Missa Breve sobre Ritmos Populares Brasileiros, by Aylton Escobar
analytical approaches
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.52930/mt.v6i1.173Abstract
This paper presents an analytical approach to the musical work composed in 1964, Missa Breve sobre Ritmos Populares Brasileiros, by Aylton Escobar. Written for a capella choir, it was premiered in the USA, in 1968, at the IV Interamerican Music Festival. This article takes, as a methodological procedure, a bibliographic-analytical approach, through which we sought to understand the dialogue between sacred-liturgical music and Brazilian folk and popular traditions, which resulted in a hybridism revealed in several ways. The bibliography that supports this work has as main authors: Bent (2002), Caplin (1998), Carvalho (2000), Cook (1987), De Bonis (2018), Ruwet (1987) and Schoenberg (2008), in the field of musical analysis; Alvarenga (1960), Andrade (1989), Ayala (1988), Lima (2010), Machado (2012), Marcondes (1977), Neves (2008) and Sautchuc (2009), regarding the biographical contextualization and research on Brazilian Music; and, finally, data from an interview with the composer. As final considerations, the text points out the hybridization processes found in the work, highlighting the way in which the composer conceived a mass of considerable importance for the Brazilian choral repertoire.