"We've taken a leap into the future so you can travel to the past. Sign up and access our AI chat.
What new feature does this chat offer?
Natural Language: Ask it anything you want to know as if you were talking to a tutor: Which cities did Francisco Guerrero visit on his trip to Jerusalem? or Is there an article about bells?, for example.
Smart Access: Not only does it respond based on the content available on Historical Soundscapes, but it also provides links to articles where you can verify the accuracy of its response.
In 1368, under the bishopric of Andrés Pérez Navarro, the dean and chapter of the …
In this article we analyse the sensory elements of an important ritual that was celebrated …
Villancicos composed for the religious profession of nuns at the convent of Nuestra Señora de …
In 1581, the organ builder Diego Liger de Sanforte travelled from Granada to Córdoba to …
News about the first organs in the chapel of Santa Ana, located in the centre of the great courtyard of the Almudaina palace in Palma de Mallorca, and the beginnings …
In this article, I will give the main known biographical details of an exceptional 17th-century sackbut player, Pedro de Porras Morales. After his time in Lerma, Sigüenza, Burgos and Cuenca, …
In 1642, Margarita Petronila de Porras entered the convent of San Pablo in Cáceres, as a dulcian-player nun. She was the sister of the famous ministril Pedro de Porras, who …
Dances that took part in the Corpus Christi procession in 1565.
The life story of the blind Franciscan organist Friar Tomás de San Antonio († 1671).
The life story of the blind Franciscan organist Friar Tomás de San Antonio († 1671).
Works by Francisco Guerrero in the music library of Edward Paston (1550-1630).
Works by Francisco Guerrero in the music library of Edward Paston (1550-1630).
Confraternities at the collegiate church of El Salvador.
In the Corpus Christi celebrations held in Madrid in 1665, one of the theatre companies commissioned to perform the autos sacramentales composed by Pedro Calderón de la Barca was that …