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Conservatorio Superior de Música de Castilla y León; Conservatorio Superior de Música "Joaquín Rodrigo" de Valencia; Conservatorio Superior de Música "Óscar Esplá" de Alicante; Conservatorio Superior de Música de las Islas Baleares; Conservatorio Superior de Música de Navarra; Conservatorio Superior de Música "Rafael Orozco" de Córdoba
Escola Superior de Educação de João de Deus (Lisbon) Escola Superior de Educação de Paula Frassinetti (Porto) Escola Superior de Educadores de Infância Maria Ulrich (Lisbon) Escola Superior de Saúde do Alcoitão (Alcoitão, Alcabideche) Escola Superior de Saúde Atlântica ; Escola Superior de Saúde da Cruz Vermelha Portuguesa (Lisbon)
Introdução: José Joaquim dos Santos (1747–1801) e o Hino para as Laudes do Nascimento de Nosso Senhor Jesus Cristo. [permanent dead link ] Accessed 28 July 2018. Ruggieri, Enrico. The Lamentações para a Semana Santa by José Joaquim dos Santos and Luciano Xavier dos Santos and the music for two violas, voices concertate and low ...
Academia de Música S. Pio X is a multi-lingual music school founded by the priest Áureo Castro in 1962, under the suggestion of the director of the Lisbon National Conservatory. Its original name was "Escola das Missões Católicas" (lit. "School of the Catholic Missions"), and the school opened its doors on 2 October with 48 enrolled students.
The term Conservatorio Nacional de Música (National Conservatory of Music) appears in the official name of several national conservatories (schools of music and other related arts) in the Spanish-speaking world: Conservatorio Nacional de Música (Argentina) Conservatorio Nacional de Música (Bolivia)
The Conservatorio Superior de Música "Rafael Orozco" de Córdoba, better known in English as the Córdoba Conservatory, is a music conservatory in Córdoba, Spain. It was founded by the city council of Cordoba in 1902 as the Música de la Escuela Provincial de Bellas Artes .
Founded as Conservatorio de Música y Arte Escénico (Conservatory of Music and Scenic Art) on 18 May 1949, this tertiary educational institution was the brainchild of the Argentine composer Alberto Ginastera. He envisaged a modern academy of musical studies that addressed both the professional and the artistic aspects of a musician's development.
The Terreiro do Paço (Palace Square) and the Ribeira Royal Palace, prior to their destruction in the 1755 Lisbon earthquake. The Royal Patriarchal Music Seminary of Lisbon (Portuguese: Real Seminário de Música da Patriarcal de Lisboa) was founded in 1713 by Portugal's king John V [1] to train singers for his Royal Chapel of Saint Thomas (Portuguese: Capela de São Tomé) at Ribeira Palace ...