Brazil Banknotes 5000 Cruzeiros banknote 1990 Carlos Gomes
Central Bank of Brazil - Banco Central do Brasil
Obverse: Portrait of composer Antonio Carlos Gomes (1836-1896) and Sculptural group from Monument at Municipal Theatre of São Paulo, representing "O Guarani", "Salvador Rosa" and "O Escravo", three of the most important operas. Lyre at lower left.
Reverse: Seated statue of Antonio Carlos Gomes (Monument near Municipal Theatre of São Paulo) & grand piano that belonged to Carlos Gomes.
Outside the São Paulo's Municipal Theater, the fountain inspired in the Trevi Fountain in Rome was a gift from the Italian community in São Paulo in commemoration of the 1922 centennial of the Independence of Brazil. The work created by Italian architect Luiz Brizzolara includes a statue of Brazilian composer Carlos Gomes (1836-1896), the theater's patron.
Watermark: The Effigy of the Republic of Brazil (Portuguese: Efígie da República) is used as a national personification, both in Brazil and in Portugal, symbolizing the Republic.
See-through register: Tuning fork.
Colors: blue, violet, light-brown, black.
Size: 140 x 65 mm.
Printer: Casa da Moeda do Brasil (CMB).
Brazilian Currency Banknotes - Brazil Paper Money
1990-1993 Regular "Cruzeiro" Issue
100 Cruzeiros 200 Cruzeiros 500 Cruzeiros 1000 Cruzeiros
5000 Cruzeiros 10000 Cruzeiros 50000 Cruzeiros
100000 Cruzeiros 500000 Cruzeiros
100 Cruzeiros 200 Cruzeiros 500 Cruzeiros 1000 Cruzeiros
5000 Cruzeiros 10000 Cruzeiros 50000 Cruzeiros
100000 Cruzeiros 500000 Cruzeiros
Antonio Carlos Gomes
Antônio Carlos Gomes (July 11, 1836 – Brazil, September 16, 1896) was the first New World composer whose work was accepted by Europe. The only non-European who was successful as an opera composer in Italy, during the "golden age of opera", contemporary to Verdi and Puccini and the first composer of non-European lineage to be accepted into the Classic tradition of music.
Younger than Verdi, yet older than Puccini, Carlos Gomes achieved his first major success in a time when the Italian audiences were eager for a new name to celebrate and Puccini had not yet officially started his career. After the successful premiere of Il Guarany, Gomes was considered the most promising new composer. Verdi said his work was an expression of "true musical genius". Liszt said that “it displays dense technical maturity, full of harmonic and orchestral maturity.”
He was born in Campinas, Brazil, son of Maestro Manuel José Gomes and Fabiana Maria Jaguari Cardoso.
His childhood's musical tendencies were soon stimulated by his father and by his older brother José Pedro de Sant'Ana Gomes, also a Conductor. José Pedro was the most dedicated guide and adviser in his brother's artistic career. He convinced Antônio to visit the Court where he became a protégé of Emperor Dom Pedro II, who, being notoriously interested in the careers of Brazilian artists and intellectuals, made possible for Antônio Carlos to study at the Musical Conservatory of Rio de Janeiro.
After having graduated with honors, Carlos produced his first opera, A noite do castelo (September 1861). It was a big success. Two years later, he repeated it with his second opera, Joana de Flandres, which was considered superior to the first. These two pieces convinced the Emperor to offer him a Royal scholarship to study in Italy in 1864. He studied in Milan at the local Conservatory with Lauro Rossi and Alberto Mazzucato and completed in three years a course which was normally completed in four years, obtaining the title of Maestro Composer.
Interested in composing an opera which dealt with a truly Brazilian subject, Carlos Gomes chose as the theme of his next work the romance novel O Guarani, by Brazilian writer José de Alencar. The opera was given an Indian subject and setting and it premiered in May 1870 at the La Scala Theater in Milan as Il Guarany.
The success was enormous. Even the most strict musical critics compared the Brazilian musician to the great European maestros, such as Rossini and Verdi. The King of Italy, Victor Emmanuel II, decorated the creator of the opera, which was presented in all major European capitals. Before that year was over, Gomes returned to Brazil, where he organized the premiere of Il Guarany in Rio de Janeiro. The piece achieved the same success Gomes had seen in Italy.
Returning to Italy, Carlos Gomes married Adelina Peri, an Italian pianist he had met while studying in Milan.
He wrote the hymn Il saluto del Brasile for the centenary of American independence which was performed in Philadelphia, on July 19, 1876.
In 1883 the maestro traveled to Brazil, receiving homages in every city he visited. When he returned to Italy, he dedicated himself to the composition of an opera themed against slavery, inspired by the liberation struggle of black slaves in Brazil, which got the title of Lo Schiavo. The composition, which had been suggested by a great friend of Antônio's, a black engineer named André Rebouças, only debuted several years later in 1889.
When the Brazilian republic was proclaimed in 1889, Carlos Gomes, who at this time was in Campinas, sailed once more to Italy. Faithful to the monarchy and Dom Pedro II, Gomes refused the opportunity given to him by president Deodoro da Fonseca to compose the new Brazilian National Anthem. In the following years, he composed the opera Condor and the cantata Colombo, for the Columbus Festival (October 12, 1892), in celebration of the fourth centenary of the discovery of America.
Invited by the governor of the Brazilian province of Pará to direct the Musical Conservatory, the maestro traveled to the capital Belém, willing to take the position. However, shortly after arriving, Carlos Gomes, by then an elderly man in poor health, died on September 16, 1896. Besides his eight operas, he composed songs (3 books), choruses, and piano pieces.