Joséf Pagés

Joséf Pagés, who was born circa 1740 and died after 1822, was a Spanish guitar maker of the Cádiz school.

He established his workshop in "Calle de la Amargura, nº 13", by 1809.

[1] A leading member of the Cádiz school, Joséf, followed very closely all the innovations that Francisco Sanguino had introduced, but with the additional development of doming the soundboard with the struts, an approach that later makers such as Jose Recio, Antonio de Torres, and Francisco Gonzales also adopted.

[2] Pagés started with systems of three braces, like the early guitars of Sanguino and Benedid; his later instruments used five.

[1] The great Spanish composer and guitarist Fernando Sor thought highly of Pagés's guitars, stating 'The guitars to which I have always given preference are those of Alonso of Madrid, Pagés and Benediz of Cádiz, Joseph and Manuel Martinez of Malaga...'[1] The composer Dionisio Aguado also mentions the Pagés brothers as among the makers he would recommend.

Andrew Galliano, playing a guitar by Joséf Pagés.