Ariel Ramírez
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Ariel Ramirez (born in Santa Fe, Argentina, 1921), is a composer.
[edit] Development and influences
Ariel Ramirez began his piano studies in Santa Fe, and soon became fascinated with the music of the gauchos and creoles in the mountains. He continued his studies in Córdoba where he met the great Argentinian folk singer Atahualpa Yupanqui. Following a suggestion from Yupanqui, he visited the Nordeste and deepened his research into the traditional rhythms of South America. At the same time continuing his academic studies as a composer at the Conservatorio Nacional of Buenos Aires. In 1946, with RCA, he made his first recording.
He went on to study classical music in Madrid, Rome and Vienna, from 1950 to 1954. On returning to Argentina, he collected over 400 folk songs and popular songs and founded the Compañía de Folklore Ariel Ramírez.
[edit] Compositions
In 1964 the composition of Misa Criolla (1964) marked the beginning of a period of high musical productivity which also saw the composition of Navidad Nuestra (1964, with poet Félix Luna), La Peregrinación (with F. Luna, 1964); Los caudillos (with F. Luna, 1965); Mujeres Argentinas (with F. Luna, 1969), and Alfonsina y el Mar (with F. Luna, 1969).
Misa Criolla is by far his best known composition: a mass for tenor, mixed chorus, percussion, keyboard and Andean instruments. Entirely based on traditional rhythms (chacarera, carnavalito, estilo pampeano), it is also, being contemporary to the Second Vatican Council, one of the first masses to be celebrated in a modern language. He wrote it in 1963-1964 and it was recorded in 1964 by Philips; directed by Ramírez himself with Los Fronterizos as solo performers (Philips 820 39 LP, including Navidad Nuestra). It was not publicly performed until 1967 in Dusseldorf, Germany, during a European tour which eventually brought Ariel Ramírez before Pope Paul VI. Equally famous are the recordings with the great solo voices of George Dalaras (1989), Jose Carreras (1990), and Mercedes Sosa (1999). In the 1990s Misa Criolla was performed at the Royal Festival Hall, London.
Today, Ariel Ramírez is president of the Society of Authors and Composers of the Republic of Argentina (SADAIC).
Other major compositions by Ramirez include the Cantata Sudamericana (with F. Luna, 1972) and another mass: Misa por la paz y la justicia (1980) with liturgical texts by Félix Luna and Osvaldo Catena. Polly Ferman is an exponent of Ramirez's piano works, but the popularity of Misa Criolla by far outstrips anything else he wrote.
[edit] References
http://dcguild.home.mindspring.com/Programs/19970517.html
http://www.coralesangaudenzio.it/conc02.htm
https://www.cdbaby.com/cd/ferman6
http://www.fundacionkonex.com.ar/premios/curriculum.asp?ID=1987
http://www.corohispanoamericano.it/RamirezAriel.htm
Categories: Cleanup from August 2006 | All pages needing cleanup | Articles lacking sources from August 2006 | All articles lacking sources | 1921 births | People from Santa Fe, Argentina | 20th century classical composers | Argentine composers | Argentine musicians | Living people | South American composer stubs