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Luis Humberto Salgado

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(Redirected from Luis H. Salgado) Ecuadorian composer, pianist, musicologist, and teacher (1903–1977)

Luis Humberto Salgado (1903 Cayambe - 1977 Quito) was an Ecuadorian composer. He was regarded as one of the most influential and prolific composers of his country.

Biography

He was taught by his father, the composer Francisco Salgado, a former student of the Italian composer Domenico Brescia (who championed nationalism in Chile and Ecuador before permanently settling down in the USA). During the 1920s, Salgado made a living as a pianist for silent films in Quito. He later he worked as a critic, teacher, and choir and orchestra conductor; he also was director of the National Conservatory of Music in Quito.

In his essay Música vernácula ecuatoriana (Microestudio), published in 1952 in Casa de la Cultura Ecuatoriana, he expresses his thoughts about the creation of a national form. For example, he replaced the classical symphonic pattern (Allegro - Larghetto - Allegretto Scherzo - Allegro Vivace) with a sequence of Ecuadorian folk dances:

Ecuadorian Symphony
I Sanjuanito
II Yaraví
III Danzante
IV Albazo, Aire típico or Alza

Luis Humberto Salgado was the leading figure of his generation. His symphonic suite Atahualpa (1933), his Suite coreográfica (1946), the ballets El amaño (1947), and El Dios Tumbal (1952) and other works show strong nationalistic feeling. Salgado also wrote two operas, Cumandá (1940, rev. 1954); Eunice (1956-7) that were never produced. Salgado was not an exclusively nationalist composer, as the varied style of his eight symphonies shows. In his later years, he even relied on atonality and tried his hand at 12-note composition. – Béhague, Gerard. 2001. "Ecuador. Art Music"

Though only two of his operas are mentioned in most music literature, he composed another two, together with nine symphonies, several concertos, several ballets. He was both a nationalist and a modernist composer. As early as 1944, he wrote Sanjuanito Futurista for piano, using the rhythm of a traditional Ecuadorian dance within the dodecaphonic writing style. He was in his early forties when he started experimenting with new techniques but was not acknowledged as a modernist until later in his life.

Compositions

List
Year Work Description
1933 Atahualpa o el ocaso de un Imperio (symphonic band) orchestra
1934 Ensueño de amor operetta
1936 Canto de Libertad ballet
1937 Andante for violin & orchestra orchestra
1940 (rev. 1954) Cumandá opera
1941 La consagración de las vírgenes del sol - Concerto for piano & orchestra orchestra
1944 Sanjuanito futurista (micro dance for piano) solo (piano)
1944 Cantata amerindia vocal
1945 Alma nativa vocal
1947 El Páramo (Preludio Andino-Ecuatoriano)
1947 Alejandría la pagana, melodrama orchestra
1946 Suite coreográfica ballet
1947 El Amaño ballet
1947 Qué lindo es el cariño (sanjuanito) song
1947 Quiteño de Quito (pasacalle) song
1948 Concierto fantasía en estilo nacional for piano & orchestra orchestra
1948 Variaciones en estilo folclórico orchestra
1949 Día de Corpus opera-ballet
1949 Symphony No. 1, "Andina" in G minor (revised in 1972 and renamed Sinfonía de ritmos vernaculares) orchestra
1949 Sismo (symphonic poem) orchestra
1950 Pieza característica orchestra
1952 El Dios Tumbal ballet
1953 Concierto para violín y orquesta in E Major orchestra
1953 Symphony No. 2, "Sintética (No. 1)"", in D minor orchestra
1955 Symphony No. 3, "Sobre un Tema Rococó: A-D-H-G-E", in D Major orchestra
1955 Danzas ecuatorianas for flute and orchestra flute and orchestra
1957 Symphony No. 4, "Ecuatoriana", in D Major orchestra
1957 Eunice opera
1958 Symphony No. 5, "Neo-Romántica" orchestra
1959 Homenaje a la danza criolla (symphonic poem) orchestra
1961 Aidita vocal
1961 El Centurión opera
1963 Concerto for Piano and Harp Obbligato orchestra
1966 Misa Solemne in D major (in five movements) choir & orchestra
1966 Misa Solemne (in four movements choir & orchestra
1968 Symphony No. 6 string orchestra and timpani
1968 Concerto for French Horn and Orchestra orchestra
1969 Suite ecuatoriana orchestra
1969 Ferviente anhelo (pasillo) song
1970 Symphony No. 7 in E minor (dedicated to the bicentennial of Beethoven’s birth) orchestra
1971 El Tribuno opera
1972 Symphony No. 8, in E minor (dedicated to the sesquicentennial of the Battle of Pichincha orchestra
1975 Concerto for Cello and Orchestra orchestra
1976 Ecuadorian Concerto for guitar and orchestra orchestra
1977 Symphony No. 9, "Sintética (No. 2)", in D Major orchestra

Discography

  • The nine symphonies (3 CDs) by the Cuenca Symphony orchestra conducted by Michael Meissner
  • Piano Music by Ecuadorian Composers CD. Piano: ,
Brindis por la peaña (alza) (Luis Humberto Salgado)
Nocturnal (pasillo) (Luis Humberto Salgado)
Other works by: Gerardo Guevara, Corsino Duran, Claudio Aizaga, Juan Pablo Muñoz Sanz

Souvenir de l'Amérique du Sud (CD) (piano, Marcelo Ortiz, works by: Gerardo Guevara, Sixto María Durán and Miguel Ángel Casares)

  • I. Amanecer de trasnochada (pasillo) - Luis H. Salgado
  • Brindis al pasado (pasillo) - Luis H. Salgado
  • II. Romance nativo (sanjuanito) - Luis H. Salgado
  • VI. Nocturnal (pasillo) - Luis H. Salgado

Writings

  • Salgado, Luis H. Música vernácula ecuatoriana (Microestudio), published in 1952 by Casa de la Cultura Ecuatoriana
  • Salgado, Luis H. Proyecciones de la música contemporánea, published in September 1960 by Ritmo, Madrid, Spain.

References

  • Apel, Willi. Harvard Dictionary of Music, Harvard University Press, 1969, p. 253.
  • Béhague, Gerard. 2001. "Ecuador. Art Music". The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell. London: Macmillan Publishers; New York: Grove's Dictionaries of Music.
  • Bull, Storm Index to biographies of contemporary composers. New York: Scarecrow Press, 1964, p. 405
  • Composers of the Americas Biographical data and catalog of their works Volume 4. Washington, D.C.: Secretaria General, organizacion de los Estados Americanos, 1958.
  • Chronological catalog of the works of the Ecuadorian composer Luis H. Salgado Boletin interam. mus., no.1 (Sep 1957), p. 45-50
  • Diccionario de la música española e hispanoamericana (DMEH). Published by Sociedad General de Autores y Editores (SGAE) and Instituto Nacional de las Artes Escénicas y de la Música (INAEM) from the Spanish Ministerio de Educación, Cultura y Deporte.
  • Pérez Pimentel, Rodolfo. In: Diccionario Biográfico del Ecuador, Guayaquil 1987.
  • Robijns, Jozef; Zijlstra, Miep. Algemene muziek encyclopedie hoofdred., J. Robijns en Miep Zijlstra. Haarlem: De Haan, -1984
  • Rosner, Helmut; Bulling, Burchard; Frank, Paul; Noetzel, Florian. Kurzgefasstes Tonkunstler Lexikon Fortfuhrt von Burchard Bulling, Florian Noetzel, Helmut Rosner Wilhelmshaven: Heinrichshofen, 1974. Note: Zweiter Teil: Erganzungen und Erweiterungen seit 1937
  • Slonimsky, Nicolas. Music of Latin America. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell, 1945, p. 374.
  • Walker, John L. "The Younger Generation of Ecuadorian Composers", Latin American Music Review University of Texas- Volumen 22, Número 2, Fall 2001.
  • Morris, Mark. The Pimlico Dictionary of Twentieth Century Composers. Pimlico, 1999.
  • Stevenson, Robert. "Quito". The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition.
  • Opus, no. 31. Issue dedicated to Luis H. Salgado. Edited by Arturo Rodas. Central Bank of Ecuador . Quito, January 1989.
  • Luis H. Salgado in Grandes Compositores Ecuatorianos, edited by Pablo Guerrero G. CONMUSICA. Quito. January 2001.
  • Wong Cruz, Ketty. Luis H. Salgado, un Quijote de la música. Central Bank of Ecuador & Casa de la Cultura Ecuatoriana Benjamín Carrión. 2004. ISBN 9978-62-315-9

Notes

  1. Stevenson 2001.20:685
  2. Apel, Willi, 1969, p. 253
  3. edufuturo
  4. Salgado, Luis H. 1952.
  5. Béhague 2001, 7:871

External links

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