×

Past_notes's video: Salvador Contreras: Corridos para coro soprano y orquesta 1941 Complete

@Salvador Contreras: Corridos para coro, soprano y orquesta (1941) [Complete]
Thanks to all for your continous support and thanks +Harry Andruschak for detecting a glitch in one of my vids earlier today! For your patience, I've got here an extra of a little something I collected recently... / Gracias a todos por su apoyo y gracias al usuario +Harry Andruschak por detectar un error en un video que subí esta tarde. Por su gran paciencia, les tengo aquí un extra de algo que recuperé recientemente... Orquesta Sinfónica Nacional de México dirigida por / National Symphony Orchestra of Mexico conducted by Enrique Arturo Diemecke. Choir/Coro: Coro de México. Soprano: María Luisa Támez. I. La indita / The Indian Girl (0:00) II. Las dos Marías / The Two Marias (1:33) III. Romance de/of Roman Castillo (2:29) IV. Los Dorados de Pancho Villa/’s Dorados (5:46) Salvador Contreras es uno de los mayores exponentes del nacionalismo mexicano. Nacido en 1910, año del comienzo de la Revolución Mexicana, vio su infancia afectada en gran manera por el conflicto entre fuerzas estatales y caudillos insurrectos. Su talento musical lo llevaría al Conservatorio Nacional de Música donde estudiaría con el ya célebre Carlos Chávez. Allí, junto con sus condiscípulos José Pablo Moncayo, Blas Galindo y Daniel Ayala formaría el Grupo de los Cuatro, dedicado a la creación y difusión de obras contemporáneas, de las cuales muchas fueron de índole nacionalista. Una de ellas son los Corridos para coro, soprano y orquesta, basados en cuatro canciones de éste género populares antes y durante la Revolución Mexicana. El corrido es un género que se desarrolla a partir del romance español y que exalta, entre otras cosas, amores idílicos, hazañas de bandoleros y gestas heroicas. La obra fue estrenada en el mismo concierto en el que surgieron dos grandes clásicos mexicanos del Grupo de los Cuatro: los Sones de Mariachi de Galindo y el irreductible Huapango de Moncayo. Salvador Contreras is one of the major proponents of Mexican nationalist art music. Born in 1910, year when Mexican Revolution started, he experienced a troubled childhood mainly because of the conflict between state forces and insurgent caudillos. His musical talent would later lead him to the Mexican Conservatory where he studied with celebrated composer Carlos Chávez. There, he would form a clique along with classmates José Pablo Moncayo, Blas Galindo y Daniel Ayala named Grupo de los Cuatro (The Great Four), which was vowed to the creation and spreading out of contemporary musical works, most of which were of nationalist nature. One of among them was the Corridos for chorus, soprano and orchestras, based on four chants in corrido style which were popular before and during Mexican Revolution. The corrido is a genre which descends from the Spanish Romance and extolls ideal love stories, outlaw feats and heroic deeds among many other things. This work was premiered during the same concert which saw the rise of two major classics of the Great Four: Sones de Mariachi by Galindo and the timeless Huapango by Moncayo. Image/imagen: 1. Vendedora de Alcatraces / Gannet Salesgirl. Diego Rivera. 1942. 2. Mujeres peinándose / Women combing each others’ hairs. Diego Rivera. 1957. 3. Salteador de diligencias / Stagecoach Robber. Johann Moritz Rugendas. 1831-33. 4. Los Dorados de Pancho Villa/’s Dorados. Juan Bandera. ca.1970.

142

5
Past_notes
Subscribers
6.4K
Total Post
203
Total Views
296.3K
Avg. Views
5.9K
View Profile
This video was published on 2015-09-19 09:32:21 GMT by @Past_notes on Youtube. Past_notes has total 6.4K subscribers on Youtube and has a total of 203 video.This video has received 142 Likes which are higher than the average likes that Past_notes gets . @Past_notes receives an average views of 5.9K per video on Youtube.This video has received 5 comments which are lower than the average comments that Past_notes gets . Overall the views for this video was lower than the average for the profile.

Other post by @Past_notes