Jump to content

Paulo Alvarado

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Paulo Renato Alvarado
Background information
Born1960 (age 63–64)
Guatemala City
Genres
Occupation(s)Musician, songwriter, producer.
Instrument(s)Cello
Years active1969–present
LabelsDIDECA

Paulo Alvarado (born 1960) is a Guatemalan cellist, composer and producer born in Guatemala. He studied architecture at Universidad Rafael Landívar but dropped out in 1983 to become a full-time member of the groundbreaking Guatemalan rock band Alux Nahual.[1] Besides his role in that band, continuing to date, he is notable for exploring the use of the cello in a variety of contexts[2] and is active in classical music. In 1992 he founded Cuarteto Contemporáneo de Guatemala, a string quartet specializing in a repertoire by Guatemalan composers, either written specifically for a string quartet or adapted for it. He has also been involved in the performance and production of Guatemalan music from the colonial period.[3]

Alvarado is the son of Manuel Antonio Alvarado a Guatemalan educator, and brother of Manuel Alvarado, a British-Guatemalan academic in media studies. He writes a weekly column, Presto non troppo in Prensa Libre, a Guatemalan daily newspaper.[4][5][unreliable source?]

In 2016 he performed and produced El Chelo Guatemalteco, a collection of Guatemalan music rendered for the Cello, with Costa Rican pianist Gerardo Meza Sandoval.[6]

Discography[edit]

  • La Cantoría de Tomás Pascual (1994). El repertorio de San Miguel Acatán, "Música Guatemalteca, Siglos XVI y XVII", CD, Pajarito Discos 50294-1. (Producer, cello)
  • La Cantoría de Tomás Pascual (2000). El Repertorio de San Sebastián Lemoa, CD, Pajarito Discos. (Producer, cello)
  • El Actor Etéreo. La música de la Nueva Escena Guatemalteca (2000). Guatemala. CD, Pajarito Discos. (Composer, producer, cello)
  • Cuarteto Contemporáneo, "Música Guatemalteca, 1582 - 1990", 1998. CD, (Producer, cello)

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Paulo Alvarado Discography". Discogs. Retrieved 17 June 2018.
  2. ^ Hernández, Oswaldo (15 May 2011). "Paulo Alvarado: Más allá del instrumento". Siglo 21. Retrieved 17 June 2018.
  3. ^ Duarte, Arturo; Alvarado, Paulo (1998), "Música de Guatemala en el siglo XVIII: los villancicos de Tomás Calvo", Mesoamérica, 19 (36): 441–498
  4. ^ "Paulo Alvarado – Prensa Libre" (in Spanish). Retrieved 2021-04-28.
  5. ^ "Paulo Alvarado", Wikiguate, April 1, 2015, retrieved June 16, 2018
  6. ^ Villalobos Viato, Roberto (27 November 2016). "Lanzamiento de novedoso disco de violonchelo y piano con música guatemalteca". Prensa Libre. Retrieved 17 June 2018.

Gandarias de, Igor:2008. La Música Electroacústica en Guatemala. Universidad De San Carlos De Guatemala, Dirección General De Investigación, Programa Universitario De Investigación En Cultura, Pensamiento E Identidad De La Sociedad Guatemalteca. Centro De Estudios Folklóricos. Gandarias de, Igor:2008. “Música guatemalteca para piano. Antología histórica, siglos XIX-XXI”. Universidad De San Carlos De Guatemala, Dirección General De Investigación. Centro De Estudios Folklóricos. Lehnhoff, Dieter: 2005. Creación musical en Guatemala. Universidad Landívar Fundación G&TContinental. Guatemala Centroamérica

External links[edit]

  • ADESCA – Aporte para la Descentralización Cultural (1999). Informe 1999. Guatemala, p. 10.
  • De Gandarias, Igor (2008). La Música Electroacústica en Guatemala. Dirección General de Investigación, Universidad de San Carlos de Guatemala. Guatemala.
  • Prensa Libre (2002). Diccionario de Artistas Guatemaltecos (A). Guatemala
  • Hernandez, D., L'Hoeste, H., & Zolov, E. (Eds.). (2004). Rockin Las Americas: The Global Politics Of Rock In Latin/o America. Pittsburgh, Pa: University of Pittsburgh Press. Retrieved from https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt9qh62v.
  • Hegarty, P., Halliwell, M. (2011). Beyond and Before: Progressive Rock since the 1960s. London: Bloomsbury.