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Guillermo Uribe Holguin

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Name
  
Guillermo Holguin

Role
  
Composer

Guillermo Uribe Holguin httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsbb
Died
  
June 26, 1971, Bogota, Colombia

Similar People
  
Blas Emilio Atehortua, National Symphony Orchestra, Francisco Zumaque, Bogota Philharmonic, Vincent d'Indy

Nilko andreas 2004 live pequena suite guillermo uribe holguin


Guillermo Uribe Holguin (sometimes spelled Uribe-Holguin) (17 March 1880 – 26 June 1971) was a Colombian composer and violinist and one of the most important Colombian cultural figures of his generation. He composed prolifically in many genres and founded the National Symphony Orchestra of Colombia (previously the orchestra of the National Conservatory).

Contents

Biography

Uribe Holguin was born in Bogota. His father was Guillermo Uribe and his mother Mercedes Holguin. While studying at the School of Engineering, he simultaneously studied violin with Ricardo Figueroa, and composition with Santos Cifuentes and Augusto Azzali, at the National Academy of Music. He became dissatisfied with his progress, and sought out a private teacher, Narciso Garay. He completed his engineering studies. In 1903 he visited New York and for the first time he heard professional orchestras and opera. It was there that he started his series of 300 trozos, based on folk melodies, written for various instruments. In 1905 he was appointed professor of violin and harmony at the Academia. There, in December 1905, he conducted his Victimae Paschali for solo voice, chorus and orchestra.

He obtained a scholarship from the Colombian government to study in Paris. In 1907, at the Schola Cantorum, he commenced violin studies with Armand Parent, and composition with Vincent d'Indy, alongside fellow students Erik Satie and Joaquin Turina. He later took violin lessons in Brussels with Cesar Thomson and Emile Chaumont. In 1909, his Violin Sonata No. 1 was played at a concert of the Societe Nationale de Musique in Paris, by Gabriel Vuillaume and Ricardo Vines. As a result of his Parisian studies, there is a marked French influence in the works he wrote prior to 1930. In Paris, he met the pianist Lucia Gutierrez. They married in 1910, and she was often soloist in his works. She died in 1925.

In 1910 he returned to Colombia and became Director of the newly reorganized National Conservatory of Music in Bogota. In 1932 the French government appointed him a Chevalier of the Legion d'honneur. He resigned from the Conservatory in 1935 in order to dedicate himself to composition. In 1939 he was decorated with the "Medalla Civica del General Santander". In 1941 he produced an autobiography. He was reappointed director in 1942, a position he held until 1947. His final composition was Doce canciones, Op. 120, written in 1962. He died in Bogota in 1971.

Since 2005 there has been a revival of his music by Colombian guitarist Nilko Andreas Guarin, who has been editing and promoting Uribe's works worldwide. Guarin performed the premiere in New York of Pequena Suite, Op. 80, No. 1, written for Andres Segovia but never played by him. He is working on a recording of never-performed music by Uribe Holguin in New York City and around the world including: Violin Sonata, Piano Trio, one string quartet, songs, and guitar music.

Opera and ballet

  • Furatena, music-drama, Op. 76 (1940; lyric tragedy in 3 acts and 4 scenes)
  • Tres ballets criollos, Op. 78
  • Choral and vocal

  • Victimae Paschali (solo voice, chorus and orchestra)
  • Requiem, Op. 17 (soloists, chorus and orchestra; written in memory of his wife, who had died in 1925)
  • Marcha Triunfal, Op. 18 (tenor and orchestra)
  • Himno, Op. 42 (tenor, chorus and orchestra)
  • Improperia, Op. 65 (baritone and orchestra)
  • Mass (children's a cappella choir and solo voices)
  • Orchestra

  • 13 symphonies (including No. 2, Sinfonia del terruno, Op. 15)
  • symphonic poem Bochica, Op. 73
  • Tres Danzas
  • Serenata
  • Carnavalesca
  • Marche funebre
  • Marche de fete
  • Suite tipica
  • Ceremonia Indigena (Himno a Zua y danza ritual)
  • Concertante

  • 2 Violin Concertos (Opp. 64 and 79)
  • Concerto for viola and orchestra, Op. 109 (1962)
  • Concierto a la Manera Antigua, for piano and orchestra
  • Villanesca, for piano and orchestra
  • Chamber music

  • 10 String Quartets
  • 2 Piano Trios
  • Piano Quartet
  • 2 Piano Quintets (Opp. 31 and 66)
  • 7 violin sonatas
  • Sonata for viola and piano, Op. 24 (1924)
  • 2 cello sonatas
  • Divertimento for flute, harp, horn and string quartet, Op. 89
  • Pequena suite (Little Suite) for violin, viola and flute, Op. 96 (1955)
  • Piano

  • 300 Trozos en el sentimento popular (based on folk dances)
  • many other piano pieces
  • Guitar

  • Tres Bosquejos
  • Suite in Three Movements Pequena Suite, Op. 80 no 1(1946; written for Andres Segovia), edited and premiered in the US by Colombian Classical Guitarist Nilko Andreas Guarin in New York City, 2005
  • Songs

  • many songs, to words by Victor Hugo, Paul Verlaine, Charles Baudelaire, Henri Barbusse, Paul Fort and others.
  • References

    Guillermo Uribe Holguin Wikipedia