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Margot Loyola

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Name
  
Margot Loyola

Albums
  
Canciones del 900

Movies
  
The Severed Heads

Spouse
  
Osvaldo Cadiz (m. ?–2015)

Role
  
Musician


Margot Loyola httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons33

Died
  
August 3, 2015, Santiago, Chile

Similar People
  
Gabriela Pizarro, Violeta Parra, Isabel Parra, Hector Pavez, Roberto Parra Sandoval

Cueca al piano margot loyola tocando


Margot Loyola Palacios (September 15, 1918 – August 3, 2015) was a musician, folk singer and researcher of the folklore of Chile and Latin America in general.

Contents

Margot Loyola 3474886792850058jpg

Loyola was active as a musician and musical ethnographer/anthropologist for many decades. She published a large body of work dealing with musical styles, folk music and customs of all Chilean regions as well as other South American countries. She also taught music.

Margot Loyola Msicos y ministros de Estado despiden a Margot Loyola

El talento de Margot Loyola (1983)


Early career

Margot Loyola U de Chile despide a Margot Loyola destacada folclorista

Loyola was born in Linares, Chile in 1918. She studied piano with Rosita Renard and Elisa Gayán at the National Conservatory of Music of Chile, and studied song with Blanca Hauser. In 1952 she immersed herself in researching the typical Peruvian dances and musical forms, the marinera and the resbalosa. This allowed her to study the origins of these dances and to characterize the simililarities between the Peruvian and Chilean ones (resfalosa and cueca). Subsequently, she worked with Porfirio Vásquez, the patriarch of black music in Peru, and then went on to study the indigenous culture of Peru with José Maria Arguedas.

Margot Loyola httpsiytimgcomvi2exIE7FFJYhqdefaultjpg

Later, Loyola studied Argentine and Uruguayan traditional and folk music, with Carlos Vega and Lauro Ayestarán, respectively. In 1952, she began her celebrated research on the ceremonial dances of the Chilean north, with Rogelia Perez and other musicians and groups. Loyola researched the folklore and traditional musical styles of all the regions of Chile as well as Easter Island (a Chilean province, located in the south Pacific Ocean). She compiled and published a great deal of valuable material obtained from her scholarly research and was regarded as an artist and researcher of great authority. Among the art expressions she researched, some were virtually rescued from oblivion and extinction by her work.

Legacy and recognition

Margot Loyola Margot Loyola E Maiso Mama cancin de amor rapa nui YouTube

Loyola created Chile's first traditional music and dance group, The Conjunto de Alumnos de Margot Loyola (Student Group of Margot Loyola), through which she effectively became an unofficial ambassadress of the Chilean culture.

Margot Loyola Margot Loyola Palacios Universidad de Chile

In 1972, Loyola became a Professor of the University of Chile, and in 1998 she was made a Professor emeritus of the Catholic University of Valparaíso. She was awarded the coveted (Chilean) National Prize of Art (mention in Music) in 1994 and the "Premio a lo Chileno" in 2001. She died on August 3, 2015 at the age of 96 in Santiago de Chile.

Works

Loyola's activities resulted in several books, videos, LPs, cassettes and CDs.

Bibliography

Margot Loyola La huella imborrable de Margot Loyola en la historia de la msica

  • "Bailes de tierra" (Earth dances), (1980)
  • "El Cachimbo", (1994)
  • Videography

    Margot Loyola Discoteca Nacional Chile Margot Loyola Por siempre Margot KEIA

  • "Danzas tradicionales de Chile" (Traditional dances of Chile), (1994)
  • "La Zamacueca" (1999)
  • "Los del Estribo: Cantos y Danzas Populares de Chile", (2001)
  • Discography

  • 14 LPs, 6 cassettes and 7 CDs, in addition to other editions in various other countries
  • References

    Margot Loyola Wikipedia