Cacilda Borges Barbosa Explained

Cacilda Campos Borges Barbosa (18 May 1914  - 6 August 2010)[1] was a Brazilian pianist, conductor and composer. She was one of the pioneers of electronic music in Brazil.[2]

Life

Barbosa was born in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. In 1928, she joined the National Institute of Music in Rio de Janeiro, where she studied with Antônio Francisco Braga, Paulino Chaves, harmony with Oscar Lorenzo Fernandez and theory with Lima Coutinho.[3] After completing her education, Barbosa worked as a pianist playing waltzes and chorinhos to dance groups and compose pieces for them. In the 1950s she published the first volume of the series "Estudos Brasileiros para Canto" and became conductor of the Radio Mayrink Veiga orchestra.[4]

Barbosa worked with Heitor Villa-Lobos from 1930,[5] and served as director of the Instituto Villa-Lobos. She became a professor[6] for chamber ensemble of the National School of Music at the University of Brazil and professor of counterpoint and fugue at the Popular School of Music Education. She also directed a number of orchestras and choir ensembles.

Works

Barbosa composed a number of works, many with a strong Brazilian theme. She also composed a number of pieces of orchestral music and chamber music together with pieces for teaching piano students.[7] Selected works include:

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Madrigal do IFBA participa dos 170 anos de Vitória da Conquista. 22 January 2011. dead. https://web.archive.org/web/20110706155305/http://ifba.edu.br/noticias/madrigal-do-ifba-participa-dos-170-anos-de-vitoria-da-conquista.html. 6 July 2011.
  2. Book: Antonio, Irati. The Norton/Grove Dictionary of Woman Composers. Julie Anne Sadie and Rhian Samuel. The Macmillan Press Limited (London); W. W. Norton & Company, Inc. (New York). 1994. 1st American. 35. Barbosa, Cacilda Campos Borges. 0-393-03487-9. registration. https://archive.org/details/nortongrovedicti00sadi/page/35.
  3. Book: Latin American classical composers: a biographical dictionary. Miguel. Ficher. Martha Furman. Schleifer. John M.. Furman. 1998.
  4. Web site: Portal Musica Brasilis - Cacilda Borges Barbosa timeline.
  5. Web site: Viva a maestrina. Jornal do Brasil. 4 February 2010.
  6. Book: Enciclopédia da música brasileira: popular, erudita e folclórica. 1998.
  7. Book: Música em debate: perspectivas interdisciplinares. Samuel. Araújo. Gaspar. Paz. Vincenzo. Cambria. 2008.