Daniel Viglietti Explained

Daniel Viglietti
Birth Name:Daniel Alberto Viglietti Indart
Birth Date:1939 7, df=yes
Birth Place:Montevideo, Uruguay
Death Place:Montevideo, Uruguay
Instrument:Guitar, vocals
Genre:Folk music, Nueva canción
Occupation:Musician
Years Active:1963–2017

Daniel Alberto Viglietti Indart (24 July 1939 – 30 October 2017) was an Uruguayan folk singer, guitarist, composer, and political activist. He was one of the main exponents of Uruguayan popular song and also of the Nueva Canción or "New Song" of the 1960s and early 1970s.

Career

He founded, in 1971, along with other musicians like José "Pepe" Guerra, Braulio López, the music scholar Coriún Aharonián, Myriam Dibarboure, María Teresa Sande and Notary Public Edgardo Bello, the recognized independent record label Ayuí/Tacuabé in order to promote and support valuable Uruguayan musical expressions.

He performed the works of Cuban Nueva Trova stars Silvio Rodríguez and Pablo Milanés and Brazil's Chico Buarque and Edu Lobo, worked with Cuban composer and arranger Leo Brouwer. His recordings are widely available, especially "Trópicos" (1972).

Viglietti was imprisoned in 1972 by his own government.[1] He was supported by the likes of Jean-Paul Sartre as an international man of conscience, a voice for peace, and an opponent of the military dictatorships that plagued South America in the 1970s. Rumors about possible mistreatment against him forced the authorities to bring him out in front of television cameras to show that, in particular, his hands were fine.[2] However, Viglietti spoke out that his treatment in police custody was much better than what other political prisoners received.[2] He was a peer of the late Chilean poet and folk singer Victor Jara and composer and activist Violeta Parra.

Discography

Reeditions and recompilations

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Rebel musics: human rights, resistant sounds, and the politics of music making . 68–69 . Fischlin, Daniel . Heble, Ajay . Black Rose Books . 2003 . 1-55164-230-1 .
  2. Book: Repression, exile, and democracy: Uruguayan culture . 110 . Sosnowski . Saúl. Popkin . Louise B. . Duke University Press . 2003 . 0-8223-1268-9 .