Rolando Alarcón Explained

Rolando Alarcón
Background:solo_singer
Birth Name:Rolando Alarcón Soto
Birth Date:5 August 1929
Instrument:Guitar
Genre:Folk
Nueva Canción
Occupation:Singer-songwriter
teacher
Years Active:1951–1973
Past Member Of:Cuncumén
Silvia Urbina
Patricio Manns
Inti-Illimani
Website:rolandoalarcon.cl

Rolando Alarcón Soto (August 5, 1929 – February 4, 1973) was a Chilean singer-songwriter and teacher, who was one of the main figures of the movement Nueva canción chilena. He was the artistic director of Cuncumén, one of the most important Chilean folk groups in the 20th century. During the 1970s, Rolando was a political activist for the Popular Unity of the socialist president Salvador Allende.

Biography

Early life

Rolando Alarcón Soto born on August 5, 1929, son of a primary school teacher and a miner,[1] he lived most of his childhood in Sewell and adolescence in Chillan,[2] where he studied guitar and piano. In the 1950s, Alarcón moved to Santiago de Chile, where he trained as a teacher, teaching in public schools. In 1955, as a result of the summer season schools taught by Margot Loyola at the University of Chile, the Cuncumén group was formed, in which Alarcon took over as artistic director during seven years.[3] They toured Europe, recorded six LPs and was consolidated as one of the main folk conglomerates in Chile.[4]

Career

In 1960 when Alarcón was still part of group Cuncumén, his first album titled Traditional Chilean Songs, was released in United States on the Folkways Records label. The album consists mainly of Chileans traditional songs from the 19th century. In 1988 the Alerce label reissued the album under translated title Canciones tradicionales.[5] [6] Rolando with Silvia Urbina joined at the La imagen de Chile tour held in Peru, Panama and United States. In 1962, after socialist countries tour, Silvia and Rolando left the Cuncumén group and started a duo that resulted in Chile nuevo vol. 1, a 1964 album consisting of six songs written by Clemente Izurieta, Richard Rojas and himself.[7] During 1963, he composed some solo songs like "Doña Javiera Carrera", a song from that album, which won an composition competition for schools.[8] "¿A dónde vas, soldado?" was included in the 1966 album, Rolando Alarcón,[9] that generated a lot of controversy for its antimilitarist content. Others were of social commitment as "Yo defiendo a mi tierra" (I defend my land); and others more linked to the Chilean tradition, such as "Mocito que vas remando" (Little boy you're going rowing).

Later, he joined the cast of La pérgola de las flores for a tour in Mexico, in which he composed "Si somos americanos" (If we are Americans), a song of clear continental feeling which like others by Alarcón such as "Yo defiendo a mi tierra" and "Mocito que vas remando" were included in the 1965 album Rolando Alarcón y sus canciones, released on RCA Victor label.[10] "Si somos americanos" was released as a single and reached number 8 on the Chilean charts.[11] Since 1965, he was one of the permanent artists of the Peña de los Parra, along with other outstanding Chilean singer-songwriters such as Victor Jara or Patricio Manns. In 1967, he represented the Chilean singers in the First Protest Song Festival held in Cuba.[12] In 1966, he participated in the Festival de Viña, achieving third place with the song "Niña, sube a la lancha" performed by Pedro Messone. In 2000, it was chosen among the ten best songs in the history of the festival. By 1967, Rolando decided to incorporate the Rock rhythms of Los Tickets for El nuevo Rolando Alarcón.

In 1968, he released Canciones de la guerra civil española on his recently created label, Tiempo, an album composed primarily of pro-republican Spanish songs,[13] the only original track is "No pasaran". Carlos Valladares and Enrique San Martín from Los Emigrantes participated in the musical accompaniment.[14] In 1969, he got an honorable mention at the First Festival of the Nueva Canción Chilena with the song "Canción de Juan el pobre" (included in the next album El Hombre). In 1970, he won on the Viña del Mar International Song Festival with the song "El Hombre" (from the namesake album), performed by Los Emigrantes.

In 1971, Canta a los poetas soviéticos was released on the DICAP label, where he performs the work of the poet Yevgeni Yevtushenko and the singer-songwriter Bulat Okudzhava.[15] In 1972, he released his last studio album titled El alma de mi pueblo, that featured the duo adherent to the then Popular Unity Los Emigrantes.[16] By this date, Alarcón was a determined activist in the campaign that would bring the socialist president Salvador Allende and the Popular Unity to power in Chile. As an enthusiast of the cause, he participated intensely until in 1973, in the middle of a tour of Chile Ríe y Canta, his heart broke when he tried to push a bus on the Matadero-Palma route. An old ulcer caused internal bleeding, and he died on February 4 at the Salvador Hospital, Santiago due to cardiac arrest.

Posthumous recognitions

After his death, the Lonqui Trio composed as homage "Canción para Rolando".[17] In 2009, the teacher Carlos Valladares and the journalist Manuel Vilches published the book Rolando Alarcón: La canción en la noche (Rolando Alarcón, the song in the night), through Editora Nacional Quimantú, an biography about his life and work.[18] In this book, some problems details that Alarcón faced due to his homosexuality were revealed, the Communist Party of Chile came to punish him for these reasons.[19] It was reissued in 2015.[20] In 2010, Rolando was one of the "eight Bicentennial authors" of the Olmué Festival being represented by Las Cuatro Brujas.[21]

On February 4, 2013, in commemoration of the 40th anniversary of the departure of the folklorist, a concert was held at the Mesón Nerudiano restaurant, Santiago, where musicians Eduardo Peralta, Rafael Manríquez,, Marcos Acevedo, and Max Berrú participated.[22] In that same year, the release of a tribute album entitled Tenemos las mismas manos, alluding to one of the verses of the song "Si somos americanos", with the participation of artists from the Nueva canción chilena and Neofolk, would be announced.[23] A marathon recital in where 25 artists would performed compositions by Alarcón at Arrau home was held on August 5, 2019.[24] [25] In 2021, an anthology of unreleased recordings or out-of-print albums called Grabaciones perdidas was published exclusively through various streaming platforms such as Spotify, Deezer and YouTube Music.[26]

Discography

Studio albums

Compilation albums

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Rolando Alarcón . MusicaPopular.cl . June 9, 2021 . es.
  2. News: Texto biográfico busca hacer justicia al fallecido folclorista Rolando Alarcón . June 13, 2021 . Cooperativa.cl . Spanish.
  3. News: Efemérides: El 4 de febrero de 1973 muere el folclorista Rolando Alarcón . 14 May 2022 . BioBioChile Televisión . 4 February 2022 . es-LA.
  4. Web site: Rolando Alarcón . Memoria Chilena. https://web.archive.org/web/20191213170408/http://www.memoriachilena.gob.cl/602/w3-article-96418.html . 13 December 2019 . June 9, 2021.
  5. Book: Discourse in Ethnomusicology: Essays in Honor of George List . 1978 . Ethnomusicology Publications Group, Indiana University . 294 . 13 September 2022 . en.
  6. Web site: Rolando Alarcón: Traditional chilean songs (1960) . PERRERAC . June 9, 2021 . es . January 22, 2017.
  7. Web site: Rolando Alarcón y Silvia Urbina: Chile nuevo vol. 1 (1964) . PERRERAC . July 27, 2019 . 23 January 2022 . es.
  8. News: Alarcón . Rodrigo . La desconocida vida del profesor Rolando Alarcón . Radio Universidad de Chile . June 9, 2021 . January 31, 2015 . es-ES.
  9. Web site: Rolando Alarcón: Rolando Alarcón (1966) . PERRERAC . 13 September 2022 . es . 25 August 2019.
  10. Web site: Rolando Alarcón: Rolando Alarcón y sus canciones (1965) . PERRERAC . November 14, 2012 . 23 January 2022 . es.
  11. Book: Billboard . 11 September 1965 . Nielsen Business Media, Inc. . 37 . 12 September 2022 . en.
  12. Book: La Opinion . 23 April 1995 . La Opinion . 24 . 13 September 2022 . en.
  13. Ossa . Marco Antonio De La . 2015 . Rolando Alarcón y las Canciones de la Guerra Civil Española. Págs. 66-95 . Artseduca . es . 12 . 66–95 . 2254-0709.
  14. Web site: Rolando Alarcón: Canciones de la guerra civil española (1968) . PERRERAC . October 24, 2015 . June 13, 2021 . es.
  15. Web site: Rolando Alarcón: Canta a los poetas soviéticos (1971) . PERRERAC . June 13, 2021 . es.
  16. News: Los 90 años de Rolando Alarcón: La vida profunda de un músico marginado . 21 December 2021 . El Ciudadano . 31 July 2019 . es.
  17. Web site: Grupo Lonqui . MusicaPopular.cl . 21 December 2021 . es.
  18. Web site: Rolando Alarcón: La canción en la noche . Cancioneros.com . 21 December 2021.
  19. Web site: Los cien años del PC . . 21 December 2021 . es . 8 December 2012.
  20. Web site: Tenemos las mismas manos. Canciones de Rolando Alarcón . 2023-01-19 . Tenemos las mismas manos. Canciones de Rolando Alarcón MusicaPopular.cl . es.
  21. News: Publican completa biografía del legendario músico Rolando Alarcón . 21 December 2021 . . 4 January 2010 . Spanish.
  22. Concierto y disco a los 40 años de la muerte de Rolando Alarcón . Cancioneros.com . 31 January 2013 . February 22, 2021.
  23. Con música, biografía y disco de homenaje recordarán al cantor chileno Rolando Alarcón . El Mercurio. February 4, 2013 . February 22, 2021 . Spanish.
  24. Hevia . David . 31 July 2019 . 25 artistas interpretarán creaciones de Rolando Alarcón en inédito tributo . . 21 December 2021.
  25. News: Sierra . Camila . 31 July 2019 . Los 90 años de Rolando Alarcón: La vida profunda de un músico marginado . es . El Ciudadano . 14 September 2022.
  26. Web site: Rolando Alarcón: Grabaciones perdidas (2021) . 14 September 2022 . PERRERAC . es.