Graciela Agudelo Explained

Graciela Agudelo
Birth Name:Graciela Agudelo Murguía
Birth Date:7 December 1945
Occupations:pianist and composer
Era:Contemporary

Graciela Agudelo (December 7, 1945 – April 19, 2018) was a Mexican pianist and composer.

Life and career

Graciela Agudelo studied piano at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México and composition at the Conservatorio Nacional de Música with Héctor Quintanar and Mario Lavista. She received a scholarship from the Internationales Musikinstitu Darmstadt in Germany.[1]

Agudelo is the founder of the chamber ensemble group Onix Ensamble and was a founding member of the Mexican Society of New Music. Agudelo has published a number of articles and essays and headed the official journal of the National School of Music of the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México. She is the author of the Musical Initiation GAM Method for Children (ENM / UNAM, 1998) and Man and Music (Patria, 1998). In 2002 she received the Xochipilli award for outstanding creativity in the field of music in Mexico.

Though some of her music is didactic in nature (she wrote instructional books and music for students), she is best known for her "solo, chamber and orchestral works in an avant-garde style enlivened by an individualistic approach to national identity that avoids folkloristic clichés".[2]

Works and discography

Agudelo has composed for symphony orchestra, chamber ensemble, strings and theater, television and educational productions. Her works that have been issued on CD include:

Notes and References

  1. Book: The Norton/Grove dictionary of women composers. Julie Anne. Sadie. Rhian. Samuel. 1994. 4 October 2010. 9780393034875.
  2. Michael Schell, "Women in (New) Music: Remembering Graciela Agudelo (1945–2018)". Second Inversion, 25 April 2018. Retrieved 1 May 2018