Luiz Heitor Corrêa de Azevedo explained

Luiz Heitor Corrêa de Azevedo
Birth Date:December 13, 1905
Birth Place:Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
Death Place:Paris, France
Occupation:Folklorist, musicologist, journalist, author
Education:National Institute of Music
Discipline:Musicology
Sub Discipline:Brazilian music
Workplaces:UNESCO, University of Paris, National School of Music, Brazilian Conservatory of Music

Luiz Heitor Corrêa de Azevedo (13 December 1905 – 10 November 1992) was a Brazilian journalist, musicologist and folklorist.

Education

Luiz Heitor Corrêa de Azevedo studied piano at the National Institute of Music in Rio de Janeiro under Alfredo Bevilacqua and Charley Lachmund, and harmony, counterpoint, and fugue under Paulo Silva. Corrêa initially intended to be a composer but by the late 1920s had decided on musicology and music criticism. He worked as a librarian at the Institute following graduation.

Career

In 1928, Corrêa wrote for the newspaper O Imparcial and, in 1934, founded both Revista Brasileira de Música, for which he was editor until 1942, and Arquivo de Música Brasileira, which supplemented the magazine.[1] The Arquivo's first publishing contained music such as Tantum Ergo by José Maurício Nunes Garcia and Canto Religioso and O Salutaris by Francisco Manuel da Silva.[2] In 1939, he became a faculty member in the national folklore department at Brazil's National School of Music and later taught music history at the Brazilian Music Conservatory. During this time, he began developing the ethnomusicology curriculum and in 1943 founded Centro de Pesquisas Folclóricas, a folklore research center.[3] He also continued writing for magazines such as Revista Cultura Política and directed a classic music radio show called Hora do Brasil.

Between 1941 and 1942, he was Brazil's Division of Music representative at the Pan American Union and served as a music consultant for the Organization of American States. In the late 1940s, he moved to Paris and became a music program specialist for UNESCO. While in Paris, he was dedicated to promoting Brazilian music and took it upon himself to advertise Brazilian concerts and performances to the larger European community. He also published his first music catalogue based on Chopin's music and worked on archival, research, and recording projects for many types of music. He also led the Section for Cooperation with Non-Governmental Organizations from 1953-1965. Between 1953 and 1968, he taught Latin American studies at the University of Paris.

Corrêa's contributions to musicology centered on systemizing and cataloging national music and folklore. He created the first accurate mapping of Brazilian musical culture and made folkloric information accessible to researchers and to potential listeners. In his book 150 anos de música no Brasil, Corrêa wrote about how underdeveloped UNESCO's music department was and that the only official documents were a survey on the conditions of "musical life" in several countries and a half-finished project about international discography. Corrêa also attempted to connect music organizations all over the world. This network would later evolve into the International Music Council.

Books and articles published

Further reading

Books

Dissertations

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Revista Brasileira de Música. 2016-09-20. Escola de Música. 2022-08-02. pt.
  2. Web site: Publicações Acadêmicas. 2010-02-17. Escola de Música. 2022-08-02.
  3. Book: Mariz, Vasco. [{{Google books|ol65tgAACAAJ|plainurl=yes}} Três musicólogos brasileiros: Mário de Andrade, Renato Almeida, Luiz Heitor Correa de Azevedo].