Ottmar Liebert | |
Background: | non_vocal_instrumentalist |
Birth Date: | 1959 2, df=y |
Birth Place: | Cologne, West Germany |
Occupation: | Musician |
Instrument: | Guitar |
Years Active: | 1989–present |
Ottmar Liebert (born 1 February 1959) is a German guitarist, songwriter and producer best known for his Spanish-influenced music. A five-time Grammy Award nominee, Liebert has received 38 Gold and Platinum certifications in the United States, as well as certifications in Canada, Australia and New Zealand. His debut album Nouveau Flamenco (1990) was certified Platinum in the United States.
Ottmar Liebert was born 1 February 1959 in Cologne, West Germany, to a Chinese-German father and a Hungarian mother. As a child, he spent most of his time travelling throughout Europe and Asia with his family. He began playing classical guitar at 11, and studying flamenco guitar at 14, after he "found a Flamenco LP in the bargain bin at a local supermarket."[1] After performing rock music in his native Germany, he moved to the United States and settled in Boston for a few years, performing in various rock clubs.[2] In 1986 Liebert settled in Santa Fe, New Mexico, where he began looking to create a new musical sound.[3] [4]
Liebert cites musical influences such as "Carlos Santana, Paco de Lucía, John McLaughlin, Robert Fripp and Jeff Beck, others were horn players like Miles Davis," although he cites "others yet were fine artists who taught me about space and brush strokes and dynamics and contrast."[1]
In 1988, Liebert founded the first incarnation of his band Luna Negra (black moon). That year he recorded a self-produced album titled Marita: Shadows and Storms.[5] The initial thousand copies were sold in the gallery of Santa Fe artist Frank Howell. When the record found its way to radio stations and began generating a response among listeners, Higher Octave Music picked it up and released a remastered version titled Nouveau Flamenco (1990).[5] The album eventually sold double-platinum in the United States.
Liebert followed up his debut with several successful albums that continued and expanded his sound, including Borrasca (1991), Solo Para Ti (1992) and The Hours Between Night + Day (1993),[5] all three earning Gold certification. Liebert's international success continued with ¡Viva! (1995) and Opium (1996), both of which earned Platinum status in the United States and Latin America.
Liebert has recorded with Luna Negra since 1989. Personnel in the band have changed regularly since then, with the only constant being bassist Jon Gagan.
Since 1990, Ottmar Liebert has released a total of 25 albums including live releases, Christmas CDs, 15 CDs of original music, a DVD, and various remixes. He has received 38 Gold and Platinum certifications in the US as well as certifications in Canada, Australia, and New Zealand.
In 2006, Liebert contributed his song "This Spring Release 10,000 Butterflies" to the album project Artists for Charity - Guitarists 4 the Kids, produced by Slang Productions, to assist World Vision Canada in helping underprivileged kids in need.[6]
Liebert describes his musical style as "Nouveau Flamenco." In a 2004 interview, Liebert explained that once he was signed to a record label, he was required to come up with a name for what he was doing. Although there are flamenco elements to his music, it's nothing like traditional flamenco, being based on melody and using much simpler forms. As this music couldn't be considered jazz, rock, or classical, he felt that flamenco was the closest word to use that people could identify with.[7]
Liebert drew some criticism with his adoption of the term, especially since according to critics, none of his works to date followed traditional flamenco palo forms. It was also perceived by some as a marketing ploy and an attempt to associate his music with the then burgeoning school of "Flamenco Nuevo", where acknowledged flamenco artists had started to rejuvenate and reinvent flamenco through the introduction of influences from Latin America (e.g. the Rumba rhythm) and even jazz music. Paco de Lucia was one such critic.[8] [9] Despite Liebert's citing Paco as an influence,[9] Paco described Liebert's music as "una degeneración, una caricatura del flamenco" (literally, "a degeneration, a caricature").[9] However, Paco later seemed to appreciate Liebert's music, with Paco's record company even mentioning him in promotional materials.[9]
Since 1986 Liebert has lived in Santa Fe, New Mexico. In May 2006 Liebert was ordained as a Zen monk by Dennis Genpo Merzel at the Kanzeon Zen Center in Salt Lake City, Utah.[3] [10]
Year | Album | Certification | Charts, awards and nominations | |
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1989 | Marita: Shadows & Storms | |||
1990 | Nouveau Flamenco |
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1990 | Poets & Angels: Music 4 the Holidays |
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1991 | Borrasca |
| nominated for a Grammy Award for Best New Age Album | |
1992 | Solo Para Ti |
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1993 | The Hours Between Night + Day |
| nominated for a Grammy Award for Best New Age Album
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1995 | Euphoria |
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1995 | ¡Viva! |
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1996 | Opium |
| nominated for a Grammy Award for Best New Age Album
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1997 | Leaning Into the Night (Inclinado en la Noche) |
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1999 | Innamorare: Summer Flamenco |
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2000 | Nouveau Flamenco: 1990-2000 Special Tenth Anniversary Edition |
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2000 | Christmas + Santa Fe | |||
2001 | Little Wing | |||
2002 | In the Arms of Love: Lullabies 4 Children + Adults | |||
2003 | The Santa Fe Sessions | |||
2003 | 3 is 4 Good Luck | |||
2003 | Euphoria: Nouveaumatic | |||
2004 | La Semana | |||
2005 | Winter Rose: Music Inspired by the Holidays | |||
2005 | Tears in the Rain | |||
2006 | One Guitar | nominated for a Grammy Award for Best New Age Album | ||
2008 | Up Close | |||
2008 | The Scent of Light | nominated for a Grammy Award for Best New Age Album | ||
2010 | Petals on the Path | |||
2011 | Santa Fe | |||
2012 | Dune | |||
2014 | three-oh-five | |||
2015 | Waiting n Swan | |||
2016 | slow | |||
2018 | The Complete Santa Fe Sessions | |||
2019 | Fete |