Miguel Ablóniz Explained

Miguel Ablóniz
Birth Date:1917 5, df=y
Occupation:guitarist

Miguel Ablóniz, also known as Michelis Ablonitis (29 May 1917 – 19 July 2001) [1] [2] was a Greek-Italian guitarist and composer who composed and performed in diverse styles, including classical and Bossa Nova.

Ablóniz began playing the guitar at the age of eight in self-study. He began his musical career as a teenager when he appeared on the radio and gave concerts in Cairo. Later he studied music theory, piano, violin and guitar at the Barcelona Conservatory. He was taught by Emilio Pujol, Juan Díaz del Moral, and Pujol's wife Matilde Cuervas, from whom he learned to play flamenco. After Pujol moved to Italy, he initially continued his career as a concertizing musician, but in 1953 he founded his own music school in Milan.[3] He also taught the master class at the School of Music at Ithaca College in New York City for many years.[4] He had great success as a teacher: his ideas on technique and performance aesthetics proved influential in the international guitar scene; he held renowned annual masterclasses in New York, and was the teacher of musicians such as Aldo Minella and Riccardo Zappa. He was also an influential musicologist, having written regularly for some of the main guitar magazines of the time, including La Chitarra, Arte Chitarristica, Guitar Review, and Guitar News.

In addition to a large number of transcriptions to guitar for existing works, Ablóniz composed many original pieces, as well as several didactic books. In total, he created more than 350 works and transcribed compositions by, for example, Manuel María Ponce.[5] As a composer, he collaborated mainly with the publishing houses Casa Ricordi and Bèrben. Among his most famous works are Recuerdo Pompeano,[6] Tanguillo, Tres Ritmos Sudamericanos,[7] Recreational Pieces, and Pequeña Romanza.

Select Publications

Bibliography

References

  1. https://web.archive.org/web/20131219014420/http://www.justclassicalguitar.com/it/storia/il-novecento-chitarristico/altri-chitarristi/miguel-abloniz
  2. ABLÓNIZ, Miguel. In: Hannu Annala, Heiki Mätlik: Handbook of Guitar and Lute Composers. Mel Bay, 2007 ISBN 978-1-60974-353-6
  3. Giorgio Ferraris – "Miguel Ablóniz" from il Fronimo issue #116, published October 2001
  4. https://www.digitalguitararchive.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/12/103-1969-Guitar-News.pdf Guitar News
  5. Richard Long, Liner Notes to M.M. Ponce: Guitar Music Vol. 2. Naxos, 1999
  6. http://www.lievens.biz/gitaar/sheet/abloniz_recuerdo_pampeano.pdf Recuerdo Pampeano
  7. https://pdfcoffee.com/tres-ritmos-sudamericanosmiguel-abloniz-pdf-free.html Tres Ritmos Sudamericanos