Raúl Zambrano Explained

Raúl Zambrano (Tampico, Tamaulipas, México, November 6, 1969) is a Mexican guitarist, mainly interested in Manuel M. Ponce's work for guitar, founder of The Manuel M Ponce Guitar Quartet (Cuarteto de Guitarras Manuel M Ponce) in 1994 and director of the group since 2002. He collaborated in the creation of a new repertoire for guitar with musicians such as Juan Trigos, Hebert Vázquez, Horacio Uribe, Georgina Derbez, Emil Awad, Aurelio Tello and Julio César Oliva, who dedicated work to both him and his quartet. He created, jointly with Aurelio Tello and The College of Mexico's president, Javier Garciadiego Dantán, the Colmex Choir (Coro Colmex, which has been directed, since its first concert at the end of 2011, by Aurelio Tello, by Zaeth Ritter and Zambrano.

Biographical data

Zambrano studied guitar with Manuel López Ramos. He was the director (1997-2005) of the International Guitar Festival at the Gothic Chapel of The Hellenic Cultural Centre in Mexico City. From 2000 to 2005 he produced, with Valeria Palomino and the National Autonomous University of Mexico, the recording of the full guitar works by Manuel M. Ponce (Obra para guitarra de Manuel M Ponce), where eleven prominent guitar players participated. In 2010 he studied, with Dirk Snellings and Capilla Flamenca, a program which establishes the relationship between French-Flemish polyphony and that of Hispanic America's chapels.

Discography

Publications

Radio

Several radio projects for the broadcasting of academic music have been produced and hosted by Zambrano:

Music for theater

Since 1991, Raúl Zambrano has been working with several stage directors, for whom he wrote music:

Critics

"Zambrano makes a great impression in every convincing piece: this is about universal music precisely because it allows us to see its character in detail. A top level recording."[4]

"Raúl Zambrano is a guitarist with an extraordinary sensitivity, much more inclined towards musical quality than virtuosity. His secret is not to exaggerate, giving each note its precise musical value without falling into the trap of imitation or becoming another version of this successful Mexican concerto, he is a guitarist par excellence. This represents an achievement by and for Zambrano. Sincerely, his meticulous interpretation is always welcome and celebrated."[5]

"I think reading this book should be mandatory for theater people. I think reading it would be simultaneously provocative and delightful for musicians. It is, however, one of those books which, although being surprisingly erudite, can be read with interest by those considering a western man's tough conflict for an expression which finds its purest space in music."[6]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Discography. Raúl Zambrano. 11 August 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20110207060756/http://www.raulzambrano.com/g_discografia.html. 2011-02-07. dead.
  2. Web site: Miranda . Ricardo . Historia Minima de la Musica en Occidente . El Colegio de Mexico . 11 August 2013 . https://web.archive.org/web/20150620041846/http://libros.colmex.mx/index.php/2012-06-18-20-32-42/epub/item/historia-minima-de-la-musica-en-occidente-2. dead . 2015-06-20.
  3. Web site: Palapa Quijas . Fabiola . Music in the West . 25 June 2011 . 11 August 2013 .
  4. Note in Mexican newspaper La Jornada, Pablo Espinosa's "Disquero", October 10, 2005.
  5. Note in Mexican newspaper Milenio, Eusebio Ruvalcaba's "El papel de las notas", November 6, 2010.
  6. Note in Mexican newspaper Reforma, José Ramón Enríquez's "Pánico escénico", November 18, 2011.