Blas Galindo
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Blas Galindo Dimas (February 3, 1910 – April 19, 1993) was a Mexican composer.
Biography[]
Born in San Gabriel, Jalisco, Galindo studied intermittently from 1931 to 1944 at the National Conservatory in Mexico City, studying with Carlos Chávez (composition), , José Rolón, and (piano). In 1934, he formed the Grupo de los cuatro with fellow composers Daniel Ayala, Salvador Contreras, and José Pablo Moncayo, seeking to use indigenous Mexican musical materials in art-music compositions (Stevenson 2001).
In 1941, he was an assistant at the Berkshire Music Festival at Tanglewood, and studied under Aaron Copland at the Berkshire Music Center in 1941 and again in 1942, when his orchestral suite Arroyos was performed there (Stevenson 2001). Returning to Mexico in 1942, he became a professor of composition at the National Conservatory and in 1947 was named Director of the conservatory (a position which he held until 1961) as well as director of the music department of the National Institute of Fine Arts (Conant 1977, 95–96). From 1960 to 1965, he was music director for the Symphony of the Mexican Institute of Social Security (Conant 1977, 97).
In 1947, Galindo was named Chief of the Department for the National Institute of Fine Arts. In September 1947, Chávez named him Director of the National Conservatory of Music, a title he maintained until 1961. Before this appointment he began as a student at the Conservatory, later becoming a professor of many subjects including "harmony, counterpoint, musical analysis, history of music and composition." While at the Conservatory, Galindo also conducted the student orchestra, reformed the bylaws and built a new building. In August 1949, he was invited to be an adjudicator at the fourth Chopin piano competition in Warsaw. During this visit to Europe he travelled to seven countries to officially inspect schools of music (Stevenson 2001).
In 1952, he married Ernestina Mendoza Vega. He became Director of Artistic Activities for the Mexican Social Security Institute (I.M.S.S.) in 1955 and in 1959 I.M.S.S. named him Chief of the Music Section of the Department of Social Services. In 1960, he began conducting the Social Security Institute's Symphony Orchestra. Galindo was a frequent attendee of music festivals and guest conductor of symphony orchestras. Also, he was a lecturer and editor of magazines, sometimes writing articles concerning music.[citation needed]
In 1960, he was able to focus on composition when he was awarded a "fellowship from the Secretary of Public Education". Galindo retired in 1965 and dedicated himself to his composition, writing some for pleasure and others for "commission". To do this, he would frequently "retreat from Mexico City to a house in the country for weeks at a time in order to immerse himself fully." To celebrate the 25th anniversary of the opening of the new building at the Conservatory, he directed the Conservatory orchestra and chorus in 1974. In July 1974, Galindo accompanied the President of Mexico with "a number of other intellectuals" to South America.[citation needed]
Galindo "constantly [fought] the problem of trying to have [his works] performed more than just once and the financial problems of having them published".[This quote needs a citation] R.P. Conant wrote of Galindo, "He would, however, like to write an opera or even a cycle of operas dealing with the life of Mexico, the agitated life of Mexico from the Aztec leader Cuauhtémoc through the leaders of Mexican independence like Morelos, Juárez, Zapata, and Cardenas" (Conant 1977,[page needed]).
Awards[]
"José Angel Lamas" prize from Secretary of Public Education; honor diploma from the Venezuelan Society of Authors and Composers; gold medal as "the best composer of the year"; diploma from the Municipality of Los Angeles, California; National Arts and Science Award for 1958–1964, presented by the President of the republic of Mexico, Adolfo Lopez Mateos
Works[]
Galindo's compositions number over 150, and include works in a variety of styles and ensemble forces.
Orchestral[]
- 1940: Sones de Mariachi
- 1942: Concerto No. 1, for piano and orchestra
- 1945: Nocturno, for orchestra
- 1951: La Manda, ballet
- 1951: Suite from the ballet La manda
- 1952: Scherzo mexicano for string orchestra
- 1956: Sinfonía breve, for strings
- 1957: Symphony No. 2
- 1960: Concerto, for flute and orchestra
- 1961: Concerto No. 2, for piano and orchestra
- 1961: Symphony No. 3
- 1962: Concerto, for violin and orchestra
- 1973: Concertino. for electric guitar and orchestra
- 1984: Concerto, for cello and orchestra
- Homenaje a Cervantes, suite
- Letanía erótica
- Obertura mexicana no. 2, for piano and orchestra
- Poema de Neruda, for string orchestra
- Concerto, for flute and band
- Concerto, for guitar and band
Vocal works[]
- 1939: Jicarita
- 1939: Mi querer pasaba el río
- 1939: Paloma blanca
- 1946: Cantata a la Patria, cantata based on the poem Suave Patria by Ramón López Velarde, for mixed choir and orchestra
- 1947: Two Songs, for voice and piano
- 1947: Three Songs, for voice and piano (Hoover 2010, 236; Stevenson 2001)
- 1948: Me Gusta Cuando Callas, after Pablo Neruda
- 1957: Cantata Homenaje a Benito Juárez
- 1965: Letania erótica para la paz, cantata on the poem by G. Álvarez
- 1975: Cinco canciones a la madre muerta, for voice and piano
- Dos Corazones for mixed choir
- Arrullo, for soloist and orchestra
- Canciones de Jalisco
- Madre mía cuando muera, for soprano and orchestra
- Segundo himno de Jalisco
Chamber music[]
- 1947: Sonata, for clarinet and piano
- 1948: Sonata, for cello and piano
- 1956: Sonata, for violin and piano
- 1961: Piano Quintet
- 1961: Suite, for violin and piano
- 1972: String Quartet
Solo piano[]
- 1935: La lagartija
- 1936: Suite No. 2
- Impresión
- Caricatura de vals
- Jalisciense
- 1937: Sombra, Preludio
- 1937: Prelude
- 1938: Llano alegre
- 1939: Danzarina, waltz
- 1941: Fugue in C
- 1944: Allegro para una sonata
- 1944: Prelude
- 1945: Five Preludes
- 1945: Y ella estaba triste, Preludio
- 1952: Seven Pieces
- 1964-1973: Piezas infantiles
- 1976: Sonata
- 1987: Preludio No. 6
Cello[]
- Sonata for unaccompanied cello
Guitar[]
- Suplica de Amor
Film scores[]
- 1955 Raices
References[]
- Conant, Richard Paul. 1977. "The Vocal Music of Blas Galindo: a Study of the Choral and Solo Vocal Works of a Twentieth-Century Mexican Composer". DMA diss., University of Texas at Austin.
- Randel, Don. 1996. The Harvard Biographical Dictionary of Music. Harvard[full citation needed], p. 292.
- Hoover, Maya Frieman. 2010. "Appendix D: Suggested Repertoire". In A Guide to the Latin American Art Song Repertoire: An Annotated Catalog of Twentieth-Century Art Songs for Voice and Piano, edited by Maya Hoover, 235–37. Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press. ISBN 0253221382.
- Stevenson, Robert. 2001. "Galindo Dimas, Blas". The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell. London: Macmillan Publishers.
- 1910 births
- 1993 deaths
- 20th-century classical composers
- Mexican male classical composers
- Mexican classical composers
- National Conservatory of Music of Mexico alumni
- Musicians from Jalisco
- 20th-century male musicians