Composer
Alberto Ginastera (1916-1983); ARG
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Emerging on the international music scene in the late '40s, Alberto Ginastera established himself as one of the mid-twentieth century's most distinctive compositional figures. Although he eventually borrowed sonorities and procedures from the serialist and experimentalist movements of the ensuing decades, he did so selectively and undogmatically, synthesizing with ever-increasing sophistication and discretion the echoes of his native Argentina with the expanding compositional palette of the avant-garde.
Ginastera was born in Buenos Aires in 1916, and even in his childhood showed early promise as a performer and composer. His adolescent years were spent in formal studies at the Williams Conservatory, and within a few years of his admittance to the National Conservatory as an undergraduate, his music was receiving national acclaim in prominent performance venues. His initial reputation rested largely on his creative interpretations of and allusions to Argentinean folk materials, as realized in short-form pieces and suites, but by the late '40s and early '50s he had completed a number of more imposing works, such his Piano Sonata No. 1 and his first two string quartets. He had also ventured abroad, first to Tanglewood in 1941, where he became fast friends with Copland, then to other destinations throughout the U.S. in the late '40s, and finally to several venues in Europe during the early '50s, where works such as the Variaciones concertantes and Pampeana No. 3 enjoyed warm receptions. He likewise introduced internationally acclaimed composers to Argentina; he oversaw an ambitious department at Catholic University (1958-1963), and during his tenure as director of the Latin American Centre for Advanced Musical Studies (1963-1971) his invited guests included Messiaen, Nono, Dallapiccola, and Xenakis. Ginastera's works from the '60s, including the opera Don Rodrigo (1963-1964), grew more varied in their methods and ambitious in their scope.
Ginastera worked actively as a composer and champion of new music despite considerable external obstacles; his political views twice put him at odds with the Perón government, which forced his resignation from positions at the National Military Academy and the National University of La Plata (he regained the latter position after Perón's defeat). Personal problems, including marital strife, stifled his productivity in the late '60s, but his divorce and subsequent marriage to cellist Aurora Natola, and his retirement to Switzerland after decades of teaching in Argentina's most prominent musical institutions, gave Ginastera his second wind; his last years were among his most fruitful.
© J. Neal, All Music Guide
Ginastera was born in Buenos Aires in 1916, and even in his childhood showed early promise as a performer and composer. His adolescent years were spent in formal studies at the Williams Conservatory, and within a few years of his admittance to the National Conservatory as an undergraduate, his music was receiving national acclaim in prominent performance venues. His initial reputation rested largely on his creative interpretations of and allusions to Argentinean folk materials, as realized in short-form pieces and suites, but by the late '40s and early '50s he had completed a number of more imposing works, such his Piano Sonata No. 1 and his first two string quartets. He had also ventured abroad, first to Tanglewood in 1941, where he became fast friends with Copland, then to other destinations throughout the U.S. in the late '40s, and finally to several venues in Europe during the early '50s, where works such as the Variaciones concertantes and Pampeana No. 3 enjoyed warm receptions. He likewise introduced internationally acclaimed composers to Argentina; he oversaw an ambitious department at Catholic University (1958-1963), and during his tenure as director of the Latin American Centre for Advanced Musical Studies (1963-1971) his invited guests included Messiaen, Nono, Dallapiccola, and Xenakis. Ginastera's works from the '60s, including the opera Don Rodrigo (1963-1964), grew more varied in their methods and ambitious in their scope.
Ginastera worked actively as a composer and champion of new music despite considerable external obstacles; his political views twice put him at odds with the Perón government, which forced his resignation from positions at the National Military Academy and the National University of La Plata (he regained the latter position after Perón's defeat). Personal problems, including marital strife, stifled his productivity in the late '60s, but his divorce and subsequent marriage to cellist Aurora Natola, and his retirement to Switzerland after decades of teaching in Argentina's most prominent musical institutions, gave Ginastera his second wind; his last years were among his most fruitful.
© J. Neal, All Music Guide
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Stage Works
52 tracks
- Panambí, ballet, Op.1
22 tracks
- Estancia, Op.8 (ballet)
30 tracks
- Panambí, ballet, Op.1
-
Keyboard Works
173 tracks
- Piano Sonatas
36 tracks
- Piano Sonata No.1, Op.22
24 tracks
- Piano Sonata No.2, Op.53
9 tracks
- Piano Sonata No.3, Op.54
3 tracks
- Piano Sonata No.1, Op.22
-
Other Piano Works
121 tracks
- Arrangement: Domenico Zipoli's 'Toccata per organo'
2 tracks
- 2 Canciones, Op.3
6 tracks
- Creole Dance Suite, Op.15
5 tracks
- Danzas argentinas para los niños (unfinished)
2 tracks
- 3 Danzas argentinas, Op.2
26 tracks
- Malambo, Op.7
5 tracks
- Piezas infantiles (childhood pieces)
8 tracks
- 3 Piezas, Op.6
9 tracks
- 12 Preludios americanos, Op.12
36 tracks
- Rondó sobre temas infantiles argentinos, Op.19
2 tracks
- Suite de danzas criollas, Op.15
20 tracks
- Arrangement: Domenico Zipoli's 'Toccata per organo'
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Organ Works
16 tracks
- Piano Sonatas
-
Orchestral Works
129 tracks
- Concertos
64 tracks
- Cello Concerto No.1, Op.36
3 tracks
- Cello Concerto No.2, Op.50
4 tracks
- Concerto for Strings, Op.33
12 tracks
- Harp Concerto, Op.25
6 tracks
- Piano Concerto No.1, Op.28
16 tracks
- Piano Concerto No.2, Op.39
9 tracks
- Violin Concerto, Op.30
11 tracks
- Concierto Argentino No.1, for piano and orchestra
3 tracks
- Cello Concerto No.1, Op.36
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Other Orchestral Works
65 tracks
- Creole Faust Overture, Op.9
2 tracks
- Estancia, Op.8a (suite from the ballet)
29 tracks
- Glosses on Themes of Pablo Casals, for string quintet and string orchestra, Op.46
10 tracks
- Glosses on Themes of Pablo Casals, Op.48
10 tracks
- Ollantay, 3 symphonic movements, Op.17
3 tracks
- Pampeana No.3, Op.24
3 tracks
- Popol vuh, Op.44
8 tracks
- Creole Faust Overture, Op.9
- Concertos
-
Chamber Works
129 tracks
- Cello Sonata, Op.49
12 tracks
- Duo for Flute and Oboe, Op.13
4 tracks
- Guitar Sonata, Op.47
36 tracks
- Impresiones de la Puna, for flute and string quartet
16 tracks
- Pampeana No.1, for violin and piano, Op.16
2 tracks
- Pampeana No.2: Rhapsody for Cello and Piano, Op.21
5 tracks
- Piano Quintet, Op.29
7 tracks
- Puneña No.2 for cello ('Hommage à Paul Sacher'), Op.45
7 tracks
- String Quartet No.1, Op.20
8 tracks
- String Quartet No.2, Op.26
10 tracks
- String Quartet No.3, for soprano and string quartet, Op.40
10 tracks
- Variaciones concertantes, for chamber orchestra, Op.23
12 tracks
- Cello Sonata, Op.49
-
Vocal Works
19 tracks
- Songs and Song Cycles
13 tracks
- 5 canciones populares argentinas, Op.10
11 tracks
- 2 Songs, Op.3
1 track
- Arrorró, for voice and piano
1 track
- 5 canciones populares argentinas, Op.10
-
Other Solo Vocal Works
6 tracks
- Songs and Song Cycles
Below are works by A.Ginastera that every music lover should explore:
- Stage Works
- Estancia, Op.8 (ballet)
30 tracks
- Estancia, Op.8 (ballet)
- Keyboard Works
- Piano Sonata No.1, Op.22
24 tracks
- Creole Dance Suite, Op.15
5 tracks
- 3 Danzas argentinas, Op.2
26 tracks
- Piano Sonata No.1, Op.22
- Orchestral Works
- Piano Concerto No.1, Op.28
16 tracks
- Estancia, Op.8a (suite from the ballet)
29 tracks
- Notable Movement: 4.Final Dance: Malambo
- Piano Concerto No.1, Op.28
- Chamber Works
- Vocal Works
- 5 canciones populares argentinas, Op.10
11 tracks
- 5 canciones populares argentinas, Op.10



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