Massiel

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María de los Ángeles Santamaría Espinosa (b August 2 1947 Madrid, Spain), professionally known as Massiel, is a Spanish pop singer. She won the Eurovision Song Contest 1968 with the song "La, la, la", beating out the famous British pop singer Cliff Richard' "Congratulations".

She decided to leave her music career in 1996, but released one last album a year later. In 2007 she released one more album and 2 new editions from 70's albums.

Biography

Massiel had contact with singers and groups from her early sixties since her father Emilio Santamaria was an artistic manager. At a young age, she decided to become a singer, actress and a songwriter. Her first recordings were released in 1966: "Di que no", "No sé porqué", "Llueve", "No comprendo", "Y sabes qué vi", "Rufo el pescador", "Aleluya" and "El era mi amigo". The song "Rosas en el mar" written by her friend Luis Eduardo Aute in 1967 established her as a singer in Spain and Latin America. In 1967, she acted in the movie "Vestida de novia".[1]

On March 29 1968, Massiel was asked to replace singer-songwriter Joan Manuel Serrat as Spain's representative at the Eurovision Song Contest. The original representative refused to perform unless he would sing in Catalan instead of Spanish. Nine days before the contest Massiel was in Mexico on tour. She got back to Spain, learned the song, recorded in five languages for the jury. On April 6 in London, she beat the favorite candidate Cliff Richard with "Congratulations by a point and won the contest. A recent documentary has accused Spain's television company TVE of bribing judges[2] on the orders of Franco. Her song titled "La, la, la" was written by Ramón Arcusa and Manuel de la Calva.[1]

Some years later, she got dramatical roles in theatrical productions like "A los hombres futuros, yo Bertolt Brecht" (1972), "Corridos de la revolución. Mexico 1910" (1976) and "Antonio and Cleopatra" in the early 80's.[1] During her career from 1966 to 1998, Massiel recorded songs of different genres for five record companies: Zafiro, Polygram, Hispavox, Bat Discos and Emasstor. Her discography includes about 50 records released as EP's, singles, LP's, CD's and compilations. In 1997, she released an album covering the music of Bertolt Brecht and Kurt Weill in Spanish, called "Baladas Y Canciones De Bertolt Brecht".[1] Massiel married long time boyfriend Vinny Cremonty, an Italian movie star. They lived in Italy for 4 years before moving to Spain. After retiring to raise her first son, Aitor Carlos Sayas, Massiel returned in 1981 with a brand new sound and a new record label, Hispavox. Her label debut "Tiempos Dificiles" was a major comeback in Spain where songs like "El Amor", "Hello America" and covers of Mexican songs "Eres (written by Jose Maria Napoleon)" and "El Noa Noa (written by Juan Gabriel)" not only exposed Mexican talent in Spain but were very popular for the singer. Massiel would finish her pop comeback in 1983 with her career-defining record "Corazon De Hierro". Not only was this album successful in her native country, but it was also her reconciliation with Latin America. The song "Brindaremos Por El" was a massive hit worldwide and topped the charts in many countries. In many ways, Massiel came back to the continent that loved her so throughout the 60's. During the 80's Massiel, for her popularity in the local market, was an invited artist at the Festival de Viña del Mar in Chile, At the time Chile was under the dicatorship of Augusto Pinochet. Massiel after singing for an hour, received the most important prize of the festival: "La Gaviota de Plata" (The Silver Seagull) In her speech thanking the public for her "Gaviota" she said: "Thank you Chile, I would like to let you know that Patricio Manns says hello from the Andes Mountains", the public cheered and celebrated her announcement. Patricio Manns is a well know composer, poet, member of the Communist Party of Chile who was in exile in Sweden following the September 11 1973 coup d'état against Salvador Allende. She re-recorded her Eurovision winner "La, la, la" in 1997, with a "hip-hop" sort of beat, background singers, whistling, and Spanish percussion. In 1998, Massiel appeared in the film Cantando a la Vida, which profiled a winner of a European Song festival suddenly disappearing. Massiel had the lead role as "Maria". Massiel sang the entire soundtrack to the film, and raked in 9,020,397 pesetas from the box office.

In 2001 Massiel fell out of the window of her second-floor flat while "trying to close the shutters" and was hospitalized for a short period afterwards. In 2005, Massiel appeared on the 50th Anniversary special of the Eurovision Song Contest, and sang the song that made her internationally famous. In 2007, she became a member of the Mission Eurovision jury, a show to select the Spanish song for the Eurovision Song Contest 2007. She made a short comeback to music on this show singing "Busco un hombre", a song competing to be Spain's entry but would be sung by another singer. It had been 11 years since Massiel had been on stage.

Discography

Some singles:

  • 1966 "Él era mi amigo"/"Sé que ries al pensar"
  • 1967 "Rosas en el mar"
  • 1967 "Aleluya Nº1"
  • 1967 "La moza de los ojos tristes"/"Mirlos, molinos y sol"
  • 1968 "La La La"/"Pensamientos, sentimientos"
    • 1968 "La La La (German version)" International
    • 1968 "La La La"/Pensamientos, sentimientos" International
    • 1968 "La La La"/"He gives me love (La La La English version)" International
    • 1968 "La La La"/"Las estrellas lo sabrán" International
    • 1968 "La La La"/"Rosas en el mar" International
  • 1968 "Deja la flor"/"Sol de medianoche"
  • 1968 "Las rocas y el mar"/"Vida y muerte"
  • 1968 "Niños y hombres"/"A espaldas de mi pueblo"
  • 1969 "Amén"/"Ay volar"
  • 1970 "Cantan las sirenas"/"Canciones"
  • 1970 "Detrás de la montaña"/Viejo marino"
  • 1971 "Dormido amor"
  • 1972 "Balada de Maria Sanders"/Balada de la comodidad"
  • 1973 "Rompe los silencios"/"Corriendo, corriendo"
  • 1977 "Tu me preguntas si soy feliz"/"Para vivir"
  • 1982 "Eres/De 7 a 9"
  • 1982 "Tiempos difíciles"/"Loca"
  • 1983 "Marinero"/"Otra mujer"
  • 1983 "Brindaremos por él"/"Ay la nena"
  • 1983 "Más fuerte"/"Basta de peleas"
  • 1984 "Acordeón"
  • 1984 "Voy a empezar de nuevo"/"Te fuiste"
  • 1985 "Vaca pagana"/"Popurrí"
  • 1985 "Rosas en el mar"
  • 1985 "Qué más quisiera yo"
  • 1986 "Volverán"/"Hoy me he propuesto pensar en ti"
  • 1986 "Lo que cambie por ti"/"Poco después de las 12 de un 20 de marzo"
  • 1990 "Ese es mi pueblo"

Some albumbs and LP'S:

  • 1966 EP "Di que no"
  • 1968 BSO "Cantando a la vida"
  • 1970 Massiel en México
  • 1972 Baladas de Bertolt Brecht
  • 1972 Lo mejor de Massiel
  • 1975 Viva
  • 1976 Carabina 30-30
  • 1977 Alineación
  • 1981 Tiempos difíciles
  • 1982 Rosas en el mar
  • 1983 Corazón de hierro
  • 1984 Sola en libertad
  • 1985 Massiel en Des...Concierto
  • 1986 Desde dentro
  • 1990 Deslices
  • 1997 Desátame
  • 1997 Autoretrato: Lo mejor de Massiel
  • 1998 Grandes Éxitos
  • 1999 Todas sus grabaciones en Polydor (1976-1977)
  • 2003 Sus primeros años (1966-1975) 2 CD's
  • 2007 Massiel canta a Bertolt Brecht (CD + Book)
  • 2008 Sus álbumes

References

  1. ^ a b c d "Massiel". The Yé-yé Girls Website.
  2. ^ http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/newstopics/celebritynews/1926993/How-Franco-cheated-Cliff-of-victory-in-Eurovision.html Telegraph article

External links

Preceded by Winner of the Eurovision Song Contest
1968
Succeeded by
Preceded by Spain in the Eurovision Song Contest
1968
Succeeded by

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