Amanda Guerreño

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Amanda Guerreño (born May 25, 1933 in Buenos Aires ) is an Argentine composer.

After completing his training at the Conservatorio Constantino Gaito, Guerreño attended the Escuela Superior de Bellas Artes of the Universidad Nacional de La Plata . She studied piano with Roberto Castro and Delia Castro , composition with Roberto García Morillo and Alberto Ginastera , instrumentation with Mariano Drago and organ with Julio Perceval at the Teatro Colón and later with Héctor Zeoli , and finally electroacoustic music at the Instituto Torcuato di Tella with Francisco Kröpfl .

She was then active as a teacher and concert pianist. She became known as a composer in 1970 with the cantata Homenaje a America . For the performance of her Vía Crucis Latinoamericano she founded the group Limay , with which she performed the work a. a. performed in Germany, Switzerland and France. She also founded the tango group Música Ciudadana , with which she also performed her own compositions.

Works

  • Sinfonía para la Paz for baritone and symphony orchestra
  • Danza de Ulises for piano (1960)
  • Tres Bocetos Sinfónicos (1968)
  • Permutaciones para dos pianos (1968)
  • Trío Americano for violin, cello and piano (1968)
  • Cuarteto para Buenos Aires + 1 for string quartet (1970)
  • Homenaje a América , cantata for soprano, bass, guitar and percussion (1970)
  • 8 canciones al estilo popular para canto y guitarra (text by Carlos Alberto Débole ) (1970)
  • Ensayo para tres notas (matinal) for piano (1970)
  • Ritmocordio II for piano (1974)
  • Ritmocordio I for trumpet, trombone, double bass and percussion (1982)
  • Tupac Amaru (text by Carlos Alberto Débole ) for mixed choir and voices (1986)
  • Tierra nuestra Libertad , cantata for choir and instruments (1987)
  • Vía Crucis Latinoamericano (1991)
  • Danza Americana for piano (1995)
  • Vals con rayuela y tango for cello and piano (1997)
  • Payanca con chamamé for flute, clarinet, violin, cello and percussion (1998)
  • Serrín-Serrán for string orchestra (1999)
  • Bacteria Filella for computer, piano and saxophone (2001)
  • Tríptico 2002 for piano and percussion

Web links

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