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Enrique Bátiz Campbell (born May 4, 1942 is a Mexican) conductor and pianist.
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Education
He began piano studies at age 8 with Francisco Agea, continuing 10 years later with Gyorgy Sandor. After two years at Southern Methodist University in Dallas, he became a student of Adele Marcus at the Juilliard School, where he also studied conducting. In 1964 he made several national tours as a pianist, and in 1965 was a semifinalist in the Marguerite Long International Piano Contest in Paris. From 1967 to 1970 he continued his piano studies in Poland with Zbigniew Drzewiecki, where he also studied orchestral conducting with Stanislaw Wislocki. In 1970 he was a finalist in the F. Busoni Piano Competition in Italy.
Piano concertist
A 1967 concert tour featured performances with the Łodz and Szczecin Philharmonics. In 1968 he participated in the Queen Elizabeth International Piano Contest in Brussels. Recitals in Warsaw and Brussels in 1969 led to outstanding reviews noting his temperament and virtuosity. Returning to Mexico in 1969, Maestro Bátiz performed many concerts as a pianist. His debut as a conductor was in the Palacio de Bellas Artes in 1969 with the Xalapa Orchestra. Later in 1970 he made a series of piano recordings for the Polish and Salzburg Broadcast Companies. He also participated in the famous International Frederick Chopin Piano Competition of Warsaw. In April 1971 he was named director, conductor, and founder of the State of Mexico Symphony Orchestra.
Conductor
For 12 years (1971-1983) Maestro Bátiz was the conductor of the State of Mexico Symphony Orchestra before moving to the Mexico City Philharmonic Orchestra for 7 years (1983-1989). In 1990 he resumed his directorship of the OSEM, which continues to the present. In 1984, he was named guest conductor of England’s Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and, as an invited guest conductor, has led more than 500 symphony orchestras around the world. He has conducted numerous piano concerti with acclaimed piano concertist Eva Maria Zuk.
His work is represented with a collection of 145 recordings: 58 with the State of Mexico Symphony, 41 with the Royal Philharmonic, 19 with the Mexico City Philharmonic, 12 with the London Philharmonic, 9 with the London Symphony, 3 with the Philharmonia, 2 with the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic, and 1 with the Toscana Orchestra in Florence, Italy. His recordings appear in the catalogs of EMI International, Academy of Sound and Vision, Musical Heritage (USA), NAXOS, IMG International Management Group, Pickwick, and RPO Records and Arts.
As a conductor, Bátiz’s repertory ranges from classical to contemporary works. He has been described as an artist who conducts with vehemence and enthusiasm, manifesting a deep understanding unusual even among the finest conductors.
Awards and recordings
Throughout his career, he has received many important distinctions and awards. These include La primera Presea Bienal in Art from the State of Mexico Confederation of Professionals, Rome’s International Gold Mercury award (the first given to a Latin American artist), and the Jose Marti and Tlatelolco’s Eagle medals. In 1984 he won First Prize at the British Music Trades Association for his interpretation of Claude Debussy’s
Bátiz has also recorded the complete nine symphonies by Beethoven, the complete pieces for orchestra by Joaquin Rodrigo, Manuel M. Ponce, and Georges Bizet, and eight volumes of Mexican music, all of which have received great worldwide acclaim. In 1997 Maestro Bátiz and the OSEM recorded the six symphonies and other works of Tchaikovsky, the four Brahms symphonies and the four symphonies of Robert Schumann.
External links
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