Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

Lourdes Pérez

 
Artist: Lourdes Perez

Similar Artists:

Soledad Bravo, Lucecita Benitez

Influenced By:

  • Active: '90s
  • Genres: Latin
  • Instrument: Vocals, Guitar
  • Representative Albums: "En Vivo

Biography

With her soulfully rich vocals and melodic guitar playing, Lourdes Perez has quickly risen to the upper echelon of Puerto Rican-American music. The recipient of the Songwriter of the Year bestowed by the Clarksville Jazz Poll in 1996, Perez continues to garner acclaim for her emotional performances. The Vancouver Courier described her as having a "honey-coated contralto that transcends language, lending an unwavering authenticity to her music reminiscent of legendary French chanteuse Edith Piaf," while the New York Times praised her for "using her gutsy declamation to reminisce over lost love and to praise women's power to nurture life." The Austin American Statesman wrote that with her "smoky, spiraling alto -- like Edith Piaf fronting the Gypsy Kings -- Perez sings of her people with a supreme sense of humanity that enlarges them to signify all people.

Teaching herself to sing and play the guitar at the age of 11, Perez was initially inspired by nueve cancion singer/songwriters including Sylvio Rodriguez, Atahualpa Yupangui, and Violete Parra. Leaving Puerto Rico in 1983, Perez settled in Austin, TX, five years later. Despite her love of music and obvious talents, she did not pursue a career as a musician until 1993. Within six months, she had become one of Austin's most promising young performers. Nominated in the Best World Music category of the Austin Chronicle Music Awards, she placed second in the Best New Act in the Music City Texas poll.

A self-titled, five-song EP, released in 1993, included the original tune "Si Me Muero Manana," which received an award as Best Foreign Language Song in the Austin Songwriters Group Competition. Perez's debut album, Recuerdate Por Mi, which followed in the spring of 1994, was voted the number one independent album in the Music City Texas Poll and took fifth place in the Austin Chronicle's Critics' Poll. Perez released a 20-minute-long cassette, Homenaje a Mercedes Sosa, featuring her interpretations of songs by the Argentinean songwriter. Her second full-length album, Vestigos, was released in 1997.

Perez's earliest break came when she was chosen to perform the opening set for Mercedes Sosa's concert at Symphony Hall, Boston, on November 16, 1995. She reached out to an even larger largest audience when she accepted an invitation from the Indigo Girls to join a 12-city, multi-artist tour, billed as the Suffragette Sessions, in 1998. During the show, Perez was joined, on her Spanish songs, by the Indigo Girls' Amy Ray and Emily Salier and translated versions of their tunes. Perez has also performed duets with Tish Hinojosa and Jane Siberry. Since 1995, Perez has been accompanied by Peruvian violinist Javier Chaparro. Their sound was enhanced by the addition of pianist Kay Sparks and cellist Margaret Coltman Smith.

Perez continues to maintain a very busy schedule. In 2000, she composed and performed the scores of the Sharir and Bustamante Danceworks' production The Leaf Storm, the Root Wy'mn Theater Company's Con Flama, and Jen Tsai's short film, When. Perez has openly opposed the American military's bombing practice on the small Puerto Rican island of Vieques. ~ Craig Harris, All Music Guide
Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
Wikipedia: Lourdes Pérez
Top
Lourdes Pérez

photo by Jennifer Davis, 2006. Creative Commons License.
Background information
Birth name Bernardita de Lourdes Pérez
Born February 12, 1961(1961-02-12)
San Sebastián, Puerto Rico
Occupations Singer, songwriter, composer, poet
Instruments Vocals, guitar
Website http://www.lourdesperez.com

Lourdes Pérez (born Bernardita de Lourdes Pérez on February 12, 1961) is a prolific Puerto Rican contemporary recording artist, songwriter, composer, arranger, poet, vocalist and guitarist. She is also one of few female décimistas (writer of décima, a specialized form of Spanish poetry). Pérez's music — often conjuring comparisons to the soulful world music genres of cante jonde, morna and fado — draws from her jíbara (Puerto Rican mountain) roots and a socially conscious genre of Spanish/pan-Latin American music called nueva trova or nueva cancion.

Contents

Life and Work

Pérez was born in Hato Arriba, San Sebastián, Puerto Rico. Considered by many to be "among the great Latin American female vocalists" and songwriters, Lourdes Pérez has performed duets with numerous legendary and diverse artists, from Argentine singer Mercedes Sosa and Mexican master decimista Guillermo Velazquez to Canadian pop artist Jane Siberry.[1] Acclaimed for her "ability to transcend language...with her achingly beautiful contralto voice," she has devoted her work to promoting human rights around the globe. Lourdes is one of 1000 performers in the world profiled in the MusicHound World: The Essential Album Guide (2000) and she is featured in the Oxford Encyclopedia of Latinos and Latinas in the United States (Oxford University Press, 2005).[2][3]

Her discography includes 7 CDs, a full length film score, a short film score, 2 modern dance scores, a theater score and numerous individual tributes, while her songs appear in films, CD compilations and anthologies. A concert at a Palestinian refugee camp prompted her Spanish translation of the Arabic song by Ahmad Kaabour/Tawfeeq Zayad, "Unadeekum (Te llamo)", which was later released on her CD, Este Filo. A song that Pérez wrote for the people of Sierra Blanca, Texas was read into the U.S. Congressional record by Rep. Lloyd Doggett (Texas) as part of a successful campaign against dumping nuclear waste inside a low-income Mexican American community on the Texas-Mexico border. References to her strong support for the decolonization of Puerto Rico can be found in several of her songs. In November 2006, her song, "Paloma Urbana" (Urban Dove) won Best Latin Song in the Just Plain Folks Music Awards.

Lourdes Pérez was honored, alongside Ali Akbar Khan, as one of the country's "finest living artists" and was awarded a 2006 United States Artists unrestricted fellowship for her contribution to music.[4]

The contemporary Puerto Rican trova group, Somos Tres, and the Lebanese singer, May Nasr, have recorded and interpreted Pérez's work.

Pérez is an openly lesbian woman, and has written songs about lesbian experience.[1] "Yo Pari Una Luchadora" (I Gave Birth to a Fighter) is a song dedicated to the mother of a lesbian activist.[1] Perez has lived and traveled with her partner, Annette D'Armata, since 1991.

Published work

  • En Vivo, Lourdes Perez con Miriam Perez (Chee Wee 2007), live duet concert with younger sister, Miriam Perez
  • Este Filo (Chee Wee 2005), solo CD
  • Azúl y Serena (Chee Wee 2003), commissioned work, recorded with the Dama de Noche Orchestra
  • Pájaros de otro canto (Chee Wee 2003), commissioned soundtrack for the film, ¿Adónde Fue Juan José?
  • Selections from Tres Oraciones (Chee Wee 2002)
  • Vestigios (Vivavoce Records-1997)
  • Recuerdate Por Mi (Chee Wee 1994)

Full-length scores

  • Azul y Serena (multimedia tribute concert)
  • Santuarios (modern/folkloric dance)
  • conflama (word opera, theater)
  • Adonde Fue Juan Jose (feature film)
  • Marejada (multimedia, oral history)

References

  1. ^ a b c Usher, Craig. "Lourdes Pérez Interview." Rootsworld.com, retrieved 14 February 2009.
  2. ^ McGovern, Adam, ed. MusicHound World: The Essential Album Guide. Detroit, Mich.: Visible Ink, 2000. ISBN 1578590396
  3. ^ Oboler, Suzanne, and Deena J. González, editors in chief. The Oxford Encyclopedia of Latinos and Latinas in the United States. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2005. ISBN 0195156005
  4. ^ United States Artists, "Lourdes Pérez", retrieved 14 February 2009.

External links


 
 
Learn More
Lourdes (given name)
Cayo (film)
Nueva canción

How old is lourdes? Read answer...
How do you get to Lourdes from Toulouse? Read answer...
Who appeared at lourdes? Read answer...

Help us answer these
Do's and dont's at lourdes?
Who is the lady of lourds?
Why is lourdes a pilgremage?

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

Copyrights:

Artist. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Lourdes Pérez" Read more