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(1896-1954)

A Spanish musical prodigy who, in 1900, at the age of three years and three months, was introduced by Charles Richet to the International Psychical Congress. Arriola had only begun playing the piano a year earlier. With his tiny hands, which appeared to grow while he played, he somehow managed to sound full octaves.

He also composed military and funeral marches, waltzes, minuets, and habaneras and played some 20 difficult pieces from memory. At the time, there was no suggestion of a Spiritualist explanation for this phenomena, but 11 years later the boy exhibited the gift of automatic writing.

 
 
Wikipedia: Pepito Arriola

José “Pepito” Rodríguez Carballeira (December 14, 1895-October 241954) was a Spanish child prodigy pianist and eventual master violinist.

Origins

Pepito was born to a liberal family of Ferrol, his mother was Josefa Rodríguez Carballeira and having no known father, his birth certificate has the family name of his mother, which she never used, naming the boy with the last name of his grandfather. After Josefa went to Madrid, his aunt Aurora took care of him and taught him to play piano.

Career Beginning

Arriola’s remarkable ability was first discovered at the age of two and a half. The story spread by his mother says that she had received a composition from a friend which she played frequently on the home piano. One morning, upon hearing the piece played with accuracy and confidence, Arriola’s mother entered the room containing the piano and was astounded when she discovered that her son was responsible for the skilled rendition. The young musician, without any formal or informal instruction, began his career as a pianist, at times playing pieces he had heard and at other times creating original compositions. After his mother noticed the child’s abilities, she took him with her to Madrid and his career as a concert pianist began.

Performances

On December 4, 1899, not yet three years old, Pepito Arriola gave his first public performance to an audience of music critics and musicians. Just after his third birthday on December 26 of the same year, Arriola held his second concert in Royal Palace of Madrid in front of King and Queen playing six original compositions. Arriola would go on to become a great violinist as well, impressing the whole of Europe with his later great concerts in the German city of Leipzig and in the Russian capital of St. Petersburg [[1]].

Original Compositions

Arriola at the age of the, could read neither music nor written language and thus his process of composition was somewhat abnormal. He would sometimes use a blank piece of paper, indicating the nature of the piece (sonata, waltz, etc.) with a symbol at the top followed by arbitrary lines and notes which was the written music for the piece. Afterward, he is described as setting the paper down in front of him saying “I will play that” and proceeding to improvise remarkably well. His pieces were described as having a “richness of astonishing expression” ranging from the tragic to the merry.

Theory of Reincarnation

Pepito Arriola’s great skill at his early age has been cited as evidence of rebirth or reincarnation [[2]]. It is speculated that this theory of Arriola’s reincarnation is obscurely referenced in “Holland, 1945” a song by 1990sindie group Neutral Milk Hotel. In the song, lead singer Jeff Mangum proclaims “The only girl I ever loved/Was born with roses in her eyes/But then they buried her alive/One evening 1945/With just her sister at her side/And only weeks before the guns/All came and rained on everyone,” apparently speaking of the well-known Holocaust victim, Anne Frank. Mangum continues by singing “Now she’s a little boy in Spain/Playing pianos filled with flames,” most likely a reference to Arriola [3].

Complete Works

  • Aurora habanera 1898
  • Impresiones nocturnas 1916
  • Hommage à Manuel de Falla/Homenaje a Falla 1942

After his death 12 additional scores were found. They were written in Barcelona after his return to Spain in 1946:

  • Divertimento concertante 1946
  • Tres textos cervantinos voice and orchestra, 1946
  • Aqui lloró Don Quixote,1947
  • Tres textos cervantinos for 2 pianos, 1947
  • Concerto para trompa horn concert, 1948
  • Sehilcht Weise1948
  • Song 1948
  • Don Quixote in DM 1949
  • Seis poesías de Antonio Machado Baritone and orchestra
  • Pequena serenata para cello y piano 1951
  • Concertino piano e orquestra 1953
  • Impresiones Argentinas



Bibliography

  • Pepito Arriola, entre mito y realidad, Eva ocampo
  • De Pepito a hildegart, Francisco Martínez López

 
 

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Occultism & Parapsychology Encyclopedia. Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology. Copyright © 2001 by The Gale Group, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Pepito Arriola" Read more

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