Teatro de la Zarzuela 29 March 2020 - Sole Giménez | GoComGo.com

Sole Giménez

Teatro de la Zarzuela, Madrid, Spain
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6 PM
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Important Info
Type: Classical Concert
City: Madrid, Spain
Starts at: 18:00
Duration:

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Programme
Overview

If Sole drew us a landscape of "Sensitive Men" on his previous album, two years later he brings us another genre proposal that the Women of Music headline wanted.
 

Women of Music has two powerful narratives, on the one hand shouting to the world that women are creators, make women composer and author visible; and on the other, the great connection we have with Latin America and how the threads that are woven between our cultures are getting us closer and closer. With this new work, Sole Giménez, composer herself of songs as popular as "Alma de Blues", "How we have changed" or "My little treasure", wants to claim the role of the composer woman, so little known and valued. Who knows that La Flor de la Canela, Bésame Mucho or Dos Gardenias made up women? For them, for the women authors, Sole takes the floor today to name them, bring them to light, give them visibility, sing them and give a new life to their works.
In this tribute, Sole has not only looked at the talent of the creators of Spain but also approaches Latin America and pays tribute to this continent through an exquisite selection of vertebrate artists for songs that are in our memory: Chabuca Granda (Peru) , Rosana (Spain), Dona Ivonne Lara (Brazil), Mari Trini (Spain), Eládia Blazquez (Argentina), Natalia Lafourcade (Mexico), Toto La Momposina (Colombia), Rozalen (Spain), Violeta Parra (Chile), Isolina Carrillo (Cuba), Consuelo Velazquez (Mexico) ... they are some of the Latin authors who visit on this album or at concerts and recitals, but there are more, many more ... they are MUSIC WOMEN.
"This is the commitment behind this project that is more than a record or a concert, it is a claim, a purpose, a goal: to do justice, name them, the authors and composers behind so many songs written here or in Latin America, so well known, so admired and enjoyed. Do it to find the balance that we have been denied so much, to balance the music this time in favor of women and especially because they are also creators ...! music! Because they, despite being invisible to all, have left a legacy of sound, rich and leafy, full of nuances, deep and beautiful that tells us and delves into their sensitivity. Sole Giménez

Venue Info

Teatro de la Zarzuela - Madrid
Location   Calle de Jovellanos, 4

The Teatro de la Zarzuela is a theatre in Madrid, Spain. The theatre is today mainly devoted to zarzuela (the Spanish traditional musical theatre genre), as well as operetta and recitals.

The theatre was designed by architect Jerónimo de la Gándara and built by José María Sánchez Guallart on the initiative of the Spanish Lyrical Company to provide a space for performances of operettas in the Spanish capital. It was modelled on the La Scala theatre in Milan with its three-level horseshoe form and opened to the public on 10 October 1856, the birthday of Queen Isabella II. The name refers to zarzuela, a theatre form that alternates spoken and sung scenes. Its promoters were established masters of the genre such as Francisco Asenjo Barbieri, Rafael Calleja Gómez, Joaquín Gaztambide, Rafael Hernando, José Inzenga, baritono Francisco de Salas, librettist Luis de Olona and composer Cristóbal Oudrid, under Francisco de las Rivas, an important banker.

In the second half of the nineteenth century, Teatro de la Zarzuela became Madrid's leading opera house, staging many of the great masterworks. On November 9, 1909 the building was virtually destroyed by fire. The rebuild by Cesareo Iradier reduced the amount of wood and metal, and in 1914 Maestro Luna raised the curtain with his orchestra to reopen the theatre. With the Teatro Real opera house closed from 1925 to 1997, Teatro de la Zarzuela remained Madrid's leading venue throughout the period and hosted most major opera events. The theatre's resident ensemble is the Community of Madrid Orchestra.

The ceiling originally featured magnificent works by the painters Francisco Hernández Tomé and Manuel Castellanos, but these were destroyed in renovations and structural changes that were made in 1956. The theatre then was acquired by the Sociedad General de Autores de España, although much of the facade and interior ornamentation was lost. Later it became the property of the state. In 1984 the Ministry of Culture, with Madrid still lacking an opera house, expanded the range of activities beyond zarzuela and opera to encompass flamenco and other dance. The building was given heritage status in 1994, and in 1998 was again remodelled, restoring much of the original structure and form.

Important Info
Type: Classical Concert
City: Madrid, Spain
Starts at: 18:00
Duration:
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