Gabriela Pizarro
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Gabriela Eliana Pizarro Soto (''Gabriela Pizarro''; October 14, 1932 – December 29, 1999) was a Chilean folklorist, a researcher, a teacher and a songwriter. She is considered one of the three leading researchers of Chilean folk, along with
Violeta Parra Violeta del Carmen Parra Sandoval (; 4 October 1917 – 5 February 1967) was a Chilean composer, singer-songwriter, folklorist, ethnomusicologist and visual artist. She pioneered the Nueva Canción Chilena (The Chilean New Song), a renewal and ...
and
Margot Loyola Margot Loyola Palacios (September 15, 1918 – August 3, 2015) was a musician, folk singer and researcher of the folklore of Chile and Latin America in general. Loyola was active as a musician and musical ethnographer/anthropologist for many dec ...
.


Life and work

Pizarro was the daughter of José Abraham Pizarro and Blanca Hortensia Soto Figueroa. Her mother had studied at Chile's National Conservatory of Music and she was in her church choir, in an orchestra, and in theater and opera groups in
Lebu Lebu may refer to: * Lebu, Chile, a city and capital of the Arauco Province of the Biobio Region of Chile * Lebu River, located in the Arauco Province of the Biobio Region of Chile * LEBU, acronym for Large Eddy Break Up * Libu or Lebu, Egyptian te ...
. Gabriela was introduced to folk when she accompanied her father to collect rent from his tenants. Her mother influenced her in her early years, along with her grandmother, Elba González, who was a tavern singer. In 1939, her family moved to Santiago, where she enrolled in Normal School No. 2. She participated in the school musical group and took guitar lessons with Professor Isabel Soro, whose recommendation helped her into a course lectured by
Margot Loyola Margot Loyola Palacios (September 15, 1918 – August 3, 2015) was a musician, folk singer and researcher of the folklore of Chile and Latin America in general. Loyola was active as a musician and musical ethnographer/anthropologist for many dec ...
in summer school at the University of Chile. The first tunes, waltzes, cuecas, and boleros that she learned to play were the definitive start of her career. There she met Silvia Urbina, Jaime Rojas, Rolando Alarcón, and
Víctor Jara Víctor Lidio Jara Martínez (; 28 September 1932 – 16 September 1973) was a Chilean teacher, theater director, poet, singer-songwriter and Communist political activist. He developed Chilean theater by directing a broad array of works, rang ...
, among many others, who motivated her in her work as a researcher, teacher, and interpreter of Chilean folk.


Loyola y Parra, the teacher and the godmother

Pizarro had already seen the famous duo, the Loyola Sisters, act in Santiago, and then she found a teacher in Margot who valued the popular art that she had learned about in her childhood.
«I had to take a test in order to participate in a singing event in the Baquedano Theater. I had to pick out a second voice in the cueca…It rains in the mountains and thunders in the sea…I had already picked out the noise, and she said ‘Tell that little girl to come over here.’ And that’s why she valued me,» she remembered. «I adored her. There was something crazy behind Margot. It was fascinating.»
With that momentum, in 1956, Gabriela Pizarro returned to Lebu and interviewed the singers Noemí Chamorro, de Quiapo, and Olga Niño, among others. From them she learned the cueca, the
mazurka The mazurka (Polish: ''mazur'' Polish ball dance, one of the five Polish national dances and ''mazurek'' Polish folk dance') is a Polish musical form based on stylised folk dances in triple meter, usually at a lively tempo, with character de ...
, tunes, religious songs, and dances like the chapecao and the chincolito, and she formed her first repertoire based on Lebu songs and dances of the folk group. And a second fundamental discovery was about to come. In 1957,
Violeta Parra Violeta del Carmen Parra Sandoval (; 4 October 1917 – 5 February 1967) was a Chilean composer, singer-songwriter, folklorist, ethnomusicologist and visual artist. She pioneered the Nueva Canción Chilena (The Chilean New Song), a renewal and ...
, who was on tour, stood in for the radio broadcast “Imágenes camperas,” that the singer had on the Chilean radio.
«They needed someone to fill the space for folk on the radio. There sang Violeta. I admired her. She was the same as all the women that I had met in the country.» The replacement lasted 3 months. «And I knew Violeta from her arrival. When I auditioned for her, I had prepared culen punch and some black biscuits to honor her. She had me sing the tune “La jardinera,” which I knew very well, and it interested her. After, she had parties, and sometimes called me so that we could collaborate.» Some of those invitations came from the shelter of Violeta Parra in the Cousiño Park (1958) and her tent in La Reina (1965).
In 1958, she founded the Millaray Group. The folk band was introduced around 1960 at the Municipal Theater of Santiago, where an extensive investigation occurred in Chile, where they compiled dances like the pavo, the cielito, the trastrasera, the pericón, and many others. In the group, she met the folklorist Héctor Pavez, who she would later marry. Starting in 1966, she taught in the Science, Musical Art, and Drama Departments in the University of Chile. She was hired as a folk guitar professor in the Department of Folk Instruction in the Music School of Vespertina, taught the same subject in the Department of Music from 1968 onwards, and taught folk dance in the Department of Dance starting in 1971. With the Millaray Group, she recorded 5 long records, whose worked together until the
1973 Chilean Coup Events January * January 1 - The United Kingdom, the Republic of Ireland and Denmark 1973 enlargement of the European Communities, enter the European Economic Community, which later becomes the European Union. * January 15 – Vietnam War: ...
, when many of the group's members, including Gabriela Pizarro, were persecuted politically. After 1973 and then death of Héctor Pavez in exile in 1975, the current economic and social situation forced her to become a popular street singer, mainly performing in the La Vega central market and in folk clubs that were successful during the time. Later, she received invitations from outcasts, so she visited France and England in 1978, where she was named a member of the Institute of Song and Dance of Britain, Holland, Spain, and Finland in 1985 and Canada in 1987. Similarly, she recorded the tapes "El folclor en mi escuela" and "Danzas tradicionales" in 1979 for Alerce Productions, and she put on the show “Nuestro Canto” with Ricardo García in the Cariola Theater. In 1987, she resumed her work as a researcher, especially about romance. Under the guidance of the University of Chile, she recorded the tape “Romances Cantados.” One year later, she published the book ''Cuadernos de terreno'', in which she displayed a large part of her investigative work. With the return of democracy in Chile, she edited her book ''Veinte tonadas religiosas'' and became president of the National Association of Folklore of Chile (ANFOLCHI), among many other activities, that would be interrupted by her death in 1999.


References


Further reading

# ↑ «Gabriela Pizarro». ''Gabriela Pizarro , MusicaPopular.cl''. Consultado el 22 de septiembre de 2019. # ↑ «Patrimonio Ñuñoa , Gabriela Pizarro». Consultado el 22 de septiembre de 2019. {{DEFAULTSORT:Pizarro, Gabriela 20th-century Chilean women singers 1932 births 1999 deaths Chilean composers Chilean women composers Chilean folk singers 20th-century composers 20th-century women composers Women in Latin music