Composers : Manuel Ponce |
||||||
|
No. | Song Name | No.of pages | Transcription by | MIDI |
1 | Estrellita | 2 | ||
2 | Estrellita (Two Guitars) | 2 | ||
3 | Estudio | 6 | Andres Segovia | |
4 | La Pajarera | 1 | Miguel Abloniz | |
5 | La Valentina | 2 | Miguel Abloniz | |
6 | Mexican Scerino | 1 | Dirk Meineke | |
7 | Por Ti Mi Corazon | 1 | Miguel Abloniz | |
8 | Prelude No11 | 1 | Andres Segovia | |
9 | Prelude No12 | 1 | Andres Segovia | |
10 | Prelude No07 | 1 | Andres Segovia | |
11 | Prelude No08 | 1 | Andres Segovia | |
12 | Preludes No01-06 | 6 | Andres Segovia | |
13 | Preludes No09-10 | 2 | Andres Segovia | |
14 | Scherzino Mexicano | 2 | Manuel Lopez Ramos | |
15 | Sonata Clasica Hommage a Fernando Sor | 12 | Andres Segovia | |
16 | Theme Varie et Finale | 6 | Andres Segovia | |
17 | Tres Canciones Populares Mexicanas | 3 | Andres Segovia | |
18 | Valse | 3 | Andres Segovia |
Manuel María Ponce Cuéllar (8 December 1882 – 24 April 1948) was a distinguished Mexican composer active in the 20th century. His work as a composer, music educator and Mexican music enthusiast researcher, connected the concert scene with a usually forgotten tradition of popular song and Mexican folklore. Constant citation of harmonic and formal traits from traditional song within his works characterised some of his compositional periods.
Originally born in Fresnillo, Zacatecas, only a few weeks after his birth, his family moved to the city of Aguascalientes and lived there until Ponce was 15 years old.
He was famous for being a "musical phenomenon"; according to his biographers, he was barely four years of age when, after having listened to the piano classes received by his sister, Josefina, he sat in front of the instrument and interpreted one of the pieces that he had heard. Immediately, his parents had him receive classes in piano and musical notation.
In 1901 Ponce entered the National Conservatory of Music, already with a certain prestige as a pianist and composer. There he remained until 1903, the year in which he returned to the city of Aguascalientes. This was only the beginning of his peregrination. In 1904 he travelled to Italy for a superior study of music in the School of Bologna.
He studied in Germany between 1906 and 1908.
After some years abroad, Ponce returned to Mexico to become a teacher for piano and history of music, back at the National Conservatory of Music, from 1909 to 1915, and 1917 to 1922. He interrumpted his work as he travelled from 1915 to 1917 to La Habana, Cuba.
In 1912 he composed his work "Estrellita" (little star), which is not a normal love song, as is usually thought, but "Nostalgia Viva" (live nostalgia).
That same year, Ponce gave in the "Arbeau Theater" the memorable concert of Mexican Popular music that, although he scandalized by the ardent defenders of the European, came to constitute a fundamental landmark in the history of the national song.
With valuable activity of promotion of the music of the country and with melodías like "Estrellita", "A la orilla de un palmar", "Alevántate", "La Pajarera", "Marchita el Alma" and "Una Multitud Más", Ponce gained the honorable title of "Creator of the Modern Mexican Song . He was also the first Mexican composer of popular music that projected its music to the foreigner: "Estrellita", for example, has been part of the repertoire of the main orchestras of the world and countless singers, although quite often the interpreter ignores the origin of the song as well as the name of the author.
He was married to Mrs. Clema Ponce, next to whom he died in Mexico City, Mexico. Before that he received the "National Arts and Science Prize".
His body was buried in the Roundhouse of the Illustrious Men in the Pantheon of Dolores in Mexico City. In his honor there is a board of recognition by the state of Aguascalientes in the base of the column of The Exedra, next to the fountain from a spring dedicated to this musical poet, in his childhood and young adult City of Aguascalientes, where he first was introduced to the music studies.
Ponce wrote music for solo instruments, chamber ensembles, and orchestra. His piano and guitar works outnumber those dedicated to other solo instruments within the set of pieces we know.
Ponce's guitar music is a core part of the instrument's repertory, the best-known works being Variations and Fugue on 'La Folia' (1929) and Sonatina meridional (1939). He also wrote a guitar concerto Concierto del sur dedicated to his long time friend and guitar virtuoso Andrés Segovia.
According to oral testimonies and contemporary press, the composer was himself an extremely developed piano performer.
Ponce interacted with many important artists from the Mexican vocal scene during
An important group of Ponce's works were previously unknown to the public, as self-proclaimed heir Mr. Carlos Vásquez, Mexican piano performer and educator who studied with Ponce, kept most of the original manuscripts under his possession. Most of them were finally donated to the National School of Music (UNAM) in Mexico City, as an analytic catalogue of his works could still be published.
One of Ponce's melodies still heard today in various arrangements is "Estrellita" (1912).