Gilberto Mendes (13 October 1922 – 1 January 2016) was a 20th-century Brazilian avant-garde composer, and one of the pioneering fathers of the company New Consonant Music.[1]
Biography
Gilberto Mendes was born in Santos, Brazil, in 1922. He studied piano with Antonieta Rudge and harmony with Sabino de Benedictis. The influence of Villa-Lobos is evident in his early works, in some way preceding the advent of bossa nova in his early songs. His contact with the poets of the Noigandres group gave him the ideological inspiration to feed his talent.[1]
Francisco Mignone, Almeida Prado, Gilberto Mendes - I Bienal De Música Contemporânea Brasileira - Disco 3 (LP) Not On Label SCM1003 1975
Fernando Cerqueira (2), Gilberto Mendes, Lindemberque R. Cardoso, Radamés Gnattali - ii Bienal De Musica Brasileira Contemporanea Disco 3 (LP, Album) Bienal De Música Brasileira Contemporânea SCM-1007 1977
Dantas Leite* / Mendes* / Paraskevaídis* - La Voz, La Palabra (LP, Ltd) Tacuabé T/E 11 1978
Gilberto Mendes (LP) Odeon 31C 063 422709 1979
Marcel Worms - Gilberto Mendes, Alicia Terzian, Emil Viklický, Burton Greene, Vincent Van Warmerdam, Jacob Ter Veldhuis, Daan Manneke, Hanna Kulenty, Various - More New Blues For Piano (CD, Album) NM Extra 98021 2001
Ricardo Tacuchian, Wayne Peterson, Christopher James (17), Raoul Pleskow, Gilberto Mendes - Carnaval / Carnival: Music From Brazil And The U.S. (CD) North/South Recordings N/S R 1028 2002
Piano Solo: Rimsky (CD-ROM) LAMI LAMI-003 2003
A Música de Gilberto Mendes - Vários Compositores Num Só Compositor Do Modernismo Ao Pós-Modernismo (CD, Album) Selo SESC SP CDSS 0025/10 2010
Béhague, Gerard. 2001. "Mendes, Gilberto (Ambrósio Garcia)". The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell. London: Macmillan Publishers.
Randel, Don M., The Harvard Biographical Dictionary of Music. Harvard, 1996, p. 576.