Rolando Antonio Pérez Fernández (born 1947, Santiago de Cuba, Cuba) is a Cuban musicologist, cellist and professor.
Academic background
Rolando Pérez initiated his musical studies in Santiago de Cuba, where he also began his career as cellist under the guidance of distinguished performer and professor Ernesto Xancó. In 1976 he graduated from Music Medium Level in the specialty of violoncello at Havana Municipal Conservatory "Amadeo Roldán". This same year, after the inauguration of the Instituto Superior de Arte (ISA) and the School of Musicology in the same educational institution, Rolando Pérez began his studies in that area, which was founded by Cuban musicologist Argeliers León.[1] After concluding his studies, Pérez received the degree of Licenciado en Música with a specialization in musicology from the Instituto Superior de Arte. In 1999, he also received the degree of Doctor en Ciencias del Arte from the same educational institution.[2]
Work as cellist
Rolando Pérez served as cellist in the Cuban National Symphony Orchestra from 1969 to 1981, as well as between 1987 and 1992.[2] He has also participated in ensembles and recordings of concert and popular music such as: "Cuarteto de cuerdas" by Carlos Malcolm,[3] "El ropavejero" by Francisco Barrios, and "El Mastuerzo" together with the Mexican rock group Botellita de Jerez.[4]
From 1993 until the present, Rolando Pérez has worked as professor in the area of Ethnomusicology at the National School of Music of the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México (UNAM), where he currently holds tenure as "Profesor de Tiempo Completo, Titular ‘A’ Interino."[2]
Publications
Throughout his long career as musicologist and researcher, Pérez has published the following books: La binarización de los ritmos ternarios africanos en América Latina (Casa de las Américas, Havana, 1987) and La música afromestiza mexicana (Universidad Veracruzana, 1990). In the first of those books (which won the musicology award from Casa de las Américas in 1982), he proposes a theory which is deeply rooted in the musicological problematic of Latin America and a methodology which could be developed in comparative studies created within the Continent.[clarification needed] The text consists of three chapters in which the author begins by analyzing general aspects related to the presence of the African population in Latin America, his contributions to music and to the socio-historical context within which those processes have evolved.[clarification needed] In the second chapter he describes in detail the characteristics of the African rhythm style and its fusion with the Hispanic style. In the third chapter he develops his own personal conclusions about what he describes as: "the binarization process of the African ternary rhythms", their specific behavior and the consequences of this process for the cultural development of the musical culture in Cuba and Latin America. His reflections are illustrated with numerous musical examples.[citation needed] In his second book, Pérez demonstrates the importance of the African contribution to the integration of the music of Mexico, as well as providse facts that may support, within the musicological field, the conclusions of Mexican anthropologist Gonzalo Aguirre Beltrán in reference to the concept that the Mexican creole music is fundamentally a result of the cultural fusion between the Spanish and the African population.[5]
In addition, Pérez has written numerous articles and book chapters, not just focused in the African musical contributions in Latin America, but also extending his interest to linguistics, epistemology and history. He has also written about the contribution of the Chinese musical traditions to the Cuban culture.[2]
These works include
La corneta china (suona) en Cuba: Una contribución asiática trascendente.[6]
De China a Cuba: una mirada a su etnomusicología.[7]
El culto a la Guadalupe entre los indios de El Caney.[8]
Notas en torno al origen kimbundu de la voz fandango.[9]
^Expresiones musicales del Occidente de México, Morelia: Morevallado Editores, 2011.
^El rostro colectivo de la nación mexicana, Morelia: Universidad Michoacana de San Nicolás de Hidalgo 1997.
^21 Son del Sur 3 y 4: Jáltipan, Veracruz, 1996- 1997.
^Review-essay of La binarización de los ritmos ternarios africanos en América, by Steven Loza, UCLA, Los Angeles, in Latin American Music Review, 11/2, December 1990, pp. 296-310.
^Review of La binarización de los ritmos ternarios africanos en América Latina, by James Robbins, York Universidad, Toronto, in Ethnomusicology, Vol. 3, No. 1, Winter 1990, pp. 137-139.
^Review of La binarización de los ritmos ternarios africanos en América Latina, by José Jorge de Carvalho, Universidad de Brasília, in Yearbook for Traditional Music, XXII, 1990, pp. 148-151.
^Assessment of La binarización de los ritmos ternarios africanos en América Latina by Isabel Aretz, on p. 308 of Historia de la Etnomusicología en América Latina, Caracas, FUNDEF/CONAC/OEA, 1994.
^Comment on La binarización de los ritmos ternarios africanos en América Latina by Kofi Agawu, on p. 38 of “Structural Analysis or Cultural Analysis? Competing Perspectives on the ‘Standard Pattern’ of West African Rhythm,” in Journal of the American Musicological Society,
^Assessment of and quotations from La binarización de los ritmos ternarios africanos en América Latina by Ángel G. Quintero Rivera, on pp. 65, 202, 288, 319 of Salsa, sabor y control. Sociología de la música tropical, Mexico City, Siglo XXI, 1998.
^Assessment of “El son jarocho como expresión musical afromestiza” (2003) by Juan Pablo González, on p. 123 of his review of Musical Cultures of Latina America. Global Effects, Past and Present, Los Angeles, University of California Los Angeles, Steven loza, ed., 2003, in Latin American Music Review, Vol. 25, No. 1, Spring-Summer, 2004, pp. 121-6.
^Reference to La música afromestiza mexicana by Antonio García de León on p. 31 of “El Caribe afroandaluz: Permanencias de una civilización popular,” in La Jornada Semanal, Nueva Época, No. 132, January 12, México City, 1992, pp. 27-35.
^Assessment of and quotations from La música afromestiza mexicana by Helmut Enrique Greiner, on pp. 8, 83-92-131-132 of Unsere dritte Wurzel. Zur schwierigen Darstellung einer “afrikanishen” Geschichte Mexikos, thesis to obtain the Master of Arts degree in Ethnology, Freie Universität, Berlin, 1995.
^Quotation from “De China a Cuba: Una mirada a su etnomusicología” (2005) by Carlos Reynoso, on p 378 of Antropología de la música. De los géneros tribales a la globalización (Vol. II), Teorías de la complejidad, Buenos Aires, Editorial SB, 2006.
^Assessment of La música afromestiza mexicana by Gonzalo Aguirre Beltrán on p. 15 of El negro esclavo en Nueva España: La formación colonial, la medicina popular y otros ensayos, Mexico City, Fondo de Cultura Económica, 1994.
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