González Ávila, Jorge (1925–1993)

views updated

González Ávila, Jorge (1925–1993)

Jorge González Ávila (b. 10 December 1925, d. 1993), Mexican composer. Born in Mérida, Yucatán, González Ávila was a pupil of the Spanish composer Rodolfo Halffter at the National Conservatory of Mexico. Like a number of Halffter's pupils, González Ávila became a true believer in the twelve-tone and avant-garde serial techniques that the Spanish master had been promoting in Mexico City's musical circles since his arrival in 1939. No dogmatist, González Ávila, who was predominately a composer of piano works, did not follow Halffter's style strictly but took an independent approach to the use of serial elements. Between 1961 and 1964 he wrote a collection of twenty-four inventions for piano; he was also the author of several collections of piano études, some of which demonstrate dodecaphonic writing.

See alsoMusic: Art Music .

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Mario Kuri-Aldana, Jóvenes compositores mexicanos (1974).

Gérard Béhague, Music in Latin America (1979).

Additional Bibliography

Chroma Institute. Chroma Report: The Chroma Institute's Report on Dodecaphonic Music Theory and on the Introduction of a Chromatic Music Notation. Duncan, B.C.: Edition Chroma, 1997.

Vega, Alvaro. "Jorge González Ávila: Passion por el piano, el folklore y el dodecafonismo." Camino Blanco. Arte y Cultura 4 (2007).

                                           Susana Salgado

More From encyclopedia.com

About this article

González Ávila, Jorge (1925–1993)

Updated About encyclopedia.com content Print Article

You Might Also Like

    NEARBY TERMS

    González Ávila, Jorge (1925–1993)