Gabriela Montero Interview
Gabriela Montero Interview
Gabriela Montero Interview
GABRIELA
MONTERO :
FROM
A DVOCACY
TO
ART ISTRY
photo by Shelly Mosman
This interview was conducted in Spanish and translated and condensed by the author for clarity.
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LS: So, as a young student, did you like to practice? discovering the piece and its layers, in a deeper and
more meaningful way. You never know what you’re
GM: No, I have always been very bad at it, because going to find.
to me, music is an extension of life, and I don’t like to
use the word practicing—but rather discovery. There’s LS: How did you discover the gift of improvisation
something very mechanical in the idea of practicing, you were born with?
and for me, sitting at the piano should be a journey of
discovering yourself, the pieces, and who you are in GM: It was always there! When something is natural
that moment as a performer—which may be different for you, you just do it and you’re not aware that this is
from who you were the day before. To me the interesting something special. I have always improvised since I was
thing about music and being a musician has become so little. In fact, my mom would follow me around with a
much more about finding ways for the music to reveal tape recorder. She recorded more than 150 tapes of me
itself to me. Sometimes, people ask me, “Why do you improvising and playing from the age of four until I was
practice if you are already so good?” And I say, “That’s about eight or nine. When I listen to the improvisations
not the point!” It’s like when you’re going on a trip; you’ve from when I was six, seven, or eight, the language is so
gone down the same road over and over again (that is incredibly modern and has much coherence. Sometimes,
you playing the piece), and then, all of a sudden, you it reminds me of the language of Prokofiev, Ginastera,
discover that there is a mailbox you never saw before or or Stravinsky, and sometimes it would be very romantic.
there is a Japanese maple tree that you never saw before. I wonder, “Where did this come from? I had never heard
You start to notice things along the way. That’s kind these composers before!” My house was not a musical
of what practicing, or discovering, gives you: it’s house, so there wasn’t a tradition of classical music
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is unique, you have to GM: Yes and no. The first teacher I had, Lyl Tiempo,
immediately recognized this talent. Our lessons were very
show this to the world!” casual, once a week, fifteen to twenty minutes. She was
wonderful and did not disturb that side of me. She rec-
ognized that this was something special. But the second
teacher in the United States was the opposite. She would
say to me: “Don’t improvise! It’s worth nothing!” So, for
many years it was something that I kind of kept to myself,
and very few people knew that I had this ability. I saw it as
something that didn’t belong in the classical world. That
is why you don’t see a lot of improvisations of mine until
I was in my thirties. That’s when Martha Argerich heard
me play. She told me, “Why don’t you share this with the
world, this is unique, you have to show this to the world!”
That was the stamp of approval that I needed, and the
wakeup call to say, “I think I deserve to show myself,
exactly as I am, and whether the music world will accept
it or not, that’s kind of their problem, but I have to be
honest and just be all of myself on stage, not half.”
LS: You mentioned Martha Argerich. Did you have other
pianists or musicians who served as inspirations to you as
you advanced in your career?
GM: I did, of course! In those younger years when I was
with this teacher in Miami, unfortunately, she didn’t
allow me to know any of the great pianists except for
Arrau (she had worked for a little bit with Arrau). I felt
deprived of this great encyclopedia of amazing musicians
for a very long time. Then in my twenties, I discovered
Moiseiwitsch and Leschetizky, and of course Edwin
Fischer, and Annie Fischer, and so many great pianists
of the past, like Horowitz and Richter. I have always had
a particular affinity with Martha, and we have become
very close. I am very drawn to pianists of the past, their
approach to themselves on stage, to the score, and the
photo by
Anders Brogaard
whole philosophy behind what it was to be an artist at
that time, and what an artist represented on stage.
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LS: Your CD Solatino, for which you won a Grammy white and red—and to substitute it with black, because
for Best Classical Album at the 2015 Latin Grammy I wanted there to be a mourning element to my recording.
Awards, focuses exclusively on works by Latin American It was not the first time BMI was asked this, but it was the
composers. How do audiences around the globe receive first time the label granted it to an artist. The Beatles tried
repertoire from this corner of the world? to get the same results, but they didn’t succeed. I did!
I wanted to make a statement about banning red, which
GM: I think people love it! It is still classified slightly represented Chavismo and communism. It was a big
outside of classical music; I think more and more that deal, a big statement, that came at a cost and risk, but
I’m seeing a real want for this kind of migration of I felt I needed to do that! I was already denouncing what
cultures and sounds and composing. I found that with was happening in Venezuela very loudly. I realized that
my own concerto, the Latin Concerto, which I play a words can only have a certain effect on human beings,
lot, there’s an incredible openness to classical music because we’re so used to seeing numbers and statistics.
language with other rhythms, harmonies, and influences. When you address a humanitarian crisis like the one
Ginastera is absolutely accepted and adored, also Venezuela has lived since 1999 through numbers and
Villa-Lobos. More and more, we see programming statistics, it doesn’t have the same reach or effect as with
that combines this kind of repertoire and people find music. I decided to write a piece of music that would help
the connection between the styles. I see more diversity people understand and live in their own skin what it felt
in programming, which is good. like to be Venezuelan. It’s a piece that is crushing and
LS: Since you mentioned your Latin Concerto, perhaps
we can talk about your role as a composer. In 2011, the
Academy of St. Martin-in-the-Fields premiered your
composition Ex Patria. Can you share with us the genesis
of this piece?
GM: I wrote Ex Patria in 2011 and I dedicated it to the I wrote Ex Patria in
19,336 victims of homicide in Venezuela that year, which 2011 and I dedicated
was significant. I made a public statement in 2010
through my recording Solatino. I asked the BMI Label to it to the 19,336 victims
remove the color red from the logo—which was always
of homicide in
Venezuela that year,
which was significant.
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photo by
Anders Brogaard
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