Composers in our collection
Personal collections
Recent donations
LAMC Collections
The library of the Latin American Music Center is the most complete
collection of Latin American art music in the world. The collection
includes rare manuscripts and published scores, records and books, anthologies
of colonial music, photographs of musicians, periodicals, microfilms
and miscellaneous documents. The entire holdings of the LAMC can be
searched in the Indiana
University Online Catalog (IUCAT).
The following personal collections have been bequeathed to the Latin
American Music Center, and complement the vast holdings and resources
of the Indiana University Music Library:
Personal collections:
- In 1992 Guillermo Espinosa's lifetime collection was bequeathed
to Indiana University. Espinosa was the founder and director of the
Inter-American music festivals that took place from late 1950s up to
1982 at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, in Washington D.C.
- The Antonio Ramírez Collection consists of twenty-two
works for varied ensembles, donated by the Puerto Rican composer. The
collection contains the original manuscripts and all the parts necessary
for performance.
- The Carlos Teppa Collection, also donated by the composer,
is a collection of ninety-three scores for diverse combinations of instruments,
from solo to large orchestra.
- In August, 1993 the LAMC received a donation from Guatemalan composer
and pianist Carlos Armando Colón Quintana. The donation
consists of a collection of scores by Central American composers Roque
Cordero, Igor de Gandarias, Manuel Herrarte, Joaquín Marroquín,
Jose Porfirio González Alcantara, and Enrique Solares. Carlos
Colón Quintana (b.1966, El Salvador), moved to Guatemala in 1981.
He studied with Jorge Sarmientos at the Conservatorio Nacional de Musica
y Arte Escénico, and continued his studies of composition and
piano in the United States with Edgar Cajas and Richard Shadinger, among
others. In November of 1993, he completed a research project for his
Master Thesis entitled Solo Piano Music by Representative Central
American Composers. Several of the pieces discussed in the monograph
are part of the collection.
- In 1994 the LAMC received the complete collection of scores of Argentinian
composer César Franchisena. Born in 1923, he
studied composition in Córdoba with Teodoro Fuchs. Franchisena
began teaching composition at the Universidad Nacional de Córdoba
in 1957, first as a faculty member and later as head of the composition
department. He founded and directed the Córdoba chapter of the
Agrupación Nueva Música--an association of composers and
performers devoted to the study and performance of international contemporary
music.
- Also in 1994, Ms. Inés Helena López de la Rosa donated
to the LAMC the complete collection of his father's scores: Horacio
López de la Rosa. Argentinean composer Horacio López
de la Rosa was born in Buenos Aires, October 26, 1933, and died in the
that city on September 7, 1986. He studied with Orestes Castronuovo
and Julian Bautista, among others. He was a founder member of the Asociación
de Jóvenes Compositores, which he directed for three consecutive
terms. He taught at the Escuela Nacional de Música Juan Pedro
Esnaola, the Conservatorio Municipal Manuel de Falla, the Conservatorio
Provincial Juan José Castro, and the Conservatorio Nacional de
Música Carlos López Buchardo. In 1969, while studying
in Spain, he won the Third International Composition Contest for Organ
Santa Teresa de Ávila with his work Seis piezas
para órgano, Op. 33. Later, he received awards from the
Argentinean society of authors and composers (SADAIC) and Fondo Nacional
de las Artes, among others. A listing of the scores in the collection
appeared in LAMúsiCa,
Vol. 2, No. 1.
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