Berta Rojas
Berta Rojas (born 23 September 1966[1]) is a Paraguayan classical guitarist. She was awarded a Latin Grammy for her album "Legado" (2022) in the category of "Best Classical Album". The same album received another statuette for "Best Contemporary Classical Contemporary Composition" for Anido's Portrait, written by Sergio Assad. She has been nominated to the Latin Grammy on three other occasions: In 2012 she was nominated for Best Instrumental Album in the Latin Grammys for her album "Día y Medio (A Day and a Half)" which she recorded with Paquito D'Rivera.[2] For her album "Salsa Roja", she was nominated at the 2014 Latin Grammy Awards in the category of Best Classical Album.[3] She got her third nomination in the 16th Annual Latin Grammy Awards for Best Tango Album for her album "History of Tango", which she recorded with the iconic Camerata Bariloche.[4] Background and educationBerta Rojas was praised for having "introduced a new dimension in the emotional reaches of the instrument", according to El País newspaper in 1991.[5] Since then she has gone on to build an international career and was lauded by the Washington Post as a "guitarist extraordinaire"[6] and by Classical Guitar Magazine as "ambassador of the classical guitar".[7] She had her first music lessons with guitarist Emiliano Aiub Riveros. She then studied guitar briefly with Carlos Vázquez, and began her formal education in classical guitar at age 10 under the instruction of Felipe Sosa and Violeta de Mestral. At the same time, she also studied piano with Rosa Mereles de López at the Jorge Báez Conservatory.[8] Rojas moved to Uruguay in 1986 to continue her studies with Uruguayan professor Abel Carlevaro. There she enrolled in the Escuela Universitaria de Música (Universidad de la República), where she obtained a Bachelor of Music in Classical Guitar, studying under guitarist Eduardo Fernández and Mario Paysée. In 1996, Rojas was named a Fellow of the Americas by the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts for her artistic excellence.[9] This recognition helped her acquire the means to continue her formal education in the United States. That same year, she began her graduate studies at the Peabody Institute. In 1997 she received a scholarship from the Organization of American States which financed her remaining studies. She received a Master of Music from Peabody Institute under the instruction of Manuel Barrueco[10] and Ray Chester.[11] In 2000, Rojas received her Graduate Performance Diploma at the same institution under Barrueco and Julian Gray.[12] Musical careerRojas has performed at various venues around the world, including at the National Concert Hall in Dublin as a soloist with the Irish Radio and Television Orchestra (RTO),[13] and on Belgian National Television with the Brussels Philharmonic Orchestra.[14] Since 2011, Rojas has toured through 20 countries in the Americas with Cuban saxophonist and 11-time Grammy award winner Paquito D'Rivera on the "In the Footsteps of Mangoré" tour.[15] Together, Rojas and D'Rivera recorded and released Día y Medio (A Day and a Half),[16] an album which earned a nomination for "Best Instrumental Album" in the 13th Latin Grammy's in 2012. She has also frequently toured with Brazilian guitarist Carlos Barbosa-Lima.[17] Rojas' twelve regular studio recordings began with the 1998 album Intimate Barrios, that was included in Gramophone magazine's list of "the best recordings you can buy".[18] Her 2006 release Cielo Abierto was praised by Soundboard magazine as "impeccable in every aspect of professionalism—heart-touching musical artistry, interesting repertoire and excellent technical production".[19] 2009's Terruño has received excellent reviews by critics internationally. Steve Marsh of Classical Guitar Magazine commended Terruño for exhibiting a "poetic exquisiteness which many another player rarely attains".[20] In May 2015, Berta Rojas received the distinction of "Maestros del Arte",[21] the "Embajadora Ilustre del Arte Musical" distinction by the Paraguayan Senate,[22] and the award of "La Ordena Nacional al Mérito Comuneros", by the Chamber of Deputies Paraguay.[23] On 18 May 2015 she released her album "History of Tango", along with the iconic Camerata Bariloche.[24] In 2016 the Autonomous University of Encarnación[25] and the Universidad Americana of Asunción[26] bestowed upon her Honorary Doctorate Degrees. And for her outstanding work on behalf of culture, the Ministry of Foreign Affairs awarded her the National Order of Merit "Don José Falcón" in 2017.[27] On 8 May 2017 she presented her album entitled "Felicidade", in homage to Brazilian music, with the collaboration of the outstanding artists Gilberto Gil, Toquinho and Iván Lins.[28] On 4 July 2017, she received the Carlos Colombino award, granted by the National Secretariat of Culture of Paraguay in recognition of her contribution to Paraguayan culture.[29] In August 2017 she became the first Latin American guitar teacher in the Guitar Department at the Berklee College of Music.[30] In June 2018 she joined the renowned Australian guitarist John Williams in a tribute to Agustín Barrios Mangoré at the Sam Wanamaker theater of the Shakespeare's Globe cultural complex in London.[31] In 2019, the National University of Asunción also granted her an honorary doctorate. On May 24, 2022, she releases her most recent recording material, entitled "Legado" (Legacy), a tribute to the pioneering women of the classical guitar. The same year she received La Guitarra de Oro Award: A Life Dedicated to the Guitar, bestowed by the Giuseppe Verdi Conservatory of Milan. More recently in 2023, she was awarded with the National Order of Merit in the Grade of "Grand Cross", the highest degree of recognition granted by Paraguay. Promoting development and appreciation of musical arts
Discography
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