Santa María de Iquique (cantata)


Santa María de Iquique, cantata popular is a cantata composed in 1969 by the Chilean composer Luis Advis Vitaglich, combining elements of both classical and folkloric/indigenous musical traditions to produce what became known as a popular cantata and one of Quilapayún’s most acclaimed and popular music interpretation. The theme of the cantata is a historical industrial dispute that ended with the massacre of miners in the northern Chilean city of Iquique in 1907. The reading is impeccably executed by the Chilean actor Hector Duvauchelle, who captures the increasingly tense struggle between the miners and their exploiters in the narrative. Instrumental interludes and songs empower the progression of the story leading to a final song which voices the miners demand for an end to exploitation with visions of an egalitarian and free world.

History

The Cantata Santa Maria de Iquique represented Quilapayun at the Segundo Festival de la Nueva Canción Chilena .
Despite the success of the work, it had its share of critics within the music world at the time of its release; some critics saw this work as too pretentious, complex and classical for it to be part of a popular neo-folkloric movement. This debate over what was authentic, what served “the cause” would grow in the years following the cantata’s release – creating serious dialectical confrontations on what materials were to be included or excluded from the NCCh.
Despite this the work was the highlight of the NCCh and a masterpiece of the Nueva Canción in Latin America and many musicologists and musicians consider it one of the most important recorded musical composition in Latin American music history.
This great appreciation for the work didn’t appear to be shared by some members of Quilapayun who saw in the existing work considerable room for improvement. In 1978, they assigned the Belgian/Argentine writer Julio Cortázar to restructure part of the original text and they introduced minor modifications to the original recorded arrangements for a new version and recording. This was done without consulting the composer of the work, Luis Advis, who upon hearing of the recording expressed great dismay and publicly attacked the artistic integrity of both Quilapayun and Julio Cortázar.

Song listing

  1. ”Pregón” / Announcement – 2:11
  2. ”Preludio instrumental” / Instrumental Prelude – 5:45
  3. ”Relato I” / Narrative I – 2:11
  4. ”Canción I” / Choral Song I – 2:21
  5. ”Interludio instrumental I” / Instrumental Interlude I – 1:33
  6. ”Relato II” / Narrative II – 1:21
  7. ”Canción II” / Solo Song II – 2:08
  8. ”Interludio instrumental II” / Instrumental Interlude II – 1:44
  9. ”Relato III” / Narrative III – 1:35
  10. ”Interludio cantado” /Sung interlude – 2:05
  11. ”Relato IV” / Narrative IV – 1:00
  12. ”Canción III” / Song III – 1:44
  13. ”Interludio instrumental III” / Instrumental Interlude III – 1:55
  14. ”Relato V” / Narrative V – 2:14
  15. ”Canción letanía” / Supplicatory song - 1:33
  16. ”Canción IV” / Song IV – 2:55
  17. ”Pregón II” / Announcement II – 0:32
  18. ”Canción final” / Final Song – 2:50

    Personnel

Additional Personnel