Otto Mayer-Serra - Life

Life

His father was a German of Jewish origin. He was later adopted by the Spanish family Serra in 1934 when he became Spanish citizen. Mayer-Serra studied music in Barcelona, although his music education came from the German and French school. While living in Barcelona he became a music critic and during the Spanish Civil War he worked in the music department for the support of the Generalitat. In 1937 his Cancionero Revolucionario Internacional (International and revolutionary Songbook) was published, in which he collected many revolutionary songs of the time by composers such as Silvestre Revueltas and Halffter. He joined the music magazine ¨Música¨, which had an important support from the official Spanish government. There he published the first Spanish articles on the concept of Music Sociology En torno de una Sociología de la Música. Along with Rodolfo Halffter he suffered the bombing of Figueras (Girona), where he lost part of his work. During that period he wrote in other magazines like Hora de España. In 1939 he movedto Mexico. There he worked as musicologist and music critic in the journal ¨Últimas Novedades¨ and in the magazine ¨Tiempo¨ as well as in programming concerts. He was artistic director of the Orquesta de Jalapa. One of his first writings was Silvestre Revueltas, su vida y su obra (Silvestre Revueltas, his life and work) was published in the magazine ¨Hoy¨ in Mexico City. Música y músicos de Latinoamérica (Music and musicians of Latin America) became his most important work and is one of the leading source for Latin American music studies.

Read more about this topic:  Otto Mayer-Serra

Famous quotes containing the word life:

    To my fancy, one looks back on life, it has only two responsibilities, which include all the others: one is the bringing of new life into existence; the other, educating it after it is brought in. All betrayals of trust result from these original sins.
    Henry Brooks Adams (1838–1918)

    I set forth a humble and inglorious life; that does not matter. You can tie up all moral philosophy with a common and private life just as well as with a life of richer stuff. Each man bears the entire form of man’s estate.
    Michel de Montaigne (1533–1592)

    People are less self-conscious in the intimacy of family life and during the anxiety of a great sorrow. The dazzling varnish of an extreme politeness is then less in evidence, and the true qualities of the heart regain their proper proportions.
    Stendhal [Marie Henri Beyle] (1783–1842)