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In Search of Alberto Guerrero
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09 April 2015

In Search of Alberto Guerrero is the first full biography of the influential Chilean-Canadian pianist and teacher (1886-1959), describing Guerreros long career as virtuoso recitalist, chamber music collaborator, concerto soloist, and teacher. Written by composer John Beckwith, who was a student of Guerrero, the book blends research and memoir to piece together the life of a man who once insisted he had no story.
Guerrero was part of the intellectual scene that introduced Chileans to Debussy, Ravel, Cyril Scott, Scriabin, and Schoenberg. He and his brother played an active role in founding the Sociedad Bach in Santiago. In 1918 Guerrero moved to Toronto, making the Hambourg Conservatory, and later the Toronto (now Royal) Conservatory, his new base. He soon became one of Canadas most active pianists. In what was then a novel activity, he played regular radio recitals from the mid-1920s to the early 1950s. He was also deeply engaged with issues in piano pedagogy, and worked with young talents including Canadas much-acclaimed Glenn Gould. But unlike the shadowy role Guerrero is assigned in Gould biographies, here he is given proper credit for his technical and aesthetic influence on the young Gould and on other notable musicians and composers.
Guerrero left few written records, and documentation of his work by others is incomplete and often erroneous. Aiming for a fuller and more accurate account of this remarkably influential and well-loved man, Beckwiths In Search of Alberto Guerrero gives an insiders story of the Canadian classical music scene in mid-twentieth-century Toronto, and pays homage to the influential musician William Aide has called an unsung progenitor.
In his sixty-year career, John Beckwith has drawn attention with performances, broadcasts, and recordings of his more than 150 compositions and with his critical and research writings on personalities and issues of Canadian music past and present. Associated from 1952 to 1990 with the Faculty of Music, University of Toronto, he was a witness of, and often a participant in, “the excitement of new creative directions in theatre, painting, and music” (as he once put it) of late-twentieth-century Canada. John Beckwith is a member of the Order of Canada and holds honorary doctorates from five universities.
Table of Contents for In Search of Alberto Guerrero by John Beckwith
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1: Chile / Canada Beginnings in La Serena Young Pianist, Young Composer A Composer for the Stage Two Composer-Associates Writings
Chapter 2: A Wedding, a Tour New York and Back: A Farewell Why?
Chapter 3: Toronto: The Hambourgs El cónsul Personal Crises Toronto: The Late 1920s and Early 30s The TCM Performances
Chapter 4: The Andison Concerts; Malloneys Friendships A Great Piano Town: The Five Piano Ensemble The 1940s
Chapter 5: Lessons Changes Glenn Gould A Letter The Final Public Recital
Chapter 6: The 1950s A Funeral Boswell Legacy
Appendix 1: Alberto Guerrero, The Discrepancy between Performance and Technique
Appendix 2: Boyd Neel, Alberto Guerrero
Appendix 3: Reunion: Participants
Appendix 4: Excerpts from the Prgoram Note for the Symposium Remembering Alberto Guerrero, Toronto, 25 October 1990 (by John Beckwith)
Notes
Bibliography
Index