Sergio Ortega
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Sergio Ortega (February 2, 1938 - September 15, 2003) was a Chilean composer and pianist.
Sergio Ortega was born in Antofagasta, Chile. He studied composition with Gustavo Becerra Schmidt in the National Conservatory of the Universidad de Chile. After graduating, he worked in the Institute of Musical Extension and was a sound engineer for six years in the University’s Experimental Theater, the Teatro Antonio Varas.
Ortega was a force for the leftist movement in Chile. Not only did he compose President Salvador Allende’s electoral theme song, Venceremos (We Shall Triumph), he was also the author of the worldwide anthem of popular resistance, El pueblo unido jamás será vencido (The People United Will Never Be Defeated). He was also the composer of the anthems of the Partido Radical (Radical Party), the Juventudes Comunistas (Communist Youth), and the Central Unica de Trabajadores. He also turned Salvador Allende’s political plan, embodied in the texts of Julio Rojas, into an album of songs called “Canto al programa”, performed by Inti-Illimani.
Ortega composed some of the seminal works of the movement known as the Nueva Canción Chilena (New Chilean Song), a fusion of rhythms and styles with a social conscience. In his work, one can find poems, cantatas, operas, songs, and soundtracks. Among his most famous works are the songs “El monte y el río” (The Mountain and the River), lyrics by Nicolás Guillén, and “Les deux mere” (The Two Seas), and a trilogy about the French Revolution.
Ortega composed a fair number of songs for use in the theater, one of his last works being the opera of fellow communist Pablo Neruda's epic poem Fulgor y muerte de Joaquín Murieta (Brilliance and Death of Joaquín Murieta). He also worked on a musical version of Neruda's Canto General with Gustavo Becerra, which was staged in 1970. In 1978, Ortega wrote a cantata of Neruda’s “Bernardo O'Higgins Riquelme, 1810. Poema sonoro para el padre de mi patria" (Homage to the Father of my Country), for the liberator of Chile. Ortega worked with his eldest son, Chanaral Ortega, on an operatic version of Pedro Páramo, the novel by Mexican writer Juan Rulfo.
In 1969, Ortega became a professor of composition in the Conservatory. A year later, in 1970, he began to direct the University's TV station, Channel 9, which he continued until 1973. At the end of 1973, after the September 11 coup, Ortega fled to France, where he resided until his death. He was given permission to return to Chile in 1983, and did so several times.
During his exile, Ortega directed L'Ecole Nationale de Musique, in Pantin, France.
Ortega died of cancer at the age of 65 on September 15, 2003 in Paris, four days after the 30th anniversary of the coup d’etat. His remains were repatriated to Chile.