Les Luthiers

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"Les Luthiers Volumen 3" (1973)
"Les Luthiers Volumen 3" (1973)

Les Luthiers is a comedy-musical group from Argentina, very popular also in several other Spanish speaking countries such as Chile, Ecuador, Spain, Colombia, Mexico, Uruguay and Venezuela. They were formed in 1967 by Gerardo Masana, during the height of a period of very intense Choral Music activity in Argentina's state universities. Their outstanding characteristic are the home-made musical instruments (hence the name luthiers, French for "musical instrument maker"), some of them extremely sophisticated, which they skillfully employ in their recitals to produce music and texts full of high class and refined humor. From 1980 until 2007(his death), they have worked together with Roberto Fontanarrosa, a renowned Argentine cartoonist and writer.

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[edit] Musical Stylings

Les Luthiers began writing humorous pieces primarily in a Baroque style, especially imitating vocal genres such as cantatas, madrigals and serenatas. Later, they diversified into humorous renditions of music in other genres, from romantic lieder and opera to pop, mariachi and even rap. Their stage show is often intermingled with humorous skits, often involving absurd situations, the music and biography of fictional composer Johann Sebastian Mastropiero and a heavy reliance on fairly sophisticated word play. Much of the humor derives from the basic contradictions between the formality and highly developed vocal and instrumental technique of classical musicians and the sheer silliness of their show.

[edit] Informal Instruments

Les Luthiers are known in particular for employing a diverse ensemble of invented instruments created from common, everyday materials. The group's first home-made musical instrument, the bass-pipe a vara (a sort of trombone), was created by Gerardo Masana, the founder of the group, by joining cardboard tubes found in the garbage and miscellaneous items. Forty years later, this instrument is still being used on stage.

The first informal instruments were relatively simple, like the Gum-Horn, made with a hose, a funnel and a trumpet's mouthpiece, and some of them were born as a parody of musical instruments, which is the case of the latín and the violata, bowed instruments whose resonating chambers are made out of a large tin for processed ham and a paint can respectively, the marimba de cocos, a marimba made out of coconuts, and others.

Inventor and instrument-maker Carlos Iraldi (1920 - 1995), as "Les Luthiers' luthier", was responsible for inventing several more sophisticated instruments, including the mandocleta, a bicycle whose rear wheel moves the strings of a mandolin, the bajo barríltono, a Double bass whose body is a giant barrel, and others.

After Iraldi's death in 1995 Hugo Domínguez took his place, and made instruments such as the desafinaducha, the nomeolbídet etc.

[edit] Members

[edit] Former members

  • Gerardo Masana, founder (died in 1973): Guitar, bass-pipe, vocals, percussion, etc.
  • Ernesto Acher (left the group in 1986): Piano, horn, trumpet, clarinet, saxophone, drums, keyboards, cello, vocals, etc.

[edit] Shows

  • Les Luthiers cuentan la ópera (1967)
  • Todos somos mala gente (1968)
  • Blancanieves y los siete pecados capitales (1969)
  • Querida Condesa (1969)
  • Les Luthiers Opus Pí (1971)
  • Recital '72 (1972)
  • Recital sinfónico '72 (1972)
  • Recital '73 (1973)
  • Recital '74 (1974)
  • Recital '75 (1975)
  • Viejos fracasos (1976)
  • Mastropiero que nunca (1977)
  • Les Luthiers hacen muchas gracias de nada (1979)
  • Los clásicos de Les Luthiers (1980)
  • Luthierías (1981)
  • Por humor al arte (1983)
  • Humor dulce hogar (1985)
  • Recital sinfónico '86 (1986)
  • Viegésimo aniversario (1987)
  • El reír de los Cantares (1989)
  • Les Luthiers, Grandes Hitos (1992)
  • Unen canto con humor (1994)
  • Bromato de armonio (1996)
  • Todo por que rías (1999)
  • Do, Re, Mi, Já (2000)
  • El Grosso Concerto (2001)
  • Las Obras De Ayer (2002)
  • Con Les Luthiers y sinfónica (2004)
  • Recital Folklórico Cosquín (2005)
  • Los Premios Mastropiero (2005)
  • Recital por los Cuarenta Años (2007)

[edit] Discography

"Sonamos pese a Todo" (1971)
"Sonamos pese a Todo" (1971)

[edit] External links