Gabriel Pareyon

Gabriel Pareyon

Gabriel Pareyon, 2003.
Background information
Born 1974
Origin Mexico
Genres Contemporary Music, Mexican composers, 21st century music
Occupation(s) Composer & musicologist
Years active 1995 – present

Gabriel Pareyon (born October 23, 1974, Zapopan, Jalisco) is a polymathic[1] Mexican composer and musicologist, who has published literature on topics of philosophy and linguistics.[2]

He has a Ph.D. in musicology from the University of Helsinki, where he studied with Eero Tarasti (2006–2011).[3] He received bachelor and master degrees in composition at the Royal Conservatoire, The Hague (2000–2004), where he studied with Clarence Barlow.[4] He also studied at the Composers’ Workshop of the National Conservatoire of Music, Mexico City (1995–1998), with Mario Lavista.[5]

His works as composer were selected for the Thailand International Saxophone Competition for Composers (Bangkok, 2006, I Prize), the 2nd International Jurgenson Competition for young composers (Moscow, 2003, II Prize) and the 3rd Andrzej Panufnik International Composition Competition (Kraków, 2001, III Prize). His output includes works for common objects (such as bottles, stones, etc.) as well as for classical (European) instruments and ensembles. He also experiments with Mexican traditional instruments (such as huehuetl, teponaztli and a wide variety of woodwinds), and metre and phonetics from Nahuatl and Hñähñu.[6]

His music also combines wider aspects of linguistics and human speech, mathematical models (series, patterns, algorithms, etc.), and models coming from bird vocalization and nonverbal communication.[7]

Musicologist

As musicologist, publications of Pareyon contributed to recognize aspects of the new music from Mexico in his own country and abroad, eg in the explanation and extension of Julio Estrada's work (see McHard 2006, 2008:264). Accordingly, his work is quoted, as early as from 2000, in international compilations about the music of Mexico (see eg Olsen & Sheehy 2000:108; Nattiez et al. 2006:125, 137, 1235) and specialised literature (see eg Brenner 2000:177; Madrid & Moore 2013:94, 126).

In the field of systematic musicology, Pareyon predicts the role of analogy as one of the foremost issues for future musicology and congnitive science (On Musical Self-Similarity, 2011),[8] foreseeing conclusions of Hofstadter & Sander's Surfaces and Essences (2013).

Writings

Sources

References

External links