María Grever
María Grever | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | Maria Joaquina de la Portilla Torres |
Born | (1885-09-14)September 14, 1885 León, Guanajuato, Mexico |
Died | December 15, 1951(1951-12-15) (aged 66) New York City, New York |
Occupation(s) | Composer |
María Grever (14 September 1885 – 15 December 1951) was the first female Mexican composer to achieve international acclaim.[1] She is best known for the song "What A Difference A Day Makes" (originally "Cuando vuelva a tu lado"), which was popularized by Dinah Washington and has been covered by numerous artists.
Contents
1 Early life
2 Career
3 Death and tributes
4 Posthumous success
5 References
6 External links
Early life
María Joaquina de la Portilla Torres was born to a Spanish father (Francisco de la Portilla) and Mexican mother (Julia Torres) in Guanajuato, Mexico. For the first six years of her life she lived in Mexico City, moving to her father's natal city, Sevilla, in 1888. She studied music in France, with Claude Debussy and Franz Lenhard among her teachers. In 1900 she moved back to Mexico and continued her musical studies at her aunt's solfège school. In 1907, the then 22-year-old de la Portilla, married Leo A. Grever, an American oil company executive, and in 1916 became a U.S. citizen and moved to New York City where she lived for the rest of her life.[1][2]
Career
Grever wrote more than 800 songs — the majority of them boleros — and her popularity reached audiences in Latin America, Europe, and the United States. She was said to have possessed perfect pitch and wrote most of her songs in one key. Her first piece of music, a Christmas carol, was composed when she was four years old. She wrote her first song when she was 18 years old, "A Una Ola" (To a Wave), and it sold three million copies.[1]
In 1920 she began work as a film composer for Paramount Pictures and 20th Century Fox studios. Joining ASCAP in 1935, her chief musical collaborators included Stanley Adams and Irving Caesar.[3]
Grever once said: “I had to leave my country, and now in New York I am interested in Jazz and Modern Rhythms, but above all, in Mexican Music, which I long to present to the American people. I am afraid they don't know much about it. It is music worth spreading; there is such a cultural richness in Mexican Music (its Hispanic and indigenous origins and how they mix) where melody and rhythm merge. It is my wish and yearning to present the native rhythms and tunes (of Mexico) from a real perspective, but with the necessary flexibility to appeal to the universal audience".[1]
Grever's first international hit was "Júrame" (Promise, Love), a habanera-bolero interpreted in a masterly manner by tenor José Mojica.[4] Other hits continued to follow, such as "Volveré" (I Will Return); "Te quiero dijiste" (Magic Is the Moonlight), written for the 1944 Esther Williams film Bathing Beauty, as well as "Cuando vuelva a tu lado" (When I Return To Your Side as recorded by Nestor Mesta Chayres)[5] and "Por si no te vuelvo a ver" (What if I see you again).[1] Other songs of hers include "Tipitipitin" (recorded as "Ti-Pi-Tin by the Andrews Sisters), "Para Que Recordar", "Ya No Me Quieres", "Tu, Tu y Tu" (as recorded by Mexican tenor Juan Arvizu in 1928)[6], "Que Dirias de Mi", "Eso Es Mentíra", "Mi Secreto", "Dame Tu Amor", "Una Rosa, Un Beso", "No Niegues Que Me Quisiste", "Despedida", "Asi" , Chamaca Mía,[7]Todo Mi Ser,[8] and "Alma Mia".
Death and tributes
Grever died in 1951 in New York after a prolonged illness. At her own request, her funerary remains were transported to Mexico City. In 1953, Argentine singer-actress and Latin America star Libertad Lamarque portrayed Grever in Cuando me vaya (When I Leave), a biopic directed by Tito Davison.[9] Three years later, Lamarque released a best-selling tribute to Grever's most popular songs titled Libertad Lamarque canta canciones de Maria Grever.[10]
Posthumous success
In 1959, Dinah Washington recorded "Cuando vuelva a tu lado" under the title "What A Difference A Day Makes" with English lyrics. The recording won a Grammy Award in 1959, and in 1998 it was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame. Her songs have been covered internationally by a variety of artists.
References
^ abcde Rodríguez, Lee M. L. María Grever: Poeta Y Compositora. Potomac, Md: Scripta Humanistica, 1994. Print.
^ https://books.google.com/books?id=HQ_UAAAAQBAJ&pg=PT134&lpg=PT134&dq=Mar%C3%ADa+Grever+%22us+citizen%22&source=bl&ots=dc5vwaDw4y&sig=Hs58pegVYr1XBkD8TMRFP40k3Z8&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwj29srem_vSAhUGyWMKHbhuDsUQ6AEIGjAA#v=onepage&q=Mar%C3%ADa%20Grever%20%22us%20citizen%22&f=false
^ IMDb. com – María Grever entry
^ Victor Library: Matrix BVE-40023 – Jurame
^ Cuando vuelva a tu lado as interpreted by the Mexican lyric tenor Nestor Mesta Chayres with organ and orchestra on Archive.org
^ Tu, Tu y Tu as interpreted by he Mexican lyric tenor Juan Arvizu with orchestra on Archive.org
^ Chamaca Mía by María Grever as sung by Juan Arvizu with orchestra (1929) on Archive.org
^ Todo Mi Ser by María Grever as sung by Nestor Mesta Chayres with the Isido Handler Orchestra on Archive.org
^ IMDb.com – Cuando me vaya (1954)
^ RCA Victor MKL 3020 Mono LP
External links
- María Grever Biography
SlideShare.net – María Grever Biografía (Spanish)- The Art Music of Mexico and Guatemala – Maria Grever (1894-1951) Biography and Images
- Victor Library – María Grever (composer)
- 1921 passport photo of Maria Grever and her children
- Recordings of performances of boleros composed by María Grever as archived on Archive.org
- O Grande Amor De María Grever 1954 Leg' - Biographical film of María Grever with Mexican Tenors Juan Arvizu and Nestor Mesta Chayress in performance on Archive.org