There are very few true living legends in the world of classical
music, few who have sustained greatness and grown throughout their
lives. Pepe Romero is such an artist. He has been honored by kings,
heads of state, and major institutions-the encomiums continue to pour
in. But to Romero, his most important contribution has been reaching the
common man. He has communicated the richness and beauty of the
classical guitar to millions of people throughout the world. He has,
indeed, become an ambassador of classical music, and, correspondingly,
of the classical guitar.
But this gift did not just appear out of nowhere. Pepe is the second
son of one of the greatest guitarists that ever lived—Celedonio Romero.
And he is brother to two more musical phenoms—Celin and Angel Romero.
But perhaps we should start at the beginning...
Pepe was born in Málaga, Spain, in 1944. In those days, following the
devastating Spanish Civil War (1936-39) and during the Second World
War, Spain was in desperate economic straits. Basic survival was the
primary challenge. Yet, in spite of this, Celedonio Romero and his
remarkable wife, Angelita, instilled in all three of their children a
love of music that transcended the profound misery surrounding them.
By age seven, Pepe set foot on the concert stage for the first time,
at the Teatro Lope de Vega in Sevilla. And now, more than fifty years
later, he continues to mesmerize audiences throughout the world. During
that time, he has given literally thousands of concerts worldwide, many
with the remarkable Romero Quartet, and many as a solo instrumentalist.
He has worked with almost every major conductor alive, and has to his
credit more than 60 recordings (among which are 20 concerto recordings
with the Academy of St. Martin-in-the-Fields, with both Neville Marriner
and Iona Brown).
Pepe Romero has premiered works by some of the finest composers of
the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Joaquín Rodrigo, Federico
Moreno Torroba, Lorenzo Palomo, Padre Francisco de Madina, Paul Chihara,
Enrique Diemecke, Ernesto Cordero, and, most poignantly, Celedonio
Romero, have written compositions for Pepe. Always a champion of music
by composers in earlier periods of music history, he has also delved
into rare archives to re-explore lost pieces by Fernando Sor, Mauro
Giuliani, Francesco Molino, Ferdinando Carulli, Johann Kaspar Mertz,
Luigi Boccherini, and others.
In 1992, Pepe Romero performed on a groundbreaking laser disc of the
Concierto de Aranjuez with Neville Marriner and the Academy of
St-Martin-in-the-Fields. He played a prominent role in the major film
documentary Shadows and Light: Joaquin Rodrigo at 90, which received
numerous plaudits worldwide (including the Chicago International Film
Festival, International Emmy Awards, and San Francisco International
Film Festival).
Maestro Romero's many accomplishments include: world premieres of
Rodrigo´s Concierto andaluz (with the entire Romero Guitar Quartet),
Concierto madrigal (with Angel Romero), and Concierto para una fiesta;
Federico Moreno Torroba's Diálogos entre guitarra y orquesta (Pepe was
personally chosen by Moreno Torroba and Andrés Segovia for the world
recording premiere of this work dedicated to Segovia); and Lorenzo
Palomo's Concierto de Cienfuegos (with the Romero Quartet) and Nocturnos
de Andalucía (both released on the Naxos label). He also revived the
great orchestral work Metamorfosi de concert by Xavier Montsalvatge,
with Gianandrea Noseda, and premiered as well as recorded the Concerto
for Guitar and Orchestra with Trumpet Obbligato by Paul Chihara, with
Neville Marriner and the London Symphony.
In 2005 the Romero Quartet recorded Concierto vasco para 4 guitarras y
orquesta by Francisco de Madina (written for the Romeros) with the
Basque National Orchestra on a Claves release (entitled Aita Madina). A
prominent new recording entitled The Romeros: Generations, features
premieres of works by Jorge Morel (such as El Maestro, dedicated to
Celedonio) and by Pepe himself, Recuerdos del pasado. In the spring of
2005, a solo recital release called Corazón Español became available on
the CPA Hollywood Records label. Shortly thereafter, on the same label,
came Classic Romero, another invaluable recital recording. In the summer
of 2008, Pepe Romero recorded a splendid solo-vocal work by Lorenzo
Palomo, with internationally recognized Spanish soprano Maria Bayo. It
includes the song cycles Mi jardín solitario (with texts by Celedonio
Romero) and Madrigal and Five Sephardic Songs and was released on the
NAXOS label in 2009 along with Palomo’s Concierto de Cienfuegos with the
Romeros Quartet and Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos conducting the Sevilla
Royal Symphony Orchestra. Celebrating their 50th anniversary and release
in 2009, is a brand new recording by the Romeros for Sony´s RCA Red
Seal Label entitled Los Romeros: Celebration.
Pepe Romero has performed (by himself and with his family) at the
White House, the Vatican for Pope John Paul II, for HRH Prince Charles,
Prince of Wales, King Juan Carlos and Queen Sofia of Spain, and Queen
Beatrice of Holland. He has been a special guest at music festivals in
Salzburg, Israel, Schleswig-Holstein, Menuhin Festival, Osaka, Granada,
Istanbul, Ravinia, Garden State, Hollywood Bowl, Blossom, Wolf Trap, and
Saratoga, among many others.
In the United States, he has appeared with leading symphony
orchestras in Philadelphia, Cleveland, Chicago, Houston, Detroit,
Pittsburgh, Boston, San Francisco, Dallas, New York, and Los Angeles, as
well as with the Orpheus Chamber Ensemble and Boston Pops. European
ensembles with which he has appeared include the Academy of
St-Martins-in-the-Fields, Dresden Philharmonic, London Symphony, Monte
Carlo Philharmonic, I Musici, Zurich Chamber Orchestra, Philharmonia
Hungarica, Solisti di Zagreb, Hungarian State Orchestra, Spanish
National Orchestra, Spanish National Radio Television Orchestra,
Norddeutscher Rundfunk, Hamburg Philharmoniker, L'Orchestre de la
Suisse-Romande, Lausanne Chamber Orchestra, New Moscow Chamber
Orchestra, American Sinfonietta, and Bournemouth Symphony—among many
others.
In addition, he has collaborated with such distinguished conductors
as Sir Neville Marriner, Rafael Frühbeck de Burgos, Jesús López-Cobos,
Eugene Ormandy, Josep Pons, Arthur Fiedler, Lawrence Foster, Enrique
Jordá, Andre Kostelanetz, Leonard Slatkin, Phillipe Entremont, Odón
Alonso, Morton Gould, Michael Palmer, Guillermo Figueroa, Michael
Zearrot, Miguel Ángel Gómez Martínez, Pedro Halffter, and Christoph
Eschenbach.
Pepe Romero has always felt, along with his father and brothers, that
the sharing of one's art is a personal responsibility. Mr. Romero has
served as Professor of Guitar at the University of Southern California,
University of California at San Diego, Southern Methodist University,
and the University of San Diego. He has conducted master classes at the
Salzburg Summer Academy, Córdoba Guitar Festival, and the
Schleswig-Holstein Festival. In 2004 he was appointed Distinguished
Artist in Residence at the University of Southern California's Thornton
School of Music.
Pepe Romero holds an honorary doctorate in music from the University
of Victoria, British Columbia. In June 1996, he received the "Premio
Andalucía de la Música," the highest recognition given by his native
land for his contribution to the arts. In addition, His Majesty, King
Juan Carlos I of Spain, has knighted Pepe and his brothers into the
Order of "Isabel la Católica."
A biographical documentary about the Romeros appeared on PBS in 2001
entitled "Los Romeros, the Royal Family of the Guitar." Following this
production, German television released another brilliant documentary
about the Romeros entitled ¨Los Romeros, the Dynasty of the Guitar." In
2007, the Romeros received the President's Merit Award from the
Recording Academy, producers of the Grammy Awards, for their significant
contributions to the music world and professional career achievements.
What will come tomorrow? Who knows? Pepe is only just beginning to flex his artistic muscles...