Alberto_Cortez

Alberto Cortez

Alberto Cortez

Argentine singer-songwriter (1940–2019)


Alberto Cortez (born José Alberto García Gallo; 11 March 1940 – 4 April 2019)[1] was an Argentine singer and songwriter. Cortez and his wife Renée Govaerts lived in Madrid.[2]

Quick Facts Background information, Birth name ...

Career

Cortez was born at 8:00 AM (11:00 GMT) on Monday, 11 March 1940, in Rancul, La Pampa Province, Argentina.[1][3][4] He began elementary school at the Alberto Williams conservatory at the age of six. He began composing songs at twelve, including "Un cigarrillo, la lluvia y tú". Later he entered Manuel Ignacio Molina de San Rafael Junior High School in Mendoza province. There he continued his studies of music at the Chopin of San Rafael conservatory.[5]

At seventeen, Cortez became the singer of the Arizona orchestra, where he was known as Chiquito García. At eighteen, he went to study in the Social Sciences and Law School of Buenos Aires and sang in bars to help himself with his studies.[5] Later Cortez began to sing in the orchestra of Mario Cardi and was contracted to sing in the San Francisco jazz orchestra. He traveled all over the country with them and began to use his pseudonym "Alberto Cortez" while singing with the orchestra of Armando Pointier. Cortez dropped out of school and dedicated himself fully to music.[5]

Aged twenty, Cortez travelled to Antwerp, Belgium where he recorded his first album. His record "Sucu Sucu" reached number one.[5] Cortez met Renee Govaerts and later married her. After a difficult start he consolidated himself as one of the most renowned composer-singers of Latin America with hits like "Mi árbol y yo", "Mariana", "Como el primer día", "A partir de mañana" and "Callejero".[6]

He died as a result of a gastric hemorrhage at 3:30 PM (13:30 GMT) on Thursday, 4 April 2019, in the city of Móstoles, in the Community of Madrid, Spain, at 79 years of age.[7]

See also


References

  1. Cuatro decadas en busca de la rima.(Cultura) Reforma - Nov 24, 2000
  2. La balada: mensaje universal - Carlos Bolívar Ramírez - 2001 - Page 188
  3. Biography on the Official website (Spanish).
  4. Discogs.com entry for Alberto Cortez.
  5. "Muere el músico Alberto Cortez, autor de 'Castillos en el aire'". El País. 5 April 2019.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Alberto_Cortez, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.