The
legendary
Manuel
Barrueco
is
internationally
recognized
as
one
of
the
most
important
guitarists
of
our
time.
His
unique
artistry
has
been
continually
described
as
that
of
a
superb
instrumentalist
and
a
superior
and
elegant
musician,
possessing
a
seductive
sound
and
uncommon
lyrical
gifts.
After
a
recital
with
Toru
Takemitsu
His
career
has
been
dedicated
to
bringing
the
guitar
to
the
main
musical
centers
of
the
world.
During
three
decades
of
concertizing,
he
has
performed
across
the
United
Sates
from
the
New
World
Symphony
in
Miami
to
the
Seattle
Symphony,
and
from
the
Hollywood
Bowl
with
the
Los
Angeles
Philharmonic
to
New
York’s
Lincoln
Center.
He
has
appeared
with
such
prestigious
orchestras
as
the
Philadelphia
Orchestra
and
with
the
Boston
Symphony
under
the
direction
of
Seiji
Ozawa,
in
the
American
premiere
of
ToruTakemitsu’s
"To
the
Edge
of
Dream."
In
addition,
he
appears
regularly
with
the
Baltimore
Symphony
Orchestra
and
with
San
Francisco
Performances.
His
international
tours
have
taken
him
to
some
of
the
most
important
musical
centers
in
the
world.
Highlights
include
the
Royal
Albert
Hall
in
London,
Musikverein
in
Vienna,
Concertgebouw
in
Amsterdam,
Philharmonie
in
Berlin,
Teatro
Real
in
Madrid,
and
Palau
de
la
Musica
in
Barcelona.
In
Asia
he
has
completed
close
to
a
dozen
tours
of
Japan
and
made
repeated
appearances
in
Korea,
Taiwan,
Singapore,
China,
and
Hong
Kong.
Barrueco’s
tours
of
Latin
America
have
included
performances
in
Mexico,
Brazil,
Colombia,
Costa
Rica,
and
Puerto
Rico.
Barrueco's
tours
of
Latin
America
have
included
performances
in
Mexico,
Brazil,
Columbia,
Costa
Rica,
Panama,
and
Puerto
Rico.
He
has
also
performed
as
a
guest
soloist
with
other
international
orchestras,
such
as
the
Russian
State
Symphony,
Helsinki
Philharmonic,
Royal
Philharmonic,
NHK
Symphony,
New
Japan
Philharmonic,
Auckland
Symphony
in
New
Zealand,
Orquestra
Sinfonica
do
Estado
de
Sao
Paulo
(OSESP),
in
Sao
Paulo,
Brazil,
and
the
radio
symphonies
of
Munich
and
Frankfurt.
Barrueco's
commitment
to
contemporary
music
and
to
the
expansion
of
the
guitar
repertoire
has
led
him
to
collaborations
with
many
distinguished
composers
such
as
Steven
Stucky,
Michael
Daugherty,
Roberto
Sierra,
Arvo
Pärt,
Jonathan
Leshnoff,
Gabriela
Lena
Frank,
Dmitri
Yanov-Yanovsky,
Jonathan
Leshnof,
and
Toru
Takemitsu,
whose
last
orchestral
work
Spectral
Canticle
was
a
double
concerto
written
specifically
for
Manuel
Barrueco
and
violinist
Frank
Peter
Zimmerman.
Manuel
Barrueco
has
appeared
on
a
wide
array
of
American
television
programs
including
"CBS
Sunday
Morning",
A&E's
"Breakfast
with
the
Arts",
and
"Mister
Rogers'
Neighborhood"
on
PBS.
His
work
in
music
also
inspired
Michael
Lawrence’s
biographical
documentary:
“Manuel
Barrueco:
A
Gift
and
a
Life”
which
has
been
aired
by
PBS
stations
around
the
United
States
including
WNET-TV
in
New
York.
He
was
also
featured
in
a
Lexus
car
commercial.
Barrueco’s
performances
have
been
broadcast
by
television
stations
around
the
world
such
as
NHK
in
Japan,
Bayerische
Rundfunk
in
Germany,
and
RTVE
in
Spain.
Barrueco’s
recording
catalogue
includes
over
a
dozen
recordings
for
the
EMI
label.
His
recording
of
Joaquín
Rodrigo's
"Concierto
de
Aranjuez"
with
conductor
and
tenor
Plácido
Domingo
and
the
Philharmonia
Orchestra
was
cited
as
the
best
recording
of
that
piece
in
Classic
CD
Magazine,
while
"¡Cuba!"
was
called
"an
extraordinary
musical
achievement"
by
the
San
Francisco
Chronicle.
"Nylon
&
Steel,"
a
collection
of
duos
with
guitar
greats
Al
Di
Meola,
Steve
Morse
(Deep
Purple),
and
Andy
Summers
(The
Police),
demonstrates
Barrueco's
outstanding
versatility
and
imaginative
programming.
His
"Concierto
Barroco,"
with
the
Orquesta
Sinfónica
de
Galicia
and
conductor
Víctor
Pablo
Pérez,
received
a
Latin
Grammy
nomination
for
Best
Classical
Recording.
This
CD
contains
the
world
premiere
recordings
of
new
works
for
guitar
and
orchestra
by
Roberto
Sierra
and
Arvo
Pärt,
as
well
as
two
guitar
concertos
by
Antonio
Vivaldi.
Other
recordings
encompass
many
of
the
works
from
the
Spanish
and
Latin
American
repertoire,
as
well
as
Bach
and
Mozart,
Keith
Jarrett
and
Chick
Corea
etcetera.
He
collaborated
with
soprano
Barbara
Hendricks
and
flutist
Emmanuel
Pahud
in
Cantos
y
Danzas,
with
The
King’s
Singers
on
a
Strauss
album,
and
with
the
London
Symphony
on
"Manuel
Barrueco
plays
Lennon
&
McCartney."
His
early
recordings,
available
on
VOX,
have
become
a
classic
amongst
guitar
recordings.
In
2007
Manuel
Barrueco
received
a
Grammy
nomination
for
the
“Best
Instrumental
Soloist
Performance”
for
his
"Solo
Piazzolla,"
which
was
the
first
recording
to
be
released
on
the
exclusive
Manuel
Barrueco
Collection
on
Tonar
Music.
"Tango
Sensations"
and
"Sounds
of
the
Americas"
came
out
subsequently
in
collaboration
with
the
Cuarteto
Latinoamericano,
the
latter
received
a
Latin
Grammy
Award
for
“Inca
Dances”
by
Gabriela
Lena
Frank
for
“Best
Classical
Contemporary
Composition.”
"Virtuoso
Guitar
Duos"
was
released
in
2009
andincludes
the
most
breathtaking
guitar
duos
from
the
Spanish
and
Latin-American
repertoire.
In
2010
he
released
a
solo
recording,
"Tárrega!,"
which
includes
works
and
arrangements
of
the
Spanish
composer
Francisco
Tárrega
and
which
received
a
Latin
Grammy
nomination
for
“Best
Classical
Album.”
"Chaconne–A
Baroque
Recital"
came
out
in
2012
and
in
2013
Manuel
Barrueco
released
"Medea,"
which
includes
Barrueco’s
arrangement
of
the
ballet
by
flamenco
guitarist/composer
Manolo
Sanlúcar.
Barrueco
recorded
the
work
with
the
Tenerife
Symphony
Orchestra
and
Víctor
Pablo
Pérez
conducting.
The
recording
received
a
Latin
Grammy
nomination
for
"Best
Classical
Album."
The
following
year
he
released,
"China
West,"
a
recording
of
guitar
trios
in
collaboration
with
his
protégés,
the
Beijing
Guitar
Duo
(Meng
Su
&
Yameng
Wang).
"Fernando
Sor:
The
Beethoven
of
the
Guitar"
was
released
in
December
of
2016
along
with
a
publication
with
the
works
on
the
CD,
edited
and
fingered
by
Barrueco.
In
December
2019
he
released
"Music
from
Cuba
and
Spain;
Sierra:
Sonata
para
Guitarra"
along
with
two
publications
of
music
from
the
CD,
transcribed
by
Manuel
Barrueco.
Manuel
Barrueco
began
playing
the
guitar
at
the
age
of
eight,
and
he
attended
the
Esteban
Salas
Conservatory
in
his
native
Cuba.
He
immigrated
with
his
family
to
the
United
States
in
1967,
as
a
political
refugee.
He
completed
his
advanced
studies
at
the
Peabody
Conservatory
of
Music,
where
he
now
shares
his
love
for
music
with
a
small
number
of
exceptionally
gifted
young
guitarists
from
all
over
the
world.
Manuel
Barrueco
is
the
recipient
of
the
United
States
Artist
Fontanals
Fellowship
for
Artistic
Excellence.