You are on page 1of 2

ALFREDO SANTOS BUENAVENTURA

Alfredo Santos Buenaventura was born in Sta. Maria, Bulacan on 14 October 1929. His parents unconsciously provided him the musical atmosphere. At an early age in grade school, he became a member of a band that marched the town because of his fascination with trumpets and trombones. During the pre-war, he became one of the twenty boy sopranos of Tiples at Sto. Domingo Church. They were given first class musical training. At that time, he also wrote his first composition which was a Danza. Bueneventura also had formal music lessons. At the age of 12 to 13, he already arranged and conducted band in his hometown. He was an official organist of the Manila Cathedral from 1960. He also became a member of the League of Filipino Composers and received numerous outstanding awards in music industry such as the Republic Cultural Heritage Awards that he won twice.

CONTRIBUTIONS He is among the few composers in the Philippines who composed five full-length operas. He has his own set of ideas about music and composition. He created a combination of contemporary and conventional, kept his melodies simple and understandable but he used contemporary harmonies to suit the intellectuals. Dr. Alfredo S. Buenaventura is an excellent musician, composer, conductor and music education teacher.

His minor works which number over 50 are mostly religious songs and hymns for specific celebrations such as the Sixteenth Centenary of St. Augustine, Mass for the 400th Year of the Augustinian Recollect and the Philippine Music Festival. His other creative musical works have been commissioned by the Cultural Center of the Philippines, Metropolitan Theater and NAMCYA. ACHIEVEMENTS Buenaventura has composed over 50 major works including operas, operettas and dance dramas, cantatas, symphonies, concertos, ballets, overtures, prelude, fugues and chamber music. His compositions and other creative works have penetrated territorial, racial and language barriers as they have been played or performed in foreign lands by international virtuosos and religious groups. Many of his compositions are based on Filipino heroes, legends and epics. He uses native songs, both tribal and folk, as themes and employs Filipino indigenous instruments. Some of his works include operas entitled, Maria Makiling (1961), Diego Silang (1966), Prinsesa Urduha (1969); cantatas such as Ang Ating Watawat (1965), Pasko ng Barangay (1964); symphonies for instance, Dakilang Lahi (1971), Gomburza (1981), and Rizal, the Great Malayan Antagonist (1990). TOFIL Awardee for Music, 1995

You might also like