Gato Pérez | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | Xavier Patricio Pérez Álvarez |
Born | Buenos Aires | April 11, 1951
Died | October 18, 1990 39) Caldes de Montbui | (aged
Genres | Catalan rumba |
Occupation(s) | Composer, singer |
Instrument(s) | Bass, guitar |
Website | http://www.gatoperez.cat |
Xavier Patricio Pérez Álvarez (April 11, 1951 – October 18, 1990), known as Gato Pérez, was a musician of Argentine origin who settled in Catalonia. He stood out in the musical genre of the Catalan rumba, which he merged with salsa and an original style. He was a singer, composer and bass guitarist.[1]
Biography
Although he was born in Buenos Aires, he came from Spanish families who had emigrated after the civil war. His paternal grandparents were from Asturias and La Rioja; and his maternal grandparents were from León and Burgos. In Madrid his paternal grandfather owned a fleet of cabs for the diplomatic corps. At the beginning of the war, he fled to Barcelona, where he worked in an aeronautical factory run by Russians and went to the refugee camps in the south of France. After falling ill with tuberculosis he returned to his family in Barcelona, a right-wing family. In 1948, his father decided to emigrate to Buenos Aires, where he met El Gato's mother, who was a pianist.[2]
Gato Pérez was born in Buenos Aires via a caesarean birth. He grew up in an upper-middle-class neighborhood and was educated in a bilingual school attended by the children of the industrial and financial bourgeoisie of Buenos Aires, whom he detested. His first contact with music was with his grandfather; they listened together to the radio and the serials of the sixties. It was the radio that introduced him to the rock and roll of Bill Haley and His Comets, which was a complete epiphany for Pérez. His first performance was at the English school prom playing "Claudette" and "Wake Up Little Susie" by the Everly Brothers. Rock and roll had arrived much earlier in Argentina, and the Argentine musicians learned to play much earlier and also burned stages earlier than the Spaniards, which would be decisive for the fact that it was the same Argentines who introduced a fresh and Hispanic rock in the Spain of the Transition. Before arriving in Spain, he was part of a pampera music group, Los Baguales, and upon arriving in Barcelona he followed the rock group Los Salvajes and Los Cheyennes.[2]
Artistic background
In 1966, Pérez arrived in Barcelona with his mother to join his father, who had made the trip earlier. After finishing high school, he settled for a while in London, with the aim of getting a job in a record company, but he had no luck and returned to Barcelona, where he worked as a butler because of his perfect English. His nickname, "Gato", came from his round face.[2]
The first group he was part of in Barcelona was Revelación Mesmérica, with Rafael Zaragoza, which was later called Nosaltres, and finally, Pérez y Zaragoza, a Simon & Garfunkel type of act.[2]
From the beginning of the 1970s, his musical restlessness led him to form, with other musicians, different bands such as Slo-Blo (country rock, and an attempt to emulate the Flying Burrito Brothers, which was the first group to perform in the Zeleste hall in Barcelona) and Secta Sónica (jazz rock, partly derived from the previous one). He was one of the driving forces behind the Orquestra Platería, a salsa music and dance band created for street parties in Barcelona in 1974.[3]
In 1977, he began experimenting with Catalan rumba and later released his first two albums (Carabruta and Romesco), followed by the more commercial Atalaya. According to Carlos Flaviá, "An Argentine prophet had to come to unite the gypsies here".[4]
In 1981, Pérez suffered a heart attack, began to have serious health problems, and the fatigue caused by his heart problems forced him to give up alcohol. His following albums were composed, in his own words, 'under the effects of mineral water'.
Pérez has been recognized as the renovator of the Catalan rumba, exactly at the time when it was going through its lowest period due to the strength of the very dynamic movida in Madrid. The quality of his lyrics and the fusion he achieved between rumba and other contemporary popular music, such as rock, salsa, or even bolero, stand out.
According to the artist:
"The Catalan rumba is the characteristic and original music of urban Barcelona. It was born from a marginalized but deeply-rooted and distinctly Barcelona community and has a very attractive stamp, somewhere between gypsy, flamenco and Central American, which cannot be compared to anything known" (Gato Perez).[2]
In addition, as a composer and lyricist, he introduced in his songs the first criticisms of the then incipient symptoms of discrimination against African workers and gypsy communities, as well as criticizing the pollution problems of an idyllic Mediterranean city.[1]
His health problems would not leave him until his death, as a victim of a myocardial infarction, in 1990. Subsequently, he has been the subject of numerous tributes from the music profession. Ventura Pons, who already counted on Gato Pérez for the soundtrack of his film La rubia del bar, has directed a documentary about his life, entitled El gran Gato.
Marcos Ordóñez wrote a biography titled Gato Pérez, la rumba como ética (Júcar, 1987).[2]
Ten years after his death, his friends and admirers joined together in a concert in his honor, with the participation of: Carme Canela, Miqui Puig, Jaume Sisa, Ia Clua, Manel Joseph, Quintín Cabrera, Sergio Makaroff, the Som La Rumba troupe, the Manolos 2000, Marina Rosell, Yumitus, Rafaelito Salazar and Son Com Son. The concert was held at the Sala Luz de Gas in Barcelona and was presented by Ángel Casas, Pepe Rubianes and Carles Flaviá.[4]
In 2010, in Barcelona's Gracia neighborhood, a new tribute, Gatos que bailan Pérez por los tejados, was held during the neighborhood's main festivities.[5]
Discography
With Secta Sónica
- Fred Pedralbes (1976) (Reissued in CD and digital format by Picap 2010)
- Astroferia (1977) (Reissued in CD and digital format by Picap 2010)
Guitars: Jordi Bonell, Rafael Zaragoza ("Zarita") and Víctor Cortina. Bass: Javier Patricio "Gato" Pérez. Drums: Toni Arasil and Jordi Vilella.
As Gato Perez
- Carabruta (1978)
- Romesco (1979; re-released in CD and digital format by Picap, 2007)
- Atalaya (1981)
- Prohibido maltratar a los gatos (1982)
- Flaires de Barcelunya (1982)
- Música (1983)
- Ke imbenten ellos (1984)
- Gato x Gato (1986; reissued in CD and digital format by Picap, 2003)
- La rubia del bar (1986; reissued in digital format by Picap, 2003)
- Ten (1987; reissued in CD and digital format by Picap, 2003)
- Fenicia (1990)
- Sabor de barrio (compilation, 1991)
Collaborations
- Tocats de Nadal - collective album (1988)
Tributes to Gato Pérez
- Orquesta Platería: Gatísimo (2002)
- Miscellaneous: El gran Gato, soundtrack of the film El gran Gato, directed by Ventura Pons (2003).
- Derrumband: & Los Amigos de Siempre (2011)
- Derrumband: A Barcelunya (2017). Tribute album to the LP Flaires de Barcelunya
Notable songs
- "Ja soc aquí"
- "Viejos automóviles"
- "La rumba de Barcelona"
- "El ventilador"
- "Rumba del's 60"
- "Todos los gatos son Pardos"
- "La curva del Morrot"
- "Gitanitos y morenos"
- "Se fuerza la máquina"
- "La rumba de aquí"
- "Luna brava"
- "Quise ser tu amigo"
- "El mismo de antes"
References
- 1 2 Jurado, Miquel (1990-10-18). "Muere en Barcelona de un infarto de miocardio el músico de salsa Gato Pérez". El País (in Spanish). ISSN 1134-6582. Retrieved 2023-02-21.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 "Gato Pérez, músico único que solo pudo darse en una Barcelona que ya no existe" Alvaro Corazón Jot Down
- ↑ Jurado, Miquel (2014-09-24). "La Orquestra Platería se despide tras 40 años de actividad". El País (in Spanish). ISSN 1134-6582. Retrieved 2023-03-08.
- 1 2 Hidalgo, Luis (2000-11-23). "Los amigos de Gato Pérez le homenajean a los diez años de su muerte". El País (in Spanish). ISSN 1134-6582. Retrieved 2023-02-21.
- ↑ Belmonte, Helena (2010-08-14). "Un homenaje a Gato Pérez, pop y 'cançó' en Gràcia". El País (in Spanish). ISSN 1134-6582. Retrieved 2023-02-21.