Anna Maria Mendieta & Tango Del Cielo

Performing Artist And Touring Concert-Show Los Angeles and San Francisco, CA United States

About Anna Maria Mendieta & Tango Del Cielo

Harpist Anna Maria Mendieta performs Classical to Tango as a soloist, with orchestras, and with her touring ensembles including: "Tango Del Cielo" (Tango From Heaven) - A multimedia concert! ...

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FEATURED STORY Latina Style Magazine (National Publication) Latinas in Music, Artistic Excellent By Mark Holston The trappings of success in the music business come in many forms. In the case of Anna Maria Mendieta, a San Francisco-based harpist whose artistry embraces a broad range of classical and popular idioms, being tapped to perform for the King and Queen of Spain and the Pope is a clear sign of her growing international stature. Each of these young Latinas is a living reminder of how raw talent, melded with focused ambition and leavened with an expansive supporting network of family, friends, and mentors, can propel artists to the upper echelon of their craft. And all three realize just how serendipitous their ascension has been. For Anna Maria, whose background includes backing a diverse constellation of pop music stars, from Barry Manilow to Olivia Newton John and Frank Sinatra, Jr., per-forming with the legendary rock group Moody Blues was a watershed event. “I remember having a very surreal mo-ment while in concert with that group,” she recalls. “We were playing ‘Nights In White Satin’, and, in the middle of the song, I flashed back to when I was a little girl listening to that song on the oldies radio station in the back of our family station wagon.” Just a kid, Anna Maria nonetheless noticed the beautiful harp solo in the tune. “I was thinking how cool it was to add classical instruments to rock music,” she adds. “I listened so carefully; I wanted to memorize every note. I was hypnotized by the music. And then to be, years later, on stage with Moody Blues, with the lights, fog, effects, the screaming fans, I was in awe of the fact that now I was playing that beautiful harp part! Dreams do come true!” Anna Maria’s personal story reflects the deep involvement in music of her extended family. Her father plays the guitar while her mother’s instrument is the accordion. The couple met through their music and virtually everyone in the family plays an instrument. Anna Maria is also giving several of her nieces harp lessons. While her family traces its lineage to Spain, in the New World there were branches in both Mexico and Guatemala. “My Mexican grandmother lived with us until I was 18, and only spoke Spanish,” she recalls of her early childhood. “We’d see my Guatemalan grandmother four times a week, as she would come over to help my mother with the kids or the laundry. Both would cook, and tell stories, and share their cultures with us in many ways. And what stories indeed! My Mexican grandmother’s grandfather was a general. His son became a symphony conductor, another became a concert violinist, and one of my grandmother’s brother’s really did run away to join the circus.” Her Guatemalan grandmother came to San Francisco to start a new life, her father having been a tobacco plantation owner lost everything because of being on the wrong side of an incoming government. “He sent his wife and daughters to the U.S. to be safe and have a new beginning,” Anna Maria affirms. “My grandmother was a flapper in the 1920’s and met my grandfather at a dance. He was from Cadiz, Spain and was an artist. She was beautiful and looked like a movie star; in fact one of her relatives became one, and starred with Rudolph Valentino in the silent movies.” For Anna Maria, every day seems to bring another surprising development in her career. Recently, the American Harp Society co-commissioned a concerto featuring Latin American rhythms to be composed for her, with performances al-ready scheduled with three symphony orchestras next year. It’s another example of how this charismatic young harpist has impressed so many across the entire spectrum of classical and popular music styles. After all, none other than Barry Manilow called her his “favorite harpist.” “Many years ago,” she recalls, “I played for several of Barry’s touring shows, and I was told by his assistant just before the first performance that he would introduce all of the instrumentalists and ask them to play a little something. He probably expected just a little strum from the harpist, but when it came to my turn, I remember that I was very nervous inside not having anything planned. I played something very showy, hamming it up quite a bit. I think it caught everyone by surprise, because I remember Barry stopped, and with a big smile, chuckled and nodded approvingly!” Anna Maria has also developed a passion for Argentina’s tango, a style previously unexplored by a harpist. “In 2005, in order to understand the music better,” she recounts, “I took tango dancing lessons and, what an eye opener! The music now made sense; I was learning how to be grounded and connect with the earth. We, as musicians, also have to become like dancers and be so intuitively sensitive to one another.” Her tango explorations led to associations with masters of the genre, the formation of her own touring group, Tango del Cielo, and an upcoming recording project to highlight her new expertise.

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