Carlos Pimentel

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Carlos Pimentel


Real name Carlos Pimentel Barrera

Life 1887 – 1958

Occupation

    • composer
    • guitarist

Instrument

    • guitar

Place of birth Santiago de Chile

Country of birth Chile

Citizenship

    • Chile



Carlos Pimentel Barrera (1887–1958) was a pioneering figure of classical guitar in Chile during the early 20th century. A prolific composer, performer, and teacher based in Valparaíso, his vast musical output spans over 500 works and reflects the stylistic transition from European salon music to emerging Latin American popular genres.

Biography

Born in Santiago in 1887, Pimentel spent most of his life in Valparaíso, where he died in 1958. He began studying piano and guitar at an early age and went on to build a significant career as a performer and composer. While the details of his early training remain unclear, he is believed to have studied under the Spanish musician Antonio Alba, with whom he shared a deep interest in the guitar and other plucked string instruments like the mandolin and bandurria. Together they helped promote the solo guitar repertoire inspired by European salon music in early 20th-century Chile.

Works and Style

Carlos Pimentel’s compositions include works for guitar, piano, and voice. His catalogue features salon dances such as vals, schottisches, mazurkas, gavottes, and polkas, as well as habaneras, tangos, cuecas, tonadas, foxtrots and even shimmies. He also composed numerous hymns, marches, and commercial jingles. Over 180 of his compositions are patriotic or commemorative works, including the notable Himno a las víctimas del terremoto de Chillán (1939).

His music was not limited to Chile: Pimentel toured and performed in Peru, Ecuador, and Argentina, receiving acclaim from audiences and critics alike. His compositions were published by major South American publishers such as Casa Guillermo Brandes in Peru and Kirsinger, Doggenweiler, Brandt, and Mattensohn & Grimm in Chile.

A tireless promoter of his own work, Pimentel traveled with his family, renting theaters to stage his concerts, where he also sold printed sheet music.

Pedagogy and Cultural Influence

In parallel with his compositional career, Pimentel was a committed educator. He founded several music schools in Valparaíso, including the influential Casa Buenos Aires in the 1930s, which served as a concert venue, a music school, and a sheet music shop. His efforts helped introduce many Chileans to both European and Latin American repertoires.

Despite his contributions, Pimentel remained in relative obscurity for decades, likely due in part to the marginalization of the guitar in academic music circles during the early 20th century. Guitars were only formally included in Chilean conservatories in the late 1940s. Pimentel himself may have chosen to remain under the radar, expressing in surviving documents a desire to be remembered only after his death.

Rediscovery and Legacy

Carlos Pimentel’s legacy was revived in 1998 when his family rediscovered his manuscripts. That year, classical guitarist Óscar Ohlsen released the album La guitarra de Carlos Pimentel, featuring 23 of his pieces, including:

  • Matilde (habanera)
  • Correspóndeme and Yo te correspondo (schottischs)
  • El ahuacate (Spanish tango)
  • Arrangements of the tango Pañuelito and the aria from Bizet’s Carmen

In April 2007, the book Del salón a la música popular en la guitarra de Carlos Pimentel by Roberto Fuertes and Bernardo Zamora was published. In early 2015, his manuscripts were donated to the Chilean National Library’s Music Archive. That same year, the documentary Acordes de la memoria was released, securing Pimentel’s place in Chile’s musical history.

Selected Works

  • Matilde (habanera)
  • Correspóndeme (schottisch)
  • Yo te correspondo (schottisch)
  • El ahuacate (Spanish tango)
  • Pañuelito (arrangement)
  • Carmen aria (arrangement)
  • Himno a las víctimas del terremoto de Chillán (1939)
  • Numerous foxtrots, cuecas, tonadas, and jingles

Sources

Orchestras

No known group memberships.

Recordings

No recordings found.

Opus

TitleGenreAlt. titleComp. Year
OsakaShimmy
Zulema, por favorCharleston