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Ricardo
Arjona to be presented with ASCAP
Latin Heritage Award. |
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The
American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers
(ASCAP) will celebrate its 14th Annual Latin
Music Awards on Tuesday, March 7, 2006 at the
Beverly Hilton Hotel in Los Angeles, California.
The invitation-only gala will honor the songwriters
and publishers of ASCAP's most performed songs
in Latin Music of 2005. ASCAP's Latin Music
Awards is one of the most attended and celebrated
events in the Latin entertainment community.
One of the evening's highlights will be the
presentation of the ASCAP Latin Heritage Award
to Ricardo Arjona. This is one of the most prestigious
honors that the Society bestows upon its members,
and is being given to Arjona for his outstanding
contribution to Latin music. Past recipients
include Antonio Aguilar, Celia Cruz, José
Feliciano, Ednita Nazario, Arturo Sandoval,
Gilberto Santa Rosa and Olga Tañón.
During
the awards ceremony, ASCAP will also recognize
the Songwriter of the Year, Publisher of the
Year, Super Song of the Year, and awards will
be presented in the following categories: Pop,
Tropical, Regional Mexican, Rock, Urban, and
Television. In the Television category, awards
will be presented to the Top Rated Theme for
Soap Opera and the Top Rated Theme for TV Variety
Program.
The singer-songwriter tradition
of social and interpersonal commentary remains
robust around the world, and in Latin America,
no one keeps it alive more than Ricardo Arjona.
Arjona is one of the most respected poets, performers
and songwriters in the hemisphere. Born in the
small town of Jocotenango, Guatamala, he starting
playing guitar and singing at an early age,
performing at political rallies and festivals
while in college. He taught school, but moved
to Mexico to follow his muse. When his first
album turned out more pop than protest, he turned
his back on recording and spent five years experimenting
with different careers. He enrolled in university
and studied Engineering, Architecture and Communications.
He taught school in a rural part of Guatemala
and was also a record setting professional basketball
player. But like any artist with a calling,
his creativity could not be contained.
He
moved to Buenos Aires, where he began writing
songs and performing in local bars. In 1990
he released the controversial "Jesus Verbo
No Sustantivo." He soon found a recording
home with Sony, where his "Animal Nocturno"
album went on to receive 13 Platinum and 1 Diamante
Awards. The follow up, 1994's "Historias,"
was an even bigger success, but it was in 1996
that the now Mexico-based Arjona experienced
a defining moment with the release of "Si
El Norte Fuera el Sur," the title track
from the album of the same name. The title was
a hugely popular song and served to further
separate Arjona from the traditional pop lyricists.
He fills stadiums and has gone on to release
four hugely successful CDs, an autobiographical
DVD documentary, and his newest release, "Adentro."