Birography :
Maria Farantouri was born in Athens at the
time when Greece was recovering from the devastation
of World War II and the German Occupation and was still engaged
in a
devastating civil war. It was then that one of Greece's major
poets, Angelos Sikelianos, wrote his "March of Spirit",
a poem of exaltation and heroic vision. Twenty-two years later,
exiled in a small village in the mountains of Arcadia by the
military junta that ruled Greece from 1967-1974, the composer
Mikis Theodorakis set Sikelianos's poem to music in a score
especially designed for Maria's voice.
As soon as the dictators had taken over the power, Maria
had left Greece and joined the struggle against the dictatorship
by giving thousands of concerts all over the world, performing
in some of world's major concert halls such as John F.Kennedy
Center in Washington, London's Royal Albert Hall and Royal
Festival Hall, the Salle Tchaikovsky in Moscow, the Berlin
Opera House and the Paris Olympia. During the dictatorship
and the years following it, Maria became the Greek people's
symbol of resistance and hope. She participated in many
festivals for disarmament and peace, and protested any
form of political oppression, performing with other famous
singers such as Myriam Makeba, Juliette Greco, Maria del
Mar Bonet and the Chilean group Inti Illimani.
Maria Farantouri kept Theodorakis's music alive during
the seven years of the military dictatorship when it was
banned in Greece, playing an important role in the movement
for the revival of Greek music. She is universally recognized
as the ideal interpreter of Theodorakis's music. Her rich
contralto voice, with its broad range and melodic quality,
combined with a fine musical intelligence make her a superb
exponent of the composer's wide range of musical styles.
Farantouri's expressive voice
as well as the high quality of her repertoire have drawn
high praise from critics and
music lovers everywhere. The Guardian wrote: "Her
voice is a controlled passion, a battle cry waiting for
a top G to let itself go. She is unique; her voice is a
gift from the Gods of Olympus". The music critic of
Le Monde described her as "The Joan Baez of the Mediterranean".
In his book, The Bee and the Architect, the late President
of the French Republic, Francois Mitterand, wrote: "For
me Greece is Maria Farantouri. This is how I imagined Goddess
Hera to be: strong, pure and vigilant. I have never encountered
any other artist able to give me such a strong sense of
the divine".
Among Maria's most important interpretations of Mikis
Theodorakis are Canto General, asetting of the poetry of
Pablo Neruda, who watched the rehearsals himself, Romancero
Gitano, a setting of poems by Federico Garcia Lorca, adapted
in Greek by the Nobelist poet Odysseas Elytis, for which
Farantouri collaborated with classical guitarist John Williams,
and the Ballad of Mauthausen, a settings of poems by Iakovos
Kambanellis, which she performed together with the Israeli
Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Zubin Mehta at the
Herodus Atticus Theater of Athens in August 1991.
Maria's international repertoire includes Songs of Protest,
songs by the Turkish composer Zulfu Livaneli and songs
by Lucio Dalla. In the 17 Songs arranged for her by the
Cuban composer Leo Brouwer with guest appearance of Mercedes
Sosa, she interpreted C.Veloso, M.Nascimento, M.Legrand,
N.Piovani and Kurt Weill. In the same double LP she also
performed songs by Vangelis, especially composed for her.
By special invitation, Maria appeared at the Berliner Ensemble
of Bertold Brecht, singing Brecht in her native language.
As a result of this success, Maria had the privilege of
presenting Ekerhardt Schall of the Berliner Ensemble to
the Greek people in a joint concert.
Although she is best known as an interpreter of Theodoraki's
music, Maria has collaborated with a number of other Greek
composers as the leading one Manos Hadzithakis. Her most
recent interpretations of Greek composers are those of
Eleni Karaindrou, Nikos Papazoglou, Pericles Koukos, Lena
Platonos and Nikos Xythakis .
Her latest recordings are "Asmata" (Peregrina,
1998) and "Serenades" (MINOS EMI, 1998) by Mikis
Theodorakis, "Third Door" (MINOS EMI, 2000) by
Lena Platonos and "A Century of Greek Song" (LEGEND,
2001), which became golden as soon as it was released -
December 2001. LEGEND Recordings released one more cd sung
by Maria last year (December 2002), a homage to Federico
Garcia Lorca. This cd includes three Lorca works: "Blood
Wedding" (set to music by M.Hadzithakis and adapted
in Greek by Nikos Gatsos), the famous Spanish songs "Canciones
Populares" and "Romancero Gitano", (M.Theodorakis
- Odysseas Elytis).
Apart from her artistic activities, Maria Farantouri has
always been very much involved in the cultural and political
life of Greece. She was a member of the Greek Parliament
from 1989-1993 representing the Panhellenic Socialistic
Movement (PASOK).
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