Rafael Escalona
Rafael Escalona | |
|---|---|
Rafael Escalona | |
| Background information | |
| Birth name | Rafael Calixto Escalona Martinez |
| Also known as | "El Maestro" (The Master) |
| Born | May 26, 1926 Patillal, Cesar, Colombia |
| Died | May 13, 2009 (aged 82) Bogotá, DC, Colombia |
| Genres | Vallenato |
| Occupation(s) | Composer, diplomat |
| Years active | 1941–2009 |
Rafael Calixto Escalona Martinez (May 26, 1926 – May 13, 2009) was a Colombian composer and troubadour. He was known for being one of the most prominent vallenato music composers and troubadours of the genre and for being the co-founder of the Vallenato Legend Festival, along with Consuelo Araújo and Alfonso López Michelsen.
He was also a long-time friend of Gabriel García Márquez, who included him in his stories and once told him that his own masterpiece novel, One Hundred Years of Solitude, was just a 350-page Vallenato. Escalona's songs compile the history and stories of the Magdalena Department of the past 20th century. Escalona was an atypical music composer: he does not play any instruments or sing so his songs can in some ways be difficult to analyze. His songs constitute a legacy of a past generation of Colombians in his memory, a pictorial collage, full of grace, that narrates stories, customs and gossips from his region. He also left a legacy of his loves and pains, humour and poetry. In 1991, Caracol TV produced a television series named Escalona, after him.