Con silencio vibrante
A Sonic Map of the Spanish–Latin American Avant-Garde (1963–1976)
IBS Classical presents Con silencio vibrante, an exceptional new release by the Seville-based ensemble Taller Sonoro, devoted to eight key works from the Spanish and Latin American avant-garde of the 1960s and 1970s. Featuring world-premiere recordings of works by Joan Guinjoan, Aurelio de la Vega, Graciela Paraskevaídis, and Jesús Villa-Rojo, the album offers a revelatory journey through one of the most fertile and least documented periods of contemporary chamber music.
Between 1963 and 1976, musical creation on both sides of the Atlantic experienced a moment of extraordinary aesthetic expansion, technical maturity, and creative openness. This recording sheds new light on that period by placing in dialogue works that embrace serialism and chance procedures, graphic notation, literary intertextuality, radical timbral exploration, and highly personal expressive languages. The selection thus traces a true map of exchanges, influences, and affinities between composers who reshaped the musical landscape of the twentieth century.
The album opens with Quotations (1976) by Mario Lavista, an intimate, suspended work shaped by fragmentary resonances and poetic echoes drawn from Poe and Béranger. It continues with the vibrant, playful Miniaturas (1965) by Joan Guinjoan, a triptych that marked the early years of the historic ensemble Diabolus in Musica. The virtuosic writing and extreme colorism of Labdanum (1970) reflect one of the most fertile phases in the work of Aurelio de la Vega, while Argentine composer Graciela Paraskevaídis offers in Con silencio vibrante (1967) a poetics of fragility and micro-gesture inspired by the words of Miguel Hernández.
Spanish avant-garde voices emerge with renewed strength in Composición a cinco instrumentos (1965) by Gonzalo de Olavide, a paradigm of structural and timbral mastery; and in Imaginary landscape (1968) by Enrique Raxach, a work shaped by literary mirror-games evocative of Borges and Lewis Carroll. In Espaciado-rítmico (1974), Jesús Villa-Rojo builds an architecture of meticulous clarity based on proportionally measured temporal blocks. The journey concludes with Cesuras (1963) by Luis de Pablo, one of the major chamber works of the Spanish avant-garde, where rigor and freedom converge in a discourse of striking expressive power.
Con silencio vibrante was recorded at the Conservatorio Superior de Música “Manuel Castillo” in Seville, produced by Paco Moya with sound engineering by Cheluis Salmerón. The ensemble Taller Sonoro —Jesús Sánchez Valladares (flute), Camilo Irizo (clarinet), Sarah Roper (oboe), Baldomero Lloréns (percussion), Ignacio Torner (piano), Alejandro Tuñón (violin), Aglaya González (viola), and María del Carmen Coronado (cello)— delivers reference interpretations marked by precision, depth, and an unwavering commitment to contemporary creation.
With this release, IBS Classical reinforces its dedication to the preservation and revitalization of the music of the 20th and 21st centuries, while confirming Taller Sonoro’s position as one of today’s leading ensembles in the performance and promotion of contemporary repertoire.



