Over the course of several decades,
Gustavo Santaolalla was recognized as a gifted musician, songwriter, producer, and composer as he enjoyed a multi-phased career that took him from Argentina to the United States and intermittently back to Latin America, overall a storied journey that included Grammy and Oscar wins, not to mention towering heights of respect for his artistic accomplishments.
Santaolalla began his career while just a teenager, when he founded the Argentine rock band
Arco Iris. With this band, he released several albums, some of them quite influential, before he fled his native country as it descended into a terrible military dictatorship in the late '70s.
Santaolalla fled to Los Angeles, where he began a modest production career that would turn downright revolutionary by the tail end of the 1980s, when he began producing breakthrough albums for key bands amid the burgeoning rock en español scene. This production work carried him through the 1990s and into the next century, as he worked with, and in most cases helped break into the mainstream, major Latin artists such as
Juanes,
Julieta Venegas, and
Molotov. His production work slowed, however, once he began composing film scores and producing soundtracks, among them
Amores Perros (2000),
The Motorcycle Diaries (2004), and
Brokeback Mountain (2005). By this point, especially in the wake of his Academy Award for
Brokeback Mountain, he was often better known for his film work than his music production, not to mention his sporadic solo albums. Nonetheless, he remained a highly respected figure among Latin musicians and within the industry built upon them, for his association was generally considered to be a Midas touch.
Born in 1952 in El Palomar, a city in the Gran Buenos Aires metropolitan area of Argentina,
Santaolalla began guitar lessons at age five, continuing them for five years without ever learning to read or write music. As a teenager, he formed
Arco Iris in 1967 with
Ara Tokatlián and
Guillermo Bordarampé; he was the band's singer, songwriter, and guitarist. Fusing together rock with Latin American folk music,
Arco Iris released several albums --
Arco Iris (1969), Tiempo de Resurrección (1972),
Sudamérica o el Regreso a la Aurora (1972), Inti Raymi (1973), Agitor Lucens V (1975) -- before
Santaolalla left the band. One of the premier "rock nacional" (i.e., Argentine rock) acts of the early '70s,
Arco Iris were also notable for their association with Danais Wynnycka, a spiritual guru with whom the band lived communally, and also for their progressive rock ambitions, which included a double-LP rock opera (
Sudamérica o el Regreso a la Aurora) and special performances of Agitor Lucens V accompanied by a ballet choreographed by Argentine legend
Oscar Aráiz. "Mañana Campestre" remains the band's most popular song.
The remaining members of
Arco Iris carried on following the departure of
Santaolalla, who formed a new band,
Soluna, also including
Alejandro Lerner, who would later become a noteworthy singer/songwriter, and
Mónica Campins.
Soluna released one album, Energia Natural (1977), and performed sporadically in Argentina and Uruguay before
Santaolalla decided to leave this band as well. He was tired of life in Argentina, which was suffocating culturally under the presidency of military general Jorge Rafael Videla, who assumed his position as ruler of the country following the 1976 junta that removed from office President Isabel de Perón, Juan Perón's widow. Videla's government was increasingly cracking down on dissent, rounding up citizens who posed any threat. (Years later, Videla was charged with homicide, among other crimes, and was convicted and sentenced to life in prison. Tens of thousands of citizens "disappeared" during his reign.) Given the stiflingly atmosphere of the time,
Santaolalla, who was targeted by the authorities because he was a musician and because of his long hair, fled the country, relocating to Los Angeles in 1978 -- after the conclusion of that summer's World Cup, of course, for it was held in Argentina.
In Los Angeles,
Santaolalla knew no one and had to start over from scratch. Enamored with the fledging punk and new wave movements of the time, he started another band,
Wet Picnic, which also included a fellow Argentine expatriate,
Anibal Kerpel. The band played a lot of gigs and eventually released an EP on Unicorn Records,
Balls Up (1982). More importantly, the collaboration between
Santaolalla and
Kerpel in
Wet Picnic established a productive working relationship that would endure for decades. In addition to his stint in
Wet Picnic,
Santaolalla kept busy as a producer. His first production work came courtesy of
León Gieco. The Argentine folk legend flew to Los Angeles in October 1980 to join
Santaolalla, who produced three songs for
Pensar en Nada, released the following year to considerable success in Argentina. In 1981,
Santaolalla composed a soundtrack for director
Robert Dornhelm's film She Dances Alone, and produced an album by
the Plugz,
Better Luck (1981), on which he also performed. A couple songs from the album ended up getting compiled on the
Repo Man soundtrack in 1984. Around this time, he recorded a solo album with the assistance of keyboardist
Alejandro Lerner, bassist
Alfredo Toth, and drummer
Willy Iturri, titled simply
Santaolalla (1982), which, like
Pensar en Nada, was well received in his native country.
Following these early years in Los Angeles,
Santaolalla returned to Argentina in the wake of the country's 1983 presidential election, which brought to power Raúl Alfonsín, who re-established an air of freedom and justice in the country. There in Argentina,
Santaolalla reunited with
Gieco for an ambitious project that would be documented in various mediums as
De Ushuahia a La Quiaca (1985). For roughly two years,
Santaolalla and
Gieco traveled from the southernmost region of Argentina (Ushuahia, in Terra del Fuego) to the northernmost (La Quiaca, along the Bolivian border). Throughout their travels, they recorded folk musicians in their own environments;
Santaolalla produced the project, using generators to power his recording equipment. The project ended up resembling the Cuban
Buena Vista Social Club (1997), with
Gieco taking on the role embodied by
Ry Cooder in the latter.
De Ushuahia a La Quiaca was successful on several counts. It spawned a pair of follow-up volumes, not to mention several television programs, and on a personal level, it also introduced
Santaolalla to his wife, Alejandra Palacios, a photographer who was part of the project.
Emboldened by the success of
De Ushuahia a La Quiaca,
Santaolalla dedicated himself to production work, and he aimed his focus on Mexico, which was undergoing political upheaval in the late '80s. The country was suffering from an economic crisis in the 1980s, and when an earthquake struck Mexico City in 1985, killing 10,000 people, the situation there turned dire. Moreover, the presidential election of 1988 took a fateful turn when the computer the country planned to use to count votes, a brand-new IBM AS/400, suddenly crashed on the day of the election. The government publicly announced "se cayó el sistema" (the system crashed), and when the votes were tallied later, the Institutional Revolutionary Party (PRI) candidate, Carlos Salinas, was declared the winner. This was expected, for the PRI party had controlled the government for the preceding 59 years (1929-1988); however, this was the first time the vote was controversial, and consequently "se cayó el sistema" became a cynical Mexican catch phrase. In turn, the PRI party fractured, resulting in the emergence the following year of the left-wing Party of the Democratic Revolution (PRD). Moreover, the state-controlled media monopoly in Mexico began to break down around this time, and the longtime ban on rock concerts in Mexico City, enacted in 1968, also came under pressure following a government-approved
Rod Stewart concert in the state of Queretaro in 1988.
Amid all of this cultural upheaval was an appetite for American-style rock music, especially with the influence of
Soda Stereo so prevalent across Latin America at the time, and so
Santaolalla began producing Mexican rock bands. In particular,
Maldita Vecindad's
Y Los Hijos del Quinto Patio (1989) and
El Circo (1991) as well as
Caifanes'
El Diablito (1990) -- each produced by
Santaolalla -- greatly fueled the burgeoning rock en español movement of the time.
Santaolalla's work wasn't exclusively Mexican, however. He also produced albums by
Los Prisioneros (Chile) and
El Divididos (Argentina), for example. But he was drawn to Mexico primarily. This was partly because of its nearness to Los Angeles, yet perhaps more importantly, it was because of the atmosphere of cultural upheaval there, which he found reminiscent of Argentina during his youth, when the Argentine rock scene was in full swing. In the midst of this rock en español uprising, he found
Café Tacuba, arguably the rock en español style's premier act -- certainly the most popular -- and the one band with which
Santaolalla's production work would become associated more than any other.
During the 1990s,
Santaolalla produced many other popular bands besides
Café Tacuba, including
Julieta Venegas (
Aquí [1998]),
Molotov (
¿Dónde Jugarán las Niñas? [1998]),
Fobia (
Amor Chiquito [1996]),
the Gipsy Kings (
Tierra Gitana [1996]),
Peyote Asesino (
Terraja [1998]),
Bersuit Vergarabat (
Libertinaje [1999]), and
Puya (
Solo [1998],
Fundamental [1999]). In 2000 he added to his roster
Juanes, with whom he enjoyed tremendous international success over the course of several albums, most notably
Un Día Normal (2002). With few exceptions, each of these albums was released by Universal Latino, which partnered with
Santaolalla; in fact, the two formed a joint venture in 1997, forming Surco, the producer's own boutique label (a sublabel, Vibra, was founded later). In addition to production,
Santaolalla recorded a pair of solo albums,
Gas (1995), a rock album, and
Ronroco (1998), an instrumental album showcasing ronroco and charango, stringed instruments of the lute family, traditionally made with the shell of an armadillo. A peculiar album, for it isn't particularly Andean-sounding,
Ronroco nevertheless attracted producer/director
Michael Mann, who approached
Santaolalla with a request to use the song "Iguazu" in The Insider (1999), a film starring
Russell Crowe. The song is featured prominently, during a turning point in the film where there is no dialogue.
The door to Hollywood was now opened, and
Santaolalla found himself fielding a series of soundtrack opportunities. First came
Amores Perros (2000), released as a two-CD soundtrack for the
Alejandro González Iñárritu film of the same name. The soundtrack featured original music by
Santaolalla as featured in the film, and it also featured newly recorded songs from major Latin acts such as
Julieta Venegas,
Café Tacuba,
Control Machete,
Illya Kuryaki and the Valderramas, and
Ely Guerra. Both the film and the soundtrack were widely praised, and a few years later
Santaolalla composed the soundtrack for
Iñárritu's next film, 21 Grams (2003). Then, introduced to Brazilian director
Walter Salles by
Iñárritu,
Santaolalla was invited to compose the soundtrack for The Motorcycle Diaries (2004). This score won him the BAFTA Award (British Academy Award) in February 2005 and set the stage for his Golden Globe and Oscar wins shortly afterward for
Brokeback Mountain (2005).
Santaolalla got the job thanks to another chance meeting, this time with Taiwanese-American director
Ang Lee. Upon reading the script for the film as well as the short story by Annie Proulx upon which the film was based,
Santaolalla composed the soundtrack -- before the movie was even shot, a rare practice in Hollywood.
Lee was actually able to study the soundtrack beforehand, keeping it in mind as he went about scouting locations for Brokeback Mountain, in addition to while he shot the film. Brokeback Mountain was as controversial as it was acclaimed when it opened in late 2005, and the buzz surrounding it garnered
Santaolalla a lot of media attention, all the more so when he won a Golden Globe for "A Love That Will Never Grow Old," an original song of his performed by
Emmylou Harris and co-written by
Bernie Taupin,
Elton John's longtime lyricist. An Oscar followed, this time for Best Score. The Academy Award complemented his 2005 Latin Grammy Award from the prior year, which he'd won for Producer of the Year.
Now with an Oscar to his name, in addition to several Grammys,
Santaolalla kept working unabated. His score for
Iñárritu's third film in a row, Babel (2006), is particularly noteworthy: to give the film an authentic Middle Eastern atmosphere,
Santaolalla learned to play the oud, an Arab lute. Also notable is
Café de los Maestros (2005), a kind of tango version of
Buena Vista Social Club.
Santaolalla used his clout to unite a who's who of Argentine tango legends for the documentary project, including musicians and singers such as
Emilio Balcarce,
Carlos Garcia,
Atilio Stampone,
Jose Libertella,
Osvaldo Berlingieri,
Horacio Salgan,
Leopoldo Federico,
Virginia Luque,
Lágrima Ríos,
Alberto Podesta,
Juan Carlos Godoy,
Osvaldo Requena,
Fernando Suarez Paz,
Emilio de la Peña,
Oscar Ferrari,
Nelly Omar,
Ubaldo de Lio, and
Mariano Mores -- none of whom was under age 70. Moreover, all participants in the project performed at Teatro Colón in Buenos Aires on August 24, 2006, sans
Libertella and
Garcia, who had died in the meantime.
Walter Salles (The Motorcycle Diaries) directed the film aspect of the documentary, and
Santaolalla released a two-volume CD,
Café de los Maestros, which won the 2006 Latin Grammy for Best Tango Album. ~ Jason Birchmeier, All Music Guide