Cristina Pato
Cristina Pato | |
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![]() Pato signing her album in Vigo, 2010 | |
Background information | |
Birth name | Cristina Pato Lorenzo |
Born | Ourense, Galicia, Spain | August 17, 1980
Genres | |
Occupation | Musician |
Instruments |
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Years active | 1999–present |
Labels | Sunnyside |
Website | www |
Cristina Pato Lorenzo (born August 17, 1980) is a Galician bagpiper, pianist and writer. Cristina has served as a visiting professor and artist-in-residence at New York University (NYU), Harvard University, and the University of California, Santa Barbara. Additionally, she collaborated for over fifteen years with Silkroad (arts organization), the non-profit organization founded by cellist Yo-Yo Ma.
Music career
Pato is the first female Galician gaita musician to record a solo album. She appeared on the Grammy Award-winning albums Yo-Yo Ma and Friends: Songs of Joy and Peace (2008) and Sing Me Home (2016)[1] and in the documentary The Music of Strangers: Yo-Yo Ma and The Silk Road Ensemble, directed by academy award winner Morgan Neville. She has also worked with Arturo O'Farrill, Paquito D’Rivera, Chicago Symphony Orchestra, and the New York Philharmonic, as well as dancers Damian Woetzel and Lil Buck. [1]
Since 2017, Cristina writes a weekly column titled “The Art of Restlessness” for Spanish newspaper La Voz de Galicia for which she was awarded the XVII Afundación Journalism Prize: Fernández del Riego. In 2022 she published her debut novel “No día do seu enterro” (“On His Burial Day”) with Editorial Galaxia (Colección Literaria, 2022). And in 2025, her second novel "Fóra de foco" was published also by Editorial Galaxia.
Discography
As leader
- Tolemia (Fonofolk, 1999)
- Xilento (Fonofolk, 2001)
- From Russia to Brazil with Patrice Jegou (Zouma, 2006)
- The Galician Connection (Zouma, 2010)
- Migrations (Sunnyside, 2013)
- Rustica with Davide Salvado, Anxo Pintos, Roberto Comesana (Zouma, 2015)
- Latina, Galician Bagpipes & Piano (Sunnyside, 2015)
See also
References
External links
- Official website
- James R. Oestreich, September 16, 2006 "Revealing the Soul in Soldierly Bagpipes" The New York Times
- Allan Kozinn, August 21, 2007 "Latin Sounds of Many Parts, Even Bagpipes" The New York Times
- Cristina Huete, August 31, 2009 "La nueva Cristina" El Pais 2009 (in Spanish)
- Lara De Meo July 17, 2007 "The many shades of Mason Gross musician Cristina Pato" Rutgers Focus
- Vivien Schweitzer, September 19, 2006 "Lusty or Tranquil in Spirit, but Always Unlikely in Sound" The New York Times