Roger Mas
Roger Mas | |
|---|---|
Roger Mas i Solé | |
| Background information | |
| Born | Roger Mas i Solé December 9, 1975 |
| Genres | Folk, folk rock, rock, world music |
| Occupations | Singer, songwriter, musician, poet |
| Instruments | Vocals, guitar, piano |
| Years active | 1996 - Present |
| Labels | K Industria Cultural, Picap |
Roger Mas i Solé (born 1975 in Solsona) is a Catalan singer-songwriter.[1]
Biography
He began studying music and instruments at the age of five under the guidance of his grandfather, Joan Solé i Costa. At the age of twelve, he started his artistic career as a clarinetist and saxophonist. From 1994 onwards, he explored various musical expressions of the world under the mentorship of Luis Paniagua.
In 1996, the Èxit Award from Catalunya Ràdio marked the start of his career as a singer-songwriter. Since then, eleven albums, numerous awards[2] for each new work, and critical acclaim have established him as a prominent figure in Catalan music.
His music is inspired by three pillars: modern sounds, traditional roots, and ancient world music. His lyrics mix street language, literary language, and disappearing dialects. He has been described as “the most beautiful voice ever to emerge from Catalan song” (Mingus B. Formentor, La Vanguardia). In recent years, he has performed in countries such as France, Cuba, Italy, Uruguay, Serbia, the United States, Hungary, and Brazil.
He has received more than twenty awards, and his discography includes Les flors del somni (1997), Casafont (1999), En el camí de les serps i els llangardaixos blaus fluorescents cap a la casa de vidre de la Senyora dels Guants Vermells (2001), dp (2003), Mística domèstica (2005), Les cançons tel·lúriques (2008), A la casa d'enlloc (2010), and Roger Mas i la Cobla Sant Jordi – Ciutat de Barcelona (2012).
In 2013, he won the Rotllana Sardana Award (granted by the Sardana Federation of the Counties of Lleida) for combining modern music with traditional and ancient sounds from around the world, with lyrics blending street language, literary expression, and ancestral forms.[3][4]
Discography
| Year | Title | Label | Awards and recognition |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1997 | Les flors del somni | Picap |
|
| 1999 | Casafont | Picap |
|
| 2001 | Roger Mas & Les Flors en el camí de les serps i els llangardaixos blaus cap a la casa de vidre de la Senyora dels Guants Vermells | Picap |
|
| 2003 | dp | K Indústria Cultural |
|
| 2005 | Mística domèstica | K Indústria Cultural |
|
| 2008 | Les cançons tel·lúriques | K Indústria Cultural |
|
| 2010 | A la casa d'enlloc | Satélite K |
|
| 2012 | Roger Mas i la Cobla Sant Jordi - Ciutat de Barcelona | Sant Jordi Produccions |
|
| 2015 | Irredempt | Satélite K |
|
| 2018 | Parnàs | Satélite K | |
| 2021 | Totes les flors[5] | Satélite K | |
| 2024 | Roger Mas i la Cobla Sant Jordi Ciutat de Barcelona · Vol 2 | Satélite K |
Books
- Flors, somnis, camins i serps (poems and songs), 1998
- La teulada és oberta i no sé on són les parets (short stories and poetic prose), 2000 — ISBN 8495304104
- Silvae Cataloniae Interioris (photographs by Carles Santana with excerpts from Roger Mas’s songs), CTFC, 2010
- La pell i l'os (biography) by Francesc Bombí-Vilaseca, Satélite K, 2011
- El dolor de la bellesa (songs and autobiographical texts), Empúries, 2017 — ISBN 978-84-16367-93-1
References
- ^ Casas, Sònia (February 2011). "Interview with Roger Mas". Sàpiens (100). Barcelona: 5. ISSN 1695-2014.
- ^ "Roger Mas wins the Enderrock Award for Best Album of the Year". Regió 7. 31 January 2009. Archived from the original on 22 August 2016. Retrieved 5 January 2016.
- ^ Singer-songwriter Roger Mas wins the Rotllana Sardana Award 2013 Archived 3 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine in Ara, 23 November 2013
- ^ González Lucini, Fernando. "Roger Mas". Canción con todos-SGAE. Archived from the original on 18 September 2020. Retrieved 20 September 2019.
- ^ Vidal, Guillem (16 September 2021). ""We shouldn't wallow in our defeats"". El Punt Avui. Archived from the original on 20 September 2021. Retrieved 20 September 2021.
External links