Clímaco Sarmiento

Clímaco Sarmiento
Born
Clímaco Sarmiento Ávila

1916 (1916)
Soplaviento, Colombia
Died(1986-01-31)31 January 1986 (aged 70)
Cartagena, Colombia

Clímaco Sarmiento Ávila[a] (1916 – 1986), was a Colombian musician and songwriter. He played saxophone and clarinet in the orchestras of Lucho Bermúdez, Pedro Laza, and others, as well as leading his own. Sarmiento wrote numerous songs in a variety of Colombian styles, and was described by Peter Wade as being a central figure of mid-century Colombian coastal music, alongside Laza and Rufo Garrido.[1]

Biography

Early life

Sarmiento was born in 1916 in Soplaviento, in the Colombian department of Bolívar.[2] His mother was Justina Ávila and his father was Pedro Sarmiento, a clarinetist. Sarmiento was the second of twelve children.[2]

Music career

In the 1920s Sarmiento's family moved to Cartagena, where he was taught to play saxophone by a German called Vickmer.[2] Sarmiento joined the orchestra of Lucho Bermúdez, and then the Orquesta Emisora Fuentes, where he met the clarinetist and band director Juancho Esquivel, with whom he formed the band Los Trovadores de Barú in 1946.[2] Sarmiento also played in the orchestras of Pedro Laza, Rufo Garrido, and Alex Tovar.[2][3]

Sarmiento formed his own orchestra in 1959, with whom he released the album Estampas de Cartagena (1959) on Zeida (a subsidiary of Codiscos), and the albums Bombo y Maracas (1961) and Clímaco Sarmiento y su Orquesta (1962) on Discos Fuentes, as well as three others for the Venezuelan record label Fonograma.[2] The orchestra recorded with singers including Tony Zúñiga, Teresita Rendón, Henry Castro, Nora Tatis, and Jairo Likasale.[2]

Personal life and death

Sarmiento was married to Cristina Vega, and is the father of musician Michi Sarmiento.[2][4] He disappeared on 31 January 1986 after going out to see friends, and was found dead the next day.[2]

Musical style and compositions

Sarmiento's first composition was "Siria Libre".[2] His other notable compositions include the porros "El Conejo", "El Breu", "Negro No Te Vayas", "Juanchito", "El Zuñigazo", and "Tribu el Guanipas", the gaita "Conchita", and the guaracha "La Tembladera".[5]

Notes

  1. ^ In this Spanish name, the first or paternal surname is Sarmiento and the second or maternal family name is Ávila.

References

  1. ^ Peter Wade (2000). Music, Race, and Nation: Música Tropical in Colombia. University of Chicago Press. p. 158. ISBN 0-226-86845-1.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Luis Daniel Vega (21 June 2016), "Clímaco Sarmiento, el aguerrido clarinetista de Soplaviento" [Clímaco Sarmiento, the fierce clarinetist from Soplaviento], Radio Nacional de Colombia (in Spanish), retrieved 3 December 2025
  3. ^ José I. Pinilla Aguilar (1980). "Sarmiento Climaco". Cultores de la Música Colombiana (in Spanish). Editorial Ariana. pp. 385–386. OCLC 253182806.
  4. ^ "Michi Sarmiento: 80 años de pura salsa" [Michi Sarmiento: 80 years of pure salsa], Radio Nacional de Colombia (in Spanish), 29 October 2018, retrieved 3 December 2025
  5. ^ "Clímaco Sarmiento Ávila, el gran homenajeado en el Festibandas 2016" [Clímaco Sarmiento Ávila, the main honoree at Festibandas 2016], El Universal (in Spanish), 18 July 2016, retrieved 3 December 2025