Age, Biography and Wiki

Carmina Escobar was born on 1981 in Mexico, is a Mexican-American musician and artist (born 1981). Discover Carmina Escobar's Biography, Age, Height, Physical Stats, Dating/Affairs, Family and career updates. Learn How rich is she in this year and how she spends money? Also learn how she earned most of networth at the age of 43 years old?

Popular As N/A
Occupation N/A
Age 43 years old
Zodiac Sign
Born 1981, 1981
Birthday 1981
Birthplace N/A
Nationality Mexico

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 1981. She is a member of famous musician with the age 43 years old group.

Carmina Escobar Height, Weight & Measurements

At 43 years old, Carmina Escobar height not available right now. We will update Carmina Escobar's Height, weight, Body Measurements, Eye Color, Hair Color, Shoe & Dress size soon as possible.

Physical Status
Height Not Available
Weight Not Available
Body Measurements Not Available
Eye Color Not Available
Hair Color Not Available

Dating & Relationship status

She is currently single. She is not dating anyone. We don't have much information about She's past relationship and any previous engaged. According to our Database, She has no children.

Family
Parents Not Available
Husband Not Available
Sibling Not Available
Children Not Available

Carmina Escobar Net Worth

Her net worth has been growing significantly in 2023-2024. So, how much is Carmina Escobar worth at the age of 43 years old? Carmina Escobar’s income source is mostly from being a successful musician. She is from Mexico. We have estimated Carmina Escobar's net worth, money, salary, income, and assets.

Net Worth in 2024 $1 Million - $5 Million
Salary in 2024 Under Review
Net Worth in 2023 Pending
Salary in 2023 Under Review
House Not Available
Cars Not Available
Source of Income musician

Carmina Escobar Social Network

Instagram
Linkedin
Twitter
Facebook
Wikipedia
Imdb

Timeline

1981

Carmina Escobar (born 1981) is an experimental vocalist, improviser, performance artist, multimedia artist, composer, and educator from Mexico City who lives and works in Los Angeles, California.

Jeffrey Fleishman from the Los Angeles Times has written that Escobar "can make her voice sound like insects dancing on dry leaves or a rocket ship dying in space."

She is on the VoiceArts faculty of the California Institute of the Arts where she teaches on "voice technique, experimental voice workshops, contemporary vocal music, and interdisciplinary projects regarding the voice".

Escobar studied music in the Escuela Superior de Música of the Instituto Nacional de Bellas Artes in Mexico City where she was trained through the classical canon, "but her soul and voice--she was labeled a soprano and mezzo-soprano--felt constricted by what she called music 'that’s mostly male, mostly European.'" These constrictions led her to explore other possibilities of the voice, extended techniques being a prominent one, and to seek additional training from artists living in Mexico City such as Hebe Rosell and Juan Pablo Villa.

In the United States and in other locales, Escobar continued her vocal experimentation techniques with additional training with Jaqueline Bobak, Meredith Monk, Jaap Blonk.

She is a graduate of the MFA program in VoiceArts at the California Institute of the Arts.

Escobar has gained national and international recognition for her vocal, scenic, electronic music, and filmic work.

In addition to performing in different festivals around the country and the world, Escobar has performed throughout Mexico, the United States, Cuba, and Puerto Rico, among other locations.

2013

Massagem Sonora, or Sonic Massage, gained attention through its role in a large scale collaborative project in 2013 through the Getty Foundation's funded Pacific Standard Time Presents: Modern Architecture in L.A. and in tangent with The Machine Project Field Guide to LA Architecture.

Their first performance of the piece took place on July 4, 2013 in Mexico City.

2015

LIMINAR's United States' performance of this landmark piece, along with other Carrillo and Carrillo inspired compositions, took place in Los Angeles's REDCAT on December 11–12, 2015.

Of Escobar's performance Mark Swed wrote: "the greatest novelty is heard in a soprano part that could be the soundtrack for a séance and was sung with startling expressivity and purity by Carmina Escobar."

2017

Another piece initially produced by Machine Project was Escobar's large-scale site-specific performance spectacle Fiesta Perpetua! A Communitas Ritual of Manifestation in Los Angeles's Echo Park Lake on May 20, 2017, which was later re-staged as part of Pacific Standard Time Festival: Live Art LA/LA on January 13, 2018, funded by the Getty Foundation and organized by REDCAT.

While the first iteration lasted all day, from dawn to dusk and moved, the second took place during one afternoon.

Of Fiesta Perpetual! Yxta Maya Murray has said that Escobar "mesmerized a crowd of onlookers with a series of esoteric songs" as she was "accompanied by the 40-member Oaxacan youth brass band Maqueos Music, conducted by Yulissa Maqueos" and the Japanese butoh dancer Oguri.

Inspired by traditional processional events in Mexico, Fiesta Perpetua! was conceived less of a spectacle to be taken in by the "onlookers" and more as a series of ritualized movements throughout the space where the audience became participants.

Carolina A. Miranda called it, "a performance that felt a little bit like a stirring rite that transforms into an impromptu neighborhood party."

Escobar is the co-founder and was a long-term vocalist of LIMINAR, a contemporary music ensemble based in Mexico City.

As noted by Alejandro Madrid in his book In Search of Julián Carrillo and Sonido 13, Escobar was instrumental in LIMINAR's performance of Julián Carrillo's Preludio a Colón, which is said to best exemplify Carrillo's microtonal music theory known as Sonido 13.

2018

Until the organization and community events space went defunct in 2018, her work was shown regularly with the Los Angeles based Machine Project.

Some of Escobar's most recent work in Los Angeles has been produced by her production company, Boss Witch.

Escobar is also widely known for her body resonance work known as Massagem Sonora, which Fernando Vigueras has described as "a sort of exercise that analyses and reflects upon the body, understanding it as a space that reveals, measures and recognizes itself throughout its resonance."

In 2018 Escobar premiered her performance piece, Pura Entraña / Pure Gut, developed during her residency at MacDowell and in collaboration Mexican instrument maker and musician Jerónimo Naranjo who known for his Piano Suspendido (Suspended Piano).

Escobar and her collaborators, which consisted of musicians, instrumentalists, and dancers—among them Naranjo, Dorian Wood, the Oaxacan youth brass band Maqueos Music, Oguri, Roxanne Steinberg—activated the installation of the Piano Suspendido that hovered 6 feet above Los Angeles' REDCAT's stage floor and created a surrealist sonic and visual journey into the entrails of the installation for the spectators.

Another project, Bajo la sombra del sol / Under the Sun's Shadow, a Boss Witch Production, premiered in 2021 also in REDCAT and it consisted of a immersive installation and film projection alongside live performance by an ensemble of artists from different disciplines: music, voice, dance.

As described on the REDCAT's website, Bajo la sombra del sol "is a performative hypertextural scenic work by Carmina Escobar that is staged, makes communion with, and gathers multimedia material at the natural landscape of Mono Lake, California."

This multimedia material gathered can be considered an experimental film that Escobar directed in Mono Lake under great duress, the Covid-19 pandemic and the fires that raged throughout California during the summer of 2021.

But the locale of Mono Lake, which has been "relentlessly whittled into its current state of environmental calamity by humans," was used to explore one of Escobar's artistic and philosophical interests, the "concept of darkness, of the shadow, of inhabiting shadows and casting shadows."

For Bajo la sombra del Sol Escobar brought back two key collaborators, Jerónimo Naranjo who constructed a series of instruments, including a large-scale drum that stands as proxy for the sun, and Dorian Wood who is a central character in the piece, both the film and live version, alongside other past and new collaborating artists.

Escobar has collaborated with several artists.

Notably she worked with Raven Chacon on a series of scores For Zitkála-Šá. The Diné composer and multimedia artist created a score specifically with Escobar in mind, For Carmina Escobar, which she has performed on several occasions, including at the Whitney Museum during the 2022 Whitney Biennial where all 12 For Zitkála-Šá were on display.

Of the Whitney Biennial performance Jennifer Pyron wrote for the Opera Wire that "Escobar’s voice amassed every possible emotion in her live performance. Between screams, gasps, wails and glottal noise, Escobar stood like a terrifying statue on stage...Symbolizing the raw terror that lays beneath the surface, sometimes in the moment and out in the open. Carmina Escobar’s performance was legendary."

2019

During Wood’s homage to the late Costa Rican, nationalized Mexican Chavela Vargas, Xavela Lux Aeterna, the multimedia Los Angeles-based artist invited Escobar to improvise with her during the performance of the song medley “Diablo y Patriótica” at the REDCAT in Los Angeles in 2019. Wood’s homage to Vargas was commissioned by the Festival Internacional de Arte Sacro in Madrid, which later also commissioned another homage, this time in honor of the late Canadian Latina Lhasa de Sela.

Wood invited Escobar to be a collaborator and a co-performer of the piece, simply titled Lhasa and they toured in cities across Spain in 2022.

The live performance was recorded in Teatro Jovellanos in Gijón. Most recently, Escobar has performed in Wood’s Canto de Todes (Song for Everyone), a 12-hour performance installation that is composed of three parts, two live movements (I and III), and one long ten-hour immersive sound and visual installation (II).

Escobar’s contributions to Canto de Todes are part of the third movement.

The performance artist Ron Athey is another one of Escobar's collaborators, and together, along with other artists at times, they have performed in underground and in off-the fringes venues.

2020

Escobar and Chacon both worked in The Industry’s Sweet Land, described by Mark Swed for the Los Angeles Times, “opera as astonishment,” which premiered in The Los Angeles State Historic Park in February 2020.

Chacon was part of the creative team, he was one of the composers, and Escobar played the role of one of the Coyotes, where she donned a costume designed and manufactured by Cannupa Hanska Luger, who also served as co-director, alongside Yuval Sharon. Among her notable contributions to Sweet Land, was her vocal improvisation, along with the other Coyote (Micaela Tobin) and the Wiindigo (Sharon Kim) over Chacon's electronic soundtrack in the section entitled "Crossroads."

Just as Escobar has invited Dorian Wood to be part of her pieces, Wood has also included Escobar among one of her most consistent collaborators.