
Willy Lopez is a graduated
sound engineer specialized on Latin American music, he is also a talented
composer and musical arranger with a long life experience creating jingles
in Spanish for companies such as Coca Cola, Goya and others.
Willy
Lopez has a comprehensive career in television and performing arts
production; he has worked in marketing for over 35 years.
Mr. Lopez owns his own record company named, Cantipista International, a
division of La Guardia Recording Studios established in New York in 1982.
On
1997 he established the Kuraka recording studio located in Tampa, Florida
presently he is located in Boston Massachusetts where he recently built and
opened a video and music studio.
Son of Portuguese immigrants, Willy Lopez was born in the Peruvian Amazon.
His first contact with music was at the age of six when his father built him
a guitar.
Mexican movies influenced Willy to play the guitar and sing rancheras
(Mexican Music). AT a very young age Willy and his brother performed in
various provinces of his country.
Later, on his adolescent years he decided to pursue his singing career with
out his brother but this time singing modern ballads.
On 1966 Willy signed an exclusive contract with the recording company Odeon
of England in Peru. In 1968 during the same period of time when his
contract with that company came to an end he decided to move to Ecuador. In
Ecuador the recording company Fediscos Del Ecuador offered Willy to
sign a profitable contract due to his extraordinary vocal talent soon he was
on the top of the hit parade breaking all record sells in that country for
three consecutive years.
Willy
was also the lead singer on the television show “Escoja Su Pareja” (Pick
Your Partner), broadcast nationally on channel 2 in Guayaquil, Ecuador.
On
1970 Mr. Lopez decided to retire from the stage and television to improve
his knowledge as a sound engineer at the Columbia University in New York,
and soon he became one of the first Latinos to be a member of the “Sound
Engineers Union” on the Big Apple.
From 1972 to 1982 Willy worked as a Shift Engineer at Latin Sound Recording
Studios located on 42nd Street in Manhattan, where he record some of the
productions of the famous Latin music label named La Fania All Star
as well as other Spanish well know vocalists and groups.
On the marketing field Willy worked with Raul Alarcon one of
the most wealthy Latinos living in USA and owner of the national radio
station La Mega.
On 1982, Willy established his own recording studio, and dedicated himself
to produce for his own Recording Label, in which he presently has 15
talented artists. Mr. Lopez has also great skills on building recording and
Television studios.
On 1993, Willy produced a music album to Veronica Robles, a Mexican singer,
since then both Willy and Veronica have produced shows and television for
several theaters and companies within Mexico and the United States.
On 1998, Willy produced 24 sound tracks for the Musical “Mexico, Magia y
Pasion” (Mexico, Magic and Passion). This presentation offered a
celebration of Mexico’s vivid colors, traditional songs, and dances mixed
with African, Caribbean, and South American rhythms. Lead by Veronica Robles
singing Huapangos Sones and Rancheras, they toured all over Mexico with this
production from April to August of 1998.
Mexico Magia y Pasion was the first Mexican musical ever
produced at a local level in New York.
On 1999, Willy and Veronica continued to perform in different theaters all
around the East Coast, starting at Thalia Spanish Theater in New York.
Willy Worked as a Director of the Latino Arts and Culture
Initiative at Centro Latino de Chelsea from April 2000 to December 2002. The
Initiative was created to serve as an alternative of delinquency and
destructive behaviors among Latino children and youth and its programs were
performing arts based in order to develop discipline skills and unlash
certain talents that could help on their academic and life education.
Presently Willy is the General producer of Orale con Veronica
a variety television program which is an alternative to commercial Spanish
television in the East Coast of the United States