Moncho Alpuente
Moncho Alpuente | |
---|---|
Born | 23 May 1949 Madrid |
Died | 21 March 2015 (aged 65) Las Palmas |
Occupation | Journalist, writer and musician |
Ramón Mas Alpuente (1949–2015), best known as Moncho Alpuente, was a Spanish journalist, writer and musician.
Born on 23 May 1949 in Madrid,[1] he studied journalism.[2]
A noted figure of the Movida madrileña,[2] he performed in several musical bands including Las Madres del Cordero, Desde Santurce a Bilbao Blues Band, Moncho Alpuente y Los Kwai and The Moncho Alpuente Experience.[1]
One of the founders of Popular FM back in 1971, he had a long career in radio.[2] A regular collaborator for El País and also Público in his later years,[3] he stood out as unofficial chronicler of the city of Madrid, to which he dedicated hundreds of pieces at the local section of El País.[2]
He died in Las Palmas de Gran Canaria on 21 March 2015.[4]
Books
[edit]- Solo para fumadores. 1988.[5]
- Hablando francamente. 1990.[5]
- Versos perversos. 2000.[5]
- Grandezas de España: la historia más grande jamás contada con menos escrúpulos. 2000.[5]
Television
[edit]On television he began with the musical program Mundo Pop (1974) on Spanish Television, in which he was a director, presenter and scriptwriter. In subsequent years, he contributed regularly different spaces:
- Tele-Magazine (1974-1975)
- Popgrama (1979-1980)
- What a night that year! (1987)
- Delusions of love (1989)
- The worst show of the week (1993)
- The commons (1999)
- Wyoming Rooftop (2005)
References
[edit]- ^ a b "Muere Moncho Alpuente". Rockdelux.
- ^ a b c d "Muere Moncho Alpuente". El País. 21 March 2015.
- ^ "Muere Moncho Alpuente". Cadena SER. 21 March 2015.
- ^ Miranda, M.; Álvarez, M. (22 March 2015). "El final grancanario del periodista Moncho Alpuente". La Provincia.
- ^ a b c d "Ha muerto el músico, periodista y escritor Moncho Alpuente". EFE EME. 21 March 2015.