|  |  born in Salamanca/Spain, lives in Madrid.After completing 
        her M.A. in art history, she specialized in contemporary art, publishing 
        two books on architecture and urbanism. Her interest in the avantgarde 
        led her to a special focus on performance art, video art and minimal music, 
        but above all on the relationship between art and life and between artist 
        and audience. Following her encounter with the musician Llorenc Barber 
        - a turning point in her artistic life - she founded the improvisatory 
        group Taller de Música Mundana with him. When she was appointed 
        director of the music library of the Complutense University of Madrid 
        (1982-1989), she began to combine these activities with studies in ear-training, 
        alto saxophone and percussion. She soon discovered the unexpected and 
        precious potential of her voice and decided to rigorously explore it to 
        its maximum consequences.
 Since 1983, she has 
        been doing research on the voice and vocal music in traditional musics 
        and this has propelled her to use the voice not only for singing and speaking 
        but also as a wind and percussion instrument built into the body. All 
        of the above constitutes the basis for her own integrated musical language.
 Through solitary 
        and systematic experimentation she developed a series of unique and personal 
        vocal techniques which she subsequently catalogued for her own use - a 
        necessary measure inasmuch as many of these techniques were invented by 
        her and thus unprecedented . By naming and ordering them, according to 
        timber and register, she was able to create a codified body of resources 
        available to her, in her work and for collaborations with other composers. 
        The first fruits of this minutious task appeared in the sound poetry of 
        the Flatus Vocis Trio and in her work with the french composer Jean-Claude 
        Eloy.
 From 1983 to 1993, 
        she studied bel canto with various professors in order to combine vocal 
        techniques traditionally considered incompatibles.
 In 1987-1988, she studied traditional vocal techniques with the 
        japanese singer Yumi Nara. In 1988, she learned mongol harmonic singing 
        with Tran Quáng Hai at the Museum of Man in Paris. This technique 
        requires the simultaneous production of two vocal sounds: the fundamental 
        note as drone and the melody made by choosing among its harmonics.
 Since 1988 she has 
        combined short workshops in France and The Netherlands with longer periods 
        in India where she studies Dhrupad music and singing with different members 
        of the eminent Dagar family.
 As a result of this, her work was greatly 
        enriched by training in the subtle perception of microtones and harmonics 
        and therefore in their vocal production, determining factors in her composition.
 It should be pointed out that while the 
        form and structure of Fátima Miranda's work bears no resemblance 
        to music of those cultures, it is essentially related if only in its use 
        of microtones, dynamics, rhythm and various and refined forms of singing. 
        Above and beyond its cultivated virtuosity it comes from a slow and conscious 
        digestion of life itself: of her travels, her diverse studies, errors, 
        contradictions, playfulness, discoveries, provocation, sense of humor 
        and of course a demanding discipline divested of all rigidity, intention 
        and exhibitionism.
 Currently she is working with german artist Hans Peter Kuhn on 
        a project called Daily Drones.
 Fatima
   		Miranda |