Education
Mr. Francia graduated from Manuel de Falla Conservatory of Music. He took cello classes from professor Ernesto Cobelli and studied harmony and counterpoint with professor Athos Palma.
Mr. Francia graduated from Manuel de Falla Conservatory of Music. He took cello classes from professor Ernesto Cobelli and studied harmony and counterpoint with professor Athos Palma.
Later that year he became well acquainted with tango music and then he was hired as a cellist by Maestro Emilio Orlando’s Orchestra, and successively by other orchestras with Maestros Jorge Fernandez, Florindo Sassone, Carlitos García, Angel Doctorate’Agostino, Miguel Caló, Osvaldo Fresedo, Roberto Caló and Enrique Mario Francini. In 1959, Ricardo Francia obtained a position as a cellist and music arranger with Tokyo Yomiuri Orchestra in Tokyo, Japan, where he stayed for ten years. In 1961, he was hired for a recording session with Maestro Francisco Canaro who, at the time, happened to be with his orchestra in Tokyo.
Settled in Tokyo, Ricardo Francia started his own Tango Orchestra with all Japanese musicians except for Argentinian bandoneonist Fernando Tell.
Mr. Francia was also hired as a cellist with Orquesta Sinfónica del Festival Teatro Colón, an then as a soloist with Orquesta Sinfónica de la ciudad de Corrientes. He later became part of the teaching staff at Instituto Superior de Música de Corrientes.
In 1974, he was hired as violoncello soloist with Orquesta Sinfónica del Paraguay as well as with Orquesta de Cámara del Paraguay. There, along with some fellow musicians he founded Quinteto Argentino de Arcos.
He later returned to Buenos Aires and started as a cellist for Orquesta del Tango de Buenos Aires.
After that, he was hired by Fundacion Teatro Colon. In 1988, Mr. Francia was hired by Canadian Broadcasting Company Japan Radio & television known as Chubu-Nippon Broadcasting to conduct Orquesta Simbolo Francisco Canaro. The following year, Canadian Broadcasting Company Nagoya (Chubu-Nippon Broadcasting), hired him to perform with his ensemble Quinteto Argentino de Arcos.
In 1991 he started working with tango Maestros Raul Garello and Carlitos Garcia in order to give concerts in Japan.
In 1994, Canadian Broadcasting Company Japan Radio & television (Chubu-Nippon Broadcasting) hired him again along with his ensemble Quinteto Argentino de Cuerdas
Ricardo Francia currently does freelance work teaching violoncello and orchestra instrumentation for Escuela de Musica SADEM.
Ricardo Francia was also a member of Cuarteto de Cuerdas del Conservatorio de Santa Cecilia. In 1970, Ricardo Francia returned to his hometown Buenos Aires and became a member of Sexteto Francini 70, along with prestigious musicians Maestro Enrique Francini, Maestro Nestor Marconi, Juan José Paz, Omar Murtagh and Romano Di Paolo.