India-Lorca-Flamenco Music-Dance-Theatre Inspired by Poem of the Deep Song Federico García Lorca Rasa Y Duende Interior Lansdcapes

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

India-Lorca-Flamenco Music-Dance-Theatre Inspired by Poem of the Deep Song Federico García Lorca Rasa Y Duende Interior Lansdcapes Mónica de la Fuente Company India-Lorca-Flamenco Music-Dance-Theatre inspired by Poem of the Deep Song Federico García Lorca Rasa y Duende Interior lansdcapes A creation in dance, music and theatre where the expe- rience of flamenco is explored in movement, sound and image in an encounter with one of its mother-roots: India. Where the primitive and at the same time stylized sound of flamenco meets –in a creative dialogue- the essence of traditional and contemporary forms of dance-theatre inspired by In- dian Performing Arts. Physical theatre, actions and gestures serve as the languages of expression to convey the poetic world of Lorca and immerse the audience in a new aesthetic experience in search of that magic, timeless space imbued with age-old traditions and startling innovation, poised between India and Flamenco, rasa and duende. “The duende works on the dancer’s body like wind on sand. It changes a girl, by magic power, into a lunar paralytic, or covers the cheeks of a broken old man, begging for alms in the wine-shops, with adolescent blushes: gives a woman’s hair the odour of a midnight sea-port: and at every instant works the arms with gestures that are the mothers of the dances of all the ages”. In Indian aesthetics, RASA refers to the nine basic emo- tions common to all human beings. The artistic expression of those emotions create an aesthetic ideal – a state where all human beings experience ART beyond cultures and frontiers, an experience of the transcendence akin to what in fla- menco is called DUENDE. These universal emotions are the leitmotif of this inter-cultural creation that elaborates a tableau of interior landscapes in an artistic journey through music, dance and visuals. Lorca divided the collection “Poems of Cante Jondo” in four parts, where each one is dedicated to a different type of fla- menco singing: solea, siguirya, petenera and saeta. Each one is personified ina character, a woman that has all the elements of the song she represents. Each female character in the poems embodies not only a deep sentiment but also evokes a different atmosphere. By following the struc- ture of the song in terms of melody and rhythm (palo), Lorca creates an acoustic architecture and at the same time brings out the “duende” of each song: “where the sentiments transform the faces, where the bodies reach unexpected spaces and the rhythm is interiorized towards the trance” Mónica de la Fuente Dancer, choreographer and specialist in Indian perfor- ming arts, Mónica de la Fuente has devoted herself for the last 20 years to the creation and dissemination of the classical and contemporary dances of India. She received her training in clas- sical dance and theatre, Bharata Natyam and Kathakali, at some of India`s most prestigious schools in the field of the performing arts: the Kalakshetra (Madras) and Kalamandalam and Margi (Kerala), with the support of the governments of India (ICCR) and Spain (AECID). In 2000 she founded her own dance theatre company in Spain and since then has performed at numerous festivals and theatres in India, Europe, and USA, where she has presented her Indian classical dance shows as well as contemporary creations in experimental dance-theatre. Among Monica`s dance theatre productions are “Lila, Rama´s Play” or the “Flower of Desire” based on the Mahabharata or the “Narrow path of Akka” inspired by the life and poetry of the me- dieval South Indian mystic Akkamahadevi. She has collaborated with artists like Ravi Prasad, Jorge Par- do, Akash Odedra and has been the artistic coordinator, per- former one of the lead choreographers in the live show Flamen- co, India directed by legendary filmmaker Carlos Saura and premiered at the Calderón Theatre of Valladolid (Spain) in October 2015. José Salinas José Salinas was born in a traditional flamenco family from Andalusia dedicated to the flamenco art. In the year 2001 he moved to Madrid and started to work with important flamenco ensembles: Compañia Joaquin Ruiz, Belen Lopez, Ra- faela Carrasco, Carlota Santana, Miguel Ángel Espino, Miriam Méndez, Inma Ortega, Carlos Chamorro, Concha Jareño etc. With these prestigious artists he performed all over Japan, Canada, South Africa, and USA. In the year 2009 he was awarded the National Award for Flamenco Singing In Madrid he has performed in the main Flamenco Tablaos: Casa Patas, Las Carboneras; Café de Chinitas, Corral de la Morería y Las Tablas etc, He has recorded with some of the leading flamen- co groups: El Torta, Miriam Méndez, Salva del Real, Silvia Marín etc. Recently he has produced and recorded his own solo album and continues on tour with projects and experimental works in which he uses a wide range of singing styles within the Spanish musical traditions, such as Acopla2 or Perkuta Flamenco. Carlos Blanco Guitar player with a Higher Diploma of Music, Flamenco Guitar Specialization and a Master in Music Education. Born in Athis-Mons (France), city where he began studying classical guitar at the Conservatory of Music Maurice Ravel at the age of 11 years. Three years later he moved to Valladolid where he continued training in the flamenco guitar and electric guitar. After several years performing with all kinds of music bands: rock, folk, flamenco he continued his undergraduate studies in classical guitar at Valladolid and Higher studies of Flamenco Guitar in Cordoba with teachers like Paco Serrano, Manolo Franco, Niño de Pura, Carlos Piñana. Also, he took two year specialized training of flamenco guitar under guitarist Oscar He- rrero and four modern harmony courses with renowned musi- cian and guitarist Felix Santos. In 2006, received the award for Best Musician at the Inter- national Folk Festival of Caldas da Rainha (Lisbon-Portu- gal) and in 2002 a Honorary Mention in the International Guitar Competition Villa de Aranda. As a versatile guitarist he has performed with numerous groups of different musical styles such as rock, pop, folk fusion, flamenco dance companies, flamenco singers and solo tours in Brazil, Japan, France, Portugal, Germany, Ukraine, Costa Rica and Spain. Guest artists Subrata De Subrata De is the most promising name in Sitar today. A si- tarist from Bishnupur Gharana, trained from the age of seven, Mr. De has not only earned his reputation as a performer, but as a cultural ambassador of India, propagating Indian culture in its purest form all over the world. He also works for cultural exchanges between India and foreign countries through concerts, lecture demonstrations and facilitating exchange programmes. Recently with Martinique Jazz Musicians. He was a leader musician for the production Flamenco, India by reputed Film director Carlos Saura produced in Spain in 2015. Subrata De is a sought after artist globally. He has given perfor- mances in various national and international festivals. He has travelled widely and performed in numerous cities spanning over 35 countries across the world as a solo musician, and as accompaning artist for reputed dancers like Sonal Mansingh, Ranjana Gauhar, etc. Subrata has released more than 20 albums and Cds He has also started an organization by the name “Swaranjali” in 2000 to promote Indian Classical Music and upcoming artistes from all over India and abroad Subrata De has been awarded Sangeet Praveen by Prayag Sangeet Samiti, Allahabad and Sangeet Bhaskar by Pra- cheen Kala Kendra, Chandigarh. Additionally, he has received the National Scholarship from the Ministry of Human Resource Development of the Government of India. Yonder Rodríguez Yonder Rodriguez is a master percussionist of world instru- ments. He plays more than twenty instruments like cumacos, afrovenezolan drums , quijada, japanese taiko and djembés. Apart from that he also plays indian instruments like tabla and kanjira. He collaborates with different musical bands like Tradere, Lucrecia, Lola Roe o AzzBand. With the latest he is tou- ring Australia. And he is part of Baúl del Indiano, dedicated to latinamerican music and baroque music Villanella and Guitarrísima. He has performed at numerous festivals in Spain and international festivals all around the world. He gives workshops on percussion and making of instruments. Photos Credits Artistic direction and coreography: Mónica de la Fuente Music compositions: José Salinas Carlos Blanco Costume design: Teresa Revenga Light design and video: Juan Ignacio Arteagabeitia (Atila) Performers: Mónica de la Fuente: dance and choreography José Salinas: flamenco singer, percussion Carlos Blanco: classical and flamenco guitar, electric guitar Guest artists: Subrata De: sitar Yonder Rodríguez: percussion, tabla and kanjira Produce: Mónica de la Fuente Dance Company Produce: Colaboran: Diseño: Mónica de la Fuente Dance Company [email protected] Tel +34 657529974 video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_ukHY6nkitQ web: http://www.monicadelafuente.com http://josesalinascantaor.com http://carlosblancoguitar.com http://www.subratade.com .
Recommended publications
  • The Barzakh of Flamenco: Tracing the Spirituality, Locality and Musicality of Flamenco from South of the Strait of Gibraltar
    SIT Graduate Institute/SIT Study Abroad SIT Digital Collections Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection SIT Study Abroad Fall 2011 The aB rzakh of Flamenco: Tracing the Spirituality, Locality and Musicality of Flamenco From South of the Strait of Gibraltar Tania Flores SIT Study Abroad Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/isp_collection Part of the Dance Commons, Ethnomusicology Commons, and the Other Languages, Societies, and Cultures Commons Recommended Citation Flores, Tania, "The aB rzakh of Flamenco: Tracing the Spirituality, Locality and Musicality of Flamenco From South of the Strait of Gibraltar" (2011). Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection. 1118. https://digitalcollections.sit.edu/isp_collection/1118 This Unpublished Paper is brought to you for free and open access by the SIT Study Abroad at SIT Digital Collections. It has been accepted for inclusion in Independent Study Project (ISP) Collection by an authorized administrator of SIT Digital Collections. For more information, please contact [email protected]. The Barzakh of Flamenco: Tracing the Spirituality, Locality and Musicality of Flamenco from South of the Strait of Gibraltar Tania Flores Occidental College Migration and Transnational Identity: Fall 2011 Flores 2 Acknowledgments I could not have completed this project without the advice and guidance of my academic director, Professor Souad Eddouada; my advisor, Professor Taieb Belghazi; my professor of music at Occidental College, Professor Simeon Pillich; my professor of Islamic studies at Occidental, Professor Malek Moazzam-Doulat; or my gracious and helpful interviewees. I am also grateful to Elvira Roca Rey for allowing me to use her studio to choreograph after we had finished dance class, and to Professor Said Graiouid for his guidance and time.
    [Show full text]
  • UC Riverside Electronic Theses and Dissertations
    UC Riverside UC Riverside Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title Fleeing Franco’s Spain: Carlos Surinach and Leonardo Balada in the United States (1950–75) Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5rk9m7wb Author Wahl, Robert Publication Date 2016 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA RIVERSIDE Fleeing Franco’s Spain: Carlos Surinach and Leonardo Balada in the United States (1950–75) A Dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Music by Robert J. Wahl August 2016 Dissertation Committee: Dr. Walter A. Clark, Chairperson Dr. Byron Adams Dr. Leonora Saavedra Copyright by Robert J. Wahl 2016 The Dissertation of Robert J. Wahl is approved: __________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________ __________________________________________________________________ Committee Chairperson University of California, Riverside Acknowledgements I would like to thank the music faculty at the University of California, Riverside, for sharing their expertise in Ibero-American and twentieth-century music with me throughout my studies and the dissertation writing process. I am particularly grateful for Byron Adams and Leonora Saavedra generously giving their time and insight to help me contextualize my work within the broader landscape of twentieth-century music. I would also like to thank Walter Clark, my advisor and dissertation chair, whose encouragement, breadth of knowledge, and attention to detail helped to shape this dissertation into what it is. He is a true role model. This dissertation would not have been possible without the generous financial support of several sources. The Manolito Pinazo Memorial Award helped to fund my archival research in New York and Pittsburgh, and the Maxwell H.
    [Show full text]
  • Download Ebook \\ Flamenco > X7RDMURUWD1U
    QMSR6RWOSANH // Kindle < Flamenco Flamenco Filesize: 1.96 MB Reviews This book is really gripping and interesting. Of course, it is actually perform, still an interesting and amazing literature. You will not truly feel monotony at whenever you want of your time (that's what catalogues are for concerning when you request me). (Claud Schaden) DISCLAIMER | DMCA SGSWZG5YYWJ0 / Kindle < Flamenco FLAMENCO To get Flamenco eBook, remember to click the button beneath and save the file or gain access to other information that are related to FLAMENCO book. Reference Series Books LLC Sep 2012, 2012. Taschenbuch. Book Condition: Neu. 246x190x8 mm. Neuware - Source: Wikipedia. Pages: 36. Chapters: Concurso de Cante Jondo, Glossary of flamenco terms, Polo, Cante flamenco, Palo, Flamenco guitar, Duende, David Broza, Cantes de ida y vuelta, Saeta, Malagueñas, Cantes libres, Bambera, Phrygian dominant scale, Paco Toronjo, Río Ancho, ¿Quién maneja mi barca , Rasgueado, Flamencology, Flamenco mode, Rondeña, Flamenco skirt, Cantiñas, Peteneras, Palmas, Alegrías, Flamenco at 5:15, Martinetes, Flamenco shoes, Cartageneras, Zapateo, Hakim, Festival Bienal Flamenco, Tonás, Falseta, Cantes a palo seco, Alboreá, Tablao, Andalusian Centre of Flamenco, La Caramba, Flamenco Fiesta, Latin Grammy Award for Best Flamenco Album. Excerpt: El Concurso del Cante Jondo (Contest of the Deep Song) was a well-known celebration of the art of flamenco, its music, song, and dance, held in Granada, Andalusia on Corpus Christi, the 13th and 14 June 1922. The Spanish classical composer Manuel de Falla (1876 1946), an Andalusian, was the principal organizer of the Concurso; he sought to encourage and enhance the performance of flamenco, which had fallen into a period of decadence.
    [Show full text]
  • An Introduction to Joaquin Nin (1879-1949) and His "Veinte Cantos Populares Espanoles"
    Louisiana State University LSU Digital Commons LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses Graduate School 1999 An Introduction to Joaquin Nin (1879-1949) and His "Veinte Cantos Populares Espanoles". Gina Lottinger Anthon Louisiana State University and Agricultural & Mechanical College Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_disstheses Recommended Citation Anthon, Gina Lottinger, "An Introduction to Joaquin Nin (1879-1949) and His "Veinte Cantos Populares Espanoles"." (1999). LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses. 6930. https://digitalcommons.lsu.edu/gradschool_disstheses/6930 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at LSU Digital Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in LSU Historical Dissertations and Theses by an authorized administrator of LSU Digital Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. INFORMATION TO USERS This manuscript has been reproduced from the microfilm master. UMI films the text directly from the original or copy submitted. Thus, some thesis and dissertation copies are in typewriter face, while others may be from any type of computer printer. The quality of this reproduction is dependent upon the quality of the copy submitted. Broken or indistinct print, colored or poor quality illustrations and photographs, print bleedthrough, substandard margins, and improper alignment can adversely affect reproduction. In the unlikely event that the author did not send UMI a complete manuscript and there are missing pages, these will be noted. Also, if unauthorized copyright material had to be removed, a note will indicate the deletion. Oversize materials (e.g., maps, drawings, charts) are reproduced by sectioning the original, beginning at the upper left-hand comer and continuing from left to right in equal sections with small overlaps.
    [Show full text]
  • Connections Between Bach and Cassadó D Minor Suites
    Southern Illinois University Carbondale OpenSIUC Research Papers Graduate School Spring 4-1-2021 CONNECTIONS BETWEEN BACH AND CASSADÓ D MINOR SUITES Eunice Koh [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/gs_rp Recommended Citation Koh, Eunice. "CONNECTIONS BETWEEN BACH AND CASSADÓ D MINOR SUITES." (Spring 2021). This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at OpenSIUC. It has been accepted for inclusion in Research Papers by an authorized administrator of OpenSIUC. For more information, please contact [email protected]. CONNECTIONS BETWEEN BACH AND CASSADÓ D MINOR CELLO SUITES by Eunice Koh Kai’En B.Mus., Nayang Academy of Fine Arts – Royal College of Music, 2017 A Research Paper Submitted in Partial Fulfilment of the Requirements for the Master of Music School of Music in the Graduate School Southern Illinois University Carbondale May 2021 Copyright by Eunice Koh Kai’En, 2021 All Rights Reserved RESEARCH PAPER APPROVAL CONNECTIONS BETWEEN BACH AND CASSADÓ D MINOR CELLO SUITES by Eunice Koh Kai’En A Research Paper Submitted in Partial Fulfilment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Music in the field of Music Approved by: Dr. Eric Lenz, Chair Graduate School Southern Illinois University Carbondale April 01, 2021 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS The journey to achieve my Masters in Music Performance would not have been possible without my teacher, Dr. Eric Lenz. I am truly appreciative of his unwavering support and dedication for my pursuit for excellence. My growth in cello performance and pedagogy will definitely be aspects that will carry through my later years as a cello performer and educator.
    [Show full text]
  • Nuevo Flamenco: Re-Imagining Flamenco in Post-Dictatorship Spain
    Nuevo Flamenco: Re-imagining Flamenco in Post-dictatorship Spain Xavier Moreno Peracaula Submitted in fulfilment of the degree of PhD Newcastle University March 2016 ii Contents Abstract iv Acknowledgements v Introduction 1 Chapter One The Gitano Atlantic: the Impact of Flamenco in Modal Jazz and its Reciprocal Influence in the Origins of Nuevo Flamenco 21 Introduction 22 Making Sketches: Flamenco and Modal Jazz 29 Atlantic Crossings: A Signifyin(g) Echo 57 Conclusions 77 Notes 81 Chapter Two ‘Gitano Americano’: Nuevo Flamenco and the Re-imagining of Gitano Identity 89 Introduction 90 Flamenco’s Racial Imagination 94 The Gitano Stereotype and its Ambivalence 114 Hyphenated Identity: the Logic of Splitting and Doubling 123 Conclusions 144 Notes 151 Chapter Three Flamenco Universal: Circulating the Authentic 158 Introduction 159 Authentic Flamenco, that Old Commodity 162 The Advent of Nuevo Flamenco: Within and Without Tradition 184 Mimetic Sounds 205 Conclusions 220 Notes 224 Conclusions 232 List of Tracks on Accompanying CD 254 Bibliography 255 Discography 270 iii Abstract This thesis is concerned with the study of nuevo flamenco (new flamenco) as a genre characterised by the incorporation within flamenco of elements from music genres of the African-American musical traditions. A great deal of emphasis is placed on purity and its loss, relating nuevo flamenco with the whole history of flamenco and its discourses, as well as tracing its relationship to other musical genres, mainly jazz. While centred on the process of fusion and crossover it also explores through music the characteristics and implications that nuevo flamenco and its discourses have impinged on related issues as Gypsy identity and cultural authenticity.
    [Show full text]
  • La Saeta Flamenca Ou Chanter Pour Le Nazareno Et La Dolorosa
    LA PASSION SELON LES ANDALOUS : LA SaETa FLaMEnCa OU CHANTER POUR LE nazaREnO ET LA DOLOROSA MERCEDES GOMEZ-GARCIA PLATA Université de PaRIS III ¿Quién me presta una escalera, para subir al madero, para quitarle los clavos a Jesús el Nazareno? Saeta Popular ès les origines du Christianisme, l’attitude de la hiérarchie ecclésiastique à l’égard de la musique en général et du chant en particulier a été partagée entre méfiance et intérêt militant. Les Pères de l’Église, en effet, se méfient de la musique – davantage D 1 de sa manifestation instrumentale que vocale – pour deux raisons essentielles. En premier lieu, ils la considèrent comme un danger en raison de son pouvoir sur les passions et les émotions qui font d’elle un objet de jouissance ; en second lieu, ils la voient comme un cheval de Troie par lequel peuvent s’infiltrer des éléments profanes dans le domaine sacré – c’est le cas des premières hymnes chrétiennes qui s’inspirent de mélodies profanes. Cependant, ils perçoivent aussi que, mise au service de la grandeur de l’Église, la musique, grâce à sa dimension symbolique, peut être utilisée comme un formidable outil de propagande susceptible d’impressionner et d’éduquer les fidèles. Cette double perception de la musique conduit l’Église chrétienne occidentale, dès les premiers siècles, à admettre la légitimité du recours au chant dans le culte et les célébrations liturgiques – tout en réglementant strictement les modalités de ce recours2. C’est pourquoi elle a aussi intégré, au cours de son histoire, dans le corpus des musiques sacrées, les chants populaires pratiqués par les fidèles lors des fêtes religieuses du calendrier liturgique, en particulier les chants de Noël et de la Passion3.
    [Show full text]
  • The Original Festival Flamenco Gitano 1965
    THE ORIGINAL FESTIVAL FLAMENCO GITANO 1965 THE ORIGINAL FESTVAL FLAMENCO GITANO 1965 EMO 9301-2 LC 5774 German Release Date: July 1, 1993 The authentic Spanish Flamenco art is artistically the richest. and liveliest folk-music in Europe. For some reason, although not lacking in popularity, this is less well known in the greater part of Europe. There are several reasons for its comparitive obscurity and they call to mind the situation of Blues in America before its "discovery" in Europe: confusion of concepts and standards, mixing with popular fashions in music, cabaret and night-clubs. Most of those activities do not display the true Flamenco art. The desire to open the door to a wider understanding of the Flamenco art and its artists and to make known the music which has inspired a wide range of contemporary music and especially Jazz, led to the resolve to call exclusively upon those who formed this art, and who preserve its essential nature in the closed circles of their own communities: the GITANOS, the Spanish Gipsies. Federico Garcia Lorca said: "... these people have united the most ancient elements of our country with the oldest they brought with them to Andalusia, and given the definite form to what we call the CANTE JONDO. They are the soul of our soul...." THE FLAMENCO IS THE BLUES OF EUROPE. Both have strong African roots and both were created and kept alive over the century by depressed minorities. In November 1965, Lippmann and Rau, the organizers of the American Folk Blues Festival, followed this successful event with the Festival Flamenco Gitano.
    [Show full text]
  • Flamenco Donald Duff
    FLAMENCO DONALD DUFF ..1"l..andA NDALUSIANits Moorishmusic,and Gypsywith itsbackground,origins in Byzantineis the basisandof much]ewishofliturgySpan• ish music. This anthropological reservoir of conflicting cultures has fas• cinated composers whenever Spain was accessible. While it was fashion• able at one time to write Spanish music in France, it is now equally fashionable to write French music in Spain. Bizet made a feeble attempt in the first direction, Falla a successful one in the latter. It is easier for a Spaniard to become a European than for a European to become a Spaniard. Musically the Spaniard depends upon the Gypsy, a fact recognized by Falla, whose home for years had been Granada. His friendship with the Gypsy dancers, singers and guitarists of that region is the inspiration for whatever is not Parisian in his music. Falla recognizes two influences, Debussy and the Gypsy, and the music of the Spanish Gypsy is guitar music. If one remains conscious of the guitar in listening to Spanish music many of its peculiarities can be explained. The guitar is tuned in fourths, an ancient Near-Eastern method. The structure of the guitar accounts sorne• what for the strangeness of flamenco· music. Another distinguishable trait is the rhythm, which in many cases cannot be written down in musical notation. It is startling in its many unexpected accents and silences. The adoption by the Spanish church of the Byzantine liturgie chant with its absence of metric rhythm in the melody and its riehness of modulated inflection, as weIl as the ]ewish and Arab influences are elements to be evaluated in a discussion of Cante Jondo (deep song, the purest type of Gypsy music) and flamenco dancing.
    [Show full text]
  • Graded Pieces Sorted by Difficulty (PDF)
    Grade Composer Composition Main Technical Difficulty or Benefit Other Notes & Comments 1 Agay Mysterious Procession Left Hand Melody This is for the total beginner, and can be taught on the very first lesson. RH play a Sight Reading steady even ostinato using only the note E, while the left hand plays the melody which Hand Independence consists only of ABC in different orders and simple rhythms. Excellent for sight- Expressive Playing reading, for hand independence, for expressive playing and for bringing up a melody on the left hand. It can also be used as a seed for free improvisation. 1 Alt Hot Noon in the Meadow Introduction to how chords develop emotSioimn ilar in difficulty to the above, this set of pieces uses modern harmonies to tell stories, so it is a very good introduction to how and why chords and intervals can elicit different emotions (for instance, “The spider” uses tritons to build up suspense, and “Bees and Flies” uses chromatic intervals to emulate buzzing). 1 Alt The Ocean Pattern Introduction A collection of 10 pieces for the complete beginner, most you can teach at the first lesson. The interesting thing here is that they use the whole keyboard and introduce patterns that frequently appear in the more advanced pieces, so they are excellent preparatory pieces. Again very good recital material for beginners. 1 Bach Chorale Lord, do with me as you will, BWV 514 1 Bach, J.C. Air in F, BWV Anh. 131, from 'The Anna Magdalena Bach Book of 1725' 1 Bach, J.C. Aria in A minor 1 Bartók Children at Play 1 Bartók Quasi Adagio no 3 from 'For Children' vol 1 1 Bartók Two Little Dialogues 1 Bartók Two Short Pieces and Two Little Dances 1 Beethoven Ecossaise in Eb major WoO 86 These are one-page very easy pieces (grade 1) that Beethoven most likely wrote as pedagogical material for is pupils.
    [Show full text]
  • Eva Evdokimova (Western Germany), Atilio Labis
    i THE CUBAN BALLET: ITS RATIONALE, AESTHETICS AND ARTISTIC IDENTITY AS FORMULATED BY ALICIA ALONSO A Dissertation Submitted to the Temple University Graduate Board in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY by Lester Tomé January, 2011 Examining Committee Members: Joellen Meglin, Advisory Chair, Dance Karen Bond, Dance Michael Klein, Music Theory Heather Levi, External Member, Anthropology ii © Copyright 2011 by Lester Tomé All Rights Reserved iii ABSTRACT In the 1940s, Alicia Alonso became the first Latin American dancer to achieve international prominence in the field of ballet, until then dominated by Europeans. Promoted by Alonso, ballet took firm roots in Cuba in the following decades, particularly after the Cuban Revolution (1959). This dissertation integrates the methods of historical research, postcolonial critique and discourse analysis to explore the performative and discursive strategies through which Alonso defined her artistic identity and the collective identity of the Cuban ballet. The present study also examines the historical context of the development of ballet in Cuba, Alonso’s rationale for the practice of ballet on the Island, and the relationship between the Cuban ballet and the European ballet. Alonso defended the legitimacy of Cuban dancers to practice ballet and, in specific, perform European classics such as Giselle and Swan Lake. She opposed the notion that ballet was the exclusive patrimony of Europeans. She also insisted that the cultivation of this dance form on the Island was not an act of cultural colonialism. In her view, the development of ballet in Cuba consisted, instead, of an exploration of a distinctive Cuban voice within this dance form, a reformulation of a European legacy from a postcolonial perspective.
    [Show full text]
  • Inspiration and Influence Behind the Keyboard Styles
    INSPIRATION AND INFLUENCE BEHIND THE KEYBOARD STYLES OF ISAAC AL~ENIZ AND ENRIQUE GRANADOS by CAREY LYNN ABENDROTH A THESIS Presented to the School of Music and the Honors College of the University of Oregon in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Bachelor of Arts May 1990 ---ol...... .~ .~ ..., iii An Abstract of the Thesis of Carey Lynn Abendroth for the degree of Bachelor of Arts in the School of Music to be taken May 1990 Title: INSPIRATION AND INFLUENCE BEHIND THE KEYBOARD STYLES OF ISAAC ALBENIZ AND ENRIQUE GRANADOS Approved: Marian Smith Isaac Albeniz and Enrique Granados stand as two of Spain's most prominent composers of the early twentieth century. Both composers established their careers through their compositions for solo piano. I shall examine the inspiration and influences behind the keyboard style of each man. After introducing the composers and touching on the issues of Nationalism and musical style in the introduction, I shall discuss Spanish inspiration in the works of Isaac Albeniz, particularly as found within his Iberia, and offer brief musical examples from his compositions. Similarly, in the subsequent chapter, I shall discuss Spanish inspiration in the works of Enrique Granados with emphasis on his Goyescas. In the final section of this thesis, I shall address various aspects of the composers' musical language and factors that influenced that facet of their keyboard styles. I ..... iv ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS I wish to express my sincere appreciation to Marian smith whose assistance in the preparation of this manuscript was made all the more valuable by her enthusiasm for the sUbject area.
    [Show full text]