Richie Zellon Epk.Pdf

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Richie Zellon Epk.Pdf BIO Richie Zellon has been hailed by the Latin Jazz Network as “a phenomenal guitarist who is possessed with a magical tone... whose ideas are based on a mystical musical map that doffs its proverbial hat to Jimi Hendrix as much as it does to Miles Davis.” Zellon has been performing, recording, and exposing audiences internationally since the mid 90’s to his excit- ing compositions showcasing rhythms from Colombia, Venezuela, Argentina, Brazil and his native Peru. He is a pioneer of a musical movement sometimes referred to as South American or “Sudaca” Jazz. Born in Lima, Peru of American and Brazilian parents, he recorded his first album, “Lando- logia” in 1982 for the Fonovox label. The re- cording featured Zellon’s unique compositions merging the percussive music of Peru’s black culture with jazz for the first time resulting in what has become known as Afro-Peruvian Jazz. Legendary American jazz musician, Jimmy Heath who met Zellon during one of his perfor- mances in Peru and was intrigued by his unique style, wrote the liner notes. Upon moving to the United States, Richie Zellon co-founded Song-o-sau’rus, an independent re- cord label that introduced new Latin Jazz artists primarily from South America. During the latter half of the 90’s, Zellon produced over 20 criti- cally acclaimed recordings for the label and as a result had the opportunity to collaborate, record and/or per- form with some of the most influential musicians both in the mainstream and Latin jazz genres. Among them, Grammy winners, Paquito D’ Rivera, Gato Barbieri and Alex Acuna as well as David Liebman, Jerry Bergonzi, Sam Rivers, Danilo Perez and Ignacio Berroa to name just a few. Due to his innovations in the field of jazz and latin music he has been profiled in several books on the history of Latin Jazz such as “El Diccionario de Latin Jazz” by Nat Chediak , “The Great Jazz Guitarists” by Scott Yanow and “The Jazz Guitar: Its Evolution, Players and Personalities Since 1900” by Maurice J. Summerfield. In his book “Caliente: A History of Latin Jazz” author Luc Delanoy concludes, “With musicians like Richie Zellon, the future of Latin Jazz is in good hands.” In addition to being a graduate of Berklee College of Music, Zellon's education includes private studies with Charles Banacos, Red Rodney, Pat Martino and Edgar Valcarcel (Peru). He is currently active as a music educator and has held teaching positions as professor of jazz guitar at Florida International University (Miami) the Univer- sity of South Florida (Tampa) The Music Workshop (Orlando) and Miami Jazz Guitar. He has offered clinics on jazz and Latin American music at various prestigious schools such as the New England Conservatory, Berklee College of Music, Jacksonville University and the University of South Florida. For almost a decade, he wrote a column on South American jazz for Jazz Inside magazine (formerly Jazz Improv). His ongoing research on the music of various Latin American cultures and their fusion with contemporary music has been a sought after topic by musicians at clinics and workshops. PRESS “With musicians like Richie Zellon, the future of Latin Jazz is in good hands.” - Luc Dellanoy (from the book, Caliente: A History of Latin Jazz) “If there is one contemporary musician who truly personifies the successful synthesis of the myriad pan-American genres into unconventional and com- pelling new forms, it is undoubtedly Lima, Peru-born guitarist, composer, and all around music alchemist Richie Zellon” - Americas “...the greatest catalyst of the Afro-Peruvian jazz idiom” - Latin Beat “When we speak of fusion in Peru, the name of Richie Zellon is prominent. “ -La Primera (Lima,Peru) CD REVIEWS BEATLES AFRO-PERUVIAN JAZZ TRIBUTE “A breathtaking album by Richie Zellon... This is a soulful, genuine homage to one of the greatest music ensembles of all time. But it is also one of the most revolutionary records by an artist who is, himself, credited by none other than Jimmy Heath, as creating (as far back as 1982), an idiom that has now come to be known as Afro-Peruvian Jazz. Labels aside, the record is a monumental achievement for its exquisite musicianship by Zellon on guitar and for his exquisite transcriptions in to a whole new realm as well as for his arrangements that retain the integrity of some of the most beautiful songs written by John Lennon and Paul McCartney.” - The Latin Jazz Network “If you are wondering what the Beatles music fused with Afro-Peruvian rhythms sounds like, this recording will come as a surprising revelation. A pleasure from beginning to end!” – Julio Garcia BBC Mundo Acclaimed by the press in Peru: “Although many are unaware, thirty years ago Lima born guitarist Richie Zellon invented Afro-Peruvian jazz ... Today we are reminded of this with his tribute to Liverpool’s Fab Four in the style of Peru’s creole waltz, marinera, festejo and landó . It is an unparalleled experience… Lennon and McCartney could well have played the jawbone and the cajón ... sounds like The Afro-Peruvian Beatles. This is not the work of a magician. It is the work of an artist, a visionary. Listen my friend! “ -La Republica (Lima) “Zellon gives the Beatles’ repertoire the Afro-Peruvian treatment. The result is impressive for being respectful and daring at the same time ... The thought of introducing an Indian drone in ‘Can’t Buy Me Love’ or transforming the experimental ‘Tomorrow Never Knows “into a marinera (Peru’s national dance) cannot go unnoticed. “ -Diario Oficial El Peruano (Lima) “Recommended…Technically Impeccable!” -El Comercio (Lima) PRESS CAFÉ CON LECHE - “This is what the next chapter in the merger of jazz and Latin music sounds like.”- Bob Blumenthal BOSTON GLOBE “Fresh Latin jazz worthy of its name and not just Latinized jazz.” -LATIN BEAT “Utililizing a stellar cast of musicians, authentic instruments and unique arrangements, the Peruvian-born guitarist stirs up a percolating pot of rhythms…It’s an often challenging work which takes the oft-combined Latin and jazz areas to the next plane.” -JAZZ TIMES “An engaging debut that puts yet another twist on the ever-evolving Latin jazz movement… an album of musical depth and aural delights.” -JAZZIZ “Zellon has opened up to jazz a cultural tradition that has been largely overlooked on this side of the equator.” -CD REVIEW “Zellon’s composing and arranging skills are impressive throughout the album…based on Latin rhythms-from the familiar tango to the more exotic Afro-Peruvian festejo and lando…Its blend of jazz and Latin idioms is or ganic and original.” -THE ORLANDO SENTINEL THE NAZCA LINES “A genuine marriage of Afro-Latin rhythms with the towering influences of Jimi Hendrix, Astor Piazzolla and Duke Ellington.” -Bill Milkowski JAZZ TIMES “Creativity and experimentation are essential for the evolution and enrichment of jazz. That’s why we believe that Richie Zellon’s work is very important as well as timely during a period in which Latin jazz is beginning to display symptoms of stagnation rhythmically as well as harmonically.”-Elmer Gonzales LATIN BEAT “Zellon deserves attention.” -RHYTHM MUSIC “The Nazca Lines is an uncommonly ambitious effort that audaciously points Latin jazz in a new direction.” -NEW YORK LATINO “He’s a guitarist to keep your eye on, playing a style of Jazz Guitar he shares with no one.” -CADENCE MAGAZINE METAL CARIBE “On a program that stretches the boundaries of Latin and jazz into tantalizing new contours, Richie Zellon has entered a zone where strikingly dissimilar rhythms from throughout the Americas blend magically with unanticipated melodic detours and buoyant jazz improvisa- tions to create a dazzling new idiom.” - Mark Holston JAZZIZ “On Metal Caribe, Zellon produces his most well-traveled, seamless effort yet, illustrating the common threads in music and cultural experience through endlessly surprising compositions and arrangements.”- JAZZTIMES “...Zellon transcends the Cuban and/or Brazilian confines established by most Latin jazz practitioners.” - LATIN BEAT “Zellon makes a compelling case for Latin jazz as a new kind of international language on Metal Caribe.” - HISPANIC VIDEO Please click on the link below to view a selection of videos... ( NOTE: You must be connected to the internet) http://www.richiezellon.com/video.html AUDIO http://www.richiezellon.com/cds/cd-samples.html.
Recommended publications
  • Peruvian Cuisine
    CHASQUI PERUVIAN MAIL Year 9, Issue 18 Cultural Bulletin of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs December, 2011 Urn. One of the Machu Picchu collection pieces. Possibly imported from the Lake Titicaca region. Cave 6A. Height: 21.9 cm. Diameter at perimeter: 7.7 Maximum Diameter: 17.3 Urn. One of the Machu Picchu collection pieces. Possibly imported from Lake Titicaca THE RETURN OF THE MACHU PICCHU COLLECTION/ PERUVIAN CUISINE: A RICH CULINARY HERITAGE / REMEMBERING JOSÉ MARÍA ARGUEDAS THE RETURN OF THE MACHU PICCHU COLLECTION TREASURES RETURN HOME It has been almost one hundred years since the Peruvian government granted Yale University the privilege of taking artifacts from the then recently discovered archeological site of Machu Picchu out of the country. The condition attached to this privilege was that they would be returned in a year’s time, after having been studied and displayed. Despite the delay in their return, the arrival in Peru of these artifacts discovered by Hiram Bingham demonstrates that it is indeed possible to fight for cultural treasures to be returned to their countries of origin. The World is Introduced to a tage found during excavation to be Wonder of the World authorized by and coordinated with In July, 1911, Hiram Bingham the Peruvian government. (Honolulu, 1875-Washington D. It was in this context that a C., 1956), a Yale Professor of Ar- temporary loan was granted for the ational Geographic. cheology interested in 16th cen- N objects found by Bingham. The tury Peruvian history, located the Peruvian government granted per- archeological site of Machu Picchu. Photo: mission for these relics to be trans- “Fortress”, “Sanctuary” and ported to Yale from 1912 through “citadel” are just a few of the terms 1916.
    [Show full text]
  • Peru's Musical Heritage of the Viceroyalty: the Creation of a National Identity
    Western Washington University Western CEDAR WWU Graduate School Collection WWU Graduate and Undergraduate Scholarship Spring 2019 Peru's Musical Heritage of the Viceroyalty: The Creation of a National Identity Fabiola Yupari Western Washington University, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://cedar.wwu.edu/wwuet Part of the Music Commons Recommended Citation Yupari, Fabiola, "Peru's Musical Heritage of the Viceroyalty: The Creation of a National Identity" (2019). WWU Graduate School Collection. 887. https://cedar.wwu.edu/wwuet/887 This Masters Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by the WWU Graduate and Undergraduate Scholarship at Western CEDAR. It has been accepted for inclusion in WWU Graduate School Collection by an authorized administrator of Western CEDAR. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Peru’s Musical Heritage of the Viceroyalty: The Creation of a National Identity By Fabiola Yupari Accepted in Partial Completion of the Requirements for the Degree Master of Music ADVISORY COMMITTEE Chair, Dr. Bertil Van Boer Dr. Ryan Dudenbostel Dr. Patrick Roulet GRADUATE SCHOOL Kathleen L. Kitto, Acting Dean Master’s Thesis In presenting this thesis in partial fulfillment of the requirements for a master’s degree at Western Washington University, I grant to Western Washington University the non-exclusive royalty-free right to archive, reproduce, distribute, and display the thesis in any and all forms, including electronic format, via any digital library mechanisms maintained by WWU. I represent and warrant this is my original work, and does not infringe or violate any rights of others. I warrant that I have obtained written permissions from the owner of any third party copyrighted material included in these files.
    [Show full text]
  • Bedoya El Perú Imaginado.Pdf (4.769Mb)
    Colección Investigaciones El Perú imaginado. Representaciones de un país en el cine internacional Primera edición digital: noviembre, 2017 © Universidad de Lima Fondo Editorial Av. Javier Prado Este 4600 Urb. Fundo Monterrico Chico, Lima 33 Apartado postal 852, Lima 100, Perú Teléfono: 437-6767, anexo 30131 [email protected] www.ulima.edu.pe Diseño, edición y carátula: Fondo Editorial Imagen de portada: Carlos Vinces/Shutterstock.com Versión ebook 2017 Digitalizado y distribuido por Saxo.com Perú S. A. C. https://yopublico.saxo.com/ Teléfono: 51-1-221-9998 Avenida Dos de Mayo 534, Of. 304, Miraflores Lima - Perú Se prohíbe la reproducción total o parcial de este libro, por cualquier medio, sin permiso expreso del Fondo Editorial. ISBN versión electrónica: 978-9972-45-407-3 Índice Introducción 13 Al inicio (era silente) 17 Animación 25 Apocalipsis 31 Auquénidos 35 Aventuras aéreas en el Hollywood clásico 39 Aventuras marítimas en el Hollywood clásico 43 Aventuras amazónicas 47 Ayahuasca 57 Belaunde Terry, Fernando 61 Bollywood, Kollywood y Nollywood 63 Caníbales 65 Cartografías 69 Caucho 73 Cocaína y otras sustancias 77 Comedias 83 El Comercio (diario) 87 Conflicto armado interno 89 Conquista 97 Contracultura 103 [7] 8 RICARDO BEDOYA Ecodocumentales 111 Ecuador (conflicto con) 115 Estereotipos y exotismos 117 Exploitation 131 Exploraciones (silentes) 135 Extraterrestres, esoterismo, búsquedas espirituales 139 Film noir 145 Fútbol 151 Gastronomía (comidas y bebidas) 153 Giallo 155 Godard, Jean-Luc 157 Guerra del Pacífico 161 Guevara,
    [Show full text]
  • Moving Away from Silence: Music of the Peruvian Altiplano and the Experiment of Urban Migration / Thomas Turino
    MOVING AWAY FROM SILENCE CHICAGO STUDIES IN ETHNOMUSICOLOGY edited by Philip V. Bohlman and Bruno Nettl EDITORIAL BOARD Margaret J. Kartomi Hiromi Lorraine Sakata Anthony Seeger Kay Kaufman Shelemay Bonnie c. Wade Thomas Turino MOVING AWAY FROM SILENCE Music of the Peruvian Altiplano and the Experience of Urban Migration THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO PRESS Chicago & London THOMAS TURlNo is associate professor of music at the University of Ulinois, Urbana. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago 60637 The University of Chicago Press, Ltd., London © 1993 by The University of Chicago All rights reserved. Published 1993 Printed in the United States ofAmerica 02 01 00 99 98 97 96 95 94 93 1 2 3 4 5 6 ISBN (cloth): 0-226-81699-0 ISBN (paper): 0-226-81700-8 Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Turino, Thomas. Moving away from silence: music of the Peruvian Altiplano and the experiment of urban migration / Thomas Turino. p. cm. - (Chicago studies in ethnomusicology) Discography: p. Includes bibliographical references and index. I. Folk music-Peru-Conirna (District)-History and criticism. 2. Folk music-Peru-Lirna-History and criticism. 3. Rural-urban migration-Peru. I. Title. II. Series. ML3575.P4T87 1993 761.62'688508536 dc20 92-26935 CIP MN @) The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of the American National Standard for Information Sciences-Permanence of Paper for Printed Library Materials, ANSI 239.48-1984. For Elisabeth CONTENTS List of Illustrations ix Acknowledgments xi Introduction: From Conima to Lima
    [Show full text]
  • UC San Diego UC San Diego Electronic Theses and Dissertations
    UC San Diego UC San Diego Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title Constructing musical spaces beyond technological Eden : a participative initiative for musical interface development based in the Peruvian context Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/9r3229qm Author Lopez Ramirez-Gaston, Jose Ignacio Publication Date 2008 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA SAN DIEGO Constructing Musical Spaces Beyond Technological Eden: A Participative Initiative for Musical Interface Development Based in the Peruvian Context A Thesis submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in Music by Jose Ignacio Lopez Ramirez-Gaston Committee in charge Professor Miller Puckette, Chair Professor Shlomo Dubnov Professor David Borgo 2008 Copyright Jose Ignacio Lopez Ramirez-Gaston, 2008 All rights reserved The Thesis of Jose Ignacio Lopez Ramirez-Gaston is approved and is acceptable in quality and form for publication on microfilm and electronically: ____________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________ ____________________________________________________________________________________ Chair University of California, San Diego 2008 iii TABLE OF CONTENTS Signature Page ……………………………………………………………………………….. iii Table of Contents …………………………………………………………………………….. iv List of Figures …………………………………………………………………………………..
    [Show full text]
  • Cahiers D'ethnomusicologie, 28
    Cahiers d’ethnomusicologie Anciennement Cahiers de musiques traditionnelles 28 | 2015 Le goût musical Råså et sentimiento : le sens musical à Java et au Pérou Marc Benamou Édition électronique URL : http://journals.openedition.org/ethnomusicologie/2508 ISSN : 2235-7688 Éditeur ADEM - Ateliers d’ethnomusicologie Édition imprimée Date de publication : 15 novembre 2015 Pagination : 81-106 ISBN : 978-2-88474-373-0 ISSN : 1662-372X Référence électronique Marc Benamou, « Råså et sentimiento : le sens musical à Java et au Pérou », Cahiers d’ethnomusicologie [En ligne], 28 | 2015, mis en ligne le 15 novembre 2017, consulté le 19 avril 2019. URL : http:// journals.openedition.org/ethnomusicologie/2508 Ce document a été généré automatiquement le 19 avril 2019. Article L.111-1 du Code de la propriété intellectuelle. Råså et sentimiento : le sens musical à Java et au Pérou 1 Råså et sentimiento : le sens musical à Java et au Pérou Marc Benamou 1 La comparaison occupe, dans l’histoire de l’ethnomusicologie, une place variable et contestée (Merriam 1982, Nettl 2010 : 70-89). Après une longue période pendant laquelle la plupart des ethnomusicologues ont délaissé les comparaisons explicites, il semble que nous soyons entrés dans un renouveau de cette approche, vu les exhortations récentes de certains de nos collègues (Agawu 2003, Clayton 2003, McLean 2006 : 314-16, Stock 2008, Nattiez 2014, Savage et Brown 2014). Il faut dire que les comparaisons implicites, dans les publications ethnomusicologiques, n’ont jamais eu autant de succès que pendant les dernières trois décennies : en témoignent les volumes des Cahiers d’ethnomusicologie (et des Cahiers de musiques traditionnelles), dont chacun réunit des cas divers autour d’un thème cohérent.
    [Show full text]
  • The Wind That Moves the Life in the Valle Del Mantaro, Peru
    Berklee College of Music Report of the Research The Saxophone: The Wind that Moves the Life in the Valle del Mantaro, Peru Submitted in Partial Fulfillment of the Degree of Master of Music in Contemporary Performance (Production Concentration) Supervisor: Olga Román by Carolina Araoz Valencia Campus, Spain June 2019 Table of Contents Presentation .......................................................................................................................... 4 1. Peru and the Valle del Mantaro ....................................................................................... 5 1.1. Jauja ...................................................................................................................... 6 1.2. Objectives of the research ....................................................................................... 7 1.3. Methodology .......................................................................................................... 7 1.4. Difficulties in carrying out the investigation ........................................................... 8 1.5. Main results ............................................................................................................ 8 2. Music in Peru. ................................................................................................................. 8 2.1. The prehispanic music ............................................................................................ 9 2.2. Music in the Spanish Colony ...............................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Music Andean Altiplano
    Music oject of the Andean Altiplano Goals 2000 - Partnerships for Educating Colorado Students In Partnership with the Denver Public Schools and the Metropolitan State College of Denver El Alma de la Raza Pr El Music of the Andean Altiplano by Deborah Hanley Grades 4–8 Implementation Time for Unit of Study: 3 weeks Goals 2000 - Partnerships for Educating Colorado Students El Alma de la Raza Curriculum and Teacher Training Project El Alma de la Raza Series El Loyola A. Martinez, Project Director Music of the Andean Altiplano Unit Concepts • Composing music, performing, and building siku pipes • Investigating the music of Quechua and Aymara communities • Learning about the professional lives of two Denver musicians who perform on these instruments Standards Addressed by This Unit Music Students sing or play on instruments a varied repertoire of music, alone or with others. (MUS1) Students will read and notate music. (MUS2) Students will create music. (MUS3) Students will listen to, analyze, evaluate, and describe music. (MUS4) Students will relate music to various historical and cultural traditions. (MUS5) Math Students use a variety of tools and techniques to measure, apply the results in problem- solving situations, and communicate the reasoning used in solving these problems. (M5) Visual Arts Students know and apply visual arts materials, tools, techniques, and processes. (A3) Reading and Writing Students read and understand a variety of materials. (RW1) History Students understand that societies are diverse and have changed over time. (H3) Geography Students know how to use and construct maps, globes, and other geographic tools to locate and derive information about people, places, and environments.
    [Show full text]
  • Music and Dance of Indians and Mestizos in an Andean Valley of Peru
    Music and Dance of Indians and Mestizos in an Andean valley of Peru This book deals with the social context of the music and dance of the people of the Callejón de Huaylas, an Andean valley in Peru. It describes and analyzes-the connection between music and dance, people, and social events. The musical instruments, the repertoire, and the song texts were studied as part of - and reflection of - the society, as well as the performers, their public, and the events during which they met. The anthropological research started from the assumption that music and dance are nonverbal means of communication. They are a 'language of actions', a way of communicating with each other and part of culture as a system of shared ideas. The Callejón de Huaylas 1 The Callejón de Huaylas is an Andean valley in North-Central Peru. It is about 150 kilometers long and its valley floor is situated at an altitude of 2,200-3,100 meters above sea level. According to the census of 1981, the population of the Callejón de Huaylas amounted to 232,176 persons, 86,433 of whom urban and 145,743 rural. Many of the rural settlements of the area are corporate peasant communities: they are located on marginal land, which tends to be exploited by means of a traditional technology involving the members of the community. Production is mainly for subsistence, and the community has jurisdiction over the disposal of land. The area is inhabited by a population of Quechua-speaking Indian peasants and Spanish- speaking Mestizos (persons of mixed parentage).
    [Show full text]
  • Cross-Cultural Explorations with Camera and Analytic Text in Cusco, Peru
    Virginia Commonwealth University VCU Scholars Compass Theses and Dissertations Graduate School 2014 Old World, New Media: Cross-cultural Explorations with Camera and Analytic Text in Cusco, Peru Scott DuPre Mills Virginia Commonwealth University Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd Part of the Interdisciplinary Arts and Media Commons © The Author Downloaded from https://scholarscompass.vcu.edu/etd/3454 This Dissertation is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate School at VCU Scholars Compass. It has been accepted for inclusion in Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of VCU Scholars Compass. For more information, please contact [email protected]. COPYRIGHT PAGE Scott DuPre Mills 2014 All Rights Reserved 1 Old World, New Media: Cross-cultural Explorations with Camera and Analytic Text in Cusco, Peru A Dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Media, Art and Text at Virginia Commonwealth University. by Scott DuPre Mills BFA Sculpture, Virginia Commonwealth University 1989. MFA Photography and Film, Virginia Commonwealth University 1999. Director: Dr. Nicholas A Sharp Assistant Professor Department of English Virginia Commonwealth University Richmond, Virginia January, 2014 Acknowledgement My committee members have contributed ideas and opinions that have been essential to the development of this project. Dr. Peter Kirkpatrick told me of the new MATX Phd. Program in 2005. I applied and was offered a full GTA in its first year and began in the fall of 2006. Peter’s suggestion of Deluze’s theoretical writings was essential to the camera consciousness component of this dissertation.
    [Show full text]
  • Sikuriando Melodías De Tiempos Lejanos: Los Sikuris Cosmopolitas Y La Vigencia De “Lo Andino” En Bogotá, Santiago Y Buenos Aires
    SIKURIANDO MELODÍAS DE TIEMPOS LEJANOS: LOS SIKURIS COSMOPOLITAS Y LA VIGENCIA DE “LO ANDINO” EN BOGOTÁ, SANTIAGO Y BUENOS AIRES A Dissertation submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences of Georgetown University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Spanish By Daniel Castelblanco, M.A. Washington, DC November 11, 2016 Copyright 2016 by Daniel Castelblanco All Rights Reserved ii SIKURIANDO MELODÍAS DE TIEMPOS LEJANOS: LOS SIKURIS COSMOPOLITAS Y LA VIGENCIA DE “LO ANDINO” EN BOGOTÁ, SANTIAGO Y BUENOS AIRES Daniel Castelblanco, M.A. Thesis Advisor: Joanne Rappaport, Ph.D. ABSTRACT This dissertation explores the ways in which the cosmopolitan players of Andean pan flutes, known as sikuris, perform music originally composed by indigenous peasants in the southern Andes and make it their own in the metropolitan contexts of Bogota, Santiago and Buenos Aires. The thesis examines the various meanings that sikuris attribute to the notion of “lo andino,” arguing that this multifaceted construct shapes their techniques of musical performance, ritual practices, moral values and imaginaries about Andean indigenousness. Through an ethnographic approach, this work traces the origin of the discourses and practices about “lo andino” that circulate among the cosmopolitans sikuris back to the representations conveyed and disseminated by Indigenismo, Andeanist anthropologies of the late 20th century, and folkloric-Andean popular music. It describes the transnational movement of cosmopolitan sikuris as dominated by a trend that echoes the majoritarian hegemonic representations of Andean indigenousness as produced and widespread by the current Bolivian state. I argue that in combination with the techniques of sikuri musical performance, the general symbols of Andean indigenousness that make an integral part of these representations promote the establishment of a community of practice that has a pivotal influence on the ways in which sikuris imagine and identify themselves.
    [Show full text]
  • The Edwin A. Fleisher Collection of Orchestral Music: Latin American Orchestral Works
    2016-17 The Edwin A. Fleisher Collection of Orchestral Music: Latin American Orchestral Works Compiled by Gary Galván The Edwin A. Fleisher Collection of Orchestral Music at the Free Library of Philadelphia THE EDWIN A. FLEISHER COLLECTION OF ORCHESTRAL MUSIC Background Philadelphia philanthropist Edwin Adler Fleisher (1877-1959) founded the first training orchestra in the United States in 1909 – over a half century before José Antonio Abreu’s famed El Sistema. The Little Symphony Club, as it was first known, was open to both sexes and all races free of charge. Over the next 20 years, Fleisher would spend between $10,000 and $20,000 annually to supply the Symphony Club with music for biweekly rehearsals (including regular sight-reading sessions!) and annual concerts. Having exhausted U.S. publishing agents, Fleisher personally traveled to Europe in 1913, 1925, 1927, 1929, and 1930 to meet with composers and publishers and purchase music to fulfill the group’s needs. A special visa in 1929 permitted him unprecedented access to works in the Soviet Union. In 1929, Fleisher donated his expansive collection to the Free Library of Philadelphia. Valued at $500,000 (nearly $7 million adjusted for inflation), the collection contained complete performance sets (a conductor’s score and a part for each musician) for just over 3,300 works. Between 1934 and 1943, Fleisher co-sponsored a Works Progress Administration Music Copying Project dedicated to creating performance sets from unpublished manuscripts by Pan American composers and doubled the size of the collection. Fleisher personally sponsored Nicolas Slonimsky’s sojourn to Latin America in 1941-42 with $10,000 to secure works from South and Central America.
    [Show full text]