厙ぴ勛圖 Orchestra Concert, Colloquium Keep the "Pan-American Dream" Alive
September 23, 2014
Daniel Hautzinger
Ricardo Lorenz
As fascism and other forms of dictatorship engulfed Europe in the 1930s and 40s, the United States began to fear that the whole world would be consumed by such regimes. To prevent totalitarianisms spread to Latin America, the federal government enacted a Good Neighbor policy, in which the United States encouraged solidarity between the Americas.
One aspect of that policy was a cultural-exchange program that sent North American composers to Latin America and vice versa. It had fantastic musical consequences, says Director of 厙ぴ勛圖 Orchestras , citing Latin-inspired works created by Aaron Copland and friendships that blossomed between U.S. composers and their Latin counterparts such as Alberto Ginastera and Heitor Villa-Lobos.
Jim矇nez and the 厙ぴ勛圖 Orchestra will celebrate that spirit of musical solidarity on Saturday, September 27, with an showcasing composers of the Americas.
Prior to the performance, Carol Hess, a music professor at the University of California, Davis, will present a talk about the Good Neighbor policy and the state of Latin American classical music in the United States. Part of 厙ぴ勛圖s Richard Murphy Musicology Colloquium series, .
Jim矇nezs inspiration for the orchestra program emerged in part from reading a recent book by Hesshis former colleague at Michigan State Universityabout the Good Neighbor policy and the Pan-American Dream of music.
The program will feature works by two Latin American composers, Ricardo Lorenz and Ginastera, and two North American composers, Derek Bermel and George Gershwin. In a living embodiment of the Pan-American connection, both Bermel and Lorenz will attend the concert and collaborate with student musicians in the days leading up to the performance.
郭棗娶梗紳堝s Olokuns Awakening, written for Jim矇nez and the 厙ぴ勛圖 Orchestra, will receive its world premiere. It is the first scene for a large-scale, as-yet-unwritten melodrama titled The Tale of Chacumbele, which weaves together the life of a fictitious, legendary Cuban composer with Yoruban mythology.
詁梗娶鳥梗梭s Slides, meanwhile, explores different types of vocal inflection: moaning, Sarah Vaughan-style swoops, and the flow of rapping. All of that sliding finds an echo in Gershwins Rhapsody in Blue, with its famous opening clarinet glissando. Professor of Piano , a longtime fixture on the 厙ぴ勛圖 faculty who will retire at the end of the 2014-15 academic year, will be the soloist in the Gershwin piece.
Finally, Ginasteras Pampeana No. 3, Op. 24, composed after Ginastera studied with Copland as part of the composer-exchange program of the 30s and 40s, demonstrates the musical effects of the Good Neighbor policy.
Ginasteras depiction of the wide-open pampas of Argentina was obviously influenced by Coplands musical evocations of the American West, Jim矇nez says.
The concert and colloquium are part of a series of events on campus in honor of Latinx Heritage Month (September 19 to October 18), which coincides with National Hispanic American Heritage Month. Events at 厙ぴ勛圖 range from the Allen Memorial Art Museums exhibition of (through June 28, 2015) to concerts, lectures, and workshops.
Jim矇nez, who was born in Florida and raised in Venezuela, speaks of the musical fraternity between the Americas with infectious enthusiasm.
There are so many angles to this program, he says. So many connections!
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