Composer’s Commission concert next week, new publications Our 2013 Composer’s Commission concert is rapidly approaching, and we have some good news! Firstly: Please join us next week, September 8th, for the premiere of Albert Guinovart’s exciting new piano work, Skyshadows. The concert will be held at the Instituto Cervantes at 7 pm. Tickets are $15 to the public ($10 ICNY members). They are available online, by phone (212-308-7720), or may be purchased in person at the institute until 6:30 pm the day of the concert, so be sure to plan ahead! For Skyshadows, Guinovart drew inspiration from the ever shifting landscape of shadows cast by the buildings of NYC, creating a light, tuneful work that begins with a nod to Cole Porter’s “I Happen to Like New York.” With his program of old and new Catalonian works, Guinovart continues a century-long musical dialog between Iberia and New York. Today’s issue of El Diario featured an article on Guinovart and our Composer’s Commission series, so be sure to check it out. Lastly–because, who can get enough of seeing their name in print?–we would like to offer a sneak preview of the work, which is soon to be published by international powerhouse Music Sales. Further information to come.
Lecture-Recital with Pianist Joseph Smith The Fall semester is nearly upon us! Coming up September 8th is the not-to-be-missed premiere of the Foundation’s 2013 Composer Commission with Albert Guinovart, but this is only the beginning of a year of great programming. Please join us on October 27th for a lecture-recital with pianist Joseph Smith. Mr. Smith is known for bringing neglected works to light. He regularly performs, writes, and lectures. He has edited eleven piano anthologies, recorded ten albums, and written for numerous publications. His show “Joseph Smith’s Piano Bench” aired for two years, as a monthly feature of NPR’s Performance Today. The New York Times has called his playing “eloquent,” and author Stuart Issacoff calls him “a walking encyclopedia of the piano” in his book, The Natural History of the Piano. For this lecture, Mr. Smith will be performing piano works of Latin-America and exploring the links between Western classical and vernacular Latin-American traditions, such as tango and milonga. As an apertif, please enjoy this video of Mr. Smith performing Chopin’s Nocturne in E flat, Op. 9, No. 2 (“with too many authentic ornaments”), and this excerpt from a previous lecture-recital, featuring “Te quiero tanto,” which he will be performing on the upcoming program. The lecture will take place on October 27, 2014 at CCNY, 11 am. The event is free to attend. No reservation required. City College of New York Shephard Hall Room 95 160 Convent Ave New York, NY 10031
Composer’s Commission 2013 July 8, 2014: The Foundation is excited to announce that the 2013 composer’s commission has been awarded to Albert Guinovart. A Catalan pianist and composer, Guinovart studied at the Municipal Conservatory of Barcelona. He is currently teaching composition at ESMUC (Escola Superior de Música de Catalunya), a position he has held since 2002. In 2014, he was inducted into the Catalan Royal Academy of Fine Arts. Guinovart’s music has been performed around the world and has been featured in several films. He recently released a recording of his works on Sony Classical (link in Spanish). Please join us at the Instituto Cervantes on September 8 for the premiere of Guinovart’s new work, Skyshadows. The program, which explores creative exchanges between Spain and New York City, will include several of Guinovart’s past works along with the works of Frederic Mompou and Enrique Granados. Click photo below for a video of Skyshadows The commission will also be performed at the Modlin Center for the Arts at the University of Richmond (VA) on September 10.
Granados Centenary Performance A major highlight of the Granados Centenary celebrations will be the performance in New York of the long-lost masterpiece Cant de les estrelles (Song of the Stars) by Voices of Ascension, directed by Dennis Keene, with pianist Douglas Riva. Cant de les estrelles was premiered by the Orfeó Català, Barcelona in March, 1911 and the work was repeated in a private concert in June of that year. Although recognized as a masterpiece it was never again performed and the manuscript was though lost until it was recovered in 2006. Dennis Keene directed Voices of Ascension in the first performance in almost 100 years in 2007 with pianist Douglas Riva, the first pianist to perform the work after Granados himself. The concert was recorded by Naxos and the CD was nominated for a Grammy award.
The Global Reach of the Fandango Spaniards, Indians, Africans and Gypsies: The Global Reach of the Fandango in Music, Song, and Dance* The Foundation for Iberian Music at The Barry S. Brook Center for Music Research and Documentation at the CUNY Graduate Center will host a conference on the global reach of the fandango at CUNY’s Segal Theater, April 17-18, 2015. (Saturday papers will be held at Alegrias at La Nacional, 239 W. 14th St, between 7th and 8th Aves.) Click here to view the program! In The Mestizo Mind: The Intellectual Dynamics of Colonization and Globalization, Serge Gruzinski notes “the difficulty we experience even ‘seeing’ mestizo phenomena, much less analyzing them.” The fandango emerged in the early eighteenth century as a popular dance and music craze across Spain and the Americas. While in parts of Latin America the term “fandango” came to refer to any festive social dance event, over the course of that century in both Spain and the Americas a broad family of interrelated fandango music and dance genres evolved that went on to constitute important parts of regional expressive culture. This fandango family comprised genres as diverse as the Cuban peasant punto, the salon and concert fandangos of Mozart and Scarlatti, and—last but not least—the Andalusian fandango subgenres that became core components of flamenco. The fandango world itself became a conduit for the creative interaction and syncretism of music, dance, and people of diverse Spanish, Afro-Latin, Gitano, and perhaps even Amerindian origin. As such, the fandango family evolved as a quintessential mestizaje, a mélange of people, imagery, music and dance from America, Europe, and Africa. Emerging from the maelstrom of the Atlantic slave trade with its cataclysmic remaking of the Western world, the fandango in its diverse but often interrelated forms was nurtured in the ports of Cádiz, Veracruz, Sao Paolo and Havana, and went on to proliferate throughout Europe and the Americas. Widely dispersed in terms of geography, class, and cultural reference, the fandango’s many faces reflect a diversity of exchange across what was once the Spanish Empire. This conference proposes to bring these cousins together, and to wonder how one form can shed light on another. The conference will take place in the Graduate Center’s Segal Theater. Registration Information 2 Day: $100 ($50 students) Single Day: $50 ($25 students) Please visit the link above for further details. If you are interested in volunteering, in exchange for waived registration fees, please contact Meira at fandangoconference.cuny@gmail.com. (*Title is with gratitude to “Unpaseo por la música y el baile populares de la Nueva España,” in Performance and Censorship in Colonial Mexico, Martha Toriz, ed., Hemispheric Institute Web Cuaderno [January 2005].)
Gross Indecency: Sexual Phobia and the Trial of Oscar Wilde A seminar with Richard A. Kaye Associate Professor of English at Hunter College and CUNY Graduate Center James Melo Musicologist for the Ensemble for the Romantic Century and Senior Editor at RILM Abstracts of Music Literature Oscar Wilde’s multifaceted personality, his biting wit, and the brilliance of his artistic genius added sparkle and glamour to late Victorian society, making him the darling of England’s salons and artistic circles. But even his position as the most popular and admired playwright in the world could not save him from the wrath of society, as he stood accused of gross indecency under England’s law that criminalized homosexual behavior. Wilde’s personal life was brought into the glare of public scrutiny during his trial, when he was humiliated, degraded, exiled from society, and sentenced to two years of forced labor. The seminar will discuss Wilde’s artistic persona within the context of Victorian sexuality and the sexual phobias of the time, the rise of aestheticism in music and the arts, and the cultural underpinnings that made Wilde’s trial such a scandalous event worldwide. Monday, June 9, 2014 5:30-7:30 pm CUNY Graduate Center, 365 Fifth Ave., Martin Segal Theatre, 1st floor FREE ADMISSION For more information: jmelo@gc.cuny.edu; 212-817-8606 Presented by the Barry S. Brook Center for Music Research and Documentation, CUNY, and the Ensemble for the Romantic Century in connection with ERC’s theatrical concert, The Trial of Oscar Wilde at Symphony Space, June 19-21. To find out more about ERC’s theatrical concerts, visit our website: www.romanticcentury.org
Upcoming Granados Events The Centenary and Anniversary of Enrique Granados Commemoration is fast expanding. Many talented scholars and artists have agreed to participate, and several events have been schedule for the future, in both New York City and Washington D.C. The Hispanic Society of America has announced a series of three concerts of music by Granados in honor of the Granados Centenary and in recognition of the important relationship between Granados and the Hispanic Society of America. In 2016, the chorus of the National Cathedral in Washington D.C. will perform Granados’ Cant de les estelles. An academic conference has also been schedule for that same year, in order to bring together scholars to explore Granados’ life and works. More will be sure to come.
“Strings Attached”: A Conversation with Kronos Quartet’s David Harrington October 22, 2014: Innovative violinist David Harrington, founder of the visionary ensemble the Kronos Quartet, will be the speaker of the 2014 Lloyd and Constance Old Lectures on 21st-Century Music. This series of talks and debates by major cultural figures addresses the changing consumption, creation, context, and valuations of today’s music. The event will also feature a live performance of music selected by Harrington. Harrington was inspired to form Kronos in 1973 after hearing a performance of Black Angels, an avante-garde piece by George Crumb. The new group quickly expanded into unconventional territory, performing renditions of songs by jazz artists, such as Ornette Coleman and Thelonious Monk, rock artists like Jimi Hendrix, as well as repertoire from past masters and contemporary composers. The group has worked closely with several prominent composers, including Terry Riley, Henryk Mikolaj Górecki, and Philip Glass, and has received numerous awards for their recordings and performances. Click here to view a recording of the talk!
3rd International Course on Medieval Music Performance July 5-13, 2014: The 3rd International Course on Medieval Music (12th-14th c.), supported by the Foundation, will begin once again this July. Hosted in Besalú, a picturesque and well-preserved medieval town in Catalonia, this nine-day immersion course is designed for vocalists and instrumentalists performing early music. The variety of programs include chant, ars nova, and vocal and instrumental music, and will bring together a world-class group of artists, scholars, and teachers.
Enrique Granados Centenary and Anniversary A Granados Celebration Official International Committee Commemorating the Centenary of Enrique Granados in 2016 and the 150th Anniversary of his birth in 2017 Enrique (Enric) Granados (1867-1916) spent the final months of his life in New York. His visit to the United States included some of the most important artistic triumphs of his life—the World Premiere of his opera, GOYESCAS, at the Metropolitan Opera, solo and chamber music recitals with cellist Pau (Pablo) Casals, recordings for the Duo-Art Reproducing Piano, the premiere of his symphonic poem, DANTE, by the Chicago Symphony, and a recital at the White House. The coincidence of the Centenary of Granados’ death in 2016 and the 150th Anniversary of his birth in 2017 provides a unique opportunity to re-discover and re-evaluate the important contributions by Granados to the musical world and to highlight the ties between his native Catalunya and the city of New York. An international committee is now actively working to organize and coordinate events commemorating the Granados Centenary around the world. For a full list of Centenary events in NYC and around the world, please see this page. (Be sure to bookmark it and check back for new events!) Steering Committee Douglas Riva Antoni Pizà International Board of Advisors Carlos Arnasay Patricia Caicedo Walter Aaron Clark Carolina Estrada Mutsumi Fukushima Ángel Gil-Ordoñez Helen Glaisher-Hernández Yolanda Guasch Miriam Perandones Lozano John Watson Milton Mary Ann Newman Mònica Pagès Jorge de Persia Paolo Pinamonti Arturo Reverter Emilio Casares Rodicio Anna Tonna Alicia Torra de Larrocha Alvaro Torrente Marta Zabaleta Biographies Carlos Aransay (ARCM) studied singing at the Escuela Superior de Canto as well as piano and composition at the Real Conservatorio Superior, both in Madrid, and composition and conducting at the Royal College of Music in London. In Vienna he pursued conducting studies with Jacques Delacôte, a pupil of Hans Swarovsky. He has conducted the London Symphony Orchestra, Pilsen Radio Orchestra (Czech Republic), the National Orchestras of Cuba and Peru, SODRE (National Broadcast) Orchestra of Uruguay, Trujillo Symphony Orchestra (Peru), Falcon Symphony Orchestra (Venezuela), etc. His involvement in opera has landed him jobs with the Earls Court arena production of Carmen (in Zurich, Munich and Berlin, with José Carreras leading one of five different casts), Costa Rica Chamber Opera ( national premiere of Suor Angelica), Midsummer Opera, Blackheath Opera, Floral Opera, etc. As an operatic chorus master Carlos has worked with the Ambrosian Opera Chorus (assistant to John McCarthy), Classical Productions Chorus (assistant to Terry Edwards and Simon Joly), Chelsea Opera Group, Midsummer Opera, etc. In 2009 he founded the London Lyric Chorus, which featured in a commercial recording with the Philharmonia Orchestra. In Lima he is music director of the new Dompablo Operetta and Zarzuela Company. Carlos’s professional chamber choir, Coro Cervantes, was founded in 1995 and is now firmly established as a succesful and prestigious group in the UK and Spain. They have released five CDs to date (Guild, Sello Autor, Signum) which have been highly acclaimed in the UK and abroad (Gramophone Critic´s Choice/CDs of The Year, Best Choral CD of 2010/The New CD Show Classic FM, etc) and have performed extensively in Spain, Holland, Mexico, Russia and the UK (Wigmore Hall, Queen Elizabeth Hall, St. John’s Smith Square…). Carlos is a regular guest conductor of the National Choir of Spain, with concerts at the National Auditorium in Madrid and broadcasts on National Spanish Radio. As a teacher, Carlos works in Latin America since 1999, with regular visits to Mexico, Peru and Cuba. In London he is one of the teachers of the Lacock International Choral Courses (with courses in the UK, Spain and Mexico), Floral Opera Workshops and has also taught Vocal Repertoire and Technique at the City Literary Institute and Spanish and Latin American vocal repertoire at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama, besides working as a private voice teacher. Since 2003, he is Music Director and a member of the jury of the Trujillo International Singing Competition (Peru). He writes and translates for EMI Classics, Naxos, Brilliant, and has been invited on several occasions to BBC radio programs such as In tune and The Choir. He has compiled a top selling CD for the National Gallery in London (The Sacred made Art) and, as a recording producer, he has worked with the Musikene School in San Sebastian and has released the world premiere recording of Juan José, an opera by Pablo Sorozábal. He has worked alongside artists like Harry Christophers and Joyce DiDonato in masterclasses, and is Patricia Petibon´s language coach in her latest CD for Deutsche Grammophon. Carlos has been a member of the Iberian and Latin American Music Society (ILAMS). Patricia Caicedo is both a musicologist and a soprano, specializing in Latin American and Iberian vocal music repertory. Recognized as a leading interpreter of the music, Caicedo sings in Spanish, Catalan, Portuguese, Quechua, and Nahuatl. She is also the founder and director of the Barcelona Festival of Song, a summer program and concert series dedicated to promoting Latin American and Iberian Vocal repertoire. Walter Aaron Clark, author of Enrique Granados: Poet of the Piano (2006/2011) and Isaac Albéniz: Portrait of a Romantic (1999/2002), both published by Oxford University Press, professor of musicology at the University of California, Riverside, where he is the Founder and Director of the Center for Iberian and Latin American Music, prepared the first edition of Granados’s Catalan opera Follet published by Tritó, Barcelona. Carolina Estrada is a Spanish-born concert pianist. She performs frequently in international festivals and has given recital in prestigious concert halls around the world as soloist and with orchestras. She has edited several recordings with Quality Classics in Holland and recorded live broadcast for National Catalan and Spanish Radios. She won her first award at the age of 8, since then, she has been grant holder of numerous international awards and prizes. Currently she has been awarded at the Chamber Music Section of the Australasian International Double-Reed Competition in Sydney and is recipient of the George Henderson Award and the Kathleen & Allison Short Scholarship, both Faculty Merit Scholarships offered by the Sydney Conservatorium of Music to financially support her doctoral degree. Carolina Estrada started her studies with Carles Julia and Ramon Coll in Barcelona. Later, she studied her Bachelor’s and Master’s Degrees with Matthijs Vershoor at the Conservatorium van Amsterdam, where she was selected to undertake a year of specialization at the Universitat der Kunste Udk with the legendary pianist Laszlo Simon. She has also received advisement from Dejan Lazic, Paul Badura-Skoda, Natalia Sheludiakova, Claude Helffer, Gerard Willems, Ilse Graubin, Edit Fisher and Malcom Bilson. Mutsumi Fukushima is a musicologist and pianist. She is the author of El piano en Barcelona entre 1880 y 1936 (to be published in 2014 by Ed. Boileau), as well as numerous articles on concert life in Barcelona. Fukushima is professor at the Elisabeth University of Music, Hiroshima. Angel Gil-Ordóñez, PostClassical Ensemble Music Director, has conducted symphonic music, opera, and ballet throughout Europe, the United States, and Latin America. In the United States, he has appeared with the American Composers Orchestra, Opera Colorado, the Pacific Symphony, the Hartford Symphony, the Brooklyn Philharmonic, the Orchestra of St. Luke’s, and the National Gallery Orchestra in Washington. Abroad, he has been heard with the Munich Philharmonic, the Solistes de Berne, at the Schleswig-Holstein Music Festival, and at the Bellas Artes National Theatre in Mexico City. In 2006, the King of Spain awarded Angel Gil-Ordóñez the country’s highest civilian decoration, the Royal Order of Queen Isabella, for his work performing and teaching Spanish music in its cultural context. Gil-Ordóñez is principal guest conductor of New York’s Perspectives Ensemble (with which he has recorded the music of Xavier Montsalvatge for Naxos [8.573101]), and music director of the Georgetown University Orchestra in DC. He also serves as advisor for a program in Leon, Mexico, modeled on Venezuela’s El Sistema. Helen Glaisher-Hernández is an Anglo-Spanish concert pianist, musicologist, pedagogue and curator. She regularly performs in the UK’s major venues including Southbank Centre’s Purcell Room, Barbican, St James’s Piccadilly, St John’s Smith Square and St Martin-in-the-Fields and has given the UK premiere of numerous pieces by Latin American composers including Villa-Lobos, Guastavino, Vitier, Guarnieri and Carreño. She is Chairwoman of ILAMS, the Iberian and Latin American Music Society, based in London. Yolanda Guasch is manager of the Barcelona publishing house Editorial Boileau. Ed. Boileau is the most important publisher of Granados’ works, including the 18 volume Complete Piano Works, directed by Alicia de Larrocha and Douglas Riva, Cant de les estrelles, Songs for Male Voice, Religious Works, and many more. In conjunction with the Granados Centenary, Boileau will also publish the first Spanish translation of Enrique Granados: Poet of the Piano by Walter A. Clark, and The Complete Correspondence of Enrique Granados, by Miriam Perandones Lozano. Dr. Miriam Perandones Lozano, author of La canción lírica de Enrique Granados (1867-1916) and The Complete Letters of Enrique Granados, to be published by Ed. Boileau, Barcelona. She is also the author of various articles about Granados, such as: Enrique Granados en París: la construcción de un icono español en el ámbito musical internacional, Revista de musicología, No. 34, 2011; La canción de Enrique Granados: un microcosmos estilístico, Cuadernos de música iberoamericana, No. 22, 2011) She is Professor at the Universidad de Oviedo. John Watson Milton, writer and historian, author of the award-winning historical novel on the life of Enrique Granados, The Fallen Nightingale (2004), Catalan translation El rossinyol abatut, published by Pagès Editors (Catalan), Spanish translation El ruiseñor abatido, published by Ediciones Milenio, and the novels Time to Choose, published by Xlibris Corporation, and Crossing the Barriers: The Autobiography of Allan Spear, published by the University of Minnesota Press. Mary Ann Newman, head of the Farragut Fund for Catalan Culture in the United States, noted author and translator of Catalan literary works . Mònica Pagès, noted musical journalist and translator, author of Acadèmia Granados-Marshall: 100 anys d´escola pianística a Barcelona (2000). Jorge de Persia, musicologist and professor, was Director of the Archivo Manuel de Falla in Granada. His books include Los últimos años de Manuel de Falla, 1993; Joaquín Turina, notas para un compositor, 1999; En torno a lo español en la música del siglo XX, 2003; Julián Bautista and Tiempos y espacios, 2005. He also writes musical articles for La Vanguardia, Barcelona. Antoni Pizà, musicologist, Director of the Foundation for Iberian Music at the Graduate Center of the City University of New York. Arturo Reverter is one of the most distingusihed music critics in Spain. He was a founder of the important music magazine Scherzo. Known for his vast knowledge of vocal music, he is the author of El arte del canto, Las 50 mejores arias de Verdi, and Alfredo Kraus, una concepción del canto. He has collaborated with numerous publications and Radio Nacional de España. Douglas Riva, pianist and musicologist, Grammy nominated for his recording of the modern premiere of Granados´ masterpiece Cant de les estrelles, the only pianist to record the complete piano works of Granados (11 CDs) for Naxos, Assistant Director of the first critical edition of the 18 vol. Complete Piano Works directed by Alicia de Larrocha published by Ed. Boileau, Barcelona, currently preparing a critical edition of the complete chamber music for Tritó, Barcelona, currently preparing the first critical edition of the complete orchestra works of Granados which will be published by Instituto Complutense de Ciencias Musicales, 2014. Emilio Casares Rodicio is a noted Spanish musicologist and professor, and one of the foremost experts on zarzuela. He is founder and former Director of the Complutense Institute of Musical Studies (Instituto Complutense de Ciencias Musicales), Madrid. Anna Tonna is a mezzo soprano, Fulbright scholar to Spain, distinguished recording artist and noted performer of Catalan, Spanish and Latin American music. Alicia Torra de Larrocha is daughter of celebrated pianist Alicia de Larrocha. From 1997-2009 she was the Manager of the Academia Marshall, founded by Granados, in Barcelona. Since her mother´s death in 2009, she has dedicated herself with the creation of the “ARXIU Alicia de Larrocha” and working on various projects to make available complete information about her mother’s career and enormous contribution to Spanish and Catalan music. Alvaro Torrente is Spanish musicologist. One of the world’s foremost experts on Spanish baroque music, especially the villancico genre, Torrente is a professor at the Universidad Complutense de Madrid and Director of the Complutense Institute of Musical Studies (Instituto Complutense de Ciencias Musicales), Madrid. Marta Zabaleta is one of the finest Spanish pianists who has taken on the responsibility of directing the Academia Marshall, in accordance with the express wish of her predecessor, Alicia de Larrocha. Ms. Zabaleta has won numerous international competitions and has performed with orchestras such as the London Symphony Orchestra, the English Chamber Orchestra, Deutsches Symphonieorchester (Berlin), the Basque Euskadi National Orchestra (San Sebastián) and the Spanish RadioTelevision National Orchestra (RTVE), as well as the symphony orchestras of Bilbao, Extremadura, Castilla y León, Murcia, Comunidad de Madrid, Galicia, Córdoba, Málaga, Granada and Valencia, under the baton of outstanding conductors such as Sir Colin Davis, Daniele Gatti, Harry Christophers, Sergiu Comissiona, Günter Neuhold, Arturo Tamayo, Juanjo Mena, Juan Ramón Encinar, Max Bragado-Darman, and Christopher Wilkins. Her recordings have been issued by EMI INternational, Claves and the RTVE label. Support for A Granados Celebration events generously provided by: