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Grady Goods: The Global Cello: Diaspora Voices

March 31 @ 3:00 pm - 4:30 pm

The Global Cello: Diaspora Voices
 
Join Jon Silpayamanant, cellist and founder/artistic director of Saw Peep Intercultural Ensemble, on a musical journey to hear diasporic composers drawing inspiration from stories and music styles and traditions from their ancestral homelands.

 

Works by Ezra Escobar, Reena Esmail, May Kouyoumdjian, Siti binti Saad, Nathalie Joachim, Kian Soltani, and Jon Silpayamanant.
 
Sunday, March 31, 3PM
Grady Goods
620 Baxter Avenue
Louisville, KY
 
 

PROGRAM

Ezra Escobar – itulak (2020)

itulak was conceived as a result of improvisation. I was playing around with my instrument and seeing what I liked. The title means “push” or “impel” in Tagalog. It seems like the piece is constantly trying to get somewhere, but never really succeeds. The music keeps pushing forwards, but something is pushing it back.

Reena Esmail – Varsha वर्षा (2019)

Varsha was written for the Haydn Seven Last Words project, for Juilliard415. The project commissioned seven composers (including Nico Muhly, Paola Prestini, Jessica Meyer, Tania Leon, Caroline Shaw and Colin Jacobsen) to write interludes between each of the Haydn quartets. This piece, Varsha, serves as an interlude between Sonata V (Sitio – “I Thirst”) and Sonata VI (Consummatum Est – “It is finished”) of Haydn’s Seven Last Words. The combination of Hindustani raags used in this piece are from the Malhaar family, which are sung to beckon rain. I imagined an interlude between these two sonatas: Christ thirsts. Rain comes from the distance (Megh Malhaar). There is a downpour around him (Miyan ki Malhaar), but he grows slowly weaker. His next words make clear that even the rain is not enough: his thirst is of another sort, which cannot be quenched by water. And so, it is finished.

Mary Kouyoumdjian – The Revolt of the Stars (2018)

The Revolt of the Stars is inspired by the Armenian fable by the same name, in which the stars unite in an attempt to outshine the sun and the moon. The fable questions the effectiveness of ‘strength in numbers’ when a group that lacks strength in spirit rises up against those in positions of power. Pre-recorded cello part by Caitlyn Sullivan

Siti binti Saad – Muhogo Wa Jangombe (1930)

A Taarab song titled after a dish, which literally translates as “beef cassava.” The cassava is a woody shrub with edible roots. The lyrics of the song is filled with metaphors and proverbs that discuss relationships with people while ostensibly talking about how to prepare the dish and etiquette of eating.

Jon Silpayamanant – Thawarawadi (2023) from Two Thai Tunes for solo cello

Thawarawadi, the first movement of Two Thai Tunes for solo cello, is an old name for Central Thailand (7th – 11th centuries BCE) and is loosely based on Thai Classical Music forms and style. The string style is reminiscent of the Thai Saw Sam Sai, which is a type of three-stringed spike fiddle that resembles other Southeast Asian rebabs like those found in Indonesia, Malaysia, and the Cambodian Tro Khmer. Commissioned by the Cello Teaching Repertoire Consortium*

Nathalie Joachim – Dam Mwen Yo (2016)

Dam mwen yo in Haitian Creole simply translates to “they are my ladies.” In Haiti, the cultural image of women is one of strength. They are pillars of their homes and communities, and are both fearless and loving, all while carrying the weight of their families and children on their backs. As a first generation Haitian-American, these women—my mother, grandmothers, sisters, aunts, cousins—were central to my upbringing and my understanding of what it means to be a woman. In Dantan, Haiti-Sud, where my family is from, it is rare to walk down the countryside roads without hearing the voices of women—in the fields, cooking for their loved ones, gathering water at the wells with their babies. This piece and the voices within it are representative of these ladies—my ladies. And the cello sings their song—one of strength, beauty, pain and simplicity in a familiar landscape. Commissioned by Amanda Gookin for The Forward Music Project.

Kian Soltani – Persian Fire Dance (2012)

Soltani’s “Persian Fire Dance” is influenced by his Persian roots and is filled with asymmetrical meters, drones, an improvisatory section, and percussive effects which mimic the tonbak (a Persian goblet drum). Having a family with traditional Persian musicians in Iran, these are sounds and styles he grew up hearing in in Bregenz, Austria where he was born.


Notes and Links


* Support for this commission was provided by Summer@Eastman of the Eastman School of Music at the University of Rochester, and by Cello Teaching Repertoire Consortium, including:

Co-Directors Lisa Caravan, Daniel Ketter

Lead Commissioners Miranora Frisch, Kathleen Kemp, Laura Usiskin Co-Commissioners Hannah Collins, Rosemary Elliott, Hilary Glen, Cora Swenson Lee, James Nackley, Adriana Ransom, Jeffrey Solow, Caleb van der Swaagh, Benjamin Swartz, Zachary Sweet, James Waldo

Ezra Escobarwww.ezraescobarcello.com
Reena Esmailwww.reenaesmail.com
Mary Kouyoumdjianwww.marykouyoumdjian.com
Siti Binti Saadhistoryheroines.com/2020/02/14/siti-binti-saad
Jon Silpayamanantwww.silpayamanant.com
Nathalie Joachimwww.nathaliejoachim.com
Kian Soltaniwww.kiansoltani.com

Details

Date:
March 31
Time:
3:00 pm - 4:30 pm
Event Category:
Website:
https://www.facebook.com/events/725205432750314

Venue

Grady Goods Gallery
620 Baxter Avenue
Louisville, KY 40204 United States
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Phone
(502) 653-7372
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