Piano Masterclass with Josep Prohens: Time and Location As previously announced, we are holding a masterclass in conjunction with our upcoming Josep Prohens retrospective concert, with the composer himself and pianist Andreu Riera, who is one of the foremost interpreters of Prohens’ piano works. The masterclass will be held the day before the concert, November 11, at 12:30, at City College’s Shepard Hall. This class is free and open to the public; no registration is required to observe. Until then, enjoy the album whose launch we’re celebrating with this concert and masterclass: [youtube]https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_k93SpxfcYUMGDcsNQhS0eWfm2qjHLkgvc[/youtube]
1619 and the Iberian Peninsula We at the Foundation for Iberian Music have been following the 1619 Project from The New York Times with great interest. We were especially inspired by Wesley Morris’s entry on The Birth of American Music, because it not only details the enormous debt that North American popular music owes to African American music, but also articulates the outsized hope and love for the world that black music sings. From the Iberian and Latin American perspective, 1619 is but one chronological landmark in the history of racism and the transatlantic slave trade. As Resident Scholar K. Meira Goldberg explores in her monograph, Sonidos Negros: On the Blackness of Flamenco (Oxford University Press, 2019), the aporetic politics of what we now think of as “race” originated in what is now Spain. On the cusp of the world-shattering European conquest of the Americas, racial (racist) ideology originated in Catholic battles against Judaism and Islam on the Iberian Peninsula as the casting of religious difference onto the surface of the skin. Christian universalism justified the barbarities of the transatlantic slave trade, but paradoxically also undermined the racial categories it engendered. Slavery and forced conversion to Christianity were claimed as boons to their victims, yet to deny any human beings the possibility of redemption from their abject state was to deny Christ himself. To understand how fundamental Spanish racial thinking is to current ideologies of race, consider that the brand used to mark slaves, often on their faces, was the word “esclavo (slave), symbolized as an “S” and a “clavo (nail) in this manner: “$.” Bóveda de San Ginés, Calle de los Bordadores, Madrid Spain sowed our ideas of race as an inexpungable stain, and the first blacks to came to the Americas came on Spanish ships. A fantastic resource for the study of this pre-1619 period can be found at the CUNY Dominican Studies Institute’s web resource First Blacks in the Americas: The African Presence in the Dominican Republic. But we at the Foundation for Iberian have also contributed to recognizing and celebrating our tangled roots. The Foundation has organized a series of transatlantic and transhemispheric conversations about the circulations of culture. The first conference, Spaniards: Indians, Africans, and Gypsies: The Global Reach of the Fandango in Music, Song and Dance, was held at the CUNY Graduate Center in New York on April 17–18, 2015. Co-edited by K. Meira Goldberg and Foundation director Antoni Pizà, the conference proceedings, El alcance global del fandango en música, canto y baile, are published bilingually and available open access in the Spanish peer-reviewed journal Música Oral del Sur (2015). A revised and expanded all-English edition of the conference proceedings, The Global Reach of the Fandango in Music, Song and Dance is available from Cambridge Scholars Publishing (2016). The second conference in this series, Transatlantic Malagueñas and Zapateados in Music, Song and Dance was held at the University of California, Riverside on April 6–7, 2017. The anthology stemming from this conference has just been published (Cambridge Scholars Publishing, 2019). The third international fandango conference, Ritmos transatlánticos en música, canto y baile, was held in Veracruz, México on April 11–13, 2019. Proceedings will be published in 2020 in Música Oral del Sur. We are currently planning a fourth conference in the series, Natives, Africans, Roma, and Europeans: Transatlantic Gestures in Music, Song, and Dance, to be held in Africa in 2021. (Announcement and CFP forthcoming.) On October 15–16, 2018 the Foundation co-organized a performance festival of flamenco artists of color and an international academic conference, The Body Questions: Celebrating Flamenco’s Tangled Roots, which was held at the Fashion Institute of Technology and the Foundation for Iberian Music at the CUNY Graduate Center. This event was funded by a Humanities New York Action Grant, and by a grant from the Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation, and was supported by Afropop Worldwide, Flamenco Vivo Carlota Santana, and The Spanish Benevolent Society – La Nacional NYC. Afropop published a wonderful program on “The Hidden Blackness of Flamenco,” as well as an interview with Meira Goldberg. In addition to these conferences, we have facilitated screenings of the feature-length documentary Gurumbé: canciones de tu memoria negra by Miguel Ángel Rosales, a film which underscores and explores the formative contributions of Afro-Andalusians to flamenco. Gurumbé can be streamed through FilmIn. There is much to be gained from recognizing not only the tangled roots of the music we love, but simply in appreciating the beauty of our shared culture and of the possibility of finding each other and recognizing each other inside that circle of art and of celebration. Bords de la Magdelaine. Le Bal du petit ange (By the banks of the Magdalena River in Colombia. The Dance of the Little Angel) by François Désiré Roulin. Watercolor, 1823. Courtesy of Banco de la República, Bogotá, Colombia
New Roig-Francolí Recording Over the summer, Miguel A. Roig-Francolí uploaded a recent performance of his Six Preludes after Chopin. In 2010 Roig-Francolí wrote Songs of the Infinite for violin and piano, for the Foundation for Iberian Music’s composer’s commission. Here, his preludes are exquisitely played by Ariadne Antipa. Enjoy! [youtube]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4dHnd8h_aEk[/youtube]
Symposium on Flamenco in the United States Flamenco in the United States An international conference presented in conjunction with the New York Flamenco Festival, 2020. For full program and event details, visit our conference page. 9 am to 5 pm 27 March 2020 Skylight Room, The Graduate Center 355 Fifth Avenue New York, New York, 10016 Talks are open to the general public and admission is free. For registration and questions, please contact: fandangoconference.cuny@gmail.com Speakers and program details available on the main conference page. Flamenco in the United States will gather scholars from a range of fields in an interdisciplinary conference highlighting the influence of the United States, through its institutions, scholars, performing artists, and audiences, on flamenco as a global form. Flamenco has been present on U.S. stages from the last decades of the nineteenth century, and this conference aims to explore how manifestations of flamenco in the U.S. have reflected back upon and contributed to the development of their original models. As nineteenth-century French dance critic Théophile Gautier wrote of his 1840 visit to Spain, “Spanish dances only exist in Paris, just as seashells are found only in curiosity shops, never at the seashore. O, Fanny Elssler!…even before we came to Spain, we suspected that it was you who invented the cachucha!” Questions and topics to be considered may include, but are not limited to: • What is the impact of U.S. performers and audiences on the development of flamenco? • How have U.S. scholars shaped flamencology in both the U.S. and in Spain? • Mapping the presence of flamenco in U.S. institutions such as universities, high schools, private studios, community centers, research centers, libraries, museums, etc. • Bibliographies, filmographies, and discographies of flamenco in the U.S. • From Sol Hurok to Claudio Segovia and Héctor Orezzoli to Miguel Marín, how have producers and impresarios shaped flamenco in the U.S.? • From player pianos to digital technology: how have U.S. recording techniques impacted flamenco? • Specific topics such as flamenco and jazz, flamenco and the folk music scene of the 1950s and 60s, U.S.-based flamenco dance companies, Spanish dance in the early modern dance pioneers of the early-twentieth century, Spanish dance in blackface minstrelsy etc. Submissions for this symposium are closed.
Video from Niño de Elche Residency Last semester, renowned flamenco and performance artist Niño de Elche did a short residency at the Graduate Center’s James Gallery, for which he created a new work, “En un cuartito los dos.” Video of that performance has been put online, so be sure to watch it if you missed it. The work was created specifically for the James Gallery space. You can read the artist statement below. The notion surrounding the Spanish term cuarto –partially translated for “room” in English– is the main premise for this project. The cuartos flamencos used to be marginalized performing spaces where dissident bodies and practices used to take place in fin-de-siècle Spain. Related spaces such as cafés cantantes contributed to articulate traditional imaginaries on Iberian culture which ignored the individuals who inhabited them. Niño de Elche aims to explore the non-normative practices spaces censor by working on sound experimentation and performative actions in the gallery space. By calling on other cuartos such as black holes and dark rooms he will explore notions such as tradition, intimacy, and queerness.
Josep Prohens’ Piano Music: A Retrospective Concert On November 12, the Graduate Center’s Segal Theater will host a retrospective concert of Josep Prohens’ piano works, as well as a masterclass with Prohens himself and pianist Andreu Riera. Prohens was the first recipient of the Foundation for Iberian Music’s Composer’s Commission in 2005, for which he wrote Dreams/Somnis for solo piano. (Click on the above link to listen!) Prohens has been composing since 1978 and is the author of Ensenyament de la música a Felanitx (The Teaching of Music in Felanitx), about music education in his hometown. He has lectured at Conservatori Professional de Música de Felanitx since 1972 and has served on the composition faculty at conservatories throughout the Balearic Islands. He is also president of Royal Academy of Fine Arts of San Sebastián of the Balearic Islands. Prohens and Riera both teach currently at the Conservatori Superior de Música de les Illes Balears. Riera recently released an album of Prohens piano works, Ficció, and he also appeared on the 2017 album Impressions. Riera has won numerous piano prizes, including the Infanta Cristina (Madrid), Caja Postal in Madrid, Alonso Competition in the city of Valencia, Frederic Mompou (Barcelona), Jacinto Guerrero and the Mozart Competition, Salzburg Mozarteum. He has performed throughout Europe and North America, including right here in NYC, with our own Perspectives Ensemble. Riera and Prohens will host a master class on November 11 at 12:30 at City College’s beautiful Shepard Hall. A concert of Prohens’ piano works will be held on November 12 at 6:30. The concert will include Prohens’ commission, Somnis, “La Llum” from Ombres, and his new work Ficció, among many more. Attendance is free. Co-organized by the Foundation for Iberian Music and Institut Ramon Llull.
Encore performance of Literes Cantatas Last year’s early music festival of Colònia de Sant Pere in Mallorca highlighted the works of Antoni Literes, featuring cantatas that were edited by Antoni Pizà and Anna Cazurra. Pizà, as one of the go-to experts on Literes, also delivered the keynote address at the festival’s symposium. Sadly, there was no Literes on this year’s program, but last year’s concert is getting a repeat performance by the Finnish Baroque Orchestra. The concert will highlight the Literes cantatas edited by Pizà and Cazurra, with works by Conti and Telemann. There will be two concerts in Helsinki, Finland, November 8 and 9. Tickets will be available soon from the Finnish Baroque Orchestra’s website.
Besalú Appearing Once Again on HBO Our readers hopefully know the name Besalú from the summer workshops in early music that are held there each year, but HBO subscribers might find it familiar for other reasons. Besalú was one of the filming locations for Game of Thrones, among several other locations in Spain, and HBO’s new hit show Westworld recently filmed its third season there. Photo by Laurence Norah Medieval Music Besalú is held each July, and it has just wrapped up its 8th annual course. Registration for 2020 will open early next spring. Meanwhile, you can find MMB on Instagram and Twitter for news, photos and videos. Each year, the Foundation for Iberian Music donates to MMB’s scholarship fund—so students who are short on cash, be aware! Funding is available! For everyone else, MMB’s courses are affordably priced, and they offer a rare opportunity for intensive early music performance and manuscript studies in a beautiful medieval setting.
Rondeña del Siglo XIX Awarded Melómano Gold Medal Accolades for guitarist Juan Francisco Padilla’s new historically-informed recording of previously unknown works from Granada, Rondeña del Siglo XIX, continue to pour in! We last posted the glowing review that the disc received in Scherzo Magazine. Now, Rondeña has been reviewed in Melómano magazine, which awarded the album its gold medal! Congratulations again to the performer, Juan Padilla, and our musicologists here at the Graduate Center, Peter Manuel and María Luisa Martínez, whose research and artistic direction made the album possible. The review appears in Melómano‘s July print edition. Click on the image to read the full text. As a postscript, we are also delighted to see that Melómano has reviewed Albert Guinovart’s new album, Nocturne, which contains the first studio recording of his 2013 Composer’s Commission, Skyshadows. It has been an excellent year for all of our friends and resident artists at the Foundation, and we are very happy for them and their continued success.