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Announcing “The Body Questions” Keynote Speaker, Agnes Kamya

The Foundation for Iberian Music is pleased to announce that Dr. Agnes Kamya will be the keynote speaker of the upcoming conference, “The Body Questions: Celebrating Flamenco’s Tangled Roots.”

Agnes Kamya 

Agnes Nasozi Kamya is a social anthropologist and screenwriter from Uganda. She went to school in Uganda and Kenya in East Africa before finally settling in the United Kingdom. In 1997, Agnes completed a Masters Degree in Civil Engineering at Imperial College in London. After completing an MA and then a PhD in Social Anthropology at the University of London in 2008, she returned to Uganda and worked as Senior Researcher at the Makerere University. During that time, inspired by her anthropological work, she wrote the screenplay for her sister Caroline’s feature film “Imani’. Imani means ‘faith’ in Swahili. The film opened at the Berlin International Film Festival in 2010 and is the most awarded Ugandan feature film to date. 

Agnes Kamya (standing, left) with the Uganda Flamenco Project

In 2011 Agnes was headhunted for the prestigious Binger writer’s lab in Amsterdam to work on her second original screenplay “Hot Comb”. Soon after she moved to Seville, Spain to follow her dream to learn flamenco and has never really left. After taking classes with some of the best dancer teachers in Spain, Agnes returned to Uganda and founded the Uganda Flamenco Project to plant the seed of this wonderful art in her native land. Agnes was invited to conduct master classes and presentations all over Spain about her work on women, cinema, representation and flamenco which now come together in her documentary project in development entitled, “In Search of African Duende.”

Since 2015 Agnes has been a member of the AfricaInEs research group at the University of Granada, Spain and is currently a Visiting Fellow at the Department of Anthropology and Sociology at Makerere University in Kampala, Uganda. Alongside her academic work she is translating her flamenco dance mentor Virginia Di Domenicantonio, “La India’s ground breaking book “El Flamenco mi Inspiración” from Spanish into English. She plans to revive the Uganda Flamenco Project, dormant since 2016, at the Department of Dance and Drama where it will have a permanent home.

Dr. Kamya will be speaking at the symposium on October 16th.

María Luisa Martínez to Give Paper in Madrid

María Luisa Martínez, one of the Foundation for Iberian Music’s research colleagues, will be giving a paper at an upcoming conference in Madrid. The conference (sponsored by ICCMU, UCM, and the New University of Lisbon) will be held at Universidad Compultense de Madrid, October 4–5, and is called “La música en las cortes ibéricas (siglos XVIII-XIX): mecenazgo, repertorio, performance” (Music in Spanish Courts [18th-19th centuries]: Patronage, Repertory, Performance).

Martínez will be giving a paper that stems from her dissertation research on Infanta Isabel (“La Chata”), one of the most important patrons of the arts in 19th century Spain. She will give her paper, “El salón musical de la infanta Isabel de Borbón (1851-1931),” on October 4th. This conference is free and open to the public. You can register here. Click below to view the program and abstracts.

[pdf-embedder url=”https://brookcenter.gc.cuny.edu/files/2018/09/Programa-y-dosier-Musica-cortes-ibericas.pdf” title=”Programa y dosier Musica cortes ibericas”] 

Raúl Rodríguez to Close “The Body Questions” Conference

We have one more schedule update concerning our upcoming conference, “The Body Questions,” and we think it’s one you’ll enjoy. Our friend, scholar and flamenco artist Raúl Rodríguez, will be closing out the conference with a performance at La Nacional‘s intimate performance space. (And if you missed our previous announcement, please be sure to check it. The conference dates have changed from Oct 16-17 to Oct 15-16.)

Raúl Rodríguez in Concert
“La Razón Eléctrica” 
(AfroFlamenco de Ida y Vuelta)

Musician and cultural anthropologist, Raúl Rodríguez will present the songs of his two albums and books, Razón de Son (2014) and La Raíz Eléctrica (2017), in which he compiles more than twenty years of creative research on flamenco music and its connection with the rhythms of the Afro-Caribbean-Andalusian cultural matrix. Through the introduction of a new instrument, the Tres Flamenco (a mix between flamenco guitar and cuban tres), this special solo concert will take the audience on a round trip journey linking historical memory with cultural action, in an open dialogue between past and present, research and creativity, reasons and songs.

On sale now through Eventbrite for $20 ($15 student/senior). Tickets will be available at the door for $25 ($20).

Drinks and light refreshments are available to purchase at the venue. La Nacional also has a full restaurant serving traditional Spanish cuisine, so why not join us for happy hour before the concert? The restaurant has generously offered a 10% discount to conference attendees, so if you are attending, be sure to save your program or ID tag to present. 

8:00 PM
October 16, 2018
La Nacional

“The Body Questions” Conference Registration Is Open

Registration for our upcoming conference, “The Body Questions: Celebrating Flamenco’s Tangled Roots,” is officially open! Conference attendance is free and open to the public, but space is limited and registration is required. Advance registration is available through Eventbrite. 

On-site registration will also be available both days.

As a reminder, the conference takes place over two days, at two separate venues. October 15 is our performance festival, to be held at FIT (in the Haft Theater).  October 16 is our symposium, to be held at the CUNY Graduate Center (The Segal Theater and room 9204). Through Eventbrite, you may register for one day or both days. You will select your desired date(s) in your shopping cart. 


There are two associated events that are also now on sale.

We will be closing out the conference events with a special performance by flamenco artist Raúl Rodríguez, at La Nacional. This concert is open to the public; conference registration is not required. Space is limited, so be sure to buy your tickets in advance! Tickets are $20 ($15 student/senior) advance, $25 /$20 at the door.

The concert is at 8:00. The conference is scheduled to conclude at 6:30. We invite conference attendees to join us at La Nacional’s restaurant before the concert. The restaurant has generously offered a 10% discount to conference attendees, so save your program or ID tag to present. You can view their menu of traditional Spanish cuisine on their website

Last, but certainly not least, we hope that you will join us before the conference on October 12 for the launch party of K. Meira Goldberg’s new book and the genesis of this conference, Sonidos Negros: On the Blackness of Flamenco. The launch party will be held at the 92nd St. Y, as a part of their Fridays at Noon series. Tickets are $15.

Flamenco Conference: Important Date Change

There has been a change of date for our upcoming flamenco conference, The Body Questions: Celebrating Flamenco’s Tangled Roots. The conference is now scheduled for October 15 and 16, with the flamenco festival at FIT on the 15th. The  symposium day will proceed as planned, to be held at the Graduate Center on October 16th.

We apologize for any inconvenience. Times, venues, and participants remain the same; only the festival date has changed. Stay posted for further news, as we announce our speakers and additional performers!

6 Sept 2018: The Lives of Emily Dickinson: Poetry, Philosophy, Sexuality

DICKINSON.jpg
Thursday, 6 September 2018, 5:30-7:30
, at CUNY Graduate Center, 365 Fifth Avenue,  Skylight Room, 9th floor

Emily Dickinson belongs to that class of artists who continuously challenge interpretation through the magnitude of their vision. Her astoundingly original poetry continues to disturb, delight, intrigue, and challenge us today. In this seminar, Jerome Charyn presents a revisionary picture of the great poet in ways that challenge received opinions: as a woman who was deeply philosophical, intensely engaged with the world, and attracted to members of both sexes. Music figured prominently in Dickinson’s poetry. The seminar will address the use of musical imagery in her poems, from the sounds of the natural world to the role of music as a source of inspiration and transcendence. The music of Amy Beach will be discussed in preparation for a theatrical concert that merges her music and a dramatic monologue based on Dickinson’s poetry and letters.

Jerome Charyn, award-winning American novelist, essayist, and author of The Secret Life of Emily Dickinson: A Novel and A Loaded Gun: Emily Dickinson for the 21st Century. See below for more on Jerome Charyn.

James Melo, musicologist for the Ensemble for the Romantic Century and Senior Editor at Répertoire International de Littérature Musicale. See below for more on James Melo.

FREE ADMISSION

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 Because I Could not Stop: An Encounter with Emily Dickinson

For more information about this event: jmelo@gc.cuny.edu; 212-817-8606
For more information on ERC theatrical concerts: http:\\www.romanticcentury.org

Jerome Charyn, master of lyrical farce and literary ventriloquism, published his first novel in 1964. He’s the author of JERZY: A Novel of Jerzy Kosinski, The Secret Life of Emily Dickinson, I Am Abraham, and dozens of other acclaimed novels and nonfiction works. His short stories have appeared in The Atlantic, Paris Review, American Scholar, Epoch, Narrative and Ellery Queen. Charyn’s groundbreaking study A Loaded Gun: Emily Dickinson for the 21st Century—the subject of a new documentary narrated by Cynthia Nixon: ‘My Letter to the World‘—explores Emily’s secret life as a powerful bisexual woman. Winter Warning, 12th in Charyn’s popular crime series, finds homicide detective Isaac Sidel in the White House as the accidental president. The worldwide fame of Charyn’s political thrillers inspired a new animated drama series for the small screen, Hard Apple, the brainchild of Charyn in partnership with Liquid Media, an international production company founded by A-list actor Joshua Jackson (The Affair). Hard Apple will be illustrated by artists Asaf and Tomer Hanuka, the team behind Waltz with Bashir. Charyn’s novel The Perilous Adventures of the Cowboy King, about the life of Teddy Roosevelt, will be published in January by Liveright/Norton and his book of essays, Under the Shadow of King Saul, will be published this month by Bellevue Literary Press.

As of 2017, Charyn has published 37 novels, three memoirs, nine graphic novels, two books about film, short stories, plays and works of non-fiction. Two of his memoirs were named “New York Times Book of the Year”. Charyn has been a finalist for the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction, and was awarded a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Fellowship in Fiction in 1983. He received the Rosenthal Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters and has been named Commander of Arts and Letters (Ordre des Arts et des Lettres) by the French Minister of Culture.

Charyn was Distinguished Professor of Film Studies at the American University of Paris until 2009, when he retired from teaching. In addition to his writing and teaching, Charyn is a tournament table tennis player, once ranked in the top 10 percent of players in France. Noted novelist Don DeLillo called Charyn’s book on table tennis, Sizzling Chops & Devilish Spins, “The Sun Also Rises of ping-pong.” Charyn lives in New York and Paris.

James Melo has written extensively for scholarly journals and music magazines in Brazil, Uruguay, the United States, and Austria, and has been invited to participate as a panel discussant in conferences in Indiana, New York, and Canada. He has written program notes for several concerts at Carnegie Hall and Lincoln Center, and for over 70 recordings on the Chesky, Naxos, Paulus, and Musikus labels, among others. He is the New York correspondent for the magazine Sinfónica in Uruguay, reviewer of music iconography for the journal Music in Art, and senior editor at RILM (Répertoire International de Littérature Musicale) at CUNY. In March 2005, he chaired a session in the conference Music and Intellectual History, organized by the Barry Brook Center for Music Research and Documentation (CUNY), and presented a paper on the history of musicological research in Brazil. He received a grant from the Paul Sacher Stiftung in Basel, Switzerland, where he conducted research on the manuscripts of Anton Webern.

Mr. Melo is the program annotator for the recording of the complete piano music of Villa-Lobos and Camargo Guarnieri on Naxos, and the program annotator for the National Philharmonic in Strathmore, MD. In 2006 and 2007 he collaborated with the Montréal Chamber Music Festival as musicologist and program notes writer. In March 2008, he chaired a session on music iconography in Brazil and Portugal in the conference Music, Body, and Stage: The Iconography of Music Theater and Opera at CUNY Graduate Center. He was the scriptwriter for Seduction, Smoke and Music, performed at The Tuscan Sun Festival in Cortona in the summer of 2011, with Jeremy Irons as Chopin and Sinéad Cusack as George Sand. Mr. Melo has authored several scripts for the Ensemble for the Romantic Century, including My Heart, My Serpent: Thus Spake Zarathustra, Schubert’s Dream, The Trial of Oscar Wilde, Porust’s Courts of Love, Emily Dickinson: Herself to Her a Music, Dracula, Cruel Beauty: Rimbaud and Verlaine, and The Sorrows of Young Werther. Mr. Melo is on the piano and musicianship faculty at the Diller-Quaile School of Music in New York City.

 

New Book from Walter Aaron Clark

Walter Aaron Clark, UC Riverside professor and founder of CILAM, has a new book on the Romeros guitar family. Clark has been involved with the Graduate Center and Foundation for Iberian Music for more than a decade; he has given a seminar on Albéniz, debuted a new book with William Craig Krause, gave the keynote address at our Granados centenary conference, co-directed our zapateados conference, and he is currently co-editing a volume of selected papers from that conference with Antoni Pizà and K. Meira Goldberg.

 We are happy to once again congratulate him on his new publication, Los Romeros: Royal Family of the Spanish Guitar (Indiana University Press, 2018). From the publisher:

Spanish émigré guitarist Celedonio Romero gave his American debut performance on a June evening in 1958. In the sixty years since, the Romero Family—Celedonio, his wife Angelita, sons Celín, Pepe, and Angel, as well as grandsons Celino and Lito—have become preeminent in the world of Spanish flamenco and classical guitar in the United States.

Walter Aaron Clark’s in-depth research and unprecedented access to his subjects have produced the consummate biography of the Romero family. Clark examines the full story of their genius for making music, from their outsider’s struggle to gain respect for the Spanish guitar to the ins and outs of making a living as musicians. 

Los Romeros is available as a paperback ($24.95) and as an ebook ($22.46).

Danspace Project Event with Meira Goldberg

  Our esteemed resident flamencologist, K. Meira Goldberg, is performing next month at Danspace Project’s Draftwork series with Barbara Martinez.

“Curated by Ishmael Houston-Jones, the DraftWork series hosts informal Saturday afternoon performances that offer choreographers an opportunity to show their work in various stages of development.”

Goldberg will be performing her experimental flamenco work Raíz(Click to read more about the work.) DraftWorks is a casual event, so it’s a great opportunity to see Goldberg’s performance in an intimate setting where you can have a discussion. Melanie Greene & Brianna Taylor will also be performing. Admission is free.

3 pm
Saturday, September 22, 2018

St. Mark’s Church
131 East 10th St.
New York, NY 10003
Phone (212) 674-8112
info@danspaceproject.org

Perspectives Ensemble mention in the New Yorker

This weekend, Foundation for Iberian Music resident ensemble Perspectives Ensemble, is performing their new program, “Falla!” directed by Sato Moughalian and with guest conductor Angel Gil-Ordóñez. We are honored to see that the event merited a mention in The New Yorker‘s “Goings On About Town” section. 

The concert consists of two Falla works, the rarely performed original version of El Amor brujo, which calls for a cantaora (a role filled here by eminent flamenco singer Esperanza Fernández), and a work derived from a scene in Don QuixoteEl Retablo de maese Pedro

To make this program truly exciting, El Retablo de maese Pedro (Master Peter’s Puppet Show) will include an actual puppet show! A digital one, at any rate. Animations by Kevork Mourad will accompany the music, and Mourad also be creating additional material spontaneously during the concert.  

Orensanz Foundation interior

photo by Orensanz Foundation

 If that were not enough to entice you, the NYC show is also free. It is being held in the beautiful neo-gothic interior of the Angel Orensanz Foundation (courtesy of the Orensanz Foundation). Ticket reservations are available online here

8 pm, 25 August 2018 (Tickets from $20; $7 student)
Doctorow Center for the Arts
Hunter, NY

7 pm, 26 August 2018 (Free)
Angel Orensanz Foundation
172 Norfolk Street
New York, NY 10002