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Conference: Music Criticism 1950-2000 (Barcelona)

There is an upcoming conference that may be of interest to our friends and colleagues in Spain. Centro Studi Opera Omnia Luigi Boccherini is holding a conference on Music Criticism since 1950. The conference is October 9–11 at the Institut d’Estudis Catalans.

This is a multi-lingual conference and selected papers will be published, following the conference. It is the last in a series of conferences exploring music criticism. Last year’s conference explored criticism from 1900  to 1950, and the previous year kicked off the series with criticism in the 19th century.

The Graduate Center community is being well represented at the conference. Current musicology student Erix Taxier will be presenting, along with faculty member Chadwick Jenkins and alumnus Emilio Ros-Fábregas, who is representing  CSIC/Societat Catalana de Musicologia.

Granados Piano Sheet Music Now Available on Mobile

There is some exciting news from Barcelona’s Editorial Boileau, which publishes Douglas Riva’s Granados editions. This past spring, they finally released their long-awaited Granados sheet music app, available for iPad, which makes available the complete piano works of Enrique Granados. Users may purchase individual pieces or the entire collection in-app. It’s a great app that allows you to make annotations directly on the digital scores and is compatible with Bluetooth devices for hands-free page turning. Every piece includes editorial notes, indicates a difficulty level, and has an audio preview available.

Have a look at Editorial Boileau’s short video guide, which is available in EnglishSpanish, or Catalan.

Granados Conference Papers Published in Diagonal

In a special issue dedicated to the Granados centennial celebration, Diagonal, the journal of the Center for Iberian and Latin American Music at the University of California, Riverside, has published selected papers from last year’s Granados conference (held March 10, 2016, at the Graduate Center).

The issue (Vol. 2, no. 1, 2016) includes:

  • “A la cubana: Enrique Granados’s Cuban Connection”
    de la Torre, Ricardo
  • “Un Manuscrito Inédito con Cinco Marchas Militares de Enrique Granados”
    Curbelo González, Óliver; Martín Sanz, Cristina
  • “Granados’s Piano Trio: Harbinger of Masterworks to Come”
    Kent, Adam
  • “¿Granados no es un gran maestro? Análisis del discurso historiográfico sobre el compositor y el canon nacionalista español”
    Perandones, Miriam
  • “Enrique Granados y el drama rural de Feliú y Codina en dos obras para escena en castellano: Miel de la Alcarria (1897) y María del Carmen (1898)”
    Quijano Axle, Mario Roger
  • “New Approaches to Enrique Granados’ Pedagogical Methods and Pianistic Tradition: A Case Study of Valses poéticos op.43”
    Estrada Bascuñana, Carolina
  • “Innovaciones pedagógicas en los métodos para el uso del pedal de Enrique Granados”
    Curbelo González, Óliver

Upcoming Gig from Resident Artist

This Sunday, the 20th—the day before the solar eclipse!—Samuel Torjman Thomas will perform with Alon Nechustan at the City Winery, for their Klezmer Brunch. Their duo is called Traveling in Pairs.  Brunch begins at 11 am; admission is $10.

Samuel Torjman Thomas is the artistic director of our resident New York Andalus Ensemble. Asefa Music represents Thomas’s work apart from the full Andalus Ensemble, encompassing his lectures, publications, and other performances.

Angel Gil-Ordóñez in the Washington Post

Angel Gil-Ordóñez was featured recently in both The Washington Post‘s daily and its magazine. Gil-Ordóñez is a long-time collaborator with the Foundation for Iberian Music, through his work as principal guest conductor of our resident Perspectives Ensemble, with artistic director Sato Moughalian. Gil-Ordóñez’s primary position is in Washington DC with the PostClassical Ensemble, which he directs and co-founded. Both ensembles have received numerous accolades.

The May 25th edition of WaPo’s online magazine published an interview with Gil-Ordóñez, entitled, “What makes a good conductor? Harmony — and ‘authority through knowledge.’” In it, Gil-Ordóñez discusses some of his training and experience as a conductor.

He was also featured in a June 29th article on activism in the arts, “Why artists become activists: it’s not only the election.” The article showcases numerous artists around the country and the ways in which they have used their art as activism. Gil-Ordóñez discusses PostClassical ensemble’s musical diplomacy, with the group’s executive director, Joe Horowitz.

Fundacion Juan March Live Stream, Sep 19

September 19th, Fundación Juan March Madrid will unveil its new season of events. This presentation will be live streamed on the Fundación website at 12 pm (Madrid time).

One of the new events to be announced is the premiere of a re-discovered musical work by Tomás Bretón  (Salamanca, 29 December 1850–Madrid, 2 December 1923), the Quinteto en sol mayor.  It will be performed by Cuarteto Breton at Fundación March Madrid on February 21, 2018. The critical edition of this magnificent chamber piece is by María Luisa Martínez, a researcher at the Foundation for Iberian Music, and Antoni Pizà, the Foundation director.

Review of “La música invisible” in Madrid’s ABC

Antoni Pizà has a new book review in Madrid’s nationally distributed newspaper, ABC.  In the June 23 , issue, he gives a glowing review of La música invisible (Fórcola, 2017), by musicologist and ABC contributor, Stefano Russomanno.  Subtitled “en busca de la armonía de las esferas,” La música invisible investigates 20 milestones in music history that exemplify Pythagoras’s music of the spheres, the invisible music that governs the universe.

In his praise for the book, Pizà writes that Russomanno is “without pedantry” and writes “with elegance.”  Read the full review here.  You can get the book directly from Fórcola for €19,50 here.  North American customers may also purchase it through Amazon.com. Want a preview? Read the foreword to La música invisible here!

 

Pollença Festival, August 2017

Mallorca’s Pollença Festival will soon begin is 56th year! The festival occurs each August in the town of Pollença and features a wide variety of classical performances at the beautiful cloister of the Convent of Santo Domingo. This international festival features symphonies, chamber ensembles, and early music consorts throughout the month of August. The Foundation for Iberian Music’s director, Antoni Pizà, has written program notes for many of this year’s concerts.

You can view the program and purchase tickets at the festival website. Tickets range from 20-35 euros.

(Photo credit: Festival Pollença)

Music Featured in 1935 Jazz Lecture

In 1935, Spanish composer and musicologist Baltasar Samper presented a series of groundbreaking lectures on jazz at l’Ateneu Polytechnicum de Barcelona and Discòfils at Associacio Pro-Música. Antoni Pizà is preparing a print edition of these lectures from Samper’s own notes. As a teaser, we have prepared a YouTube playlist of all of the recordings referenced in Samper’s talks.

Jazz recording began in 1917, but it did not become widespread until the late ’20s and early ’30s. The Hot Club of France was founded in 1931 and immediately helped to introduce a European audience to these North American records. The Hot Club of Barcelona was founded in 1935 and smaller local clubs spread throughout surrounding towns, in spite of the nascent Franco regime’s view that jazz was dangerous. You can learn a little more about the spread of jazz and blues through Catalonia in Jazz and Totalitarianism, ed. Bruce Johnson.