Tag: Carlos Chávez

  • Bard Salutes Mexican Composer Carlos Chávez

    Bard Salutes Mexican Composer Carlos Chávez

    In a development that promises to be as enlightening as it is mildly disorienting, a drive north this weekend will lead you “south of the border.”

    Carlos Chávez (1899-1978), regarded by many as Mexico’s foremost composer and conductor, will be the focus of this year’s Bard Music Festival, which begins today at Bard College in Annandale-on-Hudson, NY.

    For the next two weeks, Bard will bring together crackerjack artists (an impressive number of them on the Bard Conservatory faculty), leading musicologists, and appreciative audiences to celebrate music of the Americas, with an unusual focus on underplayed music of Mexico and South America.

    Among the featured performers will be Princeton University’s ensemble-in-residence, So Percussion, which will appear on a concert of music by Chávez, John Cage, Lou Harrison, Henry Cowell, Amadeo Roldán, and Colin McPhee, on August 14.

    Chávez is a fascinating figure, whose influence cannot be underestimated. His own works are divided between nationalistic utterances, pitched to the people, and more cosmopolitan, modernist experiments. His most famous bit of populism is his Symphony No. 2, the “Sinfonia India,” based on melodies by indigenous tribes of northern Mexico. The piece will be heard at Bard on August 15, alongside works by Latin American powerhouses Heitor Villa-Lobos, Silvestre Revueltas, and José Pablo Moncayo.

    In 1937, Chávez conducted the world premiere of Aaron Copland’s “El Salón México,” which essentially launched Copland into the mainstream.

    As always with the Bard festival, a tie-in book of scholarly essays, “Carlos Chávez and His World,” is being issued by Princeton University Press.

    Read more about this amazing, total immersion in the composer’s life and work in my article in today’s Trenton Times.

    http://www.nj.com/times-entertainment/index.ssf/2015/08/bard_music_festival_focuses_on.html

  • Carlos Chávez Mexican Musical Innovator

    Carlos Chávez Mexican Musical Innovator

    In the wake of the Mexican Revolution, Carlos Chávez (1899-1978) appeared like Quetzalcoatl, the creator-deity of Aztec lore, to forge a distinctive sound in Mexican music.

    Chávez was regarded as the foremost Mexican composer and conductor. He became director of the Orquesta Sinfónica Mexicana, the country’s first permanent symphony orchestra. He was appointed director of the National Conservatory of Music. Later, he served as director-general of the National Institute of Fine Arts. At the same time, he formed the National Symphony Orchestra, which supplanted the old OSM.

    In 1937, he conducted the world premiere of “El Salón México,” the work which essentially launched Aaron Copland into the mainstream.

    Chávez himself was one of the first exponents of Mexican nationalism in music, writing ballets on Aztec themes. His most famous work is probably the Symphony No. 2, composed in 1935-36. Known as the “Sinfonia India,” it is based on melodies by indigenous tribes of northern Mexico.

    The percussion section originally included a large number of traditional Mexican instruments, including the jicara de agua (half of a gourd inverted and partly submerged in a basin of water, struck with sticks), güiro, cascabeles (a pellet rattle), tenabari (a string of butterfly cocoons), a pair of teponaxtles, tlapanhuéhuetl, and grijutian (a string of deer hooves).

    However, when the score was published, the composer sensibly substituted the nearest equivalents commonly used by most orchestras, though he requested that the originals be employed wherever possible.

    Here is Chávez’s recording of the “Sinfonia India”:

    Everyone else seems to take it a tad slower. Here’s a spirited live performance with the SCM Symphony Orchestra (Sydney Conservatorium of Music), under the direction of Mexican conductor Eduardo Diazmuñoz:

    ¡Feliz cumpleaños, Carlos Chávez!

Tag Cloud

Aaron Copland (92) Beethoven (95) Composer (114) Film Music (120) Film Score (143) Film Scores (255) Halloween (94) John Williams (185) KWAX (229) Leonard Bernstein (100) Marlboro Music Festival (125) Movie Music (135) Opera (198) Philadelphia Orchestra (88) Picture Perfect (174) Princeton Symphony Orchestra (106) Radio (87) Ralph Vaughan Williams (85) Ross Amico (244) Roy's Tie-Dye Sci-Fi Corner (290) The Classical Network (101) The Lost Chord (268) Vaughan Williams (103) WPRB (396) WWFM (881)

DON’T MISS A BEAT

Receive a weekly digest every Sunday at noon by signing up here


RECENT POSTS