Thursday, December 15, 2011
Questions for Ballet Master, Houston Ballet II Claudio Muñoz
Claudio Muñoz will be choreographing a new dance for Houston Ballet II to be premiered on Musiqa's Jan 7, 2012 concert Free of the Ground. The music for this new ballet, Argentinean composer Astor Piazzolla’s Tango Suite arranged by Kyoko Yamamoto for piano, will be performed live by Tali Morgulis.
The Jan 7 program also includes Karim Al-Zand's Tagore Love Songs, Anthony Brandt's Creeley Songs and Philippe Hurel's Tombeau In Memoriam Gérard Grisey.
Claudio Muñoz graciously took some time out of his busy schedule to answer a few questions for the MusiqaBlog about choreography, ballet, and music.
Musiqa: Where do you begin when choreographing a new ballet? Do you start the music and let it inspire the movement?
Claudio Muñoz: In this particular case, the music was a given. Putting it on, I start to play around with ideas, shall I say… poetic ideas, the poetry, not of words, but of what’s beyond words. Only ideas though, not steps. Not yet, anyhow. For that, I would wait until I meet the second important element of my art: the dancer. Music first, the human medium comes second. I come last. My choreography is the soul of the music, expressed through the body of the dancer. A tailor doesn’t make a dress until he sees the lady who’s going to wear it. Neither would I make a choreography until I have seen the actuality, the physicality who’s going to put it on, on stage.
M: Are there certain elements in music that you feel ballet dancers respond to? Or can a good dancer dance to anything?
CM: Dancers are music. Period. There’s not even a question of responding. You are music, or you are no dancer. A good dancer would response to even silence, the inner rhythm, let alone music. So I would have already typically gone with a dancer whose response is spot-on, nail-on, dead-on, since the very first second. Nothing else is good enough.
M: Is ballet in Latin America different than what one sees onstage in Houston or New York? Is it, like much classical music, an art form that simply lands in the same identifiable form no matter where it’s performed? Or does it take new shapes and influences as it is developed and received across different cultures?
CM: There would of course be a slight difference in the feel and the look, chiefly because the ballet there has very strong roots in the Russian school. Here in the States, ballet is eclectic, it is pluralistic, it combines many styles. Of course that’s good. But, south of the equator, things somehow stay more resolutely Russian. It would also look different, just because of the feel of it…a certain approach to the roles, how to interpret them, how to get them across to the audience. That’s basically because Latins live life at a different beat than norteamericanos. There is something in the Latin American air, maybe the cultural background, the ambiance, the nuances, that affect the sensibility of the dancers, a much more earthy, physical, abandoned, free, feeling for movement, for the expression of what’s inside. It has helped Latin American dancers capturing the world stage of late.
And no, on the other hand, Ballet itself, with a capital “B” doesn’t pick up on local colors…Swan Lake is going to be recognizably Swan Lake no matter where it is staged. Of course there were variants from the many classical schools, or there will be legitimate variants from the individual artistic choice of a specific choreographer, but never from the geographical location. Ballet is an attitude, not a latitude. Classical art aims for the universal, not the local. You can add nuances, but not change the color spectrum. Aurora in Sleeping Beauty let’s say is a diamond. She can never become a topaz, an amethyst, an emerald…she can be cut into many shapes, but a diamond she’s got to stay.
Thursday, December 8, 2011
Support Musiqa's Educational Programming
As someone who believes wholeheartedly in the transformative qualities of music, I support efforts to provide music and music education to those who can most benefit from it. Musiqa and its far-reaching music education programs give Houston students what they are missing, and much more.
Founded in 2002, the non-profit organization Musiqa presents innovative, interdisciplinary concerts showcasing contemporary classical music through arts integrated curriculum at Houston area Title 1 schools. At no cost to schools, Musiqa provides programs that include:
• in-school workshops
• 10-week or year-long school residencies
• teacher study materials
• bus transportation, and
• a downtown Musiqa performance at the Hobby Center
Musiqa’s music education programs are changing the lives of thousands of these students. By bringing music into the classroom and integrating it with subjects including English, Math, and Science, Musiqa is teaching students to think creatively so they have a chance to overcome predicted outcomes of the low socio-economic status they have inherited.
We need your support to bring this nationally award-winning program to the most underserved children of Houston. Help us offer these children a window into a better world, one of music and innovation, creative thinking, and flexibility to reach for higher goals in life. Please make a donation today and share our commitment to help children access arts integrated curriculum and achieve a better tomorrow.
Thank you,
Roger Hochman, President
Musiqa Board of Trustees
"Our students are very low income students. Any experiences that we can provide for them are valuable. Many have never been downtown, in a theatre, or heard live classical music. It enriches their lives, and broadens their horizons to music and careers they never knew existed."
HISD teacher at a Title 1 school commenting on Musiqa's educational programming.
“Creativity is not a specialized gift: Rather, it is an underlying mechanism of our mental lives...We need to train the whole brain. We need communities of richly mediated minds. Our future as a thriving, productive society-and species--depends upon it.”
Musiqa founder Anthony Brandt, describes the need, “Why Young Minds Need Art,” in a Houston Chronicle editorial, September 9, 2011.
Wednesday, December 7, 2011
Musiqa Artistic Director Anthony Brandt at The Jung Center
Brandt and Eagleman will discuss their creative process from both artistic and scientific points of view and will share insights into their working methods.
In "Maternity," the soprano soloist considers her mother, her mother's mother, and so on up the maternal line - well past the point that the matriarchs are considered human.
Click here to register for this presentation. Or call The Jung Center at 713.524.8253.
The world premiere of "Maternity, Women’s Voices through the Ages," sung by soprano Karol Bennett and conducted by Grammy nominated Alistair Willis, will be performed at the ROCO in Concert: Season Finale April 21, 2012 at 5:00 PM at The Church of St. John the Divine, 2450 River Oaks Blvd.
Monday, November 21, 2011
Musiqa Loves Kids
This site is an especially helpful resource for teachers and includes detailed descriptions of our programs (Around the World with Musiqa and Musiqa Remix), interactive study guides, videos, and instructions for booking a residency and/or program for your school.
We are happy to answer any questions you may have about our educational programming. Email our Director of Communications at chrisb at musiqahouston.org.
“The music knowledge gained by these children was profound for one hour. Many students have not ever had the opportunity to visit downtown much less an actual theatre hall so this was an experience of a lifetime and a memory that truly touched their hearts.”
- Jamie Homburg, Teague Elementary
from the Teacher Comments page at musiqaloveskids.org
Tuesday, November 8, 2011
Musiqa talks to CAMH Director Bill Arning
Thursday, Nov 17 at 6:30 pm, Musiqa presents its first Loft Concert of the 11-12 season at the Contemporary Museum of Arts Houston. These informal, intimate concerts are produced in conjunction with CAMH’s current exhibitions, the show this time being artist Donald Moffett’s “The Extravagant Vein.”
CAMH Director Bill Arning describes Musiqa’s programming as “a form of extended wall text.” For the Nov 17 program, Musiqa’s Artistic Board has chosen works that expound upon some of the themes found in Moffett’s work, including the pervasiveness and multiple guises of political oppression, as well as the sometimes playful, sometimes haunting redefinitions of what materials make a “painting.” The program includes works by Cornelius Cardew, Frederic Rzewski, John Fitz-Rogers, Ryo Noda, Pierre Max DuBois and Christian Lauba. Violinist Yung-Hsiang Wang, saxophonist Dan Gelok, Musiqa Artistic Board member Rob Smith, and composition students from Rice University and the University of Houston perform.
Musiqa’s Chris Becker sat down with Arning recently to talk about Musiqa’s Loft Concerts, audience attention spans, and Arning’s punk rock and No Wave musical roots…
Chris Becker: I want to talk about your punk rock past. I read you were in a band called the Student Teachers.
Bill Arning: Yes. We were all sort of the biggest music nerds around CBGB’s. The band started playing actively when we were about 16.
CB: Are we talking about the mid 80s?
BA: 70s. 75, 76. I remember just going regularly to see the Talking Heads, the Ramones, each doing two sets a night at CBGB’s with a two dollar cover. Dinner was two fifty for a bowl of chili, which we all took our lives in our hands by eating. But it was pretty good!
At that point Patti Smith had a record out, but nobody else did. There was a Television 45 (single). My high school was two blocks from Max’s Kansas City and about 20 blocks from CBGB’s and we just started living there.
We didn’t quite realize how special it was. There was a really interesting back and forth with the serious music world of that period. You had the Rhys Chatham generation of composers very much there at CBGB’s. I even remember having this debate about why couldn’t the term minimalism in music refer to Philip Glass and the Ramones. In visual art minimalism, the question was how many elements could you reduce and still have it have the catalytic effect of art? And I’m like, the Ramones are reducing in that the pop song doesn’t have to be more than two minutes, and it doesn’t have to be anything more than three chords and a 4/4 beat, and the simplest, dumbest lyric…Punk rock was minimalism in a different form.
CB: So you were you thinking about this stuff as a young person playing in the Student Teachers?
BA: Yeah!
There were a lot of visual artists who had bands at that point. One thing I like about this city (Houston) is that it’s a small enough so that the spheres are not really separated. If I go to see Catastrophic Theatre or NobleMotion Dance I see as many people from the visual arts, and the music world, and filmmakers who are based here, and writers, and I like the fact that the genres are next to each other and allow for a spirit of collaboration.
(Teenage Jesus and the Jerks single cover with photo by Bill Arning)
CB: Musicians often describe music in terms from architecture or theory like deconstructivism. In your role here at CAMH, do you find yourself considering, thinking or speaking about art, be it painting or sculpture or whatever, in musical terms?
BA: Very much so. I talk about the experience of exhibitions, no so much individual works, in that way. Exhibitions are a time-based art even when its static works on the wall. You gotta understand the experience of someone walking through the show. You gotta choreograph that.
When we installed the Stan Vanderbeek show here, it was a very different layout than (when it showed at) the MIT galleries. Here, it’s a giant trapezoid…and you can’t control someone’s experience here. So you figure out okay, if someone goes forward, what do they get in sequence? If they go to the left, what do they get in sequence? That’s really fascinating.
CB: Audience attention span is a real “hot button” topic in the classical world now. There’s this assumption that we can’t hold people’s attention for certain lengths of time. Do you think you can measure the profundity of an experience a listener or a viewer is having just based on the amount of time they spend in front of something?
BA: People look at time spent in the museum as a quantifiable metric…I know from my own experience as a viewer that there are shows that I walk through for whatever reason not slowing down adequately. Part of the joy of art viewing is the slowing down, that fact that you gotta pay attention. But the resonances of things after the fact are often unrelated to the amount of time I spent before them.
CB: Moving on to Musiqa’s Loft Concerts that take place at CAMH. The first Musiqa concert I saw was at CAMH and I loved it. And these concerts are always packed. When you look at those audiences, do you see the potential for growth for both CAMH and Musiqa?
BA: Oh, definitely. I see the Musiqa’s programming as a form of extended wall text. They bring audiences (here) in a certain way, and help to extend the themes of the show, themes that have these other qualities, other elements that need to be brought out in the form of living art.
Visual art rarely exists without music in its natural environment. I go to a lot of artist’s studios. You ring the buzzer, you walk in the studio, and they go and turn down their iDock or their beat up second stereo. I remember when Sonic Youth’s Goo album came out…first off, Sonic Youth has incredible history of picking visual artist that are right at the cusp of super stardom for their album covers…I remember saying to a friend, “I want to do a show called ‘Goo’ and just ask every artist to send a piece that they remember they made while Goo was playing…” I never did do the show, probably would have been pretty silly.
It is the nature of (the visual arts) that it emerges from a nest that is music. And it sort of needs to be returned to that.
All (we) need really are patrons who are willing to support experimentation. There are a lot of Houston arts funders who love the idea of living composers, as well as funders who like to bring artists here and they get to realize new dreams. The funders are here. I would love to see all the organizations push the idea that this is a city that’s based on experimentation.
Monday, October 31, 2011
Musiqa's free Loft Concert Nov 17 at the Contemporary Art Museum Houston
Photo: Donald Moffett, Lot 060707 (O-Black), 2007.
Acrylic on linen with rayon and aluminum zipper
35 1/2 x 28 1/2 inches
Courtesy the artist and Marianne Boesky Gallery
November 17, 2011
6:30pm
Contemporary Arts Museum Houston,
5216 Montrose Boulevard, Houston, TX 77006
Musiqa presents: The Extravagant Vein
FREE admission!
In conjunction with artist Donald Moffett’s current show at the Contemporary Arts Museum Houston “The Extravagant Vein,” Musiqa presents a program that includes several politically charged works, including composer Cornelius Cardew’s “The Workers Song” for solo violin and Frederic Rzewski’s “No More War” a round for any number of voices.
Composer John Fitz Rogers’ “The Evidence” for monologist and prerecorded sounds utilizes text taken from the now infamous 1950 “red scare” hearings in the U.S. House of Representatives. Compositions by Pierre Max DuBois, Christian Lauba and Ryo Noda for solo saxophone and violin and saxophone round out the provocative program.
We'd love to see you there.
“The Extravagant Vein” performers:
Dan Gelok, alto saxophone
Yung-Hsiang Wang, violin
Rob Smith, demagogue
The Musiqa Artistic Board: Karim Al-Zand, Anthony Brandt, Pierre Jalbert, Marcus Maroney & Rob Smith with University of Houston and Rice University Student Composers.
Monday, October 24, 2011
Special family concert this friday: Around The World With Musiqa!
AROUND THE WORLD WITH MUSIQA
October 28, 2011
Special time: 7:00 p.m.
Hobby Center for the Performing Arts, Zilkha Hall
800 Bagby, Houston TX 77002
Tickets are $40, $30 and $20
Children under 12 are free with the purchase on one adult ticket
Tickets available at the Hobby Center website or by calling 713-315-2525.
Check out two musical numbers from Around The World With Musiqa:
Sing along with Musiqa in this highly interactive and theatrical show that explores music from all over the world. The evening begins with Around The World With Musiqa's star soprano Karol Bennett teaching the audience songs that they'll be asked to sing with her as part of the show. Once the show gets rolling, Ms. Bennett and the ensemble are joined by a musically curious stagehand played by renowned actor Eva Laporte who brings several moments of comedy to the proceedings.
The music includes well known folk songs such as "She'll Be Comin' Round The Mountain," The Lion Sleeps Tonight" and "This Land Is Your Land," with settings by modern composers inspired by these wonderful melodies.
A great evening of fun for the whole family. No prior musical experience is necessary!
Winner of four consecutive NEA awards, this production and other Musiqa educational programs are offered to 6,000 students annually at no cost.
The stellar cast includes:
Karol Bennett - Soprano
Eva Laporte - Actor
Leone Buyse - Flute
Michael Webster - Clarinet
Blake Wilkins - Percussion
Melissa Marse - Piano
Cece Weinkauff - Violin
Richard Belcher - Cello
Surtitles enable the audience to follow and sing along with the lyrics. Lighting, props and sound effects create a fully theatrical experience.
Around the World with Musiqa is presented in collaboration with the Hobby Center for the Perfoming Arts' "Discovery Series."