Showing posts with label season7. Show all posts
Showing posts with label season7. Show all posts

17 Jan 2017

Between Sardinian traditions and the avant-garde: Q & A with Paolo Angeli

Q - What repertoire will you be exploring during your Making Tracks tour?
A: I normally start touring with about five hours of music and I decide on stage what to play. It’s a very creative process, a kind of exploration with lots of space for improvisation too. This means each concert of the tour will be different. Of course my last two albums ‘S’Û’ and ‘Sale Quanto Basta’ will take up a large part of each show, but there will also be new music I’ve just composed and my interpretations of compositions from Björk and Peter Gabriel’s too.

Q - Can you tell us about the Sardinian traditional music that inspires your music? 
A: Sardinia is an island with a unique musical background. We are a meeting point between a lot of cultures and at the same time we have a strong and unique island identity. For three centuries, for example, we had Spanish domination and before that, Arabic. Sardinian music is like a big 'arazzo' [tapestry]: it looks cohesive but inside the painting centuries of small changes have taken place. The old polyphonic singing is called canto a tenore: it’s amazing … there are four singers who combine bass notes with overtone singing and a very rhythmical use of the voice. People may have heard of Tenores di Bitti as they have been produced by Real World Records, but each village in Barbagia has a slightly different sound. Even today, we can talk about how Sardinian music has a strong specificity, but we can also discuss for hours about small differences and details between the ways of singing in Bitti, Orgosolo, Mamoiada or Bolothana. Some very interesting and unusual changes have taken place down the centuries. In church music the old polyphony met Gregorian chant, so the harmonies were influenced by that.  
In canto a chitarra [Sardinian for “singing with guitar”] we have a monodic tradition with a very complex evolution: it's the fado of Sardinia. In the bells tradition of the church, there’s dance music played in relation to the most important moments of life. Then we have launeddas, an instrument documented from 3500 AD with three pipes and played using circular breathing. The great saxophone player Evan Parker loves this tradition and played with a launeddas player too. Again, every small village has its own variations for this music. Aggius and Castelsardo are not more than 70 km apart but they have a very different repertory. The same is true for Cuglieri and Santu Lussurgiu - two villages with an amazing tradition of church music.  Church music and guitar music have really influenced my background. I can use the guitar like a vocal quartet during holy week, or I can play with the bow the role of the singer and play by foot the guitar part! I love to play with a drone and I do it with propellers touching the strings, trying to reproduce a sound similar to launeddas. Since I started to play traditional music and to sing choral music too (a tasgia, the polyphonic vocal style of northern Sardinia), it has been the deeper influence behind my music. At the same time I’m an improviser. I played with Fred Frith, Evan Parker, Iva Bittova, Hamid Drake and many other great improvisers like Pat Metheny. This means I live in a no-man’s land - I use the small details of traditional music in combination with a more open way of seeing the world.

Q - You describe Palau, the place you grew up, as an extremely stimulating musical environment. Can you explain why? 
A: Palau is a small coastal village of 3000 people in the north of Sardinia, below Corsica. In secondary school I had to take a boat to go to the island of La Maddalena. In my family, music has been always something very important. I'm at home now as I write, and today I woke up to my father playing and singing, looking for a couple of chords from an old song by Domenico Mudugno. My father has been my first mentor, and on every occasion - like dinner with friends or meetings with the family (my uncle is a great guitarist too) - music has been part of our life. He has a very extended repertory, from Sardinian music to old ‘Canzone Napoletana'. One day he said to me, “why don’t you play guitar?” So when I started to play guitar - at the age of nine - I already had music in my ears. After the age of twelve, I started with my brother to play in a rock band in the village. There were five rock bands playing within a range of 200m! It was so amazing to spend time listening to cover versions from the musicians of my village. It was often many years until I got to hear the originals, and this meant we learned music with ‘mistakes’ too!
As Palau is a tourist village, it is more open than others to all kinds of music. There was also a US army base on the island of La Maddalena, so in the square of Palau there were black people break dancing since the beginning of the 1970s! The same square was used during popular festivals to listen to the great traditional musicians like Mario Scanu, Cabizza and choirs like Coro di Aggius or Tenores di Orgosolo. An old teacher of classical music, Mr Tagliabue, opened a small shop of music and I had some lessons of harmony and counterpoint there too.  To live in Palau has enabled me to grow up without borders between different types of music.


Q - Can you describe your guitar for a non-guitar player? 
A: In 1993 I met Giovanni Scanu, and one year before I had met Fred Frith. I had a big confusion in my mind. I couldn’t decide if I preferred to play traditional or avant garde music.
I didn’t like so much the guitar at that time … so I started to modify the traditional Sardinian guitar to an instrument similar to a cello and a percussion instrument. Ever since the first prototype it’s been a kind of work in progress: there are hammers like on a piano, pedals connected mechanically to the hammers, motors and propellers, mobile bridges to change tune, 14 outputs and many other things that can be used to change the timbre. I play my guitar like a cello, I use my foot like on an organ and I try to arrange the music as if I'm a conductor with a small orchestra.


Q - Pat Metheny asked you to design your augmented instrument – how did that come about? 
A: I met Pat in 2001 in Sardinia at Sant’Anna Arresi Jazz Festival. He had been very impressed by my solo show. After that show, he asked me for a copy of my instrument and we began a very deep friendship, with long discussions about music and life. We have also played live together. Pat used a copy of my prepared guitar (built in Bologna by Liuteria Stanzani and Francesco Concas) in the world tour for his Orchestrion Project.

Q - You studied with Giovanni Scanu, the old guitar player from Sardinia. Can you describe him and his playing? 
A: Giovanni Scanu, alongside Adolfo Merella, has been the most important Sardinian guitar player of the old generation (Aldo Cabizza changed the way to play guitar using a plectrum - he was a great master too). Scanu’s way to play traditional music was a bit like the old blues. I mean, it was very simple, but at the same time very deep, and with a unique emotion. In 1921 Giovanni Scanu started to play this music on stage. For me it has been like going inside a mine of diamonds. We spent time sitting in front of each other with two guitars. I had to repeat exactly what he played. There was not any mediation, only sounds and very nice talk about legends of traditional music. He was the key to the older tradition and it was a big privilege to share nine years with him learning all the secrets of old Sardinian music. I could talk for hours about that experience, probably the most important and intense I have had, as it required a complete change in my way of playing guitar in relation to a music arriving from the past.
You can’t talk about guitar music in Sardinia without talking about ‘Gara di Canto’, a competition between two, three, or more singers.  In this tradition, canto in re - the most popular typology of song - could be 40 minutes long without repeating the same melody. The guitarist doesn’t know which melody or variation or improvisation the singers are going to propose. There is not time to think about it: the guitarist has to listen and follow the same melody of the singers, using a parallel movement one octave below. It's very difficult and needs years of preparation and knowledge of the entire database of melodies the singers could use. I love to play in support of singers and I play exactly in continuity with the old school ways. I have played with the most important and active cantadores but I decided to live in my own time and play traditional music only in informal moments. Of course I also introduced in my own repertoire a way to develop this tradition, and I engaged with the tradition in other ways. I digitalized the most important museum of traditional music in Sardinia, Archivio Mario Cervo, wrote a book about canto a chitarra, and produced a collection of five CDs with recordings from 1928 to 1967. So all in all, it has been an amazing part of my life.

Q - Of all the great guitar players you’ve played with, who has been the most influential? 
A: Fred Frith. I played with Fred in a duo, trio, quartet and big ensemble. He’s really been very important to my way of developing a ‘prepared’ instrument. I think Fred is a great improviser and composer and I love his way of playing guitar as there is always a choice of material in relation to an idea of composition in real time. Of course Pat Metheny has also had an influence on my first steps in jazz, and he influences my way of playing with freedom. I love the way Pat can surf between different kinds of music, suspended between Ornette Coleman, Steve Reich, David Bowie, acoustic guitar solos and projects like Orchestrion.

Q - You are artistic director of Isole che parlano, an international arts festival in Palau. What kind of acts do you book? 
A: Myself and Nanni Angeli started Isole che Parlano in 1996, organized by Associazione Sarditudine. The idea of the association is to propose traditional Sardinian culture and values in a creative way, cross-fading with contemporary cultures in order to promote a sense of solidarity, tolerance and community, and to emphasize the social role of art. We’ve done it since the beginning with a communication between traditional music and the avant garde, trying to make a bridge between all different kinds of music. What I love is creativity in music. So it's very important to show how we don't need borders between something arriving from free improvisation or from an old, deep tradition. We combine contemporary culture and avant garde movements with traditional cultures and we promote this meeting every September with a program full of original events, concerts, meetings, workshops for children and important photo exhibitions. Concerts and events take place in archaeological sites (holy wells, tombs of the giants) and amazing places (country churches, Punta Palau lighthouse, Roccia dell’Orso), beaches (Cala Martinella), squares and on a desert island between Sardinia and Corsica like Spargi Island in Cala Corsara. So you can listen to a canto a tenore without a stage, with just granite around you, or you can have a great solo show on a desert island.  My sister, Alessandra Angeli, also works on this project with a workshop for children and a very important part of the festival, organized by Nanni Angeli, is dedicated to photo reportage. In a way it’s like the local feel of a small village, reaching out to an ideal global world without hierarchies or dominant cultures. 

Q - You are touring with the South African guitar player Derek Gripper. Are you excited about this? 
A: Kora is one of my favourite instruments. The sound of kora makes me feel safe, it's like being in touch with yourself in hypnosis. I spent years listening to this music in the mornings and I thought many times of how I could work with kora music played on guitar … and then I discovered Derek Gripper! What he does is amazing, as he follows the kora tradition and lets me feel as if I have been listening to the masters of kora. At the same time, he introduces contemporary sounds and melodies, he develops the tradition in his own way and he does it with the most popular instrument in Western music: the guitar. His way of playing is so fresh that you forget how difficult it is to play the kora tradition on a six-stringed instrument. I can't wait to share the stage with Derek and listen night by night to his music!  

8 Jan 2017

And... it's a new podcast!

Discover the music of two extraordinary, genre-defying solo guitarists: Derek Gripper and Paolo Angeli. Daring contrast and brilliant beauty on a double-bill tour across the UK from 2-16 February 2017.
Podcast presented by Colin Bass.

2 Jan 2017

On tour next: Paolo Angeli & Derek Gripper

A genre-defying double bill of daring contrast and beauty, featuring Derek Gripper, best known for his work with West African kora music (transferred to classical guitar), and Paolo Angeli with his astonishing 'prepared' Sardinian guitar. Catch two virtuoso solo performers with contrasting unique approaches to playing their instrument on one double bill programme!

12 Nov 2016

What the audience says: Chango Spasiuk

 

Chango Spasiuk was unforgettable last night, 3 performers individually brilliant and collectively phenomenal!

Muchas gracias to Making Tracks for conveying the transcedent Chango Spasiuk and his virtuoso musical companions back to Bristol again!

That was quite a concert! Chango Spasiuk and his magic band played an immersive, mezmerizing set at Colston Hall.

I just wanted to thank you for bringing Chango Spasiuk to the UK again, after such a long absence! We saw him in Cambridge last weekend. He and Marcos Villalba and Pablo Farhat gave a stunning performance, which we enjoyed so much that we’ve booked to see them again in Bury St. Edmunds next Monday.

Catch him if you can...he's just fabulous live...brilliant.

It was absolutely amazing!

Thanks again . . . I only wish this extraordinary artist could be persuaded to come to the UK more often!

This was an awesome gig! Love you guys! Please come back soon! xxx

Great performance at Cambridge Junction from Chango Spasiuk - thank you! Muchas gracias!

An emotional concert!

Awesome concert from the chamame master.

This was an awesome gig! Love you guys! Please come back soon! xxx

What a fantastic performance!!! You're a bomb of energy and optimism!!!!! Estupendo!!!!!!

It was a magnificent evening, and (...) we were treated to all the passion and virtuosity...

What a privilege to see Chango Spasiuk so close! Folks catch him on tour, you will thank me for the tip! Superb musicians & show!

Very enjoyable and entertaining concert.

Gracias a ti, Pablo y Marcos por un concierto precioso, y un par de horas de alegria musical en Sheffield hoy!

Your show in Cambridge was awesome. I am not going to say to you "I love you" because I have those words reserved for my husband. However, your music touched me very deeply and I loved it. Beautiful show!

Woooooow!!!! la experiencia fue fenomenal muchísimas gracias por la música tan linda que llego hasta el corazón y nos llenó la alma.

Great gig in Birmingham last night .

17 Oct 2016

Our latest podcast, featuring Chango Spasiuk!

A new podcast, featuring the accordion magic and deep swing of Argentinian chamamé star, Chango Spasiuk. Presented by Colin Bass.

12 Oct 2016

On chamamé, diversity and mate tea: Q & A with Chango Spasiuk

Q At home in Argentina, you are considered the new hero of chamamé, the music ‘with the deepest swing in Argentina’. What exactly is chamamé?
A:
I am just one of the representatives of the new generation of this tradition, one of many, perhaps the one that has travelled the furthest abroad playing this genre of music. Chamamé is the folk music that is widely representative of the whole of the northeast of Argentina. It is a world of sound where many elements come together, from the encounter of Jesuit monks with indigenous Guaraní people, the mestizo population, some elements from the African world too from slaves who came to Argentina via Peru, and finally European immigrants, who brought with them the accordion, an instrument that has travelled to so many places in the world. From the coming together of these different strands of influences has emerged a tradition and a sound that we today call ‘chamamé’. Traditionally it was played with accordion and guitar, later more instruments were added, like the violin, vocals, often as duet singing, and not to forget that it is a dance music. Today many many ways of playing it exist, both in its instrumental and its vocal forms.

Q – You have become famous in Argentina as the presenter of a TV program that explores rural musical traditions – is there a need for roots music in Argentina?
A:
It’s been 30 years since I have been playing music, and only 8 years that I do this TV programme called Pequenos Universos (Small Universes). It can be seen on the web on the website of ‘Canal Encuentro’. In these 8 years I made more than 70 journeys for the programme, that is to say more than 70 documentary episodes, in all of which the idea is to show the oral transmission of uninterrupted traditions. At first we criss-crossed Argentina from top to bottom, and then also travelled through neighbouring countries, like Paraguy, Uruguay, Bolivia and Chile.
When talking about roots, the truth is that our roots are constantly present, they have never disappeared. What the programme tries to show, is that there is a lot more roots music in this country than we think, there is a lot more diversity than we think, and all these diverse music styles are a lot more complex than we think, too. The programme is simply trying to show off all this richness, all these treasures right there in front of us. In many places of the world diversity is now a problem, as we can see in today’s media, there are walls going up in many places, all caused by deep ignorance of the value of diversity. Our programme tries to look at diversity not as a problem but as a treasure. So the programme is not looking at whether there is a need for it or not, but it’s simply to show the great diversity we have in our culture.
It may be that it’s the music without roots that takes up the most space in today’s media and sounds mostly out of our radios, but still, music with roots connected to our culture is still very present in the everyday of our lives. In album releases, in local fiestas and many daily activities – roots music is not a museum piece but very alive and still very present in our lives.

Q – Most people associate Argentina with the tango and the bandoneon (or squeeze box), and you have a different tradition and instrument – can you describe this to your UK audience?
A:
That’s a very interesting question. The world associates tango with Argentina because it’s the most international music to come out of the country. It was connected to the golden era of Argentine cinema, and these films were very widely watched all over the world, and their sound came very much from the culture of tango. But the bandoneon is not an instrument that has only been involved in tango, it also plays an important role in chamamé and in many other folk traditions all over Argentina. Some big bandoneon personalities come from the tango, but there are also many in chamamé, like Cocomarola, Abitbol, Riera, Flores… all of them great bandoneon players. In the music of the north of Argentina, the region of Salta, the bandoneon is also a key instrument, there are some well known and proud figures of this music, like Dino Saluzzi. So there are lots of connections between bandoneon and tango, but the instrument itself really is key in the development of many other folk traditions around the country.
Both the bandoneon and the accordion are used in chamamé – they are similar instruments, although the accordion has a broader palette of sound colours. Chamamé is a rural music, the music of farmers and labourers, of people who work with livestock, of people who dance. These rural landscapes are regions of subtropical climate and big rivers with their own complex cultural mix where the various elements mentioned earlier come together.
On the other hand, tango is an urban tradition, from the city of Buenos Aires, a big harbour city, and although the bandoneon has been a key instrument, the elements that come together are totally different and the historical and their geographical context is totally different too. Also, chamamé and most of our folk traditions are based on a rhythm of 6/8 or3/4, while tango is binary, with a rhythm of 2/4 or 4/4.

Q – You are of Ukrainian heritage. How has this informed your music?
A:
The province of Misiones received large numbers of European immigrants in the late 19th and early 20th centuries - Ukrainians, Polish, Germans, Volga-Germans, Russians, Swedish… Among all these families arrived my grandparents, the parents of my mother and the parents of my father, and they settled in the town of Apóstoles, which is where I was born. So in addition to all the influences that already existed before the immigrants arrived (Guaraní, Criollo, and influences from over the border with Paraguay and Southern Brazil) now appeared these new colours to add themselves to the existing palette. The rhythm of chamamé was predominant  in this area, but now suddenly other rhythms appeared, like rural polkas, shottish, waltzes. So at one point all these new elements got added to an existing world of sound, and this is also what happens with my music. My music contains all these elements existing alongside each other, in a very spontaneous, natural way, without any kind of conflict. There is no sense that one influence is more important or better than another – where I was born all these influences were simply around me.
There were the more local, criollo roots of early chamamé, and there were the traditions that the immigrants brought with them, which over the next 100 years took on their own distinct local colour. This particular Ukrainian music now sounds totally different and has a totally different aesthetic than any other Ukrainian music, wherever you might find it in the world. You won’t find this sound in other places where Ukrainian immigrants settled, not in Canada, nor in Brazil or the USA. The fusion that took place in Misiones is totally unique to that place, and this is reflected in my music.
There are other elements too that are connected to the Ukrainian culture but have not necessarily something to do with music or aesthetics, for example a sense of hope, flexibility, a capacity to adapt… these are all things are reflected in a very subtle manner in my music too. I think the most important being a sense of hope, and also celebration… celebration in a sense not to be confused with the spectacle of a performance or a party.

Q – Where is your home town and how does it influence your music?
A:
I was born in Apóstoles, in Misiones, a wedge of land between Argentina, Brazil and Paraguay. It is a very intense land of red earth and dense jungle. Well, there is much less jungle there now than there was before, but it’s a subtropical place, with many mountains, trees and big rivers, rivers that are red coloured from the red earth they carry, the river Parana flowing towards the river Urugyay which again flows towards the south of Brazil. It’s a region of a many different cultures superimposed on each other, which have shaped a new, unique culture: the Mbuya-Guaraní, the Criollos, the Uruguayans, the Brazilians, and obviously the immigrants from Europe that started arriving at the end of the 19th century. That’s where I come from. A place where in summer, during the months of January and February, the temperature rises to more than 45 degrees… it’s a very intense place because of all these elements, and many more.
It is where yerba mate grows, and many years back I made an album called ‘Tareferos de mis Pagos’, an album dedicated to the mate harvest and its labourers. Mate is a herb that is drunk as an infusion by everybody in Argentina, across all ages, children, adults and old people, and across all social classes too, but it only grows in this one region of Argentina, and a part of Uruguay. It’s almost a mythical plant, used by the Guaraní, then adopted by the Jesuits, and today it’s very well known and used all over Argentina and in neighbouring countries too, but it only grows in this one region where I come from.

Q – Are there any musicians from around the world you would like to collaborate with, and why?
A:
I’d like to collaborate with lots of them! With electronic music artists, with pianists, with orchestras, with string quartets, with accordion players… My interest lies in both exploring ways and tools for building bridges of connection between worlds you thought there could not be a connection with, as well as further exploring my own tradition of the music from where I come from.
I would not want to name one specific musician I would like to work with, but simply build relationships with others where we can throw ideas at each other, challenge each other and move something forward. I am always very open, thinking, researching and studying other musical worlds in order to discover where the bridges might lie. And surely at some point possibilities and crossings will appear, though at the moment I am in a phase where I have still a lot to do  and to show that comes from my own background and my own music – at some later point I’m sure I will come to focus more on the crossroads that may appear on the path. I sometimes think about an album with lots of international guests where we could work on these ideas, say flamenco or a jazz musicians, wind or string ensembles, percussion, electronics… all in one single album. Just another idea that goes around in my head and hopefully one day there will be the time, and the funding to take such a project forward. In the meantime I keep doing what is realistically possible.

Q – Can you introduce us to the musicians of your ensemble?
A:
The trio on this tour is made up of Pablo Farhat, who comes from the province of Santiago del Estero, which is a very traditional province, and he is a very versatile violinist fluent in both the studied, academic side of music, and at the same time he has a great knowledge of the oral traditions of roots music of Argentina, and he can very well combine these two worlds, these two disciplines, the one of oral transmission of roots music and the academic, written down aspect of music. He has a great skill in improvising and in immersing himself into the sound world of my music - he is a really great violinist and I’m really happy to be able to do this tour with him.
The other musician in the trio is Marcos Villalba, a percussionist and guitarist with whom I have been working for a very long time. He comes from a family of musicians, and I have also worked with his brothers Gabriel and Sebastian (who has sung on most of my records, and has been on many international tours before.) Marcos is his younger brother and he is a very very talented percussionist, and we have been working together for a many years - he has a great power and drive. I think he is one of the best cajoneros in the world – cajon is an instrument from Peru, that is also used in flamenco and many other traditions, a widely used instrument nowadays –  and he is for me one of the very best players in the world. He also plays the guitar and sometimes sings as well.
I think this trio format really is very powerful and it’s going to sound great on this tour.

Q What’s next for Chango Spasiuk?
A: 
‘Pynandí’ was my last international album, but since then I have released two more albums in Argentina: one recorded live in the Teatro Colon, called ‘Tierra Colorada en el Teatro Colon’, which is the most famous theatre in Argentina, for opera and classical music. We recorded a live album and DVD there, which hasn’t been released internationally yet. And only a couple of months ago another album was released in Argentina featuring a less well known side of my work, which is as composer of film music. Over the past 15 years I have worked on many Argentine film productions, with many different directors, so this album features my work for cinema, for documentaries, short films and TV. It’s an album with 16 tracks showing off this creative side of me – there is a lot of piano as I have worked with many pianists in this context, and there are many different musical textures -  it’s called ‘Otras Musicas’. It’s only been released in Argentina although I am looking at the possibility of an online release for the rest of the world - although there might not be a physical release people elsewhere in the world can download the album and listen to it. Back in Argentina I am working on promoting this film music album at the moment, and thinking about a new studio album for the next year that would once again have more of an international reach. The tour is not going to focus on any particular album though - it will present a broad range of my compositions and my way of interpreting the tradition of chamamé
Sending greetings and hugs to everyone and looking very much forward to coming to visit you soon!

7 Oct 2016

On tour next: Chango Spasiuk!


At home in Argentina, Chango Spasiuk is considered the new hero of chamamé, the music ‘with the deepest swing in Argentina’; a warm-hearted, accordion-based style that taps into native Guarani, Spanish, Criollo and Eastern European roots. Its natural home is the red lands and lush jungles of north-east Argentina, where Spasiuk was born to a family of Ukrainian immigrants. A fiery and sensitive virtuoso on his accordion, he brings rare charisma to his live performances: his rapt, dervish-like stage presence and his extraordinary ensemble make for music of profound beauty and feeling, infusing melancholy with resilient optimism. Winner of a BBC World Music Award and nominated for a Latin Grammy, Spasiuk makes a long awaited return to Britain with this autumn tour – not to be missed

19 Sept 2016

A new Making Track season is coming up!

Coming soon to a venue near you: Making Tracks 7 - a brand new season of the best music you have not yet heard - starting this November.
Featuring Chango Spasiuk, Derek Gripper & Paolo Angeli (in a double bill) and Sklamberg & The Shepherds. Check out more info & tour dates on our website!