11/29/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 11/29/2024 08:28
Composer Mark Contreras Waiss, soprano Sofía Kirwan-Baez, and collaborator Professor Rajmil Fischman (Keele), presented a seminar-cum-recital at King's on 27 November to explore how to incorporate traditional Peruvian music, culture and history into contemporary compositions.
Hosted by the Department of Music as part of The Colloquium Series, and by the Department of Languages, Literatures and Cultures, the event marked 100 years since the birth of Eielson, a Peruvian writer and visual artist who worked with music and performance.
At the event, Contreras explored the differences in musical production in three of Peru's varied environments - the desert, the highlands, and the rainforest - and the country's influences from Africa, the Iberian Peninsula, the pre-Hispanic Quechan civilisation, and the Shipibo Conibo and Yanesha indigenous people. He connected these traditional approaches to modern compositional techniques, and how integration can enrich and preserve cultural heritage.
Contreras is a teacher of composition at the Universidad Nacional de Música in Peru, which is a partner of the Department of Languages, Literatures and Cultures. Through this partnership, Dr Rebaza-Soraluz and Contreras have worked together to breathe new life into Eielson's work.
Rejuvenating Eielson's literature, art and music
Eielson created an installation and performance for the Munich 1972 Olympics, which included a musical composition that would be performed separately and simultaneously by musicians around the world. However, the performance was cancelled due to the Munich massacre. Dr Rebaza-Soraluz wanted to pay homage to this abandoned performance by creating a new, connected piece of work with the same themes of community, world peace, and anti-war.
Different generations of Peruvian composers created new music in dialogue with Eielson's 1945 work Antigone, which was inspired by the Sophocles play. Acoustic pieces were played in Lima, while acousmatic ones were composed abroad.
Dr Rebaza-Soraluz and Contreras collated works from ten composers into Urbi et Orbi. This was performed on 4 June 2024 at the oldest theatre in Latin America, the Teatro Manuel Ascencio Segura in Lima, featuring pianists, vocalists and acousmatic music.
Contreras shared one of these musical pieces at the King's event, before performing the full composition the following day at Festival SONOMUNDO in Paris. Professor Fischman offered his acousmatic initially performed in Peru.
The concert was supported by the Peruvian Embassy in both the UK and France, as well as the Department of Languages, Literatures and Cultures.
HE Ignacio Higueras, Ambassador of Peru to the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. Photo: Iryna Rodina
Composer Mark Contreras Waiss & soprano Sofía Kirwan-Baez. Photo: Iryna Rodina
Photo of Jorge Eduardo Eielson, Peruvian artist and writer, projected onto a screen. Photo: Iryna Rodina
Soprano Sofía Kirwan-Baez. Photo: Iryna Rodina
An enduring legacy
Dr Rebaza-Soraluz has also contributed to three international exhibitions for Eielson's centenary: