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A Silk Road That Leads Somewhere Truly New

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  • A Silk Road That Leads Somewhere Truly New

    A Silk Road That Leads Somewhere Truly New
    By MELINE TOUMANI

    The New York Times
    April 10, 2005

    When Yo-Yo Ma began work on the Silk Road Project
    seven years ago, the music world stood by with a
    mixture of curiosity and skepticism. Why was Mr. Ma,
    known for his cello interpretations of Bach and
    Brahms, suddenly jumping on the world-music bandwagon?
    Would the involvement of musicians from China to
    Turkey and everywhere in between be some kind of
    marketing gimmick, a "We Are the World" minus Michael
    and Tina? Would the classical - ahem, Western
    classical - music community be practicing cultural
    imperialism by experimenting with Eastern traditions?

    Yet most critics, after due scrutiny, were delighted.
    And audiences can judge for themselves today at
    Carnegie Hall.

    Mr. Ma, for his part, tuned out cynics from the start,
    and he remains passionate about one goal: to
    continually combine or - dare we say it? - fuse
    different musical traditions to create something new.
    "There is no tradition that exists that was not the
    result of successful and sustained invention," Mr. Ma
    said recently. He argues that the more "authentic" a
    piece of music sounds, the more likely it is to be an
    amalgamation.

    Take, for example, tango. Quintessentially Argentine,
    right? Sure, Mr. Ma says, apart from the fact that its
    star instrument, the accordionlike bandoneĆ³n, was
    invented in Germany and taken to Argentina by Italian
    immigrants. Tango's characteristic rhythm is said to
    have originated in the drumming of African slaves
    enlisted to entertain their Argentine overseers. Throw
    in a Jewish violinist, Mr. Ma suggests, and it becomes
    clear that a style of music closely associated with
    one country was not inevitable.

    So it follows that great musical traditions remain to
    be developed, if only one experiments long enough.
    "What are the preconditions of creativity?" Mr. Ma
    asked. "What happened in a historical era that gave
    rise to something magnificent?" In pursuit of an
    answer, the Silk Road Ensemble engages in deliberate,
    systematic experimentation.

    Its latest venture looks to other art forms for
    inspiration. This month, the Silk Road Project will
    move its offices from Manhattan to Providence,
    R.I.,where ensemble members are working with faculty
    and students from the Rhode Island School of Design.
    The collaboration began last weekend, with a workshop
    inspired by a figure of the Hindu god Shiva, from the
    school's museum collection. The Shiva story is one of
    destruction and re-creation for the greater good, a
    principle that could describe the Silk Road Ensemble's
    approach to music-making.

    While the ensemble tinkered with this theme, students
    from the illustration department engaged in a visual
    improvisation on large canvases. The goal, according
    to the school's provost, Joe Deal, was "an
    interdisciplinary jam session" through which artists
    and musicians might find new ways of approaching their
    work.

    The ensemble has just released an album, "Silk Road
    Journeys: Beyond the Horizon" (Sony Classical),
    featuring music from, or inspired by, China, India,
    Iran, Azerbaijan, Armenia and Turkey. Much of it is a
    slow burn; thick layers of sound from string
    instruments - cello, pipa, kamancheh and many others -
    support spare, floating melodies.

    The exceptions are the "Akhalqalaqi Dance," a vigorous
    Georgian-Armenian folk melody, played on the oboelike
    duduk by Gevorg Dabaghyan; and two Azerbaijani songs,
    "Kor Arab" and "Shikasta," with gorgeous vocal
    elaborations by Alim Qasimov. These tunes sound more
    distinctly representative of their national traditions
    than others here. They are also the most fun to listen
    to. Might it be that a kind of clarity of origin, even
    if it is an illusion, is part of what makes music come
    alive?

    Another piece, "Oasis," is a group improvisation. But
    how can musicians from different countries, speaking
    different languages and playing different scales,
    perform together in free style?

    Mr. Ma explains that after many awkward, funny,
    confusing rehearsals, ensemble members have developed
    efficient ways to communicate among musical languages.
    Within two hours, he says, they can explain to a
    musician with Western classical training the basics of
    how to participate in, say, the six-beat cycle of a
    composition by the Indian tabla player Sandeep Das, or
    an update of a seventh-century piece by the Chinese
    film composer Zhao Jiping. Mr. Zhao weighed in during
    rehearsals, using handwritten placards that read "hen
    hao" (very good) and - seldom, one hopes - "bu hao"
    (not good).

    YO-YO MA / Silk Road Ensemble: Two concerts at
    Carnegie Hall today: a family concert at 2 p.m. and a
    regular concert at 8 p.m.


    http://www.nytimes.com/2005/04/10/arts/music/10toum.html

    --Boundary_(ID_gj5MGp1dfHmKTqXZNh2l4g)--
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