Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ISTANBUL: New project offers the music of architecture

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ISTANBUL: New project offers the music of architecture

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    May 16 2010

    New project offers the music of architecture


    Does architecture have a sound? Or literally, does a space have its
    own music? If the limits of comprehension can be pushed and the power
    of the imagination can be used, yes.

    Every space has its own voice, and it reflects the echoes of its music
    only to those who are open to hearing it.
    This idea is now being brought to life with a project named `Ä°stanbul
    Mimarisinin MüziÄ?i' (The Music of Ä°stanbul's Architecture) implemented
    with the cooperation of the Ä°stanbul 2010 European Capital of Culture
    Agency's classical Turkish music director and the Turkish Music
    Foundation. The project is more than a series of concerts: It aims to
    attract interest to the fact that both architecture and music, as two
    different branches of art, are parts of the same historical entity.
    The project includes nine concerts spanning the whole year, the first
    three of which have already been performed. The first concert was at
    the Radio İstanbul building in Harbiye, the second at Dolmabahçe
    Palace and the third at the historic Feshane Administrative Building.

    All music reflects its period

    `The core idea was first developed by the Turkish Music Foundation,'
    says Mehmet Güntekin in an interview with Sunday's Zaman. He is the
    Ä°stanbul 2010 European Capital of Culture Agency's classical Turkish
    music director and was also the director of the Ä°stanbul State Choir
    of Classical Turkish Music, which also collaborated on the project.

    `I have already known the choir very well for more than 25 years, and
    I was aware of the solemnity of the Turkish Music Foundation,' notes
    Güntekin. `What was really significant was the idea itself. The music
    of the architecture of Ä°stanbul. ¦ When we say this, a question comes
    to mind immediately: Can an architectural structure have music? But
    every period reflects all the elements inherent in itself to all
    branches of art equally. Nevertheless, architecture is something
    concrete and music is abstract. How are we going to comprehend the
    music which is unique to a space?' Güntekin gives the example of the
    Süleymaniye Mosque. `Listen or imagine in your head the music of Hacı
    Arif Bey with the mosque, there's something that doesn't fit. When you
    listen to Itri while you look at the Süleymaniye Mosque, you realize
    some things coincide.'

    What Güntekin tries to express is not only a coincidental harmony
    between the music and the space. Neither space or the architectural
    structure nor music or any other branch of art are exempt from the
    influences of a certain period. And all of them are influenced at the
    same time, maybe in similar ways which are reflected in the products
    of art. `The first concert was at the Radio Ä°stanbul building,' says
    Güntekin. `This building is one of the symbols of the republican
    period of architecture. And we performed pieces by the composers who
    worked, who passed through the corridors of this building. The second
    concert at the Dolmabahçe Palace included the works of Hacı Arif Bey.
    Hacı Arif Bey lived at the palace. What an architect designs in the
    interior ornamentation, a composer makes in his compositions.'

    `All these elements are the parts of an entity,' says Fatih Salgar,
    chief of the Ä°stanbul State Choir of Classical Turkish Music. `You can
    find all the reflections of a certain century in the music. This is a
    crucial part of our culture as much as our language because in the
    past music and literature were the common point among all the
    enlightened people.'

    Nine themes, nine concerts

    `We've been giving thousands of concerts for many years,' explains
    Salgar of the interest they receive. `We have a choir that performs
    music at a certain level, and those who love this music are also aware
    of the importance of our choir. But there's an immense interest in the
    project. One of the reasons for this is because we may never give such
    a concert at these places again.'

    The project merits this level of interest after all. It also includes
    various elements of the different cultures that have been a part of
    Ä°stanbul for centuries. While the project continues with the next
    concert on June 2 at the Topkapı Palace with the compositions of Selim
    III, another concert on June 15 in the garden of the Archaeology
    Museum will bring different cultures together. `We will play on a
    different concept with Ensemble Amarcord, a European choir,' says
    Güntekin. `İstanbul is the city for which the most compositions are
    made. In this respect, we wanted Ensemble Amarcord to compile the
    compositions made for all the capitals of culture selected up to now.
    If any of these cities doesn't have a unique composition, then they
    will compile the works of a composer who has lived in this city. They
    will perform these compositions in the first part of the concert,
    while in the second part, we are going to perform the compositions
    made for Ä°stanbul. In the final part, we will perform songs for
    Ä°stanbul all together.'

    The project continues with a concert of Tanbur Cemil Bey's music at
    Yıldız Palace on June 19; the Itri concert will be at Süleymaniye
    Mosque on Sept. 21 and that of Dede Efendi at Yenikapı on Oct. 2.

    Another concert that reflects the diversity of the cultural heritage
    of Ä°stanbul will take place on Dec. 7 at the St. Jean Chrisostomus
    Armenian Catholic Church in Taksim, where the compositions of Armenian
    composers will be performed. `Musicians from minority communities
    contribute a very important part to our music: the Armenian, Greek and
    Jewish composers. Among these minorities, it is the Armenian composers
    who have produced the most compositions,' he said.



    16 May 2010, Sunday
    HATÄ°CE AHSEN UTKU Ä°STANBUL
Working...
X