Friday, 20 February 2009
PERFORMA'09
For further information, pleaase check http://performa.web.ua.pt/.
ABSTRACT
Musician or Performer? That is the question.
When some years ago Nicholas Cook (2001)[1] challenged us to think about music as performance he launched a new paradigm to understand musical performance. Indeed, a musical performance is more than the reproduction of scores; it performs meaningful events in a specific social context. This subtle change of emphasis, from the ‘text’ to the ‘event’, not only opened new paths to comprehend what a musical performance is and what the performers’ role is inside of it, but also posited music closer to other performance arts such as live art, body art, contemporary dance and theatre. Acknowledging this, I intend to get inside Performance Studies to understand what a performance is and in which ways music-making can be a performance. By promoting cross-fertilization between a diversity of arts and theories I expect to draw an alternative way to think, make, and engage with music; a way that comes in line with the more contemporary artistic scene and theory. Eventually, this reflection can contribute to integrate music in the current debate inside Performance Studies, which is still very residual. Hence, my presentation starts with a short performance where I explore the body and theatricality to create a musical event. It involves live lighting, improvised (or choreographed) music, as well as excerpts of George Crumb’s A Little Midnight Music. This work, composed in 2001, is rumination on ‘Round Midnight by Thelonious Monk. Then I present the paper.
[1] Cook, N. (2001). Between Process and Product: Music and/as Performance. Music Theory Online, 7(2).
Thursday, 12 February 2009
(More than) A musical performance
This is the first video of a series of five that aim to show details of my "performances with music". This one highlights few moments of a larger event that took place at the Brunel University (West London) in May 2008 where I intended to explore everything around music, i.e., improvisation, body's presence, voice, viscerality, theatricality, live lighting, mixture of electronic and acoustic sounds, etc.
What have been said about this event: «'More Than' was a bold and adventurous programme which used live lighting, theatrical actions and a dramatic use of spac to communicate music. Organising this level of collaborative process was admirable and some of the visual situations which were created - warming hands on the red light of the 'burning' inside piano or the wind player under what seems like a street light - were highly communicative and showed real imagination. You played with drama and passion again.» Sarah Nicolls and Richard Barrett (Brunel University)