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Yo-Yo
Ma Performs on the Silk Road
for Aga Khan Award
First Performance of Ensemble in
one of the oldest cities on the Silk Road
Photos
from the performance
Aleppo,
Syria, 6th November, 2001 — World-renowned cellist
Yo-Yo Ma and his Silk Road Ensemble gave a special
performance on the occasion of the presentation
ceremony of the 2001 Aga Khan Award for Architecture.
From high atop the Citadel dominating one of the
world’s oldest continuously inhabited cities and
out of its ornate Throne Room, the enchanting melodies
of Ahmed Adnan Saygun, Johann Sebastian Bach, Maurice
Ravel, Franghiz Ali-Zadeh and Kayhan Kalhor this
evening recreated an age-old memory of the interaction
of cultures for which the Silk Road is remembered.
Exceptional
in its setting and its significance, the performance,
in the presence of His Highness the Aga Khan and
some 500 distinguished international guests, brought
together performers from five countries in a striking
fusion of musical traditions. Symbolic of
the fruitful exchange of ideas and traditions that
the Silk Road enabled, tonight’s performance struck
more than one chord in the minds of those witnessing
an event that itself celebrates the sharing of skills
and talent from around the world and a revived conversation
amongst cultures.
Noting
the collaboration between the Aga Khan Trust for
Culture and the Silk Road Project, the Aga Khan
said that it was important to broaden “the understanding
and appreciation of the musical and artistic cultures
of the Silk Road that linked the West with Asia
and the Middle East, including Syria, for over a
thousand years.” The Aga Khan also remarked
that “this work owes a great deal to Yo-Yo Ma’s
vision, creativity, boundless energy and infectious
enthusiasm, and most of all to his genuine interest
and respect for the creative expression of peoples
embodied in the rich diversity of their cultures.”
Yo-Yo
Ma, describing the experience of playing in Aleppo,
said, “I know that I speak for all the Silk Road
Ensemble members who were in Aleppo with us when
I say that being part of the presentation ceremony
for the 2001 Aga Khan Award for Architecture was
a high moment of inspiration in our musical lives.
The selection of the projects that were honoured
demonstrated an enlightened understanding of the
importance of renewing rooted traditions.
In all its work, the Aga Khan Trust for Culture
demonstrates the understanding that, in the end,
it’s not about your culture or my culture, but about
our common world heritage.”
Each
piece performed reflected musical and cross-cultural
innovation. Yo-Yo Ma performed two solos on the
cello. Bach’s Sarabande from the Suite No. 2 in
D Minor is an example of the composer’s liberal
experimentation with unconventional musical forms
and sonorities. Translated as the Arabic word for
“noise,” the sarabande was a dance of Moorish origin
that came to Europe during the 12th Century when
the Moors invaded Spain. Saygun’s Partita for Solo
Cello reminded the listener how much he drew on
his travels across Anatolia, his studies in Western
composition at the Paris Conservatory and his exposure
to a mélange of Turkish art song, folk song, dance
and gypsy music.
The
performance of Ravel’s Sonata for Violin and Cello
recalled the composer’s exploration of the sound
worlds of the East and his penchant for experimenting
with new melodic material. Franghiz Ali-Zadeh’s
A·k Havasi, translated both as "breeze of love"
and as "dance melody of love," was inspired
by the sixteenth-century Azerbaijani poet Muhammed
Fizuli's poem "Leila and Majnun.” It
transforms the cello into the voices of the lovers,
using as her musical language the quasi-improvisatory
traditional classical style and repertory of Azerbaijan
known as mugham. Finally, Kayhan Kalhor’s
composition, “Blue as the Turquoise Night of Neyshabur”,
draws inspiration from traditional Iranian modal
melodies, which he supports with an ensemble of
Western strings. Featured instruments include the
kemancheh (spike fiddle), santur (struck zither),
and ney (bamboo flute).
The
Silk Road Project aims to illuminate the Silk Road’s
historical contribution to the cross-cultural diffusion
of arts, technologies, and musical traditions, identify
the voices that best represent its cultural legacy
today, and support innovative collaborations among
outstanding artists from the lands of the Silk Road
and the West.
Through
the Aga Khan Music Initiative in Central Asia, the
Aga Khan Trust for Culture, the lead funder and
creative partner of the Silk Road Project, seeks
to preserve and revive the traditional music of
Central Asia and enhance its role by teaching, documenting
and archiving traditional arts, preparing educational
materials on music and poetry and enabling the creation
of a unique repository of musical knowledge and
performance.
For
further information, please contact:
The
Aga Khan Trust for Culture
1-3 Avenue de la Paix
1211 Geneva 2,
Switzerland
Telephone:
(41.22) 909.7200
Fax:
(41.22) 909.7292
E-mail:
aktc@akdn.ch
Website:
www.akdn.org
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