Music of Central Asia at the Louvre
Alim and Fargana
Qasimov, Tengir-Too and The Academy of Maqam to Perform
Music
Initiative in Central Asia Brochure
Musique
d’Asie centrale au Louvre: Concerts d’Alim
et Fargana Qasimov, de Tengir-Too
et de l’Académie de Maqâm (version
française)
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| With
the release of "Alim and Fargana Qasimov",
six volumes of a ten-part
series created in collaboration with
the Smithsonian Institution are now
available. For more information,
visit http://www.folkways.si.edu/
and
enter “Central Asia” in the search
box. |
Geneva,
31 March 2008 – Musicians from Azerbaijan,
Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan supported by the Aga Khan
Music Initiative in Central Asia will be performing
at the Louvre Auditorium on the 5, 6 and 13th of April.
Spiritual
music from Azerbaijan will be performed by the world-renowned
Alim and Fargana Qasimov on Saturday,
5 April 2008 at 2030, in the Louvre’s Auditorium.
Music rooted in the nomadic traditions of the Tien
Shan (“Celestial Mountains”) of the Kyrgyz
Republic will be performed by Tengir-Too
on Sunday, 6 April 2008 at 1730, in the Auditorium.
Dushanbe-based Academy of Maqâm
will perform traditional instrumental pieces, lyrical
songs and contemplative poetry that are bound together
in a vast, yet integrated artistic conception of great
refinement and beauty. They will perform on Sunday,
13 April at 1700, also in the Auditorium.
Alim
Qasimov is Azerbaijan’s best known
and beloved singer, a virtuoso who is equally at home
in the two musical domains central to Azeri musical
culture: mugham, the classical art music that has
flourished for centuries in the sophisticated cities
of North Africa, the Middle East, and Central Asia;
and ashiq, the rural bardic tradition that is found
in Turkey, Azerbaijan and the Azeri region of Iran.
Qasimov has been awarded a number of prizes, including
the prestigious IMC/UNESCO Music Prize, and has been
hailed as “one of the greatest singers of the
20th century.” Fargana Qasimova, Alim’s
daughter, is well on the way to becoming a great singer
in her own right. For more information, click
here.
Tengir-Too
takes its name from the Tien Shan mountain range that
towers over the high alpine passes linking Kyrgyzstan
and China. Founded and directed by Nurlanbek Nyshanov,
Tengir-Too provides a living laboratory for Nyshanov’s
efforts to restore Kyrgyz music’s integrity
and authenticity – not through an uncritical
attempt to reproduce tradition, but by innovating
within it. Nyshanov draws on his compositional skills
to craft striking arrangements for small ensembles
of repertories formerly performed by solo players.
Members of Tengir-Too include Kenjegul Kubatova, whose
lush alto voice is the perfect medium for Kyrgyz lyrical
song and Gulbara Baigashkaeva, a master performer
on the komuz – the three-stringed lute that
Kyrgyz regard as their national instrument.. Tengir-Too
performs with special guest Rysbek Jumabaev, a reciter
of the great thousand-year-old Kyrgyz epic tale Manas.
For more information, click
here.
In
Tajikistan, the leader of a movement to revive the
tradition of Maqâm is Abduvali Abdurashidov.
His Academy of Maqâm, supported
by the Music Initiative, offers rigorous training
to a highly select group of talented young performers.
Maqâm are linked most strongly with Samarkand
and Bukhara, which historically have been multicultural
cities where performers and audiences included Tajiks,
Uzbeks and Central Asian (Bukharan) Jews. With its
Sufi-inspired texts, lyrical melodies, and austere
instrumental accompaniment, maqâm comprises
music of great refinement and profound beauty that
spans the entire gamut of traditional social life,
from prayer to dance. By reducing his ensemble to
the essentials – a few voices, frame drum, and
two or three long-necked lutes, including the rarely
heard sato (bowed tanbur) – Abdurashidov achieves
a remarkable clarity of texture and suppleness of
form. For more information, click
here.
All
three groups are beneficiaries and long-term partners
of the Aga Khan Music Initiative in Central Asia (AKMICA),
and its Supporting Tradition-Bearers and performance
and Outreach programmes. AKMICA, an initiative created
by His Highness the Aga Khan to help preserve Central
Asia’s endangered musical heritage by ensuring
its transmission to a new generation of artists and
audiences, also supports a worldwide music touring
programme and disseminates Central Asian music through
a variety of media projects including an audio and
video anthology co-produced with the Smithsonian Institution.
All three groups performing at the Louvre are featured
in the first six the CD/DVD series available on Smithsonian’s
Folkways recordings. For more information, visit http://www.folkways.si.edu/
and enter “Central Asia” in the search
box.
For
more information about the Aga Khan Music Initiative
in Central Asia, please see http://www.akdn.org/music.
For
additional information on the performances at the
Louvre, please consult the Auditorium section of www.louvre.fr.
For
further information, please contact:
For
Press:
Sam
Pickens
Aga Khan Development Network
P.O. Box 2049
1211 Geneva 2
Switzerland
Tel: (+41 22) 909 7277
Fax: (+41 22) 909 7292
Mobile: (+41 78) 661 8714
Email: info@akdn.org
Aga Khan Music Initiative in Central Asia (AKMICA):
Fairouz
R. Nishanova
Director, AKMICA
Aga Khan Trust for Culture
P.O. Box 2049
1211 Geneva 2
Switzerland
Email: akmica@akdn.org
Notes
The
Aga Khan Music Initiative in Central Asia was created
in 2000 by His Highness the Aga Khan to contribute
to the preservation, documentation, and further development
of Central Asia’s musical heritage. The Music
Initiative’s goals include revitalising important
musical repertories by helping tradition-bearers pass
on their knowledge and craft; building sustainable
cultural institutions that can eventually be maintained
by local organizations and communities; and supporting
artists who are developing new approaches to the performance
of Central Asian music. Worldwide, the Music Initiative
strives to increase knowledge about Central Asia’s
music and culture, particularly among students, and
to nurture collaborations among musicians from different
parts of Central Eurasia and beyond.
The
Music Initiative is part of the Aga Khan Trust for
Culture’s wide range of activities aimed at
the preservation and promotion of the material and
spiritual heritage of Muslim societies. As the
cultural agency of the Aga Khan Development Network
(AKDN), the Trust leverages cultural heritage as a
means of supporting and catalysing development. Its
programmes include the Aga Khan Historic Cities Programme,
which works to revitalise historic cities in the Muslim
world - both culturally and socioeconomically.
Over the last decade, it has rehabilitated historic
areas in Cairo, Kabul, Herat, Aleppo, Delhi, Zanzibar,
Mostar, the Northern Areas of Pakistan, Timbuktu
and Mopti. The Trust’s other programmes include
the Aga Khan Award for Architecture, the Aga Khan
Program for Islamic Architecture at Harvard University
and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT),
ArchNet.org, a major online resource on Islamic architecture,
and Museums and Exhibitions, which is creating three
museums in Cairo, Toronto and Zanzibar.
The
Aga Khan Development Network (AKDN) is a group of
private, non-denominational development agencies working
to empower communities and individuals to improve
living conditions and opportunities, especially in
sub-Saharan Africa, Central and South Asia, and the
Middle East. The Network’s nine development
agencies work in 29 countries, focusing on social,
cultural and economic development for all citizens,
regardless of gender, origin or religion. The AKDN’s
underlying ethic is compassion for the vulnerable
in society. Its annual budget for philanthropic activity
is in excess of US$ 450 million.
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