Imani Winds and Roberto Sierra
Classical music without the powdered wigs.
July 1st, 2009
Punch Brothers | Chamber Music Northwest gets patriotic.0 comments
June 24th, 2009
Risk/Reward New Performance Festival | Hand2Mouth marries art pop and pop art. 0 comments
June 17th, 2009
Inviting Desire (Dance Naked Productions) | Whips, gangbangs, fisting and Obama.0 comments
June 10th, 2009
Store For A Month | Art bargains and food for thought—now available at a “store” near you.0 comments
June 10th, 2009
The Blue Room (Portland Actors Conservatory) | Sex, drugs and rampant regret.0 comments
June 3rd, 2009
Rush + Robbins (Oregon Ballet Theatre) | The insect women will devour you!0 comments
June 3rd, 2009
Grey Gardens (Portland Center Stage) | Jerry may like your corn, but I do not.0 comments
May 20th, 2009
Everyone Who Looks Like You | Hand2Mouth’s family life: Food, fights and farts.0 comments
May 13th, 2009
Rigoletto (Portland Opera) | Murder with a side of Hunchback.0 comments
May 13th, 2009
Three Sisters (Artists Rep) | Who shot Baron Nikolai Lvovich Tusenbach?0 comments
![]() PIANO MAN: Roberto Sierra. |
[July 16th, 2008]
Classical music is no longer the last bastion of white, upper-class Eurocentricity, and this week’s Chamber Music Northwest concerts prove it: The featured ensemble, Imani Winds, is composed of African- and Latino-American musicians, still a rarity in the classical world. But what really makes them special is the way they combine instrumental virtuosity with creative originality, eclectic vision and an audience-friendly approach that engages everyone from veteran classical music geeks to newbies to kids.
This Thursday and Friday the quintet, abetted by the Orion String Quartet, will play the world premiere of Imani flutist-composer Valerie Coleman’s nonet Aún Aquí (“Still Here”).
On Monday and Tuesday, Imani will play another world premiere by another musician who busts the classical stereotype: Roberto Sierra, an affable Puerto Rican and one of America’s most honored composers. Sierra’s works range from taut modernism to winsome lyrical works. Most incorporate folk elements drawn from his Caribbean heritage. Such assimilation, Sierra says, is no different from what Mozart, Bartók and Beethoven did with folk tunes. “Nowadays, we have the world at our fingertips so we can access many different sources,” Sierra says, but “that’s not what makes a piece good or interesting. It’s what you do with them.”
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That’s true of his new Concierto de Cámara, which gets its world premiere in Portland. “I am from Puerto Rico—that’s my milieu, my musical accent,” he says, laughing. “That’s who I am. In the last movement, for example, you will hear some rhythms and riffs that will sound evocative of salsa music,” Sierra says, but “these rhythms are transformed into my own modern language.”
It’s rare enough for a composer to enlist one virtuoso ensemble, much less a pair, so Sierra took full advantage of the potent Miami and Imani chops to write a movement featuring individual instrumental showcases as well as others displaying both the groups’ separate identities and their collaborative capacities.
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