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Matt Haimovitz to Release PRIMAVERA I THE WIND

This new initiative asks composers to write in response to Sandro Botticelli’s enigmatic painting, Primavera.

By: Jun. 09, 2021
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Matt Haimovitz to Release PRIMAVERA I THE WIND  Image

On June 11, 2021, multi-Grammy nominated cellist Matt Haimovitz's next recording, PRIMAVERA I the wind, will be released on the PENTATONE Oxingale Series. The new digital album features the first fourteen of 81 new pieces written for Haimovitz, commissioned by THE PRIMAVERA PROJECT. This new initiative asks composers to write in response to Sandro Botticelli's enigmatic painting, Primavera, and the prophetic large-scale triptych, Primavera 2020, by contemporary artist Charline von Heyl. Haimovitz recorded the album in January 2021 at von Heyl's artist studio near downtown Marfa, Texas. More information about the project, composers, and pieces is available at THE PRIMAVERA PROJECT's online hub, www.theprimaveraproject.com.

The first two singles from the album are now available - Vijay Iyer's Equal night and Nkeiru Okoye's Euba's Dance. Watch the stunning music video for Equal night, filmed at the Texas ghost town Contrabando in Big Bend Ranch State Park earlier this year: http://bit.ly/WatchEqualnightVideo

Euba's Dance by Nkeiru Okoye is named after the Nigerian scholar, ethnomusicologist, and composer Dr. Akin Euba. Okoye says, "Dr. Euba famously coined the phrase, 'African pianism' to describe the inclination of many African composers to use the piano's percussive effects. I had been doing this for years before meeting Dr. Euba, using some of the same 'color chords' that are in this lively dance etude. Euba's Dance is dedicated to Matt, and my Oberlin sister Luna who introduced me to this project."

Of Equal night, Vijay Iyer writes, "Equal night is a direct translation of 'equinox,' the moment in the earth's orbit when night and day are of equal lengths. So this piece is about spring, but also about fall, which has an equinox of its own. The piece takes the form of a mini-suite, which I hear as a small collection of short stories, each segment finding its own balance of light and darkness, inner and outer, or high and low."

THE PRIMAVERA PROJECT is an exploration of music and art as sources of influence and inspiration for each other. During this time of global pandemic and social upheaval, both Primavera paintings' composition, characters, symbolism, nature and flora, darkness and light, mythology, identity, and spirituality are ripe for new interpretation - as reflected by the newly commissioned pieces on this first installment. The project's commissions began with nine composers, incorporating a variety of musical languages. Each composer then recommended colleagues to be considered as the next participating composers until a total of 81 composers were selected. All 81 resulting pieces will be recorded for commercial release, with Haimovitz making the next album in Marfa, Texas in late May. PRIMAVERA II will be released in fall 2021.

The distinct and diverse contemporary compositional voices on this album bridge the centuries, expanding and redefining the range and repertoire of the solo cello. Framed by Gabriella Smith's bare and Lisa Bielawa's Missa Primavera, Vijay Iyer, David Sanford, Nkeiru Okoye, Jorge Sosa, and others bring a multitude of influences from the world of Jazz and Latin music, to Vivaldi and Scriabin.

Matt Haimovitz will be performing music from THE PRIMAVERA PROJECT in six upcoming virtual and in-person concerts, including at Strathmore Music Center in North Bethesda, MD (June 10), Oregon Bach Festival (June 25, virtual), PS21 in Chatham, NY (July 5), Green Mountain Music Festival in Burlington, VT (July 16), Napa Valley Festival in Napa Valley, CA (July 20), and at his Bach Cello Suites Workshop (July 30, virtual). For details, see: www.theprimaveraproject.com/events.

About THE PRIMAVERA PROJECT:

THE PRIMAVERA PROJECT is co-directed by Matt Haimovitz and Dr. Jeffrianne Young. The seeds of the project were planted in spring 2019, when Haimovitz and Young visited the Hirshhorn Museum in Washington, D.C., and encountered the paintings of Charline von Heyl. They were immediately drawn to the multi-layered musicality of her paintings, and her whimsical imagination intertwined with literary and historical references. In summer 2019, they experienced a similar epiphany with Botticelli's Primavera on a visit to the Uffizi in Florence. That fall, Haimovitz and Young reached out to von Heyl, who expressed an appreciation of music and invited them to visit her studio in Marfa, Texas. In late December, the three met - their lively conversation centered around the enduring relevance of Botticelli's painting.

Haimovitz and Young asked von Heyl if she would ever consider reimagining the Botticelli painting for the 21st Century, and discussion about the idea of commissioning new cello works inspired by the artwork began. Less than two months later, days before the pandemic lockdown, von Heyl had completed her Primavera 2020.

"The world has been fractured and on the brink long before the pandemic decimated the performing arts," says Haimovitz. "The musical commissions of THE PRIMAVERA PROJECT celebrate our golden age of musical diversity and richness. Each new piece - like the blossoming flowers, figures, and symbols of Charline von Heyl's and Sandro Botticelli's Primaveras - has been a ray of light, offering us hope for renewal of the human spirit."

Young says, "I felt a sense of kinship from the very first conversation with Matt and Charline. There was a generosity of ideas between the three of us, how together we could bring to life a world of music engaging the old and new Primavera paintings. Haimovitz and von Heyl are incredibly curious about the world beyond their studios. During our initial conversation together, I observed firsthand how true artists and performers constantly notice and intentionally incorporate old and new cultural references and sources of inspiration in their work."

PRIMAVERA I the wind also includes:

The album opens with bare by Gabriella Smith, a moving chorale to environmental turmoil. Of the piece, Smith writes, "Bare is inspired by the seasons - not the archetypical seasons or the seasons I grew up with, but the new seasons of my home state of California: cycles of ever intensifying drought and fire - and the landscape that is left behind."

Of his piece Suolo, David Sanford writes, "The literal Italian translation of suolo is soil, and the piece is meant to capture the potency of the extraordinarily fertile earth beneath the feet of the mythological figures in Botticelli's painting, which has produced some five-hundred identifiable plant species and flowers and may be intrinsically connected with the characters Chloris and Flora as well (the second and third figures from the right)."

For The Crocus Palimpsest, composer David T. Little drew inspiration from a 1934 passage about spring by Samuel Beckett, in addition to the paintings by Botticelli and von Heyl: I have positively never watched it coming with so much impatience and so much relief. And I think of it as a victory over darkness, nightmares, swears, panic and madness, and of the crocuses and daffodils as the promise of a life at least bearable, once enjoyed but in a past so remote that all trace, even remembrance of it, had been almost lost. Little says, "From within the darkness of this year, I found it hard to imagine spring. . . Like a keystone to a masonry arch, Beckett's words helped bring my ideas into balance, and helped reveal the title. The Crocus Palimpsest then came quickly. I would compose it over the course of several days, as the old year became the new, and we took a step closer to an again-remembered spring."

Jorge Sosa writes of his piece Reimagined Spring, "I wanted to write a work that reflected on the promise of hope that comes with the change of seasons: a reflection on the thawing process, as we gradually come out of the bitter cold winter and awake into a new season of rebirth. . . I took as a point of departure the painting by Charline von Heyl, where she re-imagines the Primavera by Botticelli. She uses the same construction as the Botticelli but distorts the images to create a stunning new work. I wanted my piece to reflect on that process, so I decided to use Vivaldi's "Spring" from The Seasons as a point of departure. The result is a piece that is referential to Vivaldi, Botticelli, and Charline Von Heyl, and continues a dialogue of shared experiences and reflections on the passing of seasons, and their connection to the longer cycles of life."

inti figgis-vizueta's work the motion between three worlds draws inspiration from the transitional aspects of Spring, centering poetics of new growth, creation, and interconnectivity. She writes of the piece, "The score behaves as a cosmological map, providing visual frameworks for navigation and movement between sets of given harmonic and timbral materials. The directionality of visual objects, lines of connectivity, and cosmological imagery help inform trajectories of transformation. The player is asked to 'always be moving between.'"

Diaphanous Grace by Luna Pearl Woolf is inspired by the three dancing Graces pictured in the Primavera paintings. Woolf writes, "Together these women, swathed in Diaphanous Grace, are the promise of transformation and new creation. Through the flowing aura of their garments we sense the delicate buds of the unknown, the possibility of an awakening that remains just out of reach. In writing this, my fifth work for unaccompanied cello for Matt Haimovitz, I wanted to begin in that place of suspended, ever-changing transparency - however that may translate into sound - and never let it fall to earth."

Of his piece Chloris & Zephyrus, Roberto Sierra writes, "When my mind was focused on the task of writing a work for cello that, at some level, needed to relate to the Botticelli painting, my eyes went straight to Chloris and Zephyrus. The playful nature of their pose, the delicate nature of Chloris, who seems to be entranced while wanting to flee, and the otherworldly nature of Zephyrus became elements that I translated into musical expression."

Six Graces by Chloe Sizemore explores myriad ideas to sustain three-part polyphony with the solo cello in a sumptuous musical depiction of the six graces of Botticelli's and Charline von Heyl's Primaveras. Double-stop tremolos with accompanying pizzicato and ethereal natural harmonics with plucked open strings are two examples.

Tod Machover writes of Sorta Voce, "I was interested in exploring the different forms of breath - from sustaining to destructive - that seem to animate the two paintings by Botticelli and von Heyl, as well as to hint at the mystery and diversity that underlie what can appear at first to be purely celebratory and life-affirming images. In exposing both the power and the ambiguity of breath, Sorta Voce explores the will to persist, the longing for rebirth after tough times, and the acceptance of life's constant ebb-and-flow. "

Spring Forward by Jake Heggie celebrates the momentum of early spring. He writes, "My favorite time of year is the front edge of spring, when we wake from a groggy winter's sleep to notice buds appearing, blossoms and grasses pushing through insistently, magically, powerfully; slowly at first, then bursting forth everywhere. Best of all, we anticipate longer days and daylight savings time, when we set our clocks ahead an hour. This piece is a virtuoso Tarantella, constantly building, surprising and illuminating, faster and faster. To my great delight, Matt Haimovitz has lavishly embellished and personalized an already challenging score to add to the excitement of what will happen next."

Fluorescenza by Laura Elise Schwendinger draws inspiration from fluorescence, or the state or act of flowering. Schwendinger writes, "Starting with the Botticelli and following through the transformation of the materials that are significant in Charline von Heyl's work, my response starts with the cello playing the role of ancient lute player, sitting over a musical framework used during the late Renaissance and flowering fully in the Baroque period, used for songs, dances and sets of variations called the La Folia . . . the dual meaning of foglia (leaf), the reference to music of an earlier time that morphs into the world of the modern which references a more dramatic stance with large contrasts that grow out of, or "blossom" from, the original chord progression, still hidden in the substructure."

Missa Primavera by Lisa Bielawa brings another layer of influence in addition to the two paintings by Botticelli and von Heyl - Renaissance composer Josquin dez Pres's Missa Hercules Dux Ferrariae. Bielawa writes, "Both Botticelli and Josquin were able to create luminously beautiful works that also, within their construction, celebrated wildly complex networks of cryptic meanings that art historians and musicologists, respectively, have been decoding with glee ever since. Singing Josquin is like being inside a superbly illustrated fantasy novel, full of color and magic and symbolism. I leaned into the surplus signification and symbolism inherent in the project itself. Josquin, composing in Italy around the same time as Botticelli's heyday, created his cantus firmus (the core melody that underpins the structure of the composition) by matching the actual vowel sounds of the name of his benefactor (Hercules, the Duke of Ferrara) to the corresponding vowel sounds of the solfège syllables. I followed suit and generated my own cantus firmus, also gleaned from the name of the commissioner (and, coincidentally, with the painting): Mi (Pri-) Fa (ma-) Re (ve-) La (ra). With this underpinning in place, I was able to explore and reimagine many other features of Josquin's masterwork, as von Heyl has done with the Botticelli masterwork."







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