SMAQRA

Since the beginning of time, musical instruments have undergone modifications that allow them to adapt to the expressive demands of their time. Some instruments such as those that form the modern string quartet (violin, viola and cello) have a history that dates back to the first monodic instruments such as the Rebecq of the troubadours. Among the most important modifications we will note the addition of the sound post to increase the low volume of the instruments and thus obtain a greater projection, the curvature of the bridge allowing only one string to be played at a time, the tension of the strings and the addition of the cello endpin to stabilize the instrument.

In the second part of the XX century is affirmed a new source of inspiration for composers and their quest for new means of expression: the electronic music. Thus writing parts for electronic sources mixed with instrumental sources, called mixed pieces is becoming increasingly important in the panorama of contemporary music. These pieces are created under different broadcast systems: stereo, quadraphonic, 5.1, 8.0, etc.

This new concert situation has definitely changed the viewing habits of listeners, and their attention was brought to focus on the dissemination of music through the speakers. In other words, the instrument is no longer the main source of projection. This has brought new opportunities in musical writing, especially regarding the physical space of sound and moving. However, we lost some notions of ontological. The performer is often cut off from the overall result of the play, even if a return system is proposed. The cause-effect relationship is often unknown of the performer, because of its isolation, behind the speaker line, we can say that often the result is approximate.

In the interest of developing my musical research for composition, and inspired by the explorations conducted by Adrian Mamou-Mani (Acoustics researcher) in «instruments augmentées», I was interested in the construction of « hybrid » instruments. These are classic instruments that have the ability to project electronic processing and sounds by themselves. This new, offers us the opportunity to re-forge the link between causality and dissemination of sound, replace the performer at the center of the management of the resulting sound and also allows to consider joint concerts in places not equipped with the possibility of wider dissemination.

Smaqra, like the « hybrid string quartet » is a hybrid word. With this piece I continue my exploration work on the different types of « distortion of the causal listening » and translate into music the notion of masking to create a sound illusion between the acoustic sound of instruments and treatments used internally their sound boxes.

Smaqra was commissioned by the Henri Pousseur Center, under the direction of Marie-Isablle Collard, the Center for Musical Creation Art Zoyd, under the direction of Monique Hourbette and the Tana string quartet. The two violins, the viola and the cello were hybridized thanks to the collaboration with the luthier Lucas Balay and the acoustic researcher Adrién Mamou-Mani. Its creation took place on January 15, 2015 at the Museum of Contemporary Art of Strasbourg by the Tana quartet.

Author: Juan Arroyo

Composer in residence at the Center Henri Pousseur (2014), IRCAM (2015), Cité Internationale des Arts (2015), Member of the Academy of France in Madrid – Casa de Velazquez (2016), at the Art Zoyd Music Creation Center (2017), member of the Académie de France in Rome – Villa Médicis (2017), Juan Arroyo is actually the guest composer of the National Orchestra of Peru, co-artistic director and conductor of the Regards ensemble, co-artistic director of the Sonomundo Festival, curator of the Experimenta festival at the Great National Theater of Peru, professor at the d’Argenteuil conservatory and member of the Artistic Council of the Casa de Velasquez. Juan Arroyo was born in Lima, Peru. He studied composition at the Conservatories of Lima, Bordeaux and at the National Conservatory of Music and Dance in Paris. He deepens his musical knowledge in formations like Voix Nouvelles and the IRCAM. He has been guided by eminent composers such as Allain Gaussin, Brian Ferneyhough, Heinz Holliger, Henri Pousseur, Jean-Yves Bosseur, Luis Naón, Mauricio Kagel, Michael Levinas, and Stefano Gervasoni. His music is rewarded with numerous awards such as the prize of the Salabert Foundation (2013), the prize of the Academy of Fine Arts of France (2015) and the Ibermusicas composition award (2022). He receives prestigious commissions from the French Ministry of Culture, Radio France, Centre Henri Pousseur, SACEM and Donaueschinguen Musiktage. His works are performed by eminent musicians such as Ensemble Intercontemporain, L’Itinéraire, Linea, LAPS, L’Arsenale, Proxima Centauri, Sonido Extremo, National Orchestra of Peru, Vertixe Sonora and Tana Quartet. His music is performed at great festivals such as Ars Musica, Présences, Cervantino, La Chaise-Dieu, Ensems and ¡Viva Villa! His compositional work revolves around sound hybridization. Indeed, in 2014, he began a fundamental stage of his artistic work with the construction of new instruments capable of transmuting their sound, the TanaInstruments. This allowed him to hybridize the perceptual cues of sounds in order to reveal the evocative and irrational nature of their substance, sometimes making them enigmatic.

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