KC Studio
Harlem Quartet Comes to Carlsen Center as Ensemble-in-Residence for Heartland Chamber Music Festival
by Libby Hanssen
July 2, 2019
The Group’s July 31 “Cross Pollination” Concert Will Draw from Diverse Cultures, Exploring Ragtime, Afro-Cuban Rhythms and Classical Music
The Harlem Quartet debuted in 2006, named to honor the Harlem
Renaissance of 100 years ago. The ensemble was founded by the Sphinx
Organization, which uses classical music to further social justice. It
has traveled the world promoting diversity in classical music and
engaged young audiences by presenting both traditional string quartet
repertoire and a variety of styles by underrepresented composers.
This July, the Harlem Quartet returns to the Kansas City area as
ensemble-in-residence for the Heartland Chamber Music Festival at
Johnson County Community College’s Carlsen Center.
“Our main goal is to inspire the kids by helping them identify with
the music and the performers, to see people that look like them,” said
Ilmar Gavilán, violinist and founding member of Harlem Quartet. The
quartet includes fellow violinist and founding member Melissa White, as
well as Jaime Amador on viola and Felix Umansky on cello.
Harlem Quartet has come to Kansas a few times, including a 2017
residency with the Heartland festival, which has previously invited the
Miami String Quartet and the Parker Quartet.
“Having a professional string quartet every summer to work with our
local and national students is so critical to their development,” said
Victoria Olson, one of the festival’s founders and co-artistic
directors.
Harlem Quartet’s concert is called “Cross Pollination.” It explores
influences from various cultures in the string quartet and brings
together these diverse worlds.
Willliam Bolcom’s “Three Rags for String Quartet” began life as a
work for piano, exploring the ragtime style, while Claude Debussy’s
“String Quartet” in G minor incorporates the persistent rhythms of
Indonesian gamelan. Debussy’s writing style influenced the jazz
musicians of New Orleans, and those musicians, in turn, shared ideas
with musicians in Cuba, where Gavilán grew up in a prominent musical
family.
Originally from Havana, Gavilán studied classical violin but also
learned styles like jazz and salsa that he heard on the radio and in the
street, at social clubs and carnival. “The music is all around you,” he
laughed, “so you pick up a couple of things.”
They’ll also perform a work by Gavilán’s father — composer and
conductor Guido López-Gavilán. His “Cuarteto en Guanguancó” uses
Afro-Cuban rhythms and textures. The program concludes with Johannes
Brahms “String Quartet No. 3, Op. 67,” a pleasant, playful work that has
youthful charm, ideal for a primarily young audience.
The concert is a classic example of the sort of eclectic viewpoint
the group brings to the genre. Harlem Quartet has worked with masters of
many idioms, including Chick Corea and Gary Burton. The quartet was
featured on the Grammy Award-winning tune “Mozart Goes Dancing” from
Corea and Burton’s album “Hot House.”
An inspiring opportunity for students
But their stay in Kansas is more than just an inspirational performance.
During their two-day residency, they also coach the Heartland
participants, working with students from middle school through
pre-professional level players.
“We work it out that every single student gets to work with them in
their group, so it’s really hands-on for the 80 students in the
festival,” said Olson.
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