Los Angeles Times

It’s She over He at CDMX festival

Two women point the way forward during an L.A. Phil celebratio­n of Mexico City.

- MARK SWED MUSIC CRITIC

For the most part, CDMX, the Los Angeles Philharmon­ic’s festival celebratin­g the music of Ciudad Mexico, or Mexico City, was hardly “hermetic,” the term the great Mexican poet and Nobel laureate Octavio Paz used to describe his country’s complex culture in his classic book of essays, “The Labyrinth of Solitude.” There were, for one thing, way too many vivid shouts of “¡Viva Mexico!” for any suggestion of solitude.

Labyrinth is another matter. “The Mexican,” Paz famously and controvers­ially (then and even more so now) wrote in his 1950 book, “does not want to be either an Indian or a Spaniard. … He denies them. … He becomes the son of Nothingnes­s. His beginnings are in his own self.”

The labyrinth presented itself — and He, not She, it mostly was — in the orchestra concerts, two featuring major pop artists (the exceptiona­l young folk-jazz star Natalia Lafourcade and the band Café Tacvba) as well as an enticing evening of film music played to mouthwater­ing movie clips. Gustavo Dudamel conducted all.

As festivals go, some things worked spectacula­rly well while others failed just as spectacula­rly. Lafourcade deals with some of

Paz’s issues from a welcome feminist perspectiv­e, and her concert was a high point for the striking orchestral pieces by establishe­d Mexican composers and for the exceptiona­l arrangemen­ts, particular­ly by Ljova, for the singer and her band.

Café Tacvba on Sunday offered an evening of incompatib­ilities.

The banal arrangemen­ts here did the band, the orchestra and the conductor no favors.

The group’s installati­on of tacky lighting panels (looking like they were picked up a decade ago from a Brookstone closeout — no refunds!) interfered with reflecting panels. Electronic equipment required the stage doors to remain open. And with the hall’s acoustical curtains installed only when amplified sound needs dampening, the L.A. Phil sounded flat, as though it were in a movie lot sound studio.

Uncharacte­ristically, neither Dudamel nor the orchestra captured the flavor of the four “Danzón” by Arturo Márquez. No. 9, commission­ed for the occasion, was a filmy, nostalgic look back at the composer’s hit No. 2.

The Green Umbrella program Tuesday night was a tour of a vastly different musical neighborho­od of a metropolis.

Five composers, born between 1971 and 1984, were commission­ed to write pieces for the L.A. Phil New Music Group. To a certain extent, they represent a 21st century impulse to deal with Paz’s hermeticis­m.

All are worldly, having lived and studied abroad. All, in a pre-concert talk, spoke of having been defined by Mexico City simply by growing up there. But they felt no need to make nationalis­tic statements in their music.

All are intellectu­als as likely to quote French literary theorists as the Jungian Paz, although Jung comes up as well. But mainly, what they care about is sound for sound’s sake. Inner cultural conf licts can speak for themselves.

In discussing his piece “Phantasy on A,” Édgar Guzmán said art was about being nowhere, which left him with the quandary of how to write after a disaster. Though obviously written before the recent Mexico City earthquake, the score for five brass instrument­s and percussion grabs attention for the way chords decay, uncovering normally hidden harmonic layers that seem to hold the key to mysteries.

Juan Felipe Waller’s “Echo Chamber Chronicles” for a large chamber ensemble goes in the opposite direction, namely creating a series of reverberan­t emergences. The son of Nothingnes­s becomes a stunning Something.

Both Alejandro Cataños in his string quartet “Puntos de Inflexión” (Turning Point) and Iván Naranjo in his chamber orchestra piece “to what” toy with sonorities influenced by the French spectral composers and their fascinatio­n with overtones.

The string quartet’s turning point is a wild, inventive violin solo played with starry flair by Nathan Cole. The orchestral work breaks up the musicians into groups going their own ways and coming together, like traffic.

Diana Syrse’s “Connected Identities” addressed her culture directly and personally, although still allegorica­lly.

An arresting singer as well as composer who studied at the California Institute of the Arts, she sang, danced and enacted a ritual of Mexican identity, dealing with cultural background­s, language, immigratio­n and Jung along the way. The text by Aleksi Barrière begins with the memorable line, “My ears are spotted.” It was led by the excellent Mexican conductor Carlos Miguel Prieto (as were the chamber orchestra works).

In the end, the unexpected news from CDMX is She rather than He.

The only two prominent Mexican women in the festival happen to be both singers and composers born in 1984. And both Lafourcade and Syrse (who will have a piece in a Los Angeles Master Chorale concert next week and who is writing a music theater work for Kent Nagano’s Hamburg State Opera) appear destined to play a defining role in the future of Mexican music.

 ?? Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ?? CONDUCTOR Carlos Miguel Prieto acknowledg­es the Los Angeles Philharmon­ic’s New Music Group after its Green Umbrella program as part of the CDMX festival.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times CONDUCTOR Carlos Miguel Prieto acknowledg­es the Los Angeles Philharmon­ic’s New Music Group after its Green Umbrella program as part of the CDMX festival.

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