Reza Vali
Reza Vali currently is a professor at the University of Pittsburgh
in the US.
An interview published in Persian-language daily "Shargh"
in Tehran (9/5/2004). The interview also is online in Iran Flamenco:
www.iranflamenco.com/news/archive/n4123.htm
I R A N N E W S D A I L Y (T E H R A N)
By Pejman Akbarzadeh
Vali was born in 1952, and began his music studies at Tehran Conservatory
of Music. In 1972 he went to Austria and studied music education and
composition at the Academy of Music in Vienna. After graduating, he
moved to the United States and continued his studies at the University
of Pittsburgh, where he completed his doctorate in music theory and
composition in 1985. Vali's compositions include pieces for large orchestra
as well as chamber music. He has been a faculty member of the School
of Music at Carnegie Mellon University since 1988, and has received
numerous honors and commissions, including the prize of the Austrian
Ministry of Arts and Sciences, two Andrew W. Mellon Fellowships, commissions
from the Boston Modern Orchestra Project, the Pittsburgh New Music Ensemble,
Kronos Quartet, the Seattle Chamber Players, the Arizona Friends of
Chamber Music, and the Northeast Pennsylvania Philharmonic, as well
as grants from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts and the Pittsburgh
Board of Public Education.
In December 1991 he was selected by the Pittsburgh Cultural Trust as
the Outstanding Emerging Artist for which he received the Creative Achievement
Award. Vali's compositions have been performed in the United States,
Europe, South America, Mexico, Hong Kong, and Australia and have been
recorded on the New Albion, MMC, Ambassador, and ABC Classics labels.
In his new CD there are three works entitled "Concerto For Flute
and Orchestra", "Folk Songs" (Set No.10) and "Deylaman".
Vali says: "My Concerto for Flute and Orchestra was commissioned
by the Boston Modern Orchestra Project and was first performed in Boston
on 13th February 1998 by Alberto Almarza, solo flute, and the Boston
Modern Orchestra Project conducted by Gil Rose. The two movements of
the work have as their main influences both Persian [Iranian] classical
and folk-music. The first movement is scored for flute, strings, percussion,
and harp. The flautist uses a technique involving simultaneous playing
and singing which brings out the overtones and alters the timbre of
the instrument. This technique is used to imitate the sound of the Persian
bamboo flute (the ney). The very fast second movement uses rhythmic
cycles which represent cycles called dowr in medieval Persian music.
The second movement is based more on Persian folk-music and has a great
deal of dance character.
In 1978, Vali started writing a series of compositions based on Persian
folk-music. These works consist of sets of folk-songs (each set containing
four to eight songs) written for voice and orchestra, voice and piano,
or instrumental ensembles without voice. Folk Songs (Set No. 10), completed
in September 1992, is the tenth set of this ongoing cycle. It was commissioned
by the Pittsburgh New Music Ensemble and supported by a grant from the
Pennsylvania Council on the Arts. Vali gives more details: "The
piece consists of four songs, two of which (songs No. 2 and No. 4) are
based on authentic Persian folk-melodies. Songs No. 1 and No. 3 are
composed in the style of a folk-song (imaginary folk-song). The third
song (Lament) is a funeral dirge composed in memory of Olivier Messiaen.
Folk Songs (Set No. 10) is dedicated to my wife, Nan, with love and
appreciation for her support of my music..." The third piece "Deylaman"
(pronounced day-lah-Mohn) is the name of a region in northwestern Persia
(Iran) as well as the name of a mode which originates from this region.
According to Vali: "The musical syntax of Deylaman is strongly
influenced by the Persian modal system (Dastgah). The composition begins
with an allusion to the Persian mode of Homayoon followed by the mode
of Dashti. Successive superimpositions of the tetrachords of these two
modes result in a special type of Persian polyphony. In the second section,
the music leaves Persian territory and moves into the world. Short quotations
from the music of Europe (Beethoven, Bruckner, Mahler, Wagner), Africa
(African folk-song), and Latin America (Peruvian folk-song) are interwoven,
all intersecting on the intervals of the perfect fifth and the perfect
fourth which I believe are the intervals most fundamental to all humans.
In the third section, the two Persian modes are heard in reverse order.
This time the mode Dashti is followed by the mode Homayoon, and the
piece mirrors the way it began.
Two Persian instruments, the ney and the barbat (oud), are added to
the Western symphony orchestra in Deylaman. In this recording, the sound
of the ney is produced by a Western flute employing the extended technique
of simultaneous singing and playing (this technique is further developed
in the Concerto for Flute and Orchestra)..." Deylaman was completed
in 1995 and is dedicated to Gil Rose and the Boston Modern Orchestra
Project.