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LP
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ID 005LP
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$28.00
PREORDER
RELEASE DATE: 1/10/2025
Dance and drama began for Paulo Alvarado in 1992 when Sabrina Castillo, Bettina Barckhausen, Joam Solo, Xavier Pacheco, and Alfredo Porras invited him to create the music for their choreographic and theatrical productions as an ethereal actor who is not seen but heard; a sound that is not merely an occasion to "musicalize" the stage production; music that does not merely adorn or incidentally accompany the movement and text, but that acts. This is how he soon had the opportunity to work on the stage production of Sophocles' Oedipus Rex (Edipo Rey), the first of several plays for which Alvarado composed music at the request of Luis Tuchán one of the revered theatrical directors from Guatemala. Later, as an example of another area of action, and at the request of Dennis Leder one of Guatemala's leading artists from the past three decades and Ana Asturias who had worked with the Guatemalan Dance Company, he created the music for a dance-installation called, fittingly, Lederana mixing both words from their name. Around that time, he also began composing and presenting music for productions by Guatemalan authors, such as the drama by Rubén Nájera, Sacra Conversación, directed by Joam Solo. These pieces, contained on Side A of the album, represent only a very brief sample of an era immersed in theatre and other performative projects where more than forty theatrical and choreographic pieces were created in a span of three decades, and consist of his valuable contribution to the soundtrack of dramatic theater and contemporary dance in Guatemala. Separately, the title piece of this album, "Antigua," found on Side B, was designed for the exhibition of engravings, lithographs, and digital prints by Roberto Godoy, Antigua Estampa de la Vida Mía. It gathers musical extemporizations for the dance we invented at the moment of inaugurating the photographic exhibition by Rocío Villanueva, Los Mutantes de los Apegos; the fifth movement of String Quartet No. 5 (version for six cellos); Exiliados en Tierra Propia; and Las 56 (from the film Después del Fuego), dedicated to the young women wounded and killed on March 8, 2018, in a so-called "safe home" in Guatemala City. This LP unites many of Paulo's most experimental works and serve as a small tribute to his life, trajectory and to all those who, without reservation, dedicated and invested resources in his music catalogued by himself as one of the main ways to celebrate human life: art.
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2LP
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ID 002LP
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Guatemalan label Identidata present Sacratávica, the very first collected survey of Joaquín Orellana's compositions. With a career spanning over 50 years of activity across contemporary art, performance, theater, and sound art, Orellana is a highly singular figure in Guatamalan culture. Most of his music was created using an orchestra of his self-built instruments, also known as Útiles Sonoros. Sitting at the border of sculpture, sound installation and musical instrument, these Útiles Sonoros, which he's been building and developing since the late '60s, are at the center of his artistic activity. Aside the obvious formal aspect, his compositions also have a strong political message, while being deeply rooted in Guatemalan history, folklore, and various identities, both indigenous and modern. Playful opener "Híbrido a presión" was one of the first of his compositions to be performed entirely using the Útiles Sonoros. "Ramajes"(1984), initially titled "Evocación profunda y ramajes de una marimba" , tracks the many incarnations of the marimba across history, before reaching its final form as one of Orellana's instruments by combining vibrational percussion with melody and poetry fragments. The title track, "Sacratávica", represents one of the most ambitious and emotionally charged pieces from the album. An expansive 22-minute composition mixing textures that mimics field recordings and multi-layered vocal melodies culminating in choral catharsis, "Sacratávica" deals in baroque maximalism without ever feeling cluttered. Dubbed "Las voces del Rio Negro", the piece references the massacres that took place in Coban during a period where the army massacred numerous towns, throwing the bodies in the nearby Rio Negro (the Black River). Final track, "Fantoidea", a glistening, metallic ambient improvisation, was a reimagining of Disney's Fantasia using Paul Dukas's "The Sorcerer's Apprentice" as inspiration. Despite his work being presented in numerous exhibitions and concerts in various prestigious museums and theaters across the world, very few quality recordings exist to date. The only previously available recordings so far or either of very poor quality or did not receive enough attention. For the people behind Identidata, it has been a long and arduous process to put together these pieces. Trying to offer a panoramic view of Orellana's work, the curators have selected pieces ranging from different decades and artistic periods. Sacratávica is a portrait of a singular artist whose work speaks not only to his culture, but carries strong aesthetic sensibilities that resonate universally.
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