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Tambuco is a percussion-ensemble work for six players, written by the Mexican composer Carlos Chávez in 1964. The score is dedicated to Clare Boothe Luce, and a performance of it lasts approximately thirteen minutes.

Tambuco
by Carlos Chávez
Portrait of Carlos Chávez by Carl van Vechten (1937)
Composed1964 (1964)
Published1967
Movements1
Premiere
Date11 October 1965
LocationLeo S. Bing Theater at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art
ConductorWilliam Kraft
PerformersLos Angeles Percussion Ensemble

History


Los Angeles County Museum of Art in 1965
Los Angeles County Museum of Art in 1965

The impulse to compose Tambuco came about in an unusual way. In 1950, Clare Boothe Luce had commissioned Chávez's Third Symphony, completed in 1954. Their unlikely friendship continued for nearly three decades and, after Luce began working in mosaics in 1963, they agreed to exchange commissions for works from each other. For Chávez, Luce created a 4' x 5' mosaic titled Golden Tiger, which he hung in his Lomas de Chapultepec studio in Mexico City. In return, he created Tambuco.[1][2]

The premiere took place on 11 October 1965 in the Leo S. Bing Theater at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, performed by the Los Angeles Percussion Ensemble conducted by William Kraft.[3] Both Chávez and Luce were in the audience.[1]


Instrumentation


Each of the six performers plays a battery of at least six different instruments. Pitched percussion is found in each of the players' groups, which also each include wood, metal, and membrane instruments.[4] The total array is:


Analysis


Instead of the conventional procedures of thematic repetition and development, Tambuco unfolds in what the composer describes as "a constant process of consequent evolution. That is to say, an initial idea serves as an 'antecedent' to a 'consequent', which in turn immediately becomes an antecedent to a new consequent, and so on until the end of the piece".[5] Chávez elsewhere characterizes such a procedure as being "like a spiral".[6]

The work falls into three main sections, each characterized by the predominance of certain instruments:

  1. Rasps, rattles, and blocks (b. 1–158)
  2. Definite-pitched instruments (glockenspiel, celesta, vibraphone, chimes, and marimba, b. 159–207), ending with a xylophone transition passage (b. 208–15)
  3. Timpani, bongos, conga, and bass drums (b. 216–283).

This main structure is followed by a coda (beginning in b. 284) in which the definite-pitched instruments gradually re-enter, leading to an abrupt ending.[7]


References



Footnotes


  1. Parker 1984, p. 63.
  2. A photograph of the mosaic is reproduced in Parker 1984, p. 62.
  3. Anon. 1965; Peterman 1986.
  4. Peterman 1986, pp. 36–7.
  5. Chávez 1967, p. 1.
  6. Chávez 1961, p. 84.
  7. Hall 2008, p. 59.

Further reading





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