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Jerusalem Post – For the Love of Latin

For the Love of Latin
By Ori J. Lenkinski

MAESTRO MAGIC: ‘You can’t see the audience, but you can feel their attention,’ says classical conductor Gisele Ben-Dor. © Photo, Henry Fair

Uruguay-born Israeli conductor Gisele Ben-Dor speaks to the ‘Post’ on studying with Leonard Bernstein and being known as the champion of Latin American music.

The image of a classical conductor is that of a serious person, a person addressed with respect and silence, a leader and an expert. It is the conductor who unifies the orchestra, who finds the perfect balance among thousands of notes, who takes individual instruments and turns them into a harmonious whole.

“You can’t see the audience,” says Gisele Ben-Dor, “but you can feel their attention.”

Seated at a table in Café Noir, sipping Sprite and nibbling cake, conductor Ben-Dor speaks of her life at the helm of the orchestra pit. Her visit to Israel coincides with the 100th birthday of Argentinian composer Alberto Ginastera. This week, she will conduct the Israel Chamber Orchestra in Ginastera’s ballet La Estancia in its entirety, marking the first time this work has ever been performed in Israel. Two performances will be given at the Tel Aviv Museum of Art.

“We had to memorize parts of Jose Fernandez’s Martin Fierro when I was in school. Ginastera took some of these verses and put them in his music. The first time I heard Ginastera, I was so surprised to hear these lines in classical music, it felt like coming home,” says Ben- Dor with a smile.

“He wrote La Estancia in the first period of his creative life. It was his eighth opus, which is very early. It was during his nationalistic phase; he wasn’t trying to be universal. It is a period for most composers where it is very clear where they come from and what they have heard. And these pieces are often very audience friendly, very honest and attractive.”

Ben-Dor is blond with bright blue eyes. Her flawless, rich English is peppered with an accent.

English is her fourth language following Spanish, Italian and French, and preceding Hebrew and a few others. She is the mother of two boys and a player of many instruments. She goes by “maestro,” as the largely acceptable “maestra” bore too many childhood classroom associations. “‘Maestra’ is what we call a schoolteacher in elementary school. It didn’t feel right.”

“I was an obsessive kid,” she says, “I asked my parents to let me play the piano and I spent a lot of time with it.

I was very attracted to the range of the instrument. At 13, still in Uruguay, I started to conduct choirs. I really liked the polyphony of it. I played anything I could get my hands on.” Ben-Dor occasionally performs on the guitar but finds it nerve-wracking as compared to leading an orchestra.

In her last two years of high school, Ben-Dor was asked to choose a major.

“I was meant to be an accountant. Strangely, as part of some archaic system in Uruguay, as an accountant you had to study Italian and French. Those languages wouldn’t have helped me at all as an accountant but they were very handy as a musician. In any case, when the time came to enroll to university, I could not commit to accounting. I knew I wanted to conduct but I had no idea how to become a conductor.”

In 1973, Ben-Dor immigrated to Israel with her entire family.

“Everyone came. My parents and grandparents…

everyone. At that time, moving was not easy. My main activity was to learn how to live here,” she recalls.

Though the drive to music was still strong, Ben-Dor put her plans on hold to acclimate. Eventually, she attended an audition for a prestigious school in Berlin.

“It was a week-long audition with every exam imaginable.

In the end, I was accepted. I came back to Israel and turned down the offer. For three years after that I studied privately with teachers in Israel. And then I was offered to go to the United States. It felt right and it was a success. I was given a lot of opportunities and I used them.”

It was in the States that Ben-Dor came to know Leonard Bernstein.

“He was an educator,” she remembers. “He had this great passion for sharing music. I remember this one time, we were at a festival of Bavarian music and he was going to conduct that evening. He was meant to be resting. He called us students and he opened the score. He sat down at the piano and sang the entire thing from start to finish. They had to drag him away from the piano, throw a jacket on him and put him on stage.”

In the international community, Ben-Dor is known as the champion of Latin American music.

“It’s always obvious that a French conductor will play French composers and a Russian conductor will play Russian music. As a Latin American, how many composers do you have to choose from?” While there may not be as many big names as Western Europe boasts, Latin America has produced a wealth of classical music, much of which Ben-Dor has had a hand in purveying.

“I have to hustle,” she smiles. “When a festival calls me and asks to play Ginastera’s La Estancia, they ask for the suite. And I tell them, ‘You know, there’s a whole ballet.’ I want to make sure that the music gets heard.

That is always a challenge.”

To give a taste of the original, two local dancers will perform sections of the original ballet.

2020-05-29T11:35:13-04:00

Gisèle Ben-Dor Talks about Cien Años on Winnipeg’s CLASSIC107

Cien Años: Winnipeg’s CLASSIC107 celebrates the legacy and music of Astor Piazzolla with conductor Gisele Ben-Dor

“Cien Años” is not only an exquisitely expressive celebration marking the centennial of Piazzolla’s birth, the CD honors more than one man’s immeasurable musical contributions. For Uruguayan-born conductor Gisèle Ben-Dor, a fierce champion of Latin American composers, equally important as paying homage to the Argentine nuevo tango legend was capturing the uniquely mesmerizing performance of bandoneón player/arranger/composer Juanjo Mosalini on Piazzolla’s most ambitious work-the Aconcagua concerto-and showcasing an exciting new piece she commissioned from this extraordinary musician. Mosalini’s title composition, Cien Años, is in turn a heartfelt 100th birthday tribute to his own grandfather and the legacy of his family’s four generations of bandoneónists.

Winnipeg’s CLASSIC107 – Chris Wolf writes….2021 marked the 100th Anniversary of the great bandoneon virtuoso, composer and ambassador for Argentinian tango, Astor Piazzolla. What better way to mark this milestone, than with music by Piazzolla, and music inspired by him!

Gisele Ben-Dor is and American-Israeli conductor, who has travelled the world conducting and exposing audiences to the wonders of Latin American music. Born and raised in Uruguay, she has grown up with this music and has been championing its rhythms, its textures and its ability to truly transport the listener to the warmth of Latin America.

Ben-Dor has collaborated with the amazing Argentinian bandoneon virtuoso and composer Juanjo Mosalini, to create a recording that consists of both Mosalini’s new music for bandoneon and orchestra, and the music of Piazzolla.

Originally the album was meant to feature Mosalini’s music which is heavily influenced by the sounds of Piazzolla, but as Ben-Dor explains “at some point Mosalini said ‘I have this piece that I started to write for my grandfather called Cien Años’…and then the idea of the Piazzolla anniversary came to mind and that was it…we were really recording the music of Piazzolla, one way or the other.”

Ben-Dor and Mosalini recorded Cien Años with the Pro Arte Orchestra of Boston, which is an orchestra that consists of Boston’s best freelance musicians. Ben-Dor was Music Director of the orchestra for ten years, and continues to conduct frequently as Conductor Emeritus. She has conducted many works by Latin American composers with the orchestra, and the playing on the recording reflects the Orchestra’s ability to capture the magic of the Latin American feel and mood of the music.

Many of the orchestral arrangements have been done by Mosalini, and it is Mosalini who is front-and centre on the disc playing his bandoneon with a phenomenal virtuosity that would give Piazzolla a run for his money. Of particular interest, is Mosalini’s arrangement of Piazzolla’s “Four Seasons of Buenos Aires.” The four pieces were composed as individual pieces by Piazzolla and were never meant to be performed as a suite. Mosalini takes Piazzolla a step further and has puts the four pieces together as a suite, having the pieces flow seamlessly into the next.

For any lover of Latin American music and the tango, Cien Años is a must have recording! For all those who live in cooler climates, and want to feel the warmth of Latin America, give this disc a listen and you will be transported to the warm streets of Argentina.

2022-02-07T15:20:10-05:00

Carnegie Corporation Honors Conductor Gisèle Ben-Dor

Carnegie Corporation Honors Conductor Gisèle Ben-Dor

“Great Immigrant, Great American”

We are excited to share the news that the Carnegie Corporation of New York, one of the nation’s oldest grantmaking foundations, announced that it is honoring trailblazing conductor Gisèle Ben-Dor with their prestigious “Great Immigrant, Great American” Award, which celebrates the many ways in which immigrants enrich our culture, strengthen our democracy, and improve our society through their lives, their work, and their examples.

Gisèle Ben-Dor

Gisèle Ben-Dor
Conductor Emerita, Pro Arte Chamber Orchestra of Boston
BORN IN: Uruguay

Carnegie Corporation of New York Honors 34 Great Immigrants for Their Contributions to Our Democracy
Annual tribute from the philanthropic foundation established by Andrew Carnegie focuses on naturalized citizens who live their lives in service to society

New York, New York, June 30, 2021 — Carnegie Corporation of New York released its annual list of Great Immigrants today, honoring 34 individuals who have enriched and strengthened our society and our democracy through their contributions and actions. The philanthropic foundation invites Americans to celebrate these distinguished individuals by participating in its online public awareness campaign Great Immigrants, Great Americans, #GreatImmigrants.

The Class of 2021 represents more than 30 countries of origin and emphasizes service to society, including honorees who are recognized for helping others as medical providers and researchers; as advocates for the disadvantaged, disabled, and disenfranchised; and as changemakers in politics, voting rights, climate change, and teaching. Overall the honorees have a wide variety of backgrounds and careers, including the chairman and CEO of Pfizer; the head of Google’s interactive design; the creator of language-learning software Duolingo; winners of the Pulitzer, Nobel, Vilcek and Beard prizes; and celebrities such as actress Helen Mirren and comedian John Oliver.

2021-12-16T10:16:17-05:00

William Kreindler — Piazzolla Cien Años

The disc is obviously a labor of love. Mosalini is the perfect soloist, and Gisèle Ben-Dor’s leadership is unsurpassed, especially in the articulation of the emotional shading. The orchestra, especially the string soloists, play as if they were in Buenos Aires. Sound quality is also very fine, especially for a concert recording. Tango devotees will find this programme a worthy tribute to Piazzolla. Those interested in exploring the tango might as well start at the top, with this disc.

-William Kreindler

Piazzolla Cien AnosOne might not think of Boston as a center of the tango, but the Pro Arte Chamber Orchestra under Gisèle Ben-Dor, its former conductor and now Conductor Emerita, have programmed the dance. Astor Piazzolla created Nuevo Tango – meant for listening, not dancing – and is the best-known advocate of Tango music. Works on this disc, which commemorates his centenary, were either written for bandoneón and orchestra or arranged by Juanjo Mosalini, perhaps today’s foremost soloist on the instrument. This accordion with buttons rather than keys is a fixture of Argentinian popular music.

Between 1965 and 1970, Piazzolla wrote four pieces which describe Buenos Aires in different seasons of the year. Known together as Estaciones Porteñas, they are not a suite but Piazzolla’s quintet or octet would sometimes play them together. In 1996-1998, Russian composer Leonid Desyatnikov arranged them as a suite for violin and orchestra. Mosalini’s new arrangement for bandoneón and orchestra was made at Ben-Dor’s request. He also linked the movements and edited them into a sort of symphonic poem. Its elements range from a big-city motif, not unlike that in Vaughan Williams’s London Symphony, through the typical nostalgic Tango, to descriptions of the actual seasons. The work continues with depicting the busy streets of Buenos Aires before the final apotheosis of the city. I found this music evocative and truly affecting.

Mosalini wrote the tango Cien Años (100 years) in memory of his grandfather. This arrangement, also made at Ben-Dor’s request, is a centenary homage to Piazzolla. It starts with an introduction fiull of pathos, becomes more energetic, and ends in sadness – a fine tribute to both men. Tomá, Tocá (take it, play it) is very original, notably in its use of solo strings. Mosalini has also arranged Piazzolla’s well-known Libertango, written during one the master’s lengthy stays in Europe. Classical music and jazz both deeply influenced Piazzolla. This piece’s propulsiveness harks back to Baroque music.

Aconcagua is the highest mountain in the Americas. Piazzolla’s publisher bestowed the name on his 1979 Concerto for Bandoneón and Orchestra: he considered it the pinnacle of Piazzolla’s output. It is scored for strings, piano, harp, tympani and percussion. The vigorous first movement, almost a double concerto for bandoneón and piano, may bring Stravinsky to mind. The typical Tango nostalgia is ever-present, and is developed in classical fashion. All three movements are expertly scored. The second begins with a haunting cadenza for the soloist, joined by strings as the cadenza material is developed. The last movement echoes the first in excitement; hints of Stravinsky or perhaps Les Six are present again. After a heartfelt slower section, the movement becomes intense before ending abruptly.

The disc is obviously a labor of love. Mosalini is the perfect soloist, and Gisèle Ben-Dor’s leadership is unsurpassed, especially in the articulation of the emotional shading. The orchestra, especially the string soloists, play as if they were in Buenos Aires. Sound quality is also very fine, especially for a concert recording. Tango devotees will find this programme a worthy tribute to Piazzolla. Those interested in exploring the tango might as well start at the top, with this disc.

2022-04-07T18:30:36-04:00
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