Angle(s)

Sunday, December 13, 2015

Antonio Chaparreiro 13 questions


Photo Hernani Faustino

António Chaparreiro, guitarist and compositor from Almeirin, Portugal, now living in Lisbon.

Self-taught musician, he has developed a multifaceted musical activity, favoring free improvisation, in which the guitar appears as a generator of sounds, noises and sonic textures, and he has focused on listening idea compositions.It has a Degree in Musicology at the Faculty of Social and Human Sciences, University Nova of Lisbon. 

Concert with RANDOM GUITAR TRIO (Pedro Alçada, Emidio Buchinho, Antonio Chaparreiro) at Inestética, Vila Franca de Xira,

As a musician and composer, he has participated in several projects in the area of ​​New Improvised Music among which are: Lumpen Trio with Ernesto Rodrigues, Viola, Miguel Sá, Electrónica and Jorge Serigado, Baixo, A Parte Maldita with Abdul Moimême, Saxofone, Nuno Rebelo, Guitar and Hernâni Faustino, double bass, Monorquestra with Fala Marian, João Castro Pinto, Nuno Rebelo, Pete Bastian, Pedro Gonçalves, Rui Alves, Rui Viana, Sei Miguel; Variable Geometry Orchestra. During his activity as a musician he has played with Rui Cardoso, Jorge Palma, Ernesto Rodrigues, Nuno Rebelo, Emidio Buchinho, Carlos Zingaro, Carlos Santos, Miguel Sá, Jari Marjamäki, among others. 

with Nuno Rebelo na Cada da Cerca 2014

It has several works published in his own name and as a participant in collaborative discographic records. Master of Musical Arts - Music and Technology at Universidade Nova de Lisboa, Faculty of Social and Human Sciences.


 

What do you remember about your first approach to sound?

      A distortion pedal.
      Or, maybe, it was the Laverda.When I was a kid, there was this Italian superbike which had such a big, raucous, and so distinctive sound, that you could have been in your room and just by hearing its sound coming from the road near by, you would say, with a smile: “There goes a Laverda!”



Lumpen Trio: Abril-em-Maio, Lumpen music, cdrom (2002)

Which were the first and the last record you bought with your own money?

      I think the first record was a single by Bob Dylan -  “Hurricane”; the last one was a Led Zeppelin box set.



António Chaparreiro, Emídio Buchinho, Filipe Bonito: A Ordem dos Contrários, Author Ed., 4 cdroms (2003)


This is a 4 cds album on the concepts of “serie” and “multiplication”. Each musician recorded at home 45 solo improvisations within a particular time frame (from 9 seconds to 7.29 minutes) and in a particular order. These improvisations were then juxtaposed (collage) over three duos and a trio without editing or esthetic choices (the 1-0.09s together, the 2-0.09s together, etc.). The first cd uses the improvisations of Chaparreiro and Buchinho, the second, Chaparreiro and Bonito, the third, Buchinho and Bonito, and the fourth cd presents all three musicians.

This process of progression and addition implies the possibility of an infinite serie just by adding another and another musician, multipliyng its instantiations.
Consequently, it is not really an album of improvised music in that it lacks the discoursive elements of real time interaction and by introducing repetition  - when you hear a second duo, half of it is repetition and the other half is different. Also, it is not “composed” music, since as part of a serie, it is just a moment of that serie.


A PARTE MALDITA. Abdul Moimême: Saxofone Tenor, António Chaparreiro, Nuno Rebelo: Guitarras, Hernâni Faustino: Contrabaixo

Can you describe a sound experience that you believe contributed to your becoming a musician?


      The pleasure of listening to music... Eventually, it grew to the point I just had to participate in music making.



Lumpen Trio
Not an album but a multimedia performance on the concept of simultaneity of times. We recorded in audio and video a private concert, previous to the public one, and then we projected the video recording on ourselves, in the exact same places creating doubles of ourselves. The audio prerecorded would also be randomly used by Miguel during the concert, causing a discoursive interaction between the real time events and prerecorded ones, between the past and the present.


Visually, the past would always be present as a double, as a presence, aurelly, it would come as part of the real time event, as a double (two guitars, tow basses, two computers), but also as a structural element of creation in a real time dialogue. The past and the present at the same time.



What do you recall about your playing learning process?

      Firstly, I tried to imitate, but, finding that too difficult, I turned imitating into a virtual concept.



What's the relevance of technique in music, in your opinion?


      Technique turns playing effortless. It frees the musician’s mind.



How's your musical routine practice?


      Unfortunately, I don’t have much time for a playing routine practice nowadays, only a listening one, and mostly at work. But I play whenever I can, be it randomly improvisations or exercises I find on the Internet or in old music books.



Tell me one musical work that has provoked a change in your music.

      Possibly the last one I listened to; most everything stimulates me. So, I guess, there is no such thing as “my” music, only music I keep doing which is continually changing.



Opus Macaronicorum is the abridged title of Opus Merlini Cocaii Poetae Mantuani Macaronicorum, a collection of works written by Theophilo Folengo (1491-1544) and first published in 1521. His Phantasiae served as a model for Rabelais’ La vie de Gargantua et de Pantagruel).

What are the challenges and benefits of today's digital music scene?

      One of the benefits of today’s digital music scene is the availability of the technology: everybody can make music. The challenge will be (as it has always been, but in a much bigger scale) to get your music heard.



What is your relationship with other art disciplines?

      Besides the enjoyment of the aesthetic experience, these creative disciplines, along with philosophy, represent a vast repository of ideas and concepts to which I am permeated to and often use in my work.
     


What would you enjoy most in an artwork?

      It’s ability to reminds us the otherness that exists in us.



What is the most recent musical experience that has attracted your attention?

      The work of Alexander Schubert.



What projects are you working on now and what does the future hold?

      I’m currently reworking my musical archive in order to make it publicly available on the Internet. The future is growing and I hold their hands every day.



Tell me one impossible project do you like to realize?

      To have a musical career.



Selected Discography


Jorge Palma Quarto Minguante 
EMI, 1986


U Omãi Qe Dava Pulus
Aut. Ed., 1994


Lumpen Trio Abril-em-Maio 
Lumpen music, cdrom 2002


António Chaparreiro, Emídio Buchinho, Filipe Bonito 
A Ordem dos Contrários
Author Ed., 4 cdroms 2003


POTLATCH The Rrose Sélavy Show
[insub 19], 2007


Variable Geometry Orchestra Stills
Creative Sources     CS 100 cd     2007 


Ernesto Rodrigues, António Chaparreiro, José Oliveira - Sudden Music
Creative Sources     CS 002 cd     2001     
     
  
Ernesto Rodrigues, António Chaparreiro, José Oliveira - Paris ‎
Creative Sources     CS 250 CD     2014      
  

António Chaparreiro & alçada - Opus Macaronicorum
Creative Sources     CS 299 CD     2015        


IKB ensemble Anthropométrie sans titre
Creative Sources     CS 263 cd     2014  


IKB ensemble Rhinocerus
Creative Sources     CS 268 cd     2014  


Variable Geometry Orchestra Lulu auf dem Berg
Creative Sources     CS 325 cd     2015
  

Ernesto Rodrigues, Guilherme Rodrigues, Miguel Mira, 
Nuno Torres, Eduardo Chagas, António Chaparreiro, 
Rodrigo Pinheiro, Carlos Santos, José Oliveira 
Jadis La Pluie Était Bleue
Creative Sources     CS 300 CD     2015