Anna Maria Mendieta & Tango Del Cielo

Performing Artist And Touring Concert-Show Los Angeles and San Francisco, CA United States

About Anna Maria Mendieta & Tango Del Cielo

Harpist Anna Maria Mendieta performs Classical to Tango as a soloist, with orchestras, and with her touring ensembles including: "Tango Del Cielo" (Tango From Heaven) - A multimedia concert! ...

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TANGO DEL CIELO "Tango Surprises From The Sky" Publication: Suislaw News, Florence, Oregon By Burney Garelick The music was sweet and sad, bowed, plucked, and percussed with refined elegance. Nothing like the sound tango evokes - no sultry, smoldering chords, twisting long limbs in manipulative moves of menace. If Tango del Cielo's music was pretty, tango dancer Count Glover's countenance smoldered with enough dark intensity to shake the continent of South America, spilling tsunami waves in all directions. Flamenco dancer Fanny Ara was equally chilling, clicking castanets and stomping the stage giving rise to the phoenix. Count and Fanny attempted to dance with each other but were both put off and exited at opposite sides, two titans of terror unwilling to engage each other. Count plucked harpist Anna Maria Mendieta from her instrument and put her through intricate twists and turns, after which he dropped her at her harp and fled the stage. Sometimes he danced by himself, pleased at last to find a perfect partner. Anna Maria, however, knew what to expect and expertly dodged bullets that would send anyone else to a chiropractor. Anna Maria is genetically coded for tango; her great aunt danced in Rudolph Valentino's silent movie classics. Tango del Cielo, an ensemble from California and Seattle, performed April 13 at the Florence Events Center, the penultimate concert in the Seacoast Entertainment Association 2011-12 season series. The four musicians celebrated traditional tango and flamenco using classical instrumentation violin, cello, and harp and extraordinary percussion, all arranged with complementary precision. Much of the program of Latin music was drawn from the work of Astor Piazzolla. Readily recognizable pieces included "Jalousie," "Granada," and "Malagueña." Dancers accompanied some of the pieces. "Danse Espagnole from La Vida Breve" by Manuel de Falla and transcribed for violin by Fritz Kreisler was a literally moving duet between flamenco dancer Fanny and violinist Thomas Yee. Thomas is an excellent violinist, and his fiddle, previously owned by the great Isaac Stern, has a sublime tone, even when it is tasked to imitate crickets. The innovative group provided other surprises, including video clips on a large screen of Valentino films and colorful artwork to accompany the music. At the start of the second set, the group performed its own silent film against an elaborate stage set. The Count sat at a cafe table drinking wine and feverishly writing a music score. Percussionist Antonio Gomez was a put-upon waiter. Anna Maria arrived to discover the composer's score and played it on her harp. She showed the score to cellist Joseph Hebert who turned it right side up or upside down and played it on his instrument. Thomas appeared wearing a black fedora and toting his cased instrument like a gangster's weapon. 'Twas truly a tango film noir! Drum solos in any genre are always exciting, but Antonio's "Madera y Cuero" was mesmerizing. He had no traditional drum kit; he sat on a box drum and combined bongos, cymbals, shakers, rattles, a rainstick, and all manner of percussive implements. The string instruments joined in with exotic sounds, enveloping the listener in a tropical landscape by painter Henri Rousseau arranged by John Cage. Tango del Cielo delivered an innovative and surprising performance of tango and flamenco music. Rain isn't the only thing that falls from the sky!

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