Cuatro Puntos plays ‘music for peace’

WINSTED — The chamber music ensemble Cuatro Puntos played a program featuring “music for peace” at the Winsted Community Bookstore on Saturday, Feb. 25. 

According to the group’s website at www.cuatropuntos.org, the group’s name means “four points” in Spanish.

During the Feb. 25 concert, the group played music by Johannes Brahms and folk songs from Afghanistan.

The group, which has played concerts throughout the world, includes Winsted residents Steve Larson and his wife, Annie Trépanier.

“The mission of the group is to try to build bridges between different cultures and to bring people from all over the world together through art and music,” Larson said in an interview before the concert. “We want to cross different cultural boundaries. Music does that in a number of different ways. Any kind of music from any culture, if you listen to it with an open mind, anybody can appreciate it. You don’t necessarily have to be from that culture to enjoy music and learn something from it. Through various projects you can also bring artists together from all over the world from different cultures, not just cultures in our own region but all over the world who can collaborate together on projects.” 

“One of our main projects was presenting last year’s concert series, ‘From Damascus to Kabul,’” group member Alan Ballinger said. “The series included music from composers in Syria, Iraq, Iran and Afghanistan. It also included commissioned work based on themes of Afghan music written for a string sextet.”

Group member Kevin Bishop has spent the past year in Afghanistan working with the Afghan National Institute of Music.

At the concert on Feb. 25, Bishop spoke about his experiences in Afghanistan. 

“Over the years we have done collaborations with the institute,” Bishop said. “Last year we recorded an album with our ensemble and an orchestra at the National Institute of Music, which I now direct. We played with an all girls ensemble based out of the country. The mission was to get their voices heard internationally, because Afghanistan is one of the worst places in the world to be a woman. Women are facing a lot of setbacks and a lot of cultural bias against them.”

Bishop said that music was banned in Afghanistan until 2001.

“Music is still widely opposed in the country,” he said. “It has many friends as it has enemies in the country. It’s an example of how music can bridge cultural boundaries and bring people together.”

“Our concert today we’re going to be discussing the relationship between the media and music,” Ballinger said. “We’re going to talk about Brahms, who was vilified quite viciously at many points in his life because of his music. There was a ‘War of Romantics’ between Brahms, Franz Liszt and Richard Wagner. The further that you dig into this you will find overtones of fake news, overtones of intolerance, that resonate with what we are experiencing in America today.”

Adding to the program, Bishop spoke and played a selection of cultural songs from Afghanistan and spoke about how the media covers the country and what, he said, are things the media gets wrong about it. 

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