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Rebeca Omordia: ‘Nigeria Could Be the Center of Classical Music in West Africa’

Nigeria’s rich history of classical music gets a convincing revival in “Ekele: Piano

Music African Composers”, the debut album by Rebeca Omordia, the London-

based pianist of Nigerian and Romanian descent. She is an alumnus of Trinity

College of Music and Royal Birmingham Conservatory (both in the UK) where she

has taught for the past ten years. Omordia has collaborated with a range of

celebrated international musicians that include Julian Lloyd Webber, double

bassist Leon Bosch, pianist Mark Bebbington, cellist Raphael Wallfisch and

Chineke orchestra, the first professional orchestra consisting of majority black

and ethnic minorities in Europe.

“Ekele” is a result of a five year research into the works of pioneering Nigerian

composers: Ayo Bankole, Fred Onovwerosuoke and Christian Onyeji most of which

were composed pre-independence in 1960 and in the years after, at a time when

the country was shaking off the shackles of British colonialism while defining its

own cultural identity.

“Rebeca is a fluent pianist. She’s classical trained in Eastern Europe and has a

certain technical facility and a flexibility, rhythmically wise” says DY Ngoy, the

Congolese executive producer with whom Omordia created “Africa Concert

Series”, a year-long recital by musicians of African descent at London’s October

Gallery: “what is fantastic about her CD [“Ekele”] is that she played the music of

African composers and made it relevant to our time”. Examples of monthlythemes for the African Concert Series include “String Quartets by African

Composers”, “African Art Music for Woodwind”, “Arabesque: Piano Music from the

Arab World” and “The South African Bass”.

“It’s a great project that Rebeca has started and i commend her” says Chi-Chi

Nwanoku OBE, the British-Nigerian double bassist who founded Chineke Orchestra

alongside whom Omordia often performs: “there’s something else about playing

music by someone that comes from the country of your father land. Sometimes

there’s a familial feeling that you aren’t even aware that you’ve got, until you’ve

discovered it.” In April, OkayAfrica sat down with Omordia in London to discuss

her album “Ekele”, her current role as the Artistic Director of African Concert

Series and the history of classical music in Nigeria and Africa. The following are

edited excerpts from the interview.

How do you find the state of classical music in Nigeria today?

They have a very vibrant scene. I think the problem in Nigeria is the funding, and

the financial resources that are allocated for that. And because musicians these

musicians cannot afford living just from playing in an orchestra, they have to

look for other means of work, including teaching, playing gigs, doing concerts for

churches and this I believe in my own opinion takes their focus from what could

be one of Africa’s best and biggest orchestra.

That’s a huge claim to make.

Well, I think if MUSON [Music Society of Nigeria] had the resources, if they had

the personnel to really, really look after how they are organizing the event,

Nigeria would be the center of classical music in at least West Africa if not inAfrica. They have everything, they have the hall, they have instruments, they

have pianos, they even have the audience which they have built over the years.

In South Africa, they already we have the Western influence. And they have

different financial resources for art there but we are talking about West Africa,

Nigeria and all the African countries that have music schools, classical music

schools and orchestra.

Do you see yourself being part of this new shakeup any other way than visiting

and just going there to play concerts?

I am supporting MUSON and I am very happy to go there and perform. The

audience is really receptive and they really welcome me. Also the musicians,

there are musicians I have been working with.

What is Nigerian Art Music?

Nigerian art music or African art music is a blend of Western classical music and

traditional rhythms and melodies. It was generated from Western classical music.

The father of Nigerian classical music, Fela Sowande (1905 – 1987) was an organ

player in a church where his father was a music director. He came to London to

study music and after doing that he became very known in London. He went back

to Nigeria to broadcast and to lecture and he used all the cult tunes, all the

traditional music in his compositions.

Today, a lot of the compositions by the pioneers of Nigerian Art Music are in

manuscript form and were never recorded. What are the reasons for this?The problem is not even just the recording, 95 percent of the music has never

been published. My research took such a long time to find the compositions. Some

of Ayo Bankole’s music was published but not all of them. So I had to get in touch

with his son, Ayo Bankole junior who’s a musician in Nigeria. Fred Onovwerosuoke

“24 Studies in African Music” is published under his own label, I would say, but

the rest of the music is not published. So then, of course it’s very difficult for

anybody, including, Africans to access it and then record it.

Because some of these composer’s work contain melodies or songs that

existed for ages before being notated into classical compositions, are they

mere translations and still regarded as original compositions?

Nobody has ever composed anything like that before. So I think they are original

composition. In that sense, for the Western world and also for the African world

this is something completely new. Because for the Western world, this music

might sound exerting because of the rhythm and because of the cues. Each piece,

or each composer they use melodies from the tribe they came from. Ayo Bankole

is Yoruba, so we see so many Yoruba songs there even Fela Sowande does that.

Christian Onyeji he’s in the Igbo song.

Can you give an example using any of the compositions on “Ekele”?

So for instance, Ayo Bankole’s piano sonata is completely original, even though he

is using the idiom of some Yoruba song. It’s not the actual Yoruba song. It’s not a

particular Yoruba song. Christian Onyeji’s “Ekele Diri Chineke” is an arrangement

of an already existing gospel Igbo song. So the tune itself is not his, it was from

the ’80s. It was sang by a gospel artiste and he arranged it in a Western classicalform. That’s why that song is called “arrangement”, his own arrangement. It’s not

his own composition.

Why is Ayo Bankole’s piano sonata the centerpiece of Ekele?

As a length and as a style and as a conception it’s the most solid work from a

Western classical point of view. Its construction is as a sonata which has a

Western classical structure and that already places Ayo Bankole as a classical

composer.

Is there anything else about technique perhaps that distinguishes the

compositions by African composers from that of others?

The rhythm has become a very strong element of the classical music but because

African rhythms, they are already so original, this changes the way you play a

classical piece because of the rhythm.

What is “African Pianism”?

Akin Euba totally invented African pianism which means he found the piano as a

Western instrument favorably for impressing certain elements of Nigerian

traditional music. So that’s why his pieces are very rhythm based, more than

melodic based. So then this will reflect on how the technique of writing the music

and also how the technique of playing the music and then the piano becomes

more of an instrument of percussion. It gets closer to the African or the Nigerian

traditional instrument. And can this be done with most of the other instruments

that are not traditional in Nigeria and Africa.

Tell me more about Akin EubaHe wrote things for cello and other instruments but he found the piano particular

close to expressing with other Nigerian instruments. It is known that piano is

quite a percussive instrument and it’s usually the job of the West in particular to

bring out the melodicity of the piano and to try to get over the percussive effect

but Akin Euba used it to his benefit. He was closer to expressing the traditional

Nigerian music that the African instrument would usually do.

Why was it important to include the shorter compositions – “Little Variations

For Ayo” and “Ya Orule” by Ayo Bankole?

They audience reaction works with that. They also have an important value

because his children Ayo junior and Femi his sister, they were raised to learn to

play the piano. So he wrote this for them so they will have what to play and

because both pieces they have their own element of Nigerian music, it would

have been easier for the children to practice that than to practice some very

Western traditional song that might be boring for them. They do stand next to the

biggest “miniature” work of the biggest Western composers.

What, to you, is special about Fred Onovwerosuoke’s “24 Studies in African

Rhythms”?

He is using same syllable staccato, percussor segment on the piano, which makes

it quite difficult for a pianist and for the hand to perform it and then he is using

the seven rhythms. Three plus four in a bar.

How will that go if you were to illustrate?

One, two, three, four, five, six, seven.Oh, it’s just that.

Yeah, but it will be. One, two, three, one, two, three, four, one, two, three, one,

two, three, four, one, two, three, one, two, three, four, one, two, three, one,

two, three, four. To play this is quite difficult and then he’s mixing them. This will

be the starting rhythm at the base for the whole study and on top of that, he is

bringing other rhythms too. Okay, this could be quite an accessible rhythm to play

for a jazz pianist, but for a classical pianist, where you don’t really find rhythms

like that so often, it can be challenging because you are used to a different

composition style.

And the difficulty is what makes it exceptional?

I think from a pianist point of view, his work is the most original of all the African

composers because he’s not trying to stick to the Western style. He is already a

classical composer through his education but because he traveled Africa, he

wrote down materials, music, songs from all these countries and all the tribes and

he used them in “24 studies in African rhythms”. That’s why he is not just a

composer he’s an abnormal musicologist as well. He used, in every study, a

completely different rhythm such as the music melodies in Ethiopia, in Ghana,

everywhere in Africa he traveled. So this is really, really exceptional.

Is it always clear what compositions are based on specific melodies from

specific countries? How do you distinguish one from the other?

You will notice even if you are not a musician, you will notice, from the rhythms

and the melodies, how different they are. There’s a piece, it’s a lullaby fromCongo, and it does seem like a lullaby, and it has all the elements of a lullaby but

then the tune itself, even if you have not listened to Congo music, you will know

that this is something Africa.

Bartok is a said to be a strong influence on Fred O’s approach to the piano.

Can you explain why?

It was easy for him to adopt Batok even though Batok was inspired by African

rhythm himself. Because they have a common element. Bato made musical

language his rhythm and he also was inspired by Africa. Because he traveled and

he was inspired by Northern Africa. That’s where he even got his rhythm. It was

easy for Fred to adopt Batok even though Batok was inspired by African rhythm

himself.

In an old interview you spoke briefly about one of your first tutors who, when

she passed, bequeathed her entire collection of CDs – over 400 – to you. Could

you tell me more about how formative the relationship was for you?

There were many people that had really influenced my growing up as an artiste.

That particular lady was so special because I grew up with her. We are talking

about a relationship that lasted over a decade. She was my first or second piano

teacher and I worked with her for six, seven years. And after I finished working

with her we stayed friends and I used to go and visit her on weekly basis and we

would discuss about music. And even though I had stopped working with her as a

pianist, then she took over raising me as an artiste and as a musician. We would

listen to recordings and analyze and even after I graduated from university, she

would be writing me letters. We will be discussing music and then I will visit herand even when I moved to the UK, every time I would come back she would know

that I had come back. The following day I must have lunch with her. Well the

lunch is not just talking about catching up. In the end, we will be listening to

recordings or something that she discovered because she was really with

everything that was new, with all the new pianists and she had the latest

recordings at that age.

You tell me why are these particular arrangements special to you? What about

them is special?

It’s the most difficult piece for cello and piano. For a pianist because it’s almost

like a piano concerto. Very difficult technique, both at the same time you are

playing with a cellist. So you have to have, how will I say “double attention” to

what you are playing towards music a partner will be doing. Actually, in every

musicians’ life because of their personality because of their intellectual ideas,

you will always find a particular composer you relate to and you might find.

Whatever your interest in music, it’s closer to how you see music and the world in

general and in the last period of his life. I think it’s a fantastic piece. It really

suits my personality, my temperament and my technique.

What is special about performing to a live audience?

Every concert is special because every concert is completely different. This is also

the excitement about it that there is no concert that is the same. And you never

know how it’s going to go.

Can you single out a memorable moment?

One of the most important solo concerts was, I think, the first time my father

came to my concert [Romania, late 1990s]. After the concert he told me that

tears came into his eyes when he was listening to a particular piece. And it

reminded him of where he was from in Delta State. I think it was Beethoven’s

sonata.

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