7:00 pm ET

Americas Society
680 Park Avenue
New York

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Heloísa Fernandes Quartet

Heloísa Fernandes Quartet. (Image: Paulo Rapoport)

Heloísa Fernandes Quartet

The Brazilian pianist and composer returns to our stage after a decade with her quartet. 

7:00 pm ET

Americas Society
680 Park Avenue
New York

Share

Overview

On February 4, we will host this concert in person. Tickets are free. Registration for Americas Society members is open now via the AS/COA Portal. Contact membership@as-coa.org with any questions. Registration for the general public will open on January 6.

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The music of Brazilian pianist and composer Heloísa Fernandes is the sound of a woman free to study literature, poetry, nature, classical music, jazz, and Brazilian music, to let them shape her identity, and to let her identity flow into compositions. Strong and original, ancient and modern, her sublime creations blossom with rhythmic vitality and melodic delicacy. With her skill as an improviser, she searches the music's emotional depths and soars with joy. “Fernandes is beyond categorization,” wrote the Post and Courier of her U.S. debut. “She is herself, and I’ll always be interested in any music she cares to explore.”

Her Quartet is Heloísa Fernandes (piano), Toninho Carrasqueira (flute), Sidiel Vieira (bass), and Ari Colares (percussion).

About the Artist

Brazilian pianist and composer Heloísa Fernandes was born in the city of Presidente Prudente, São Paulo, and took up the piano at age four. She went on to study with Paulo Gori and Gilberto Tinetti, with whom she cultivated her taste for classical music, and graduated in piano performance from the Conservatório Dramático e Musical de São Paulo. She also studied conducting at the Centro de Estudos Musicais Tom Jobim and composition at the University of São Paulo. Her strong and original repertoire of compositions and arrangements reflect her interests in literature, poetry, nature, classical, jazz, and Brazilian music. 

In 2001, she was a finalist in Brazil's leading musical competition, the Prêmio Visa de Música Brasileira, recognition that brought her to national attention. She released her debut recording, Fruto, in 2005 on Brazil's Maritaca label with a repertoire combining her own compositions with her arrangements of works by Pixinguinha and Caetano Veloso. Her musical collaborators included some of Brazil's finest musicians—percussionist Naná Vasconcelos, bassist Zeca Assumpcão, and musical director Gil Jardim. In 2008, she made her international debut to critical acclaim at Spoleto Festival USA in Charleston, South Carolina. 

For the next phase of her composing work, Fernandes organized the project Melodias do Brasil – Identidade e Transformação. Over the course of twelve months, she studied the research of Mário de Andrade and his colleagues who had documented Brazilian folkloric melodies in the years 1936 to 1938. They transcribed melodies from all parts of the country and published 570 of them in Melodias Registradas por Meios Não-Mecânicos in 1946, the first edited material about folklore in Brazil. 

De Andrade believed that Brazilian composers could find the soul of Brazil in the melodies of its people, and that these melodies could be inspiration to create new works. His collection included candomblé, maracatú, cateretê, samba, toada, and more. Fernandes chose a group of these melodies to be the spirits of new compositions. Their transformation into new works surprised people because they are not typical of the way Brazilian folklore is handled by today's musicians. Rather than emulating their strong colors, pulse, and rhythms, Fernandes created a delicate and introspective world. Arranged, performed, and recorded with her colleagues Zeca Assumpção (double bass) and Ari Colares (percussion), this collection was released in 2009 as the album Candeias, and was presented by the trio on stages in Brazil and in Braga, Portugal, where the trio made its European debut. 

Her next recording was born out of an encounter with an extraordinary piano—a Fazioli on the stage of PianoForte Studios in Chicago where she performed in 2014. “What happened to us in that room was transformative,” studio owner Thomas Zoells said, “No one had ever coaxed such sounds out of our Fazioli piano nor had such a poetic and affecting voice.” He offered her the opportunity to record a new album on the instrument. Her plan to do so in 2015 was nearly cancelled as she became ill enough to require hospitalization. She recovered but was left with little time to prepare for the scheduled dates. Her recording engineer, André Magalhães, urged her to press on with the plan and, persuaded by his reasoning, she plunged into the composing process but with a changed perspective. Her brush with death had taught her to value every new day, to embrace all that each moment may offer. Unaware of its influence, this perspective drove her musical thinking. She wanted the album to have the edge and risk-taking of an improvised concert, to be thoroughly in the moment. She built themes, each named for an emotion, and developed ideas about what she might do with them in performance. Looking back at the finished album, entitled Faces and released in 2016, she saw that the act of making it completed what her life's events had provoked. “I lived a process of transformation, deep in pain and joy. Creating the album was the last part of this transformative journey.” 

Inspiration for her most recent album, Inzu (2019), came from the biographical novel The Barefoot Woman by Scholastique Mukasonga. Of Kinyarwanda origin, the word inzu means ancestral dwelling, a traditional type of dwelling in Rwanda. In the author's account, inzu safeguards the motherly and feminine spirit that gives strength to her mother, Stefania, to face the condition of exile that devastated the family during ethnic conflicts in the country. In the center of the dwelling it was necessary to keep the fire burning, never extinguished. “In the inzu,” reads the text, “Mother said it is not the eyes that guide us, but the heart.” Fernandes composed three new works for the album – "Inzu," "Urugori," and "Stefania" – recorded in duo with saxophonist Mané Silveira. 

The Orquestra Sinfônica da Universidade de São Paulo commissioned Fernandes to write arrangements for orchestra and piano of four of her compositions which she premiered with the Orchestra in 2019. Filmmaker José Alberto Cotta commissioned her to compose and perform solo piano music for Exile – The Poesis of Imre Kertész, a documentary about the Hungarian writer and Nobel Prize laureate released in 2020. 

In 2020 she received a commission unlike any other. The advertising agency Almap BBDO of São Paulo wanted to create a project to honor International Women’s Day. A book about letters exchanged between Maria Anna Mozart and her younger brother, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, gave rise to an idea. These letters as well as 90 pages of Maria Anna’s diary reveal that she was a musical talent of her brother’s caliber and that the two of them concertized in Europe together. Because of the customs of her time, at the age of 16 Maria Anna ceased to tour with Wolfgang due to her obligation to find a husband and get married, though she continued to compose. Among Wolfgang’s comments in the letters was his admiration for her compositions, the scores of which, unfortunately, have not survived. 

Project Ms. Mozart set out to imagine what one of those compositions might have sounded like. Based on the idea that a person’s speech is intimately related to the way one expresses himself or herself in composing music, her letters were read aloud and then translated into musical pitches by computer software. The motifs that resulted were given to Fernandes, who was commissioned to create a work from them in the style of the period and to perform on piano a composition that might have been written by Maria Anna Mozart. “What was really interesting to me," said Fernandes, “was that process of identification as a woman. Living today, almost 300 years after her, the space for women is so limited. There’s so much less than there could be. Just imagine her life: all that talent and being unable to live it to the utmost. Women know perfectly well what that’s like. So that was the first thing. And the second thing was feeling that this project is so generous because it honors women, it values them, and it’s bringing back someone who was lost in time and space.” The project won London’s 2021 D&AD award in the category of Original Composition in Sound Design & Use of Music. 

In her performance work as a solo recitalist, Fernandes has created a new duo with Brazilian flutist Toninho Carrasqueira. The range of their repertoire stretches from the traditional to the contemporary. She has also expanded her trio into a quartet with the addition of Carrasqueira and is composing new works for it in which tradition and modernity flow together to stimulate spontaneous creation.

Funders

The MetLife Foundation Music of the Americas concert series is made possible by the generous support of Presenting Sponsor MetLife Foundation. 

The 2024-2025 series is also supported, in part, by the Howard Gilman Foundation, Augustine Foundation, Fan Fox and Leslie R. Samuels Foundation, New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council, New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature, Mex-Am Cultural Foundation, Alice M. Ditson Fund of Columbia University, and Mid Atlantic Arts.