Little Music Jorge
Macchi and Edgardo Rudnitzky.
Installation and performance at Biennial Prospect 1 New Orleans, 2008.
Little Music, a collaboration between Jorge Macchi and Edgardo
Rudnitzky, was produced in the occasion of the Biennial Prospect
1 New Orleans. The piece is located near the City Park, in the Bayou
Saint John, a channel that used to connect Mississipi river with
Pontchatrian lake. Together the artists have created five paddle
boats that the public can ride, drawing from the tradition of paddle
boats in City Park before Hurricane Katrina. While they acknowledge
that “the tragedy of Katrina is an obvious and unavoidable
background to the event,” their inspiration began with “the
importance of music in New Orleans and the strong relation between
African and American culture in this part of United States.”
Each one of the boats has the six paddle wheel associated to a giant
kalimba installed on the back of the seat. The paddles have teeth
that activate the metal keys of the instrument like in a musical
box. In this way the people produce music when pedaling. The sounds
coming from the boats mix at random but harmonically, due to the
use of a pentatonic scale
The kalimba is an instrument in the percussion family. It is a modernized
version of the African mbira. It is a sound box with metal keys
attached to the top to give the different notes. It is also known
as the African Thumb Piano. Several reeds or tines are plucked with
the thumb or fingers, and the reed vibrations are amplified by a
hollow box resonator or a sounding board. The name kalimba is a
Bantu word which means ‘little music’. |