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Caballito Negro + Friends @ Livewire 14 Festival, Baltimore MD

Caballito Negro joins Baltimore’s Lisa Cella and Dustin Donahue for a quartet performance of Birds, Bees, Electric Fish by Juri Seo., a world’s first double duo for flute and percussion, alongside other innovative music by Emma O’HalloranJane RiglerWill RoweStuart Saunders Smith. It’s the East Coast premiere of Birds, Bees, Electric Fish.

The complete program:
Jane Rigler — Two Seaming
Emma O’Halloran — music for the small hours
Stuart Saunders Smith — No. 13
Will Rowe — Itch
Juri Seo — Birds, Bees, Electric Fish — East Coast Premiere

Admission is free, but tickets are required. Please visit here to reserve seats.

This concert is the fifth of six events in Livewire 14: Resounding. To view the complete schedule, please visit here.

Linehan Concert Hall is easy to visit, with plenty of free parking. Please visit here for directions and parking information.

Livewire is sponsored in part by the Center for Innovation, Research, and Creativity in the Arts (CIRCA). This event is made possible with financial support from the Linehan Fund for Excellence in the Arts.

Caballito Negro is the lead commissioner for this new work recently completed by Princeton composer Juri Seo for flute/percussion quartet. The 28-minute, three-movement work is the first of its kind created for double flute/percussion duos, and is inspired by Umwelt, the German word for environment used in biology to denote the perceptual world as experienced by a specific organism.

In Juri’s words: “While our perception is limited to our own Umwelt, delineated by the limits of human perceptual capacity, we can imagine other animals’ Umwelten by studying their physiology and behaviors. The attempt at this impossible task of exiting the self-centered perception is a deeply human endeavor that may help recontextualize our relationship with other organisms and with the living world. To compose the work, I began by selecting three organisms I found particularly interesting: birds, bees, and electric fish. How do birds hear their own songs? What goes on in the mind of a bee in a colony? And what does it feel like to be a fish feeling its three-dimensional surrounding via an electrical sensa/on on its skin?

The audience is encouraged to mentally map their surroundings replete with diverse vibrating objects. The translations of senses become more abstract as the piece unfolds; from birds to bees and to electric fish, various senses—auditory, visual, kinetic, and tactile—are alluded to through sounds only. Ironically, my attempt to enter the minds of other beings necessitated a heightened sense of humanity, as I strove to imagine their diverse non-human senses through a lens of familiarity and empathy. It involved hearing birds slower, imbuing them with lyricism; imagining the serene and joyful minds of bees; and experiencing a sense of touch and sight through the act of listening.”