Queer COVID Quarantine Commission
This Project started with a summer studying at the Music Academy Remote Learning Institute (usually the Music Academy of the West) during the COVID-19 pandemic. I received a small grant from the Music Academy to fulfill a personal project, and I decided to contact composers J Diaz, inti figgis-vizueta, and Yaz Lancaster after finding and falling in love with their music. I asked each of them to write me a short piece for solo flute. I had two goals in the making of this project: 1) Amplify queer voices in the classical music world, and 2) Fill the flute repertoire, even if just a little, with works by queer composers. I can definitely say that this project has been incredibly fulfilling—both in the collaborative aspects of working with these unbelievably imaginative composers, and in the results of their beautiful works for flute. Each piece delves into a different aspect of the flute, and they are all very unique pieces that I am proud to welcome into the flute repertoire.
floater by Yaz Lancaster
fréimhe (root) by inti figgis-vizueta
three distant moods by J Diaz
Purchase the album here: https://devanjaquez.bandcamp.com/album/queer-covid-quarantine-commission-project
floater by Yaz Lancaster
Small and impermanent stars, spots & squiggles
Yaz Lancaster (they/them) is an interdisciplinary artist interested in practices aligned with relational aesthetics and the everyday, fragments and collage, and anti-oppression. They perform as a violinist, steel pannist, and vocalist in a wide variety of settings from DIY to orchestras, and they present work in many different mediums and collaborative projects. They’ve had the opportunity to work with friends/artists like Anne Leilehua Lanzilotti, Apply Triangle, JACK Quartet, Hypercube, and Skiffle Steel Orchestra. Yaz holds degrees in violin performance and poetry from New York University. They love chess, horror movies, and bubble tea. http://yaz-lancaster.com
fréimhe (root) by inti figgis-vizueta
inti figgis-vizueta (b. 1993) is a New York-based composer whose music focuses on combinations of various notational schemata, disparate and overlaid sonic plans, and collaborative unlearning of dominant vernaculars. She often writes magically real musics through the lens of personal identities, braiding a childhood of overlapping immigrant communities and Black-founded Freedom schools—in Chocolate City (DC)--with direct Andean & Irish heritage and a deep connection to the land. Her music has been praised by The Washington Post as “haunting” and “raw, scraping yet soaring”, The New York Times as “alternatively smooth & serrated”, and The National Sawdust Log as "all turbulence" and “quietly focused”. inti is the recipient of the 2020 ASCAP Foundation Fred Ho Award.
inti has been commissioned by JACK Quartet, Crash Ensemble, National Sawdust, Music from Copland House, The Phillips Collection, Jennifer Koh’s Arco Collaborative, and cellists Matt Haimovitz, Amanda Gookin, and Andrew Yee, among many others. Her music has been performed at the Kennedy Center, Walt Disney Concert Hall, the Ecstatic Music Festival, Spoleto Festival, Seattle Symphony’s Contemporary Music Marathon, and the New Latin Wave Festival. She has collaborated with artists such as Attacca Quartet, Spektral Quartet, Wild Up, Alarm Will Sound, Face the Music, and clarinetist Gleb Kanasevich as well as been featured by organizations such as the American Composer’s Orchestra, Kaleidoscope Chamber Orchestra, Montpelier Chamber Orchestra, the Institute for New Music, and Mizzou New Music.
Her advocacy on access and education includes work with Luna Lab, Boulanger Initiative, New Music Gathering, and the International Contemporary Ensemble as well as articles for publications like American Composer’s Forum and Sound American. She curates for Score Follower, an online archive championing universal access to contemporary musics, with a focus on finding and featuring QTBIPOC artists. She gives regular lectures on her music, most recently at the Manhattan School of Music, UC Boulder, and American University.
inti maintains a private teaching studio alongside a sought-after commission schedule, and invitations for masterclasses & composition workshops. She teaches through the lens of queerness, indigenous forms of transmission, and connecting diaspora to musicmaking through expanded & non-linear notational systems. inti studied privately with Marcos Balter, George Lewis, Donnacha Dennehy, and Felipe Lara.
inti loves reading poetry, particularly Danez Smith and Joy Harjo. inti honors her Quechua bisabuela, who was the only woman butcher on the whole plaza central and used to fight men with a machete.
three distant moods by J Diaz
I. cold sounds from a playground'
II. still there
III. light reflecting off of fish scales or watching a dumb moth fly
“three distant moods for flute solo were inspired by moments during the pandemic. The repeating textures of the third movement, with its dumb name, capture a bit of how a medication made me feel in March of 2020. Both the first and second movements are about loneliness and distance explored through faint whistle tones, tongue slaps, and quarter tones—or rather how the flute sound evolves through these extended techniques.”
J Diaz is a Sound Artist currently based in Philadelphia. He designs sound for a variety of mediums—including theatre, dance, and the concert stage. He was the runner-up for the Anderson & Roe piano duo’s New Music New Video composition competition in 2018. J holds an MFA from the Vermont College of Fine Arts and an MA with distinction from The University of Sheffield.