Meredith Monk is known for employing extended vocal techniques. Photo by Hiroyuki Ito / Getty Images
Meredith Monk is known for employing extended vocal techniques. Photo by Hiroyuki Ito / Getty Images
Meredith Monk is known for employing extended vocal techniques. Photo by Hiroyuki Ito / Getty Images
Meredith Monk is known for employing extended vocal techniques. Photo by Hiroyuki Ito / Getty Images

Veteran composer Meredith Monk to celebrate anniversary with three shows at NYUAD


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Meredith Monk can remember well the day she read her own obituary.

Touring Japan in 1982, the American musician spotted the tribute in a national newspaper. It was written by experimental Japanese musician Ryuichi Sakamoto, one of Monk’s “super-favourite composers”. Jazz great Thelonious Monk had just died, and it seems the editors got confused.

“It was shocking,” says Monk who is now 73. “I never kept it. I guess I thought it was a bad omen – but in a way, I guess I wish I had.”

The story is both funny and tragic – but also serves to highlight the core pleasures, and perhaps barriers, in Monk’s music – no one knows quite how to categorise it. She recalls earlier in the same trip spotting her records in a rack alongside her namesake’s.

Monk is hardly a jazz artist, but even record shop nerds are at a loss where to file her work (when pushed, she begrudgingly concedes to the Contemporary Classical bracket, but prefers the term New Music).

For more than 50 years, she has been making art that transcends conventional definition, an interdisciplinary approach combining music and voice with choreographed movement and symbols. While the sonic aspect has been bottled on a string of album releases, most notably for ECM, a Meredith Monk performance is about more than music – it is a collage of image, object, light and sound.

In September last year, US president Barack Obama awarded Monk the National Medal of Arts in recognition of her five-decade career, which will be celebrated during an anniversary retrospective performed over three concerts at New York University Abu Dhabi next week. The show was conceived during an artistic residency at New York’s Carnegie Hall last year.

The centrepiece was a four-hour, all-star concert to show how far Monk’s influence has spread. Guests included Sonic Youth guitarist Lee Ranaldo, hip-hop DJ Spooky, and avant-garde composer John Zorn.

Monk’s later career has heralded a move into instrumental composition, but at the heart of her most distinctive work – from the early solo recordings to the experimental Vocal Ensemble she founded in 1978 and still leads today – is Monk’s own voice.

A beguiling freak-of-nature howl, it conjures primordial sounds as if from another planet. Monk is known for employing “extended vocal techniques” that push beyond traditional singing methods, making sounds not words, and heard once, her voice is unmistakable.

The way she tells it, Monk’s path was set the day, in the mid-1960s, when she realised “the voice could have the same flexibility and range of movement as a spine or a foot”.

Where, then, might Monk be if she had not been born with this three-octave weapon?

“That’s an amazing question,” says Monk. “Right from the beginning I realised that would be the anchor and core of the work emotionally. I can’t imagine doing anything without it.

“The voice has such a profound connection to the emotions for which we don’t have words – it’s a way of uncovering those fundamental human energies.”

When talking and writing about Monk’s music, listeners scrabble to unravel layers of influence, pointing to everything from medieval plainchant to 20th-century minimalism – something both compellingly visionary and innately ancient. Astute observers point to Monk’s background as a 1960s coffeehouse folksinger.

“I work from the inside-out,” says Monk.

“I think the honesty, directness and poignancy of folk music is something that I always loved and wanted to have in my work. Then the freedom of jazz and strength of classical music, and the visceral quality of rock n’ roll – all of those things are part of our musical heritage, our environment.”

The musician Monk is most often associated with, quite misleadingly, is Björk. The Icelandic iconoclast is a lifelong fan who covered Monk's Gotham Lullaby. After years of "postcard contact", the pair finally met in 2005 for a joint interview for America's National Public Radio. By the end, both women were in tears. Work began on a duet which might not "ever be done".

“I don’t feel like her work is so much like mine, but she has a spirit which is very related to mine,” says Monk.

“In a way, I feel like I’m mum, artistic mum – we have a very sweet friendship.”

Much of Monk’s music is “untranscribable” – she teaches collaborators with tapes and demonstrations – however, as Monk reaches the middle of her eighth decade, work is underway to notate select pieces.

The legacy is being preserved, even if it requires as many as five different notation systems, maps and charts to document a single piece.

“I felt that I wanted other people to have the joy of performing this work,” she says. “I hope people do, I really do. I’ve devoted my life to this, from the time I was 20 – I hope it will outlast me.”

• Meredith Monk & Vocal Ensemble perform at Black Box, The Arts Center, NYUAD, Saadiyat Island, on Sunday and Monday at 8pm, and on Tuesday at 10am. Register for free tickets from nyuad-artscenter.org

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The hardest dive in the UAE is the German U-boat 110m down off the Fujairah coast. 

As a child, he loved the documentaries of Jacques Cousteau

He also led a team that discovered the long-lost portion of the Ines oil tanker. 

If you are interested in diving, he runs the XR Hub Dive Centre in Fujairah

 

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Group H: Real Madrid, Al Hilal, Pachuca, Salzburg.

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Adam Yates (GBR) Mitchelton-Scott - 

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Mercer, the investment consulting arm of US services company Marsh & McLennan, expects its wealth division to at least double its assets under management (AUM) in the Middle East as wealth in the region continues to grow despite economic headwinds, a company official said.

Mercer Wealth, which globally has $160 billion in AUM, plans to boost its AUM in the region to $2-$3bn in the next 2-3 years from the present $1bn, said Yasir AbuShaban, a Dubai-based principal with Mercer Wealth.

Within the next two to three years, we are looking at reaching $2 to $3 billion as a conservative estimate and we do see an opportunity to do so,” said Mr AbuShaban.

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From its office in Dubai, Mercer also looks after Africa, India and Turkey, where they also see opportunity for growth.

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Some clients also have a higher appetite for risk, given the low interest-rate environment that does not provide enough yield for some institutional investors. These clients are keen to invest in illiquid assets, such as private equity and infrastructure.

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“In this environment, we have seen a de facto increase in the risk that clients are taking in things like illiquid investments, private equity investments, infrastructure and private debt, those kind of investments were higher illiquidity results in incrementally higher returns.”

The Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, one of the largest sovereign wealth funds, said in its 2016 report that has gradually increased its exposure in direct private equity and private credit transactions, mainly in Asian markets and especially in China and India. The authority’s private equity department focused on structured equities owing to “their defensive characteristics.”

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British aristocrat Lord Carnarvon, who funded the expedition to find the Tutankhamun tomb, died in a Cairo hotel four months after the crypt was opened.
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