Paul Bowles @ 100 - Santa Cruz News

Paul Bowles and Irene Herrmann in Tangier in 1991. (Phillip Ramey)

If you were a creative artist—composer, writer, dramatist,
musician—during the middle of the 20th century, you knew the work of
Paul Bowles. If you were an international insider, you probably
vacationed at his Moroccan lodgings. His arc of influence left no art
form and no intriguing personality untouched, and sooner or later the
gifted and celebrated found their way to his Tangier hideaway. Known to
mainstream audiences as the author of The Sheltering Sky and renowned
among art world cognoscenti as an innovative composer, Bowles led a
charmed and utterly independent life on three continents. To celebrate
100th anniversary of his birth, UCSC will host performers, filmmakers
and scholars to celebrate “all things Bowles” this weekend, Feb. 4-6.
All lectures, readings, exhibitions and performances are free and open
to the public.

An expatriate for most of his long life, Paul Bowles was an influential
icon of life sculpted against the grain of mainstream values and codes.
Ever the free spirit, Paul Bowles’ life defined glamor. A member of
Gertrude Stein’s Paris salon between the wars, the petite fair-haired
Bowles had been a music critic in New York, studied composition with
Aaron Copland and made his first visit to Tangier—all before he was 21
years old. During the 1930s and 40s he became close friends with other
American intellectuals such as Orson Welles and Tennessee Williams,
continued writing experimental music under the mentorship of Virgil
Thomson, wrote dance music for Merce Cunningham that was conducted by
Leonard Bernstein and translated a play by Jean-Paul Sartre that was
directed by John Huston on the New York stage. Yes, a charmed life
indeed.

Moroccan Mystique
After a bohemian marriage to writer Jane Bowles, Paul Bowles moved
permanently to Tangier and wrote the work for which he is best known,
The Sheltering Sky, an existential study of three Americans and the
psychological erosion of their lives during a journey across the
scorching Algerian desert. Even as his literary fame grew, Bowles
continued to compose music for theater—often as vibrant, jazz-influenced
and playful as his writing was darkly pessimistic. And for half a
century he played host to an expanding company of artistic and gay
expatriates who flocked to Tangier, including Truman Capote, Gore Vidal,
Allen Ginsburg and William S. Burroughs. Bowles seemed to know everyone
interesting, from Jean Cocteau and Benjamin Britten to Werner Herzog and
Paul Theroux.
Inspired by the rich and exotic culture of Morocco, Bowles began to
explore the indigenous musical traditions, traveling the countryside
recording music and stories performed by native creators. Jane Bowles
died in the early 1970s, and Paul lived on in Morocco, giving his final
interview, in 1999, to Santa Cruz musician Irene Herrmann, who became
the executor of his musical estate upon his death later that year.

Treasure Hunt
Thanks to Herrmann, many of the songs, concerti and works for piano
created by Bowles will be performed this weekend at UCSC as part of a
three-day festival to honor his centennial. Brian Staufenbiel and
Patrice McGinnis will perform West Coast premieres of rare songs; the
Eloise Pickard Smith Gallery will exhibit memorabilia, letters,
photographs and scores; and Cowell College will host filmmakers, poets,
historians and literary scholars who will offer their insights and
analyses of Bowles’ contribution to international creativity.

“It started as a treasure hunt,” Herrmann says of her quest for Bowles
and his music. “Any American music student knows Aaron Copland and
Virgil Thomson, and over the years of my own study the name ‘Paul
Bowles’ kept popping up.” Virgil Thomson, for whom Bowles wrote music
criticism at the New York Herald Tribune, said of Bowles’ work as a
composer: “Paul Bowles’s songs are enchanting for their sweetness of
mood, their lightness of texture, for in general their way of being
wholly alive and right. . . . The texts fit their tunes like a peach in
its skin.”

“It was hard to find his music,” Herrmann recalls, “and that made it all
the more tantalizing.” In 1990 Herrmann tracked down a few of Bowles’
more well-known piano pieces. Her interest was now kindled, but the
trail grew cold, fast. “The music was either out of print or had never
been published,” she says.

Sifting through some of his writings, his music and old photos at an
archive at the University of Texas, Herrmann “started to get to know his
music and the people who knew him.” It was sheer luck, she admits, when
she contacted Phillip Ramey, who had lived in the same apartment
building as Bowles for half of each year. “He was the gatekeeper to gain
access to Paul. He recognized that I was serious, and he too saw that
Paul considered himself primarily a musician and that needed to be
exposed to the wider world.”

A Friendship Born
An accomplished accompanist, music teacher and ensemble performer on
piano, cello and mandolin, Herrmann knew she absolutely had to meet the
man himself. And in 1991 she went to Morocco, not knowing exactly where
the trail would lead. “But I came bearing him musical gifts,” she says:
Bowles’ own “lost” compositions. The recollection brings a smile to her
face. “I played his own music for him—music he had never heard
performed.” After a three-week stay, their friendship had begun. She
liked the man himself—“very much,” she admits. “He was incredibly alert,
soft-spoken, almost epigrammatic, but always spot-on in his comments and
insights. Politics, literature, poetry, language—he knew so much.”

The man she met had fallen in love with Morocco. “He liked the life, the
music. There was a very sophisticated group of seasonal residents.”
Tangier was famous for its exotic architecture and cultural life, its
brilliant colors and heightened sunlight, all of which attracted Matisse
as well as Yves Saint Laurent. It was also famous for its laissez-faire
society. American and European gay celebrities found acceptance, respite
and each other in the heart of this Euro-Arab crossroads.

Herrmann aimed toward the centennial of Bowles’ birth to bring his
little-known world out of the musical closet. “It was the perfect time.
He was still in the cultural memory and I thought, ‘This really is the
one chance to honor him,’” Herrmann says. “His writings are still
current, and because I am his music executor I wanted to bring together
all these people who knew him in all his various guises.”
At this weekend’s UCSC event, audiences will be able to hear Bowles’
music and meet the ethnomusicologists who will re-edit his collections.
They’ll also be able to hear recitals of his music and see the long-lost
film You Are Not I made from a Bowles short story in 1983, which will be
brought from New York by independent filmmaker Sara Driver.

In addition to a screening of this rare, 48-minute black and white
cinematic treatment of Bowles’ literary work, Herrmann is excited about
three hour-long concerts that will include West Coast premieres of
Bowles’ eclectic and graceful compositions. Six Piano Preludes (to be
performed by Herrmann and Michael McGushin) offer Bowles as a
quintessential American modernist, sparkling with jazz syncopation,
expressionistic flights of fancy and atonal poetry. Friday, Ensemble
Paralelle, led by Nicole Paiement, performs some of his rarest works.
Part Gershwin, part folkloric, with inflections a la Satie, Bowles’
music bristles with vivacity in style, sound and tempo. Bowles was a
restless composer of songs set to a broad swath of texts, from Lorca and
Tennessee Williams to Gertrude Stein and Jean Cocteau.

A crowning achievement of Herrmann’s tri-continental efforts over the
past several years is the large archives of Bowles’ music now housed in
UCSC’s Special Collections. “Theater music, interviews, so much,” she
enthuses, “and now it’s available to everyone to come and study right
here in Santa Cruz.”

Pulling together this multi-media Paul Bowles event has been a labor of
love for Irene Herrmann. But she confesses she’s glad it’s almost over.
“Let’s just say I’ll be thrilled when he turns 101!”

THE PAUL BOWLES CENTENNIAL runs Friday-Sunday, Feb. 4-6 at UCSC with
films, lectures, concerts and exhibitions. All events are free. For
schedule visit http://bowles.ihr.ucsc.edu.

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http://news.santacruz.com/2011/02/02/paul_bowles_100
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