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Improvisation in Europe: references
In Europe, versified improvisation also had its golden age,
namely in countries such as Yugoslavia, Albania, Wales, Corsica, the Canary
Islands, the Island of Ibiza, Andalusia, Galicia, etc...
Pilar Pons and Miquel Ametller
improvisers - MINORQUE
(Arg. XDZ - Alberto Elosegi)

Pilar Pons and Miquel Ametller
(MINORQUE - BALEARIC ISLANDS)
(Bilbao - 2003 - Intercultural meetings about oral improvisation
in the world - Xenpelar Dokumentazio Zentroa)
Windows Media Player
Real Media Player
We should also remember that more than 2000 years ago, versified
improvisation was probably quite widespread amongst the Greeks since for his
third pastoral poem, the Latin poet Virgil drew inspiration from their
verbal jousting.
Not very long ago in Wales, sometimes two competitors would sing, either
accompanied or unaccompanied by harps, stances called "Pennilion". The first
improvised verses and sung them, the second used the same tune and replied
with something funny or satirical..
Armando Rodrigues "Marinho" improviser -
PORTUGAL
(Arg. XDZ - Alberto Elosegi)

Closer to home there are also forms of improvisation in
Brittany and
Corsica.
Recent map of oral improvisation
Southern Europe
Source : Argo
Sardinia
Central and Southern Italy
Bosnia
Iberian Peninsula
Source : Argo
Galice
Basque Country
Catalonia
Northern Portugal
La Alpujarra
Murcia
Balearic Islands
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The guides
You will be accompanied throughout this site by improvisers. During your
visit: click on their photos to discover what they have to say.
Xalbador
"Sung mass was also held during the week, and I used to sing to accompany
the priest. I took great pleasure in doing this because at that time I
enjoyed singing.
I found it easy to learn church hymns, although I didn’t understand what
I was singing because everything was in Latin. Later on, I became interested
in Basque songs.
I learnt some of them from my shepherd friends, but mostly from copies
collected here or there. Most of them were given to me by my aunt Mariana.
This is how I learnt many Basque songs.
Sometimes I even hummed away to tunes amongst my sheep. They also seemed
to appreciate my singing.
Behind the songs, writers … Then I began to think that someone was behind
these magnificent songs and I even learnt that they were called
improvisers.
I found this astonishing and difficult to believe because I didn’t think
that I had such a talent.
I was fascinated by the thought of these mysterious characters"
Amets Arzallus
"When I was a child, I didn’t have a model, except for my father. Later
on, at the age of 13 or 14, I began to realise that I had a preference for a
certain type of versification, and I began to know what direction I wanted
to take.
Since then, whenever I’m asked who’s my favourite improviser I answer:
Jose Agirre. My father felt very close to him, because they both came from
the same background. We, on the other hand, were born in towns and for us
Jose Agirre is the opposite of our own experience: he was brought up in a
farming environment, in the countryside, he began to work at a very early
age …
He had other references, and you can see that in the way he improvises.
To my mind, he’s a model because his language was rich and full of
colourful expressions, and because he represents a world which is the
opposite of our own"
Sustrai Colina
"When I was small, I wanted to be a pelota player. I hardly realised that
it was even possible to become an improviser.
Afterwards, you begin to think that you could be a improviser, you try to
understand the talent of others, and you have a certain admiration for them.
Then your turn comes when you are standing alongside those who you admired,
and they even become your friends. We saw all of this.
This was the case with Joxe Agirre, who’s 75 years old and still an
improviser. You discover who they really are and you admire them even more.
When you go to a village with this figure, this symbol, you’re surprised to
see how humble they are, and that they’re always ready to help you.
It’s an incredible chance to be able to meet such figures. This is also
the case of Andoni Egaña, three times champion, an unrivalled theoretician,
an enlightened and innovative improviser and a forerunner, but who, when
he’s sat at a table with you, is just one amongst you.
There are great lessons to be learnt from these meetings"
Miren Artetxe
‘"Last year the international improvisation festival took place. There
were Mexicans, Argentineans, Cubans, Catalans and Georgians. They were all
struck by our lack of expression.
We don’t move our body, we don’t modulate our voice, we don’t use any
means of expression. We certainly have a lot of work to do in that field.
But, just as when you lose one sense you compensate it with another, just
like the blind hear better than us, in improvisation it’s the words which
are important, they’re what convey the message.
Content has always been the priority and we’ve achieved a high level of
quality in that respect, but perhaps the time has come to take a look at the
form. But without scarifying the very nature of improvisation.
The body should not take priority over the word, the word must remain at
the centre of the message. Another criticism is that improvisers don’t sing
very well. It’s true, but there again, what’s important is the word, and we
concentrate on words. It’s not singing. The melody is there to help convey
the words.
So whilst it’s true that we do need to work on improving the singing and
expressivity, I don’t think, as if often said, that anything is missing from
improvisation. It lacks nothing"
Patxi Iriart
"I acquired a taste for improvisation when the ikastola (Basque-medium
school) in Bayonne opened a class. I was in CM2 (10-11 years old) and we
were only a small group. From then on, I’ve always continued. Karlos
Aizpurua was our teacher.
I must admit that in the beginning I was pushed by my mother, but
afterwards, I realised that improvisation enabled me to learn many things.
Also, it was something new, and it was a change from usual activities like
football or pelota.
When the improvisation schools got off the ground, we met outside lesson
time for an hour a week with Karlos Aizpurua as our teacher. Then I attended
to high-school in Cambo and there, a new group was set up: there were a few
of us from the Lycée in Bayonne, others came from inland in the Basque
Country.
At present there are five of us, four boys and one girl. In the
beginning, there were more of us, simply because some left. Improvisation is
not everyone’s cup of tea"
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