Raíces Negras
Dr. Mitchell leads Raíces Negras, a music collective celebrating Black and Latine voices across the Americas with chamber music repertoire ranges from the rich timbral colors of modern Pierrot ensemble works, to the Afro-Brazilian swing of choros, to the polyphonic rhythmic framework of Afro-Cuban jazz, and everything in between. The group respects traditional genres while also bending and blending them with improvisatory intersections. The collective consists of world-class musicians hailing from the United States, Puerto Rico, Venezuela, Brazil, Bulgaria, Haiti, and beyond. Providing musical curiosity, virtuosity, and creativity to the collective, they each maintain busy schedules as sidemen and solo artists in their own right.
Origin: During National Hispanic Heritage Month 2019, flutist Ceylon Mitchell II and his acclaimed chamber music ensemble presented a concert series of Afro-Latin music at venues throughout Prince George’s County, Maryland. The classical crossover performances highlighted African and Latinx cultures, demonstrating the unique development of Western-European classical flute music in the Latin American countries of Puerto Rico, Cuba, and Brazil. This project was made possible due to a 2019 Prince George’s Arts and Humanities Council Artist Fellowship Grant.
Programs include:
- DUO – Brazilian Classical: The Music of Clarice Assad
- TRIO – Contemporary Cuban Classical (Leo Brouwer, Tania León, Paquito D’Rivera)
- TRIO – Spirits of Nature: American Women Composers (Tania León, Clarice Assad, Elisenda Fábregas, Undine Smith Moore)
- SEXTET – Brazilian Choro: The Musical World of Pixinguinha
- LATIN BAND – The Cuban Charanga Flute Evolution: Richard Egües, Orlando Maraca Valle
Dr. Ceylon Mitchell, Dr. Felipe Garibaldi in recital.
Repertoire includes:
- Claire Assad: Tríptico (Triptych)
- Claire Assad: As Cores de Tomie
- Claire Assad: The Last Song
- Radamés Gnattali: Sonatina
Join us for a chamber music concert celebrating four innovative and prominent American women composers of the 20th and 21st centuries. Spotlighting the flute, cello, and piano, each work explores an element of nature and the spirits that dwell within, ranging from the Negro spirituals in Undine Smith Moore’s “Afro-American Suite,” the motions and gestures of the beach in Tania León’s “Sands of Time,” a day in the life of the Papua New Guinean rainforest in Elisenda Fábregas’s “Voices of the Rainforest,” or the avant-garde timbral illusions and mythical imagery of Clarice Assad’s world-premiere commission entitled “Flight of the Fairies.” The program focuses on universal thematic material, told by talented voices from diverse backgrounds. While the storytelling of Moore and Fábregas is much more literal and accessible, the illustrative atmospheres from Assad and Leön are stark, evocative, and ambiguous. Within these musical works, audiences will discover and enjoy the worldly and otherworldly soundscapes these composers can elicit.
Repertoire includes:
- Clarice Assad: Flight of the Fairies (commission)
- Tania León: del Caribe, soy! (fl, pn)
- Undine Smith Moore: Afro-American Suite
- Elisenda Fábregas: Voices of the Rainforest
- Leo Brouwer: El cazador de historias (commission)
- Leo Brouwer: La región más transparente (fl, pn)
- Paquito D’Rivera: Invitación al Danzón
Ensemble includes:
- Dr. Ceylon Mitchell, flute
- Dr. Elizabeth Hill, piano
- Erin Murphy Snedecor, cello
The Brazilian Choro is an intriguing, imaginative, and beautiful music. This musical genre, birthed in Rio de Janeiro in the mid-19th century, represents the height of Brazilian nationalism. Like the national dish feijoada, where a lot of different ingredients are thrown in to make the stew, choro has its roots in African syncopated rhythms and European dance forms, including the lundú, the polka, and the habanera, creating a very unique style. Traditionally, the common instrumentation includes the flute leading with ornamented melodies, the guitar and cavaquinho providing improvised harmonic and rhythmic accompaniment as well as the melodic counterpoint, and percussion, usually pandeiro, providing the rhythmic backbone aligned with the solo melody. Though the genre is usually instrumental, at times some compositions have accompanying lyrics. The improvisatory nature of choro mirrors that of North American jazz and virtuosity is a hallmark of the style. Arguably, the most influential composer in the preservation of choro during the 20th century was the Afro-Brazilian composer and flautist Alfredo da Rocha Vianna Jr. (1897–1973), or Pixinguinha, as he was more commonly known. He famously revolutionized counterpoint in choros and samba. As part of this program, you will hear a selection of famous compositions by him and his contemporaries.
Repertoire includes:
- Carinhoso
- Cochichando
- Um a Zero
- Lamentos
- A Flor Amorosa
- Lundu Característico
Ensemble includes:
- John Lee, guitar
- Lucas Ashby, percussion
- Andre Coelho, percussion
- Pablo Regis de Oliveira, cavaquinho
- Seth Kibel, sax and clarinet
Contemporary classical flutist Dr. Ceylon Mitchell II leads the modern Cuban charanga ensemble Raíces Negras in an evening dedicated to the beloved Cuban music group Orquesta Aragón and its songwriter, Richard “La Flauta Mágica” Egües. The performance features hits like “El Bodeguero” and “Pare Cochero,” showcasing the fusion of Afro-Cuban rhythms and European classical instruments. A celebration of traditional Cuban forms and Latin jazz, Mitchell and the award-winning musicians of Raíces Negras bring audiences to their feet.
Repertoire includes:
- Almendra
- Pare Cochero
- Ceylon’s Danzón (commission)
- Danzón Siglo XXI
- El Paso De Encarnación
Ensemble includes:
- Sarah Taylor Cook, vocals/coro
- Michael Paxton, sax
- Christine Kharazian, violin
- Joshua Jenkins, piano
- Chuco Mendoza, bass
- Fran Vielma, percussion: congas
- Dominique Patrick Noel, percussion: timbales
- Bruno Lucini, percussion: drum set, guïro, claves
UPCOMING EVENTS
Raíces Negras Trio - Kennedy Center's Millennium Stage Series
Raíces Negras Trio - Kennedy Center's Millennium Stage Series
Dr. Ceylon Mitchell (flute), Erin Murphy Snedecor (cello), and Dr. Elizabeth Hill (piano) celebrate innovative and prominent American women composers of the 20th and 21st centuries.
Arts Club of Washington: Homage to Brazil
Arts Club of Washington: Homage to Brazil
Flutist Dr. Ceylon Mitchell (flute) and guitarist Dr. Felipe Garibaldi perform duo works by Brazilian composers.
PAST EVENTS
Angélique Kidjo: Color of Noize Orchestra
Angélique Kidjo: Color of Noize Orchestra
Global icon and five-time Grammy Award winner Angélique Kidjo returns to Carnegie Hall in celebration of her incomparable 40-year (and counting!) career, including selections from her latest project, African Symphony, as well as performances with her band of songs that...
Levine Presents | Brazilian Choro: The Musical World of Pixinguinha
Levine Presents | Brazilian Choro: The Musical World of Pixinguinha
Contemporary classical flutist Dr. Ceylon Mitchell II leads the Raíces Negras choro ensemble in an evening celebrating the genre’s most influential composer, Alfredo da Rocha Viana Filho, also known as Pixinguinha.
Les Amorces: Ingleside at Rock Creek
Les Amorces: Ingleside at Rock Creek
Join Les Amorces as we celebrate the legacy of women composers, featuring a program that includes both their works and those of their male counterparts. This concert blends the voices of piano, flute, and soprano to highlight the creativity and influence of women in mus...