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L. R. PEDROZA • THE JOROPO IN VENEZUELA’S MUSICAL MODERNIT Y ...

UDK 78.082.2.036(87)
DOI: 10.4312/mz.52.1.51-72

Ludim Rebeca Pedroza


Univerza v Teksasu
Texas State University

The Joropo in Venezuela’s Musical


Modernity: Cultural Capital in José
Clemente Laya’s Sonata Venezolana
Joropo v venezuelski glasbeni moderni:
kulturni kapital v skladbi Sonata Venezolana
Joséja Clementeja Laye
Prejeto: 12. oktober 2015 Received: 12th October 2015
Sprejeto: 7. december 2015 Accepted: 7th December 2015

Ključne besede: joropo, sonata, Laya, analiza, Keywords: Joropo, Sonata, Laya, analysis, Venezu-
Venezuela, nacionalizem ela, nationalism

IZVLEČEK ABSTRACT

Venezuelska Šola nacionalne moderne (Escuela The Venezuelan Escuela Nacional Moderna
Nacional Moderna) iz 30-ih in 40-ih let 20. sto- (1930s–40s) considered the joropo folk dance an
letja je imela ljudski ples joropo za polnokrvno inherently rich musical expression that demanded
sredstvo glasbenega izraza, ki je zahteval pozornost the spotlight of artistic autonomy. José Clemente
umetniške avtonomije. Sonata Venezolana Joséja Laya’s Sonata venezolana (1946) demonstrates
Clementeja Laye (1946) prikazuje, kako so sklada- how these composers transformed the framework
telji okvir sonatne oblike preoblikovali z glasbeno of sonata form with the joropo’s musical presence.
navzočnostjo joropa.

“It was with Aldemaro Romero’s Fuga con Pajarillo (1990) that the 23-year-old Du-
damel sealed his fate as winner of Bamberg’s inaugural Gustav Mahler Conducting
Competition in 2004.” So declares Berlin-based music critic Shirley Apthorp.1 Rome-
ro’s Fuga con Pajarillo continues to share in Gustavo Dudamel’s visibility, receiving

1 Simón Bolívar Youth Orchestra of Venezuela, Fiesta, conducted by Gustavo Dudamel, recorded at the Centro de Acción Social
por la Música, Sala Simón Bolívar, Caracas, 1/2008 (Deutsche Grammophon, 2008, compact disc, liner notes).

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broad international exposure on labels such as Deutsche Grammophon, in social en-
gines such as youtube, and in the repertoire of non-Venezuelan orchestras. Dudamel’s
choice of repertoire not only fulfilled the competition’s requirement that contestants
bring a symphonic work from their own country; it also set the spotlight on the pajari­
llo, one of the many sub-genres of the joropo, a dance widely embraced by Venezue-
lans as a national symbol.
On first encounter with Fuga con Pajarillo, the average listener will be struck by
its multidimensional contrapuntal vitality; music aficionados and scholars alike might
also identify the ubiquitous sesquiáltera–the juxtaposition of triple and duple meters
alternating with each other or in a simultaneous interplay. Within this interplay of me-
ters, the rich syncopated discourse, rhythmic counterpoint, and juegos hemiolados (he-
miolated games) create the “difficult to put together, but beautiful”2 musical identity of
the joropo. It was during the 1930s that this musical identity was partially codified and
assimilated into the academic domain by the leaders of the Escuela Nacional Moderna
(ENM hereon),3 Vicente Emilio Sojo (1887–1974), Juan Bautista Plaza (1898-1965), and
José Antonio Calcaǹo (1900–1978). Indeed, Aldemaro Romero’s successful rendition
of the joropo stems from the groundwork established by several key compositions
the ENM produced during the 1930s and 40s. Of these, Juan Bautista Plaza’s Sonati-
na venezolana (1934) has received broad attention in various musicological circles,
and has been exposed to an international audience through recordings and various
editions.4 Other compelling works, such as the Sonata venezolana (1946) of José Cle-
mente Laya (1913-1981), are recognized in international catalogues,5 but have received
far less attention from scholars and musicians alike. Both compositions are notable in
that they successfully codified musical elements that have become part of the cultural
capital of Venezuelan composers to this day.
Building on the ideas of cultural theorists Néstor García Canclini and Pierre Bour-
dieu, I will argue that the ENM heard the joropo as an inherently rich form of musical
expression, transporting its indisputable presence–not merely harvesting its isolated
rhythms or melodies–from the world of song and dance onto the listening stages of
the academy and the international field of music. The ENM established an autonomous
field of music in Venezuela in part by codifying those musical qualities of the joropo
they believed were deserving of the aesthetic spotlight.
After a theoretical contextualization of the ENM, I will provide a rhetorical and so-
nic foundation for a substantial examination of the joropo. I will continue by engaging
José Antonio Calcaǹo’s public review and analysis of the celebrated Sonatina vene-
zolana (1934), composed by his colleague Juan Bautista Plaza. The traits that Calcaǹo
identifies as successful in this work are expanded in the pieces of the early generation
of graduates of the ENM, of which José Clemente Laya’s Sonata venezolana (1946) is

2 Ibid. I am borrowing Dudamel’s choice of words.


3 Escuela Nacional Moderna (Modern National School) is one of the epithets by which the early twentieth-century composition
school in Caracas, led by Vicente Emilio Sojo (1887–1974), has come to be known. Other names include Escuela Nacionalista
Venezolana and Escuela de Santa Capilla. José Peǹín and Walter Guido, Enciclopedia de la música en Venezuela (Caracas:
Fundación Bigott, 1998), s.v. “Laya Morales, José Clemente,” and s.v. “Sojo, Vicente Emilio.”
4 See note 33.
5 Maurice Hinson, Guide to the Pianist’s Repertoire, fourth edition (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2013), 594.

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a particularly interesting example. I will explore the first movement of Laya’s sonata,
titled joropo, identifying how the impelling traits of the joropo absorb the defining
aspects of sonata form, the quintessential structure of autonomy in the international
field. Finally, conclusive remarks and issues regarding the joropo in the field will be
posed for future studies.

The Joropo and the Foundation of the (Autonomous) Music Field in


Venezuela

Scholars have approached the ENM in a variety of ways, producing celebratory stu-
dies of its modernizing projects and critical deconstructions of its socio-cultural lega-
cy.6 Most recently, building on the theoretical platforms offered by Benedict Anderson,
Eric Hobsbawm, and Ernest Gellner, Pedro Rafael Aponte argues that the ENM favored
the joropo, among a rich diversity of regional traditions, as the homogenizing musical
icon for Venezuela and, that it promoted the study of European composers and forms
and the foundation of choral and symphonic entities, all of which the ENM considered
crucial to modern artistic literacy.7 Aponte’s approach to invented traditions demon-
strates, among other things, how the Sojo/Plaza/Calcaǹo triumvirate strived to produce
repertoire that audiences and critics would hear as both Venezuelan and aesthetically
artful. In short, they were creating the audience, the repertoire, and the codes for hea-
ring Venezuelan music as distinctively Venezuelan and artistically literate.8
From a Bourdieuian perspective, the ENM was effectively establishing a Venezu-
elan academic field, that is, the educational and civic spaces where musicians could
receive and exhibit sanctioned training. They were also building cultural capital—skills,
techniques, rhetoric, and codes—that could meet the challenge of being heard as both
Venezuelan and autonomously artistic. And they were carving out ambitious social
spaces for the reception of their work, seeking symbolic capital, the recognition of
national and international critics, the embrace of the broadest possible audience, and a
place in the international music field. All three “competing principles of legitimacy” of
the field, as theorized by Bourdieu, were central to the ENM’s project: “the recognition
granted by the set of producers who produce for other producers . . .. the recogniti-
on of the ‘bourgeois taste . . .. the consecration bestowed by the choice of ordinary
consumers . . . .”9 Indeed, like many other early twentieth-century Latin American ar-

6 On the celebratory side, see the highly regarded studies Marie Elizabeth Labonville, Juan Bautista Plaza and Musical Nationalism
in Venezuela (Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 2007) and Miguel Castillo Didier, Juan Bautista Plaza:
Una vida por la música y por Venezuela (Caracas: Instituto Latinoamericano de Investigaciones y Estudios Musicales Vicente
Emilio Sojo, 1985); important critical studies include José Peñín and Walter Guido, Enciclopedia de la música en Venezuela
(Caracas: Fundación Bigott, 1998), s.v. “Nacionalismo;” José Peñín, “Plaza y el nacionalismo,” Revista Musical de Venezuela, no.
38 (1998): 217–256; Fidel Rodríguez Legendre, Música, Sojo y caudillismo cultural (Caracas: Fundación Vicente Emilio Sojo,
1998); and the work of Pedro Rafael Aponte, to be cited at length in this article.
7 Pedro Rafael Aponte, “The Invention of the National in Venezuelan Art Music, 1920–1960” (PhD diss., University of Pittsburgh,
2008). See especially chapters 4 and 5.
8 Ibid., especially 155–177.
9 Pierre Bourdieu, “The Field of Cultural Production, or: The Economic World Reversed,” in The Field of Cultural Production, ed.
by Randal Johnson (Columbia University Press, 1993), 50–51. This compilation of Bourdieu’s writings constitutes an excellent
summary of his theoretical apparatus, aspects of which I have attempted to encapsulate in the italicized concepts of this section.

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tistic projects, the ENM sought both emancipation and democratization, two of the
dimensions of modernity theorized by Nestor García Canclini.10 The academic spaces,
the symphony orchestra, the concert choir, the search for a Venezuelan musical voice,
the assimilation of contemporary international practices as well as the quintessential
forms of absolute music–the sonata and the symphony–and not least, the music appre-
ciation programs, all appeared to them as necessary vehicles for the creation of an au-
tonomous music field. For Bourdieu, autonomous fields are social spaces that adhere
to the belief of “art-for-art’s-sake,” and that eschew “functionality” and the approval of
the masses. The ENM desired that field of aesthetic autonomy, yet they also wished it
to remain populist to the core.
This dynamic, “in its rejection of European domination but its internalization of
its civilizing mission” has at times been read as “self-colonization.”11 Yet, in discussing
the first phase of Mexican modernism in the visual arts, García Canclini invites us to
resist self-colonization readings: “It was not so much the direct–transplanted–influen-
ce of the European vanguard that gave rise to the modernizing vein in the visual arts
on the continent, but rather the questions of the Latin Americans themselves about
how to make their international experience compatible with the tasks presented to
them by developing societies . . . ”12. In looking at the “permanent conflict” that is the
“unifying principle” of the field,13 as Bourdieu proposes, what are “the movements of
affection and participation in solidary or complicit activities in which hegemonic and
subaltern groups are needed,” García Canclini could ask.14 Indeed, the ENM sought to
“occupy a space that is already occupied;”15 they desired to be part of the international
music field rather than subvert it, and like all members of the field, they “believed in
the game”16.
In creating an emancipated aesthetic that would help them participate in the
game–in the international music field, what questions did the ENM ask? How do their
answers and actions suggest not only the invention of tradition and modernity, but
also their hedonic regard for the musics practiced on their surrounding soil, their
“affections” and “complicities”? In plain language, how does succumbing to the chal-
lenges of the modernization project allow the ENM to indulge in the “difficult but
beautiful” intricacies of musics such as the joropo? García Canclini invites us to take
these questions seriously, to look into the actions that take place beyond the symbo-
lic projections of modernity and tradition, inside the coveted autonomous field of
music in Venezuela.

10 Néstor García Canclini, Hybrid Cultures: Strategies for Entering and Leaving Modernity, trans. by Christopher L. Chiappari and
Silvia L. López (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1995), 12–13. (Originally published as Culturas híbridas: Estrategias
para entrar y salir de la modernidad, editorial Grijalbo, Mexico, D.F., 1990.)
11 See Aponte, “The Invention of the National in Venezuelan Art Music, 1920–1960,” 25, where he cites Fernando Coronil’s
arguments from The Magical State: Nature, Money, and Modernity in Venezuela (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1997),
73.
12 Ibid., 50. Emphasis mine.
13 Bourdieu, “The Field of Cultural Production,” 34.
14 García Canclini, Hybrid Cultures, 259.
15 Ibid., 75. García Canclini analyzes Jorge Luis Borges’s work, recognizing that “. . . to write, especially in peripheral countries, is
to occupy a space that is already occupied.”
16 Pierre Bourdieu, Language and Symbolic Power, ed. John B. Thompson (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1995), 14.

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On the question of “how do we create the national?”

In analyzing the writings of ENM leader Juan Bautista Plaza, along with the recepti-
on of his works, Aponte provides evidence of the difficult task these composers faced.
On the one hand, their own eclectic inclinations at times confused critics and audien-
ces who were not keen to accept their creations as “Venezuelan” simply on account
of the nationality of the composer. On the other, while the ENM leaders were aware
of the rich variety of genres cultivated in different regions of Venezuela, neither the
critics nor the urban audiences appeared to share that awareness. Interestingly, Pla-
za finds himself defending his Siete canciones Venezolanas (1932, “Seven Venezuelan
Songs”) due to the apparent inability of one critic to hear anything “Venezuelan” in
them; the critic particularly missed the presence of the joropo, which was the most
broadly known vernacular genre in the country.17 Seemingly, the ENM leaders are ini-
tially pressed to favor the joropo as a possible answer to the question of how to crea-
te a “national” musical aesthetic. Aponte convincingly argues this point by discussing
three other works by Plaza–including the Sonatina Venezolana (1934)–which draws
strongly on the joropo and which proved to be successful with audiences and critics as
“exemplars of Venezuelan music.”18
Even as they lamented the narrow knowledge of critics and audiences in relation to
folk musics, one should not assume the ENM leaders were violating their own affecti-
ons in favoring the joropo. Calcaǹo does not spare effusive adjectives when describing
the rhythm of joropo as “full of grace and exquisiteness,”19 and Vicente Emilio Sojo, well
known for his admiration of vocal polyphony, often alluded (with a tinge of pride) to
the polyrhythmic character of the songs and dances of the plains, which he believed
to have sprung from the integration of Spanish sacred and secular techniques with the
existing musical sensibilities of the laborers in the plains’ ranches.20 The joropo claims
kinship with the family of the fandango, which was widely spread throughout Latin
America since the eighteenth century. Like the fandango, the joropo is an umbrella
genre that engulfs a rich variety of dance, vocal, and instrumental regional sub-genres,
each with formulas of musical and choreographic elements codified among their pra-
ctitioners. In short, that the joropo genre emerged as the most likely candidate to re-
present an overall Venezuelan aesthetic identity is understandable, given its diffusion,
popularity, and appeal across various regions of the country.
The work of art is an object of belief 21 in an autonomous field that must justify its
meta-functionalist claim to existence, its “art-for-art’s-sake” motto. But the work of art is
also a collectively experience-able, sonic object, or, at the very least, the work of art in-
volves such a sonic involvement. This leads us to an interesting crossroad in contempo-

17 Aponte, “The Invention of the National in Venezuelan Art Music, 1920–1960,” 161–162.
18 Ibid., 166.
19 José Antonio Calcaǹo, “La sonatina venezolana de Juan Bautista Plaza,” El Nuevo Diario, Agosto 20, 1934; quoted in Castillo
Didier, Juan Bautista Plaza, 394.
20 See Vicente Emilio Sojo, “Carta del maestro Sojo al poeta Carlos Augusto León,” Revista Musical de Venezuela, no. 21 (1987):
35–36.
21 “The work of art is an object which exists as such only by virtue of the (collective) belief which knows and acknowledges it as
a work of art.” Bourdieu, “The Field of Cultural Production,” 35.

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rary musicology; even though post-1980s musicology has engaged in uncovering the
sociological underpinnings of classical (canonized) repertoires, it has done so relying
on the sonic familiarity facilitated by an established system of listening codes. Thus,
even as it eschews formalism, the musicology field speaks to a coterie of readers who,
whether keen on celebrating or destroying the musical work in question, is ultimately
sonically and rhetorically familiar with the work and/or the genres that have been co-
dified by the very formalism it rejects. So it is that in much of their discourse scholars
can bypass formalistic analysis altogether. With musical practices that fall far from the
international canon and its systemic codes, critical analysis must involve a written liste-
ning; it must introduce key aspects of the sonic experience at the center of the work of
art in question–in this case, the joropo.

Listening to the joropo

Many varieties of joropo continue to thrive in Venezuela to this day. We will explo-
re one of the most broadly known and studied, the joropo llanero (“plains joropo,”
also called “golpe,” and “pasaje,” both of which should be considered sub-categori-
es).22 This joropo is associated with the plains regions of both Venezuela and Colom-
bia, and in its most traditional form features the arpa llanera (the “plains harp,” a di-
atonic harp with a varying number of strings), the cuatro (a four-string small guitar),
and the maracas.23 Figure 1 is a visual abstraction of the basic rhythmic functions of
these instruments.

Figure 1: Joropo llanero, instruments and their rhythmic functions (with clave de corrido).

22 The seminal study of the joropo was undertaken by Luis Felipe Ramón y Rivera, and published in 1953. A second edition is
available: Luis Felipe Ramón y Rivera, El Joropo, Baile Nacional de Venezuela, 2nd ed. (Caracas, Venezuela: E. Armitano, 1987).
More recently, Claudia Calderón Sáenz has produced “Estudio analítico y comparativo sobre la música del joropo, expresión
tradicional de Venezuela y Colombia,” Revista Musical de Venezuela, no. 39 (1999): 219–256. An overview of the genre is offered
in José Peñín and Walter Guido, Enciclopedia de la música en Venezuela (Caracas: Fundación Bigott, 1998), s.v. “Joropo.”
23 The plains’ harp and the cuatro are criollo versions of the Baroque harp and vihuela that arrived in Venezuela during colonial
times. Musicologist Alberto Calzavara discusses historical documentation of these instruments in chapters seven and eight of
his Historia de la Música en Venezuela (Caracas: Fundación Pampero, 1987).

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Traditionally, the harp is the foundational instrument of the ensemble. The harp’s
treble strings at times carry a relatively lyrical melody. At others, they provide melo-
dic counterpoint, alternating between 6/8 and 3/4 (as shown at the top of Figure 1),
thus producing the ubiquitous sesquiáltera characteristic of the joropo and other Latin
American genres.24 The harp’s bass strings–also called bordones–ground the music in
one of several 3/4 patterns (Figure 1 shows one of the most common), interacting with
the harp treble strings to produce a rich array of polyrhythmic encounters, like that
shown in the first two measures of Figure 1 where the treble strings are in 6/8 against
the 3/4 of the bordones (a vertical sesquiáltera). The cuatro player uses the rasgueo, an
aggressive strumming technique; by alternating between open-hand strumming and
closed-hand strumming, the cuatrista adds percussive, accented syncopations (Figure
1 shows one of the most common rasgueo patterns). In their most basic function, the
maracas support the cuatro’s accents, although virtuoso maraqueros will greatly ela-
borate on the basic patterns.
A more involved discussion of the relationship between the cuatro rasgueo and the
harp’s bordoneo (here used as a verb) would require the distinction between two im-
portant rhythmic claves or “keys” in joropo: the clave de corrido (or corrio)–shown in
Figure 1, and the clave de seis, where the bass strings switch to a “rest-quarter-quarter”
pattern and the cuatro’s accented rasgueos fall on the first and fourth beats. Figure 2 is
an abstraction of the clave de seis, as codified by joropo scholar Claudia Calderón: 25

Figure 2: Rhythmic key, clave de seis.

The characteristic rhythmic interplay of the joropo shown in Figures 1 and 2 repre-
sents only the foundational skeleton of what musicians actually perform. Ornamenta-
tion, elaboration, meter migrations, and a variety of juegos hemiolados (“hemiolated
games”) are expected. The rhythmic interplay that ensues from moment to moment in
a joropo is notable. In performance, the interplay between the treble and bass registers

24 For an in-depth discussion of the sesquiáltera see Pedro Van der Lee, “Zarabanda: Esquemas rítmicos de acompaǹamiento en
6/8,” Latin American Music Review 6, no. 2 (1995): 199–220. Although in Mexico and other Latin American countries the term
sesquiáltera is used interchangeably with hemiola, in this article I will use the term hemiola for the migration of meters from
triple to simple duple (from 3/4 to 2/4, for example), which is conspicuous in what joropo scholars call juegos hemiolados
(hemiolated games).
25 For an in-depth discussion of these claves, see Calderón Sáenz, “Estudio analítico y comparativo,” 219–256. Many informal
videos of this basic ensemble and of both claves are found in social engines such as youtube. The reader may look specifically
for postings that feature harpist José Gregorio López.

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of the harp becomes increasingly contrapuntal; perhaps in a desire to pursue this co-
unterpoint more freely, many contemporary groups feature a bass player, acoustic or
electric, freeing the harp to explore the treble line with more intricacy while playing
with the bordones. This constant variation of horizontal and vertical rhythmic interplay
is anchored by codified harmonic progressions that musicians learn by heart (much
like the 12-bar-blues in the United States) and that are particular to a specific geograp-
hic region. The trajectories of these harmonic progressions vary in length and formal
structure, as illustrated in these selected examples from Claudia Calderón ‘s catalogue
of nearly twenty patterns:26

Uni-partite patterns:
Seis Corrido: (V-I-IV-V) in major
Pajarillo Golpe de Seis: (V-I-IV-V) in minor
Periquera: (I-I-V7-I-I-I7-I7-IV-IV-IV-II7-V-IV-I-V7-I) in major

Bipartite patterns:
Merecure : A (I-I7-IV-IV-I-V-I-I) repeated + B (V-V-I-I) four times or more.

Tripartite patterns:
Chipola: (I-IV/V-I-IV/V-I-IV/V-I-IV/V) and coda: (I7-IV-I-V) and modulation to domi-
nant: (V-I/II-V-I/II-V-I/II-V-I/II-V) and coda: (I-V-Ii-I) and modulation to relative mi-
nor: (VI-II/III-VI-II/III-VI-II/III-VI-II/III) and coda: (II-I-III7-VI); da capo.

In performance, a pajarillo may begin with a llamado (“call”), an introduction that va-
ries in length, which eventually leads into the main harmonic cycle V-I-IV-V. The ensemble
then will anchor itself to the harmonic cycle and release a different interplay of rhythmic
and melodic counterpoint with each pass of the cycle. That interplay will also be ancho-
red to one of the rhythmic claves delineated in Figures 1 and 2. Although an extended
study of the joropo in performance is not possible here, I will allude to listening examples,
which should be accessible as streaming audio from most libraries in universities around
the world. In the album Sí, soy llanero (Smithsonian Folkways),27 track 3, the ensemble,
Grupo Cimarrón, begins this pajarillo with a lyrical call, before engaging a harmonic pro-
gression rooted in the cadencia andaluza (the well known tetra-sequence of minor-ma-
jor-major-major triads), which they realize on a clave the corrido. The pajarillo proper,
now in the rhythmic clave de seis, starts approximately at 09:2428, and it is at this point we
can hear each cycle of V-I-IV-V come to life anew as all the instruments explore the possi-
bilities of the sesquiáltera, syncopation, juegos hemiolados, timbre percussive effects, etc.
The prominent presence of what in functional harmony are called primary chords
may invite the moniker of “harmonic simplicity” often bestowed on folk and popular

26 Calderón Sáenz, “Estudio analítico y comparativo,” 242–243. The Enciclopedia de la música en Venezuela, s.v. “joropo,” lists
over fifty patterns, not all of which coincide with the information in Calderón’s catalogue.
27 Grupo Cimarrón, Sí, soy llanero: Joropo Music from the Orinoco Plains of Colombia, recorded at Audio Producciones Patrick
Mildenberg, Bogotá, Colombia. Smithsonian Folkways Recordings SFW CD 40515, 2004, compact disc.
28 The time cue refers to the streaming library versions, which cue the overall length of the album, not each separate track.

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musics. Let us resist this description. Beyond the particular ways we may hear the I-V
polarity in the joropo, harmony is simply not the impelling element in this genre. “Har-
mony” in joropo is a relatively stable platform on which rhythmic interplay–indeed,
rhythmic counterpoint–stands and becomes the impelling factor. Put in a simpler, if
reductive way, in joropo, rhythm “uses” pitch and harmony to create action, as opposed
to the post-enlightenment interplay where melody and harmony create discourse by
resting on relatively stable and repetitive rhythms. One could argue that the economy
of harmonic change in joropo is crucial; it is what lures the ear toward the dynamic acti-
on created by rhythmic counterpoint. The phrase “simple harmonies” is not germane
to a fair musical description of the joropo, and the ear inclined to listen for harmonic
richness and syntax will miss the very voice of the genre.
Thinking of rhythmic interplay in this way allows us one other important conside-
ration: that several types of goal direction are evident in the various sub-genres of the
joropo.29 An instrumental pajarillo, such as the one on track 3 of Sí, soy llanero, is very
much goal directed, although not based on the principle of melodic or tonal return.
Joropo listeners have expectations of tension-release related to the interplay between
compound duple and triple meters; the interplay must not ground itself for too long
on an overall 3/4 pulse; the 6/8 tension against the triple bordoneo is used–although
not syntactically–to play with the listeners’ sense of tension and release. Tension and
release are also achieved through what I call riff counterpoint, the constant juxtapo-
sition of short, melodic gestures that are rich in rhythmic parlance, and that bounce
with and against each other among all the instruments.30 This type of riff counterpoint
is particularly evident on track 1 of Sí, soy llanero, which bears the same name as the
album. In this track, the added voice of the bandola–a pear-shaped, small guitar whose
strings may be strummed or plucked–provides counter-melodic/rhythmic riffs to the
rich texture of the ensemble. The ensemble administers these riffs carefully, at times
multiplying them and at times decreasing their number and degree of metrical tension.
In addition to what we could call an episodic goal direction, grounded in meter and
riff counterpoint, the principle of melodic return may also play a role in some joropos.
Often, the codified patterns shown above are actually turned into full da capo forms,
where musicians use the principle of return–in melody and tonal area–to recapitulate
an initial section, but often with a more intensified riff counterpoint. In performan-
ce, for example, a pajarillo corrido can be goal directed in terms of the return of the
opening melody of the vocal line, and, in terms of a heightening of the intensity of
contrapuntal texture and percussive effects that accompany the melodic return; both
can be heard in track 1 of Sí, soy llanero. This is particularly evident when the vocal
element is present and a melodic, directional element is therefore in play. In a different
variety of the genre–the Eastern Venezuelan joropo termed “joropo with refrain”–an
ABAB alternation is evident, one that nevertheless grows in improvisatory intensity

29 A theorization of alternative ways of hearing goal direction (or recombinant teleologies) that has invigorated my own thinking
on the matter is Robert Fink, Repeating Ourselves: American Minimal Music as Cultural Practice (Berkeley: University of
California Press, 2005).
30 For a more detailed exploration and application of the concept of riff counterpoint, see Ludim Rebeca Pedroza, “Merengue
Meets the Symphony Orchestra: Interrogating Music as One and the Terrific Musical Experience at the Hollywood Bowl,”
American Music 32, no. 3 (Fall 2014): 317–352.

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with each repetition. Angular and syncopated vocal melodies also take on a directional
and quasi-syntactic character in the Eastern joropo with refrain.31
The distinctiveness of the sonic experience of joropo resides in the various kinds
of goal direction it presents, most of which are rhythmically, metrically, and texturally
impelling, rather than harmonically directional.32 In describing such alternative species
of goal direction, I have chosen to use the term impelling rather than syntactic or dis-
cursive, particularly to emphasize dynamics of tension and release that are not rooted
in any analogy to communicative rhetoric or syntax. This constitutes a conceptual invi-
tation to re-code listening rather than a rejection of directed listening. One could even
argue that it is through the focused listening of this impelling distinctiveness that key
repertoires of the Escuela Nacional Moderna were negotiated effectively. This propo-
sition can be examined more closely through the writings of one of the leaders of the
ENM, José Antonio Calcaǹo.

Listening to the joropo in Plaza’s Sonatina venezolana (1934)

Juan Bautista Plaza’s Sonatina venezolana (1934)33 is entrenched in the musico-


logy of Venezuela as one of the early, seminal successes in the domain of composition
of the ENM. Calcaǹo explained the particulars of this success in an article-review pu-
blished in the Nuevo Diario on August 20, 1934.34 In addition to providing insight into
the listening sensibilities of Calcaǹo, the review is also significant in that it represents
an early scholarly hearing of the joropo, several years before the first ethnomusicologi-
cal study of the genre (1953).35 It is reductive of the genre as a whole, yet indicative of
Calcaǹo’s careful consideration of a joropo as sonic experience.
Calcaǹo begins by alluding to Plaza’s harmonic treatment, deeming it conservative,
because the “tonal principles” governing the musical form (binary) and the absence
of “harmonic originality in our folklore” so justify it.36 I read his choice of words–an
absence of harmonic originality–not as a diatribe but as recognition that harmony is
not what we listen for in this music. Calcaǹo quickly moves on to the musical elements
that have caught his attention, melody and rhythm in particular. He praises Plaza for
capturing the “intermittent” character of joropo melodies, “which is perfectly in tune

31 Listen to track 11 “Joropo Cruz Acuña” in !Y Que Viva Venezuela! Maestros del Joropo Oriental (Smithsonian Folkways Recordings,
2009).
32 See Robert Fink, “Goal-Directed Soul? Analyzing Rhythmic Teleology in African American Popular Music,” Journal of the
American Musicological Society 64, no. 1 (Spring 2011): 179–238. Fink argues against the “antiteleological” analytical segregation
imposed on many popular musics, and against scholars who have conceded “the entire domain of musical structure to the
defenders of high art . . ..” As he argues for a number of dance-based genres, I would argue that the joropo does not reside in
a non-descript state of jouissance, and does not resist analytical discourse.
33 The sonatina can be found in the international collection Latin-American Art Music for the Piano by Twelve Contemporary
Composers (New York: G. Schirmer, 1942). A recording by Arturo Nieto-Dorantes can be found in Itunes; recordings by Beatriz
Balzi and Raquel Boldorini can be found in Juan Bautista Plaza’s channel in youtube.
34 Most of the text of the review is published in Castillo Didier, Juan Bautista Plaza, 392–397. Other analyzes of this review
are found in Aponte, “The Invention of the National in Venezuelan Art Music, 1920–1960,” 172–177, and in Peñín, “Plaza y el
nacionalismo,” 251–253.
35 See note 22.
36 As quoted in Castillo Didier, Juan Bautista Plaza, 393.

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with the spirit of our popular dance music, given that in ‘golpes’ and ‘pasajes’ the me-
lody almost disappears at times in an arpeggio or in a purely rhythmic fragment . . . .”37
In describing the “intermittent” character of joropo melodies, Calcaǹo has pointed to
the element I have called riff counterpoint. He is clearly not disappointed to find an
absence of lyrical, directional, syntactic melodies.
Calcaǹo’s most exuberant language is reserved for the rhythmic aspect. “The rich-
ness of its rhythm is admirable, precisely as it comes to such a short composition; more
than ten rhythmic formulas appear early on, of pure Venezuelan strain, applied with
admirable cohesion and spontaneity.”38 He offers musical examples of these rhythmic
cells–reproduced in Example 1 below–which point precisely to the conspicuous ga-
mes of sesquiáltera central to the joropo.

Example 1: “Rhythmic Formulas” in Juan Bautista Plaza’s Sonatina venezolana (1934),


as rendered by Miguel Castillo Didier.39

“It is in the rhythm where the expressive weight of this composition resides; it is
the rhythm, which infuses that tireless and fluid vitality, that ultra-varied jocundity, that
excitement, full of grace and exquisiteness.”40 Calcaǹo’s affective exegesis embraces
“rhythmic richness” with a zest comparable to the one implied in centuries of analyses
of harmonic complexity in other repertoires. He continues: “The musical environment,
which Debussy obtained principally through the harmonic element, is in this work

37 Ibid., 394. “Pudiera decirse que la melodía es intermitente en la pieza, lo cual está perfectamente de acuerdo con el espíritu
de nuestra música popular bailable, ya que en los ‘golpes’ y ‘pasajes’ la melodía casi desaparece a ratos en un arpegio o en un
simple trozo puramente rítmico.”
38 Ibid., 394. “La riqueza de su ritmo es admirable, como que tratándose de una composición tan corta, aparecen en la primera
más de diez fórmulas rítmicas, de pura cepa venezolana, aplicadas con una justeza y una espontaneidad admirable.”
39 Ibid. In an email communication dated December 3, 2015, professor Castillo Didier granted his permission for the reproduction
of the example, and informed me that he extracted it from a printed version of Calcaǹo’s review he in turn obtained from
Plaza’s widow, Nolita de Plaza.
40 Ibid., 394–5. “Es en ese ritmo donde se concentra la carga expresiva de esta composición; es él quien le insufla esa vitalidad
incansable y fluida, esa jocundidad variadísima, esa agitación llena de gracia y exquisitez.”

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achieved with rhythm, an always precise and defined rhythm.”41 The comparison to
Debussy’s accomplishments may be read as a nod to the European literate vanguard
and thus as part of the symbolic enactment where self-colonialism impersonates the
“civilizing project” of modernity. It is well known, after all, that Debussy was admired
in the circles of the ENM.42 Nevertheless, Calcaǹo is a scholar who sees himself car-
ving out a space for aesthetic autonomy, and under this light, the nod to Debussy is
meaning­ful in that he recognizes in Debussy’s “musical environment” a novel way of
making music impelling, something Plaza has achieved by capitalizing on the distinct
features of the joropo.
In summary, the question of “how to create the national” involved, in its complicity
with the nation-building project, the affective, hedonic practice of reflective listening in
relation to vernacular musics and doing so with unprecedented attention and gusto. In
this context, reflective listening is my conceptual alternative to the conventional score-
-centered analysis, as it involves not exclusively the analysis of a score, but the focused
listening of musics that are conventionally rendered in aural environments–as the jo-
ropo still is. Even when these musics migrate to the academic domain, “score-analysis”
still demands reflective listening, because performers recognize the joropo when they
are learning the music. In the next section, my own reflective listening of Laya’s Sonata
venezolana will take the form of a narrative from the perspective of a pianist raised in
academic environments–both in Venezuela and the U.S–where sonata form is heavily
codified. But I was also raised listening to joropos in the schoolyard, at friends’ ranches,
and not least of all, in the concert hall. Mine is thus the reflective listening of an agent
negotiating multiple capitals.

Musical Capital in José Clemente Laya’s Sonata Venezolana (1946)

In the academic space carved out by the ENM, musicians invited critics and the
public to listen to the elements of the joropo that they experienced as distinctive and
loaded with musical capital, that is, with the potential to be musical materials of impel-
ling force on the listening stage. A little over a decade after Plaza’s Sonatina venezo-
lana helped establish the joropo in the academic environment, a student of Sojo and
one of the early-generation graduates of the ENM, José Clemente Laya, produced his
Sonata venezolana (1946).43 Its first movement, titled simply joropo, can be heard as an
example of the newly created musical capital.
Laya’s oeuvre indicates that, like his fellow graduates, he was systematically tra-
ined in the rudiments of the motet, the suite, the fugue, and the sonata, among other

41 Ibid., 394–5. “El ambiente musical de la obra, que Debussy obtenía principalmente con el elemento armónico, está aquí logrado
con el ritmo, ritmo siempre preciso y bien definido.”
42 José Clemente Laya states: “As disciples of maestro Sojo, our formation began under the auspices of Mozart, with our eyes
turned toward Debussy as the supreme objective.” As cited in Enciclopedia de la música en Venezuela, s.v. “Laya Morales, José
Clemente.”
43 José Clemente Laya, Sonata Venezolana para Piano (Caracas, Venezuela: Fundación Vicente Emilio Sojo, 1991).

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standard Renaissance, Baroque, Classic, and Romantic forms.44 His Sonata venezola-
na (1946) features three movements: Joropo (Allegro) in sonata form, Canción (Ada-
gio) in ternary form, and Bolera (Allegretto), a rondo. As Example 2 shows, his joropo
begins with the expected call, where the bordoneo bass pattern is clearly present in
the left hand, and the accents on beats one and three are “felt” in the pitch-register
drop from E to B.

Example 2: José Clemente Laya, Sonata venezolana (1946), movement I (joropo), mm.
1–4.45

As Example 3 shows, after this four-measure call, the long held note in the upper
voice of m. 5 signals the emergence of a lyrical, directional melody, which soon
­enough acquires the angular and syncopated semblance of some joropo melodies
(particularly the Eastern varieties). Yet, the pianistic language is contrapuntal, with
other melodic fragments present and constantly traveling between three and four
voices. Laya hints at the cuatro’s percussive closed strumming (labeled on m. 5) thro-
ugh the dissonant minor seconds, which roughly coincide with the rhythmic clave de
corrido shown in Figure 1. Above all, the relentless, motoric activity at the suggested
tempo poses a veritable challenge to the performer, who experiences the contrapun-
tal juggling of the entire ensemble in one body. Example 3 brings attention to the
“home key”46 of the movement, E major, and shows a relatively continuous slice of
the exposition, which I will now discuss.

44 For example, Laya’s works include, among others, the orchestral Suite venezolana (1947), the chamber Fuga para cuarteto de
cuerdas (1947), the Suite al estilo barroco, sobre tema propuesto por Vicente Emilio Sojo (1946), and the Sonatina para Rosita
(1946). For a complete catalogue see Peǹín and Guido, Enciclopedia de la música en Venezuela, s.v. “Laya Morales, José Clemente.”
45 Musical content and expression marks in all Laya examples are based on the 1991 edition published by Fundación Vicente
Emilio Sojo in Caracas (cited in note 43); engraving and publication in this essay were undertaken with permission from the
same institution.
46 I am using the terminology codified in William E. Caplin, Classical Form: A Theory of Formal Functions for the Instrumental
Music of Haydn, Mozart, and Beethoven (Oxford: Oxford university Press, 1998).

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Example 3: José Clemente Laya, Sonata venezolana (1946), movement I (joropo), mm.
5–23.

A musician raised in Venezuela will recognize the open strings of the cuatro in
the left hand gesture found in measure 13. In the most common, reentrant tuning

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of the instrument, these pitches are A3, D4, F-sharp4, and B3.47 School children are
taught to sing these four notes to the words cambur pintón (“ripening banana”), as
rendered in Figure 3:

Figure 3: Common tuning in the cuatro with mnemonic syllabication.

Playing the passage that begins in measure 5 provokes additional aural reminiscen-
ces. The floating melody in the upper voice launches itself on a sustained D-sharp,
which to my ears recalls the long sustained pitch with which vocalists begin some jo-
ropos.48 The sustained D-sharp releases itself into a syncopated melody in m. 6, whi-
ch then spins itself off by alternating between ascending riffs, sustained pitches, and
syncopated and hemiolated bits (mm. 13 and 14). Supporting this upper melody is the
bass line, which emphasizes the first and third beats by drawing the ears (and fingers)
to the lower register (mm. 5 and 7). In subsequent measures, this bass line imperso-
nates the rich bordoneo characteristic of virtuoso harpists (or bass players) in joropo,
who far from repeating the same two or three-note riff, elaborate upon it. The pianist
must also negotiate several counter-riffs that compete in interest with the upper-voice
melody, a contrapuntal practice notable in Eastern joropos, where the harp treble co-
unterpoints with the vocalist.49 The riff counterpoint is further enhanced through the
sesquiáltera games of tension-release evident from measure to measure; for example,
the juxtaposition of the 3/4 and 6/8 gestures in mm. 6 and 7 comes to a brief release in
the solitary ascending gesture of measure 8. This ascending gesture continues to play
a releasing role in its alternation with subsequent sesquiáltera sonorities in measures
9 and 11.
Having identified the fundamental joropo elements that populate the pitch and
rhythm fabric, one will begin to ponder the larger structural patterns that frame this
fabric. Although sonorities that invite the hands and ears to identify with a functio-
nal “home key” are present (as in mm. 12–13, 15–16, 22–23, in Example 3), clear lea-
ding-tone motions to that key (E) are notably absent. Yet, pivotal arrivals at E major
sonorities are immediately preceded by conspicuous juegos hemiolados, as indicated
in measures 13–16, and 21–23 (Example 3). In a way, Laya is establishing the on-beat
3/4 bordoneo as a “rhythmic tonic,” 50 using the preceding hemiola duple groupings

47 On the history of the cuatro and its tuning, see Calzavara, Historia de la Música en Venezuela, chapter 8; and Luis Felipe Ramón
y Rivera, “Sobre el origen hispano de nuestro cuatro,” Revista Musical de Venezuela, no. 4 (1981): 38–51.
48 Listen to track 1 of Sí, soy llanero (cited in note 27). This long, opening sustained pitch is often found in the estilo recio (hard
style) of the plains region; the melody, however, afterwards, acquires a more active and lyrical profile, such as that often found
in the Eastern regions of Venezuela (the joropo oriental). Indeed, the melodies of plains’ joropo tend to be made up of short
riffs that facilitate poetic improvisation and virtuoso improvisation. Laya’s melody appears to be a compound melody of various
joropo styles.
49 For example, listen to track 14, “Golpe de Arpa y Estribillo” in !Y Que Viva Venezuela!
50 See Fink’s proposition regarding tonic rhythm in his “Goal-Directed Soul?”, 199.

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as rhythmic cadential gestures. This practice continues in the ensuing measures (not
shown in Example 3).
In measure 27, we encounter an F-sharp major ninth chord that anticipates the
expected modulation to the dominant in a sonata form. This “subordinate key,” B ma-
jor, arrives unequivocally in m. 44, with an indication of cantabile, an unmistakable re-
ference to the change in character expected in late-classical and early romantic subor-
dinate themes. As shown in Example 4, this theme maintains a counterpoint between
the left hand and right hand, but presents more constant patterns of syncopation and
angular melodies that provide it with a distinctive identity. Most notably, the first four
measures of this cantabile (mm. 44–47) are heavily grounded on a 6/8 pulse, which
this time is anticipated in the cadential figures of mm. 40 to 43, suggesting not only a
modulation to the dominant B but also to the 6/8 meter. Indeed, 6/8 pervades the enti-
re cantabile, and the 3/4 bordoneos thus become the stuff of tension.

Example 4: José Clemente Laya, Sonata venezolana (1946), movement I (joropo), can-
tabile theme in B major begins in m. 44.

A double bar and repeat signs point to the first 75 measures as the exposition of a
sonata form. As shown in Example 5, measure 76 leads us into the development, which
builds on the distinctive cambur pintón motif, now in B major, treated canonically and
sequentially.

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Example 5: José Clemente Laya, Sonata venezolana (1946), movement I (joropo), be-
ginning of the development.

These sequences continue for 25 measures before arriving at a concerto-like ca-


denza, evoking romantic piano practice. The cadenza takes us back to the opening call
in a clear recapitulation; nevertheless, the return of the four-measure opening call and
the pitch-by-pitch recapitulation of the music shown in Example 3, all happen in the
key of A major rather than the tonic E. As Example 6 shows, the A major area smoothly
takes us to its own dominant, E major, the overall tonic, in the voice of the cantabile
theme. This type of return-emphasis is similar to the ones found in some balanced
binary forms of the keyboard sonatas of Domenico Scarlatti. (This is precisely the com-
parison Calcaǹo makes in reviewing Plaza’s 1934 Sonatina venezolana, a comparison
that, for Aponte, reflects Calcaǹo’s desire to ground the sonatina in the neoclassical
movement of the twentieth century, and ultimately, in an overall narrative of Western
music history.)51

Example 6: José Clemente Laya, Sonata venezolana (1946), movement I (joropo), reca-
pitulation of cantabile theme.

As Example 7 demonstrates, Laya closes the movement with the same riffs that clo-
sed the exposition. These riffs only obliquely drive the leading tone toward the tonic;
rather, they tip-toe on pitches of the dominant, ultimately leading to a closing third-less
E vertical structure elaborated by an F-sharp appoggiatura.

51 Aponte, “The Invention of the National in Venezuelan Art Music, 1920–1960,” 176.

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Example 7: José Clemente Laya, Sonata venezolana (1946), movement I (joropo), end
of the movement, mm. 187–189.

I will end this reflective listening by summarizing some of the ways in which Laya’s
joropo negotiates the codes and techniques of the international music field. First,
Laya’s tonal fabric springs from the ubiquitous melodic pattern that announces itself
in m. 13: the cambur pintón motif from the cuatro’s open strings. Revisiting the call of
the movement shown in Example 2, it is notable that the pitch relations from the onset
are rooted in the intervallic relations of this motif. Moreover, the bordoneo descending
figure reaffirms the quartal identity of the cambur pintón motif. The major-7th chord
that inaugurates the primary-key theme in m. 5–as well as numerous “tall” chords
through­out the movement–could be heard as directly inspired by the impressionistic
language so admired in the early nationalist circles of Venezuela. Or, they could simply
echo the conspicuous major-second sonorities that are suggested by the tuning of the
cuatro. Likewise, the preponderance of angular melodies and the importance of the
open fourth and fifth intervals square well with the initial call and the intervallic identi-
ty of cambur pintón. All in all, Laya is composing “with the tones of a motif,” to borrow
Schoenberg’s words, grounding the musical fabric in a cohesive pitch relationality bor-
ne by the bass bordoneo and the cuatro.
Second, in his use of sonata form, it is notable that Laya chooses to recapitulate
the opening theme in the subdominant, a tonal center that elevates the gesture of the
initial rising fourth of the cambur pintón. This choice aligns with the quartal-intervallic
universe Laya has created, one that I have attempted to visually represent in Figure 4.
This visual conceptualization encapsulates my hearing of the E, not as a mono-linear
tonic, but as a pivot pitch between B and A that relates to the three main areas of the
sonata form in quartal relationships, which in turn harken to both the cambur pintón
and the bordoneos of the bass harp strings.
This should not suggest that goal direction plays a weak role in the movement.
The recapitulation in A rather than E does not debilitate the sense of return, nor
does it clash with the goal-directed sensibilities of the joropo itself, in which the
principle of return is not foreign. Rather, the return in the subdominant emphasizes
“homeness”–a sense of arrival–through intervallic relationships rather than throu-
gh a single pitch “tonic.”
Third, Laya dispenses with the gradual intensification of riff counterpoint and jue-
gos hemiolados, as is customary in popular joropos; instead, he uses these elements as

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Figure 4: Quartal relationships in the sonata framework of Laya’s joropo.

impelling devices of tension/release, not only from measure to measure, but in the ca-
dential motions toward, and as markers of identity for each of the sonata-form themes.
Finally, Laya’s appeal to virtuosity–arguably a requirement of the international music
field at the turn of the century–seems to spring from the distinctiveness of the joropo
as well. Under the pianist’s fingers, the visceral, motoric energy of the joropo comes
to life and the rhythmic counterpoint is pervasive, enveloping the performer in the
“jocundity” of the genre. The technical challenge is augmented by the juxtaposition of
a fully directional melody with the intermittent counterpoint of the inner voices and
the bordoneo.
In this article I have shown how the pitch fabric, the sonata form, and other ele-
ments commonly associated with the autonomous field of music, are absorbed and
transformed by the joropo’s presence. Indeed, it would be difficult to argue that Laya
harvested the joropo in order to insert isolated melodies or rhythms into the thematic
framework of the sonata form. That Laya, like many of his colleagues and teachers
with other works, chose to call this a Venezuelan sonata (sonata venezolana) and the
movement squarely by the name of the dance rather than the more abstract “allegro,”
is perhaps telling of the particular beliefs invested on these sonic objects. This brings
us full circle to our initial inquiry: In the creation of an emancipated aesthetic, what qu-
estions did the ENM ask? If one of these was “how do we create the national,” another
was “how do we concurrently create the modern-artistic.” One answer may be said to
have been Calcaǹo’s concept of stylization, which also provides fodder for a closing
platform that may facilitate future study of the music field in Venezuela.

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The Joropo in the Music Field: Stylization, Elevation, and Multiple


Capitals

“What is truly astonishing is the achievement of an elevated sty-


lization with our very own musical elements, given that these
elements present us with difficulties that initially appear insur-
mountable, as one presumes to handle them in superior spheres
without muddling their character. This is something we, Venezue-
lan composers, have been striving toward for years, and are only
now reaching; in past works we were able to stylize insufficiently,
so much so that those works barely deserved to be considered the
individual work of a creative artist, given that we could almost
confuse them with pieces of pure popular strain.”52

Calcaǹo’s praise for Plaza’s 1934 Sonatina venezolana employs rhetoric that may
invite readings of self-colonialism. Indeed, today, the term elevation conjures imperial-
ist baggage, particularly the idea of “simple” vernacular musics being elaborated with
the academy’s tools of “complexity.” A Bourdieuian perspective invites us to resist this
direct projection of the fields of power and class struggle onto the autonomous field.
On the one hand, acknowledging that Calcaǹo’s rhetoric (and that of his colleagues)
contains a degree of condescension toward popular musics should not obfuscate the
implications of the very concerns he is expressing: The “originality” and “artistry,” i.e.
the coveted stylization associated with the “superior” sphere of autonomy cannot be
achieved at the expense of a “muddling” of the character of popular musics. Plaza
speaks in similar terms, when alluding to composers running the risk of destroying
“the intimate vitality” of the “popular arts.”53 As I have argued, Calcaǹo’s reflective lis-
tening of Plaza’s Sonatina venezolana more than suggests a deep respect and affec-
tion for the inherent qualities of the joropo in its own social environment. To put it
simply, the ENM chose the joropo not because they read potential complexity in its
simplicity, but quite the contrary, because they read it as inherently complex, rich, and
exuberant. All in all, in the universe of belief of the ENM, we could read the nascent
(Venezuelan) autonomous musical work as a conceptual technology–a carving tool to
be used with care–and the superior sphere as a platform of display–the earned spot-
light of autonomy–for the artist and his/her affections.
On the other hand, the autonomous field is a social arena, even as it operates ac-
cording to its own logic. In Venezuela–as in other Latin American countries–the music
field was not forged entirely by wealthy artists in opposition to a popular artisanal

52 Quoted in Castillo Didier, Juan Bautista Plaza, 392–93. Translation and emphasis mine. “Pero lo que sí raya en lo asombroso
es haber logrado esa elevada estilización con nuestros elementos musicales propios; pues estos ofrecen dificultades a primera
vista insalvables, cuando se pretende manejarlos dentro de esferas superiores, sin que pierdan nada de su carácter. Eso lo
venimos buscando los compositores venezolanos desde hace años, y solo ahora es cuando se empieza a lograr; pues en las
obras anteriores a esta que nos ocupa solo se había podido estilizar en un grado insuficiente, tanto que apenas merecían esas
obras ser consideradas como obra individual de un artista creador, pues casi se confundían con las obras netamente populares.”
53 Juan Bautista Plaza, “Apuntes sobre estética Musical Venezolana,” Revista Literaria no. 35 (Cubagua: Caracas, 1939): 10–12;
quoted in Peñin, “Plaza y el nacionalismo,” 229.

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L. R. PEDROZA • THE JOROPO IN VENEZUELA’S MUSICAL MODERNIT Y ...
field; it was claimed and built largely by musician-artisans, who had themselves been
forged in the “sub-fields” of the church, the dance floor, and the civic band, among
many others. Indeed, the old, wealthy mantuano class cultivated music only as a di-
version and did not consider its professional pursuit appropriate to its rank. The ac-
knowledged leader of the ENM, Vicente Emilio Sojo, was born in this artisanal circle,
in a family of limited means whose mixed-race background has been explored by mu-
sicologists.54 Sojo’s training in his hometown of Guatire took place with Regulo Rico,
church composer, member of the Unión Filarmónica (which cultivated a variety of
choral and orchestral repertoires), estudiantina and band director, performer in fiestas
and serenatas, in short, a musician versed in popular music genres and Mozart and
Beethoven alike–a musician of multiple musical capitals.55
In the context of this artisanal music field, Calcan`o’s historicism’–which was only to-
uched upon in this article–also provokes interesting questions; Calcan`o is indeed con-
structing a continuity between the ENM’s output, the joropo, and the Scarlattian school
of clavecinists, perhaps in an effort to highlight Venezuelan “tradition” as a protagonist
in the grand historical narrative of the international field.56 Post Calcan`o musicologists
such as Alberto Calzavara and Mario Milanca Guzmán, however, consider this a socially
grounded continuity, not merely a historicist construction. Their research has brought
to light the documented reality that since colonial times, native-Venezuelans, slaves, mu-
lattos, “poor whites”–in short, members of the artisanal class–have been the recipients
of European-based musical training (particularly counterpoint) in the harp, the vihuela,
and the organ. 57 The work of these scholars suggests that it was in the very bodies of
these musicians–as opposed to in an abstract interchange between fields–where that tra-
ining mutated with the Afro-Venezuelan and Native-Venezuelan practices that were also
theirs. In short, these artisanal musicians accumulated a multiplicity of musical capitals
while navigating the difficult socio-political arenas imposed on them.
The ENM’s first generation of graduates was populated by many musicians who
were versed in the artisanal field of music making, and who claimed their autonomous
space by engaging in a reflective listening of the myriad musical manifestations they
themselves practiced. They explored the joropo and other vernacular musics with the
conceptual technologies of absolute music: the sonata, the symphony, the suite, the
fugue. Theirs was a nationalism of immense eclecticism.58 As they gained exposure to
the international field of music, they expanded their objects of musical affection and
cautioned themselves against an “excessive cult to folklore”59. To this day, the music
field in Venezuela does not define itself in opposition to the popular field; rather, it is
generously populated by artists who move comfortably between the spaces of acade-
mic and popular musics, and who invest heavily in both (Aldemaro Romero being an
54 See in particular Guido Acuña, Maestro Sojo (Caracas: Editorial Arte, 1985), 55–66.
55 José Peǹín, “Regulo Rico, Maestro de Sojo,” Revista Musical de Venezuela, no. 38 (1998): 40–44.
56 See Aponte’s argument in relation to this in his “The Invention of the National in Venezuelan Art Music, 1920–1960,” 155–177.
57 Calzavara, Historia de la Música en Venezuela, 59–60; Mario Milanca Guzmán, La música venezolana: de la colonia a la
república (Caracas: Monte Ávila Latinoamericana, 1994), 119 and especially the section titled “Los pardos en la música colonial
venezolana.”
58 For a discussion of the background musicianship and the overall tendencies in the compositions of the ENM’s early graduates—
many of which were decidedly non-nationalist—see Aponte, “The Invention of the National,” 178–206.
59 Peǹin, “Plaza y el nacionalismo,” 246.

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example). This is an autonomous field carved out of complex affections and complici-
ties with multiple capitals that reside in the singular body of each musician. As much in
its repertoire as in its difficult past and present dynamics, it poses compelling challen-
ges for future studies of music as emancipated aesthetic.

POVZETEK prav joropo za središče svoje glasbene estetike.


Zavoljo zvočne in retorične osnove srednji del razi-
Joropo, ples, ki ga ima večina Venezuelcev za skuje t. i. joropo llanero (»nižinski joropo«); njegove
svoj nacionalni simbol, se je mednarodni javnosti tradicionalne instrumente, in sicer cuatro in harfo,
predstavil zlasti z deli Aledamara Romera in s sesquiáltero – sopostavitev dvojnih in trojnih taktov
posredništvom dirigenta Gustava Dudamela. Ro- –, refrenski kontrapunkt, juegos hemiolodos (igre
merove, a tudi druge akademske predelave joropa hemiol) in vrsto ciljnih usmerjenosti, ki so značilne
temeljijo na estetskih predlogah, ki so jih uveljavile za žanr. Ta odsek pojasnjuje, zakaj je ENM določene
ključne skladbe Šole nacionalne moderne (ENM) značilnosti joropa slišal kot glasbeni kapital, torej
v 30-ih in 40-ih letih minulega stoletja v Venezueli. kot elemente poganjajoče jasnosti, ki bi lahko
Ena izmed njih, Sonatina venezolana Juana Bau- bili dejavniki v osnovanju emancipirane estetike.
tista Plaze (1934), je v muzikoloških krogih naletela Javna ocena in analiza, ki jo je za slavno Sonatino
na veliko posluha in dosegla tudi mednarodno venezolano (1934) skladatelja Juana Bautiste Plaze
občinstvo s pomočjo posnetkov in različnih izdaj. zapisal José Antonio Calcaǹo, prikazuje mnoge
Druga dela, kot denimo Sonata Venezolana Joséja značilne elemente.
Clementeja Laye (1946), pa so sicer navedena v Zaključni del raziskuje nekoliko manj znan joropo
mednarodnih katalogih. V dialogu s kulturnima Joséja Clementeja Laye, enega od učencev ENM-ja
teoretikoma, Néstorjem Garcío Canclinijem in Pier- iz 40-ih let 20. stoletja. Prvi stavek Layeve Sonate
rom Bourdieujem, članek argumentira, da je ENM venezolane – sonatne oblike – pretkano združuje
joropo prepoznal kot po sebi bogat glasbeni izraz kode in tehnike mednarodne klasične glasbe s
in prenesel njegovo glasbeno navzočnost – ne zgolj tistimi, ki so značilne za joropo. Najprej zveneča
s tem, da bi odbral posamezne ritme in melodije struktura stavka izide iz četvernih razmerij, ki so
– iz sveta ljudske pesmi in plesa v glasbene dvo- značilne za uglašenost cuatra (A3, D4, Fis4 in
rane akademskega sveta in na odre mednarodne B3). Nato Laya izbere ponovitev glavne teme v
klasične glasbe. V teoretskem smislu je šola ENM subdominanti, tonalnem centru, ki privzdigne
ustanovila samostojno področje glasbe v Venezueli, gesto začetnega dviga kvarte v uglašenosti cuatra.
delno prav s kodifikacijo glasbenih prvin joropa, Naposled Laya učinkovito osnuje tekmujoče 3/4 in
za katere so njeni predstavniki menili, da zahtevajo 6/8 takte kot polarne elemente, ki spremljajo teme
pozornost umetniške avtonomije. na toniki in dominanti. Pod črto lahko rečemo,
Začetna kontekstualizacija v članku se osredini na da Laya ponazarja, kako so ti skladatelji preobli-
simbolno projekcijo nacionalizma in modernosti v kovali okvir mednarodnih glasbenih sredstev za
ENM-jevem temelju, a hkrati razkriva »afekcije« in doseganje avtonomije – zlasti sonatne oblike – s
»razloge«, ki so vodile do tega, da si je ENM izbral karakterističnimi elementi joropa.

My sincere thanks go to the reviewers of this journal for their comments, and to Roberto Ojeda Tovar,
Coordinador General Estratégico de la Fundación Vicente Emilio Sojo for his kind and prompt processing
of the permissions involved in my engraving of excerpts from Laya’s Sonata venezolana.

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