
L’excellence artistique de Jordi Savall a été récompensée par le prix du festival d’Abu Dhabi le 11 décembre. Ce prix, profond témoignage de son engagement en faveur de la renaissance et du renouveau de la musique ancienne, a été remis par S.E. Sheikh Nahyan bin Mubarak Al Nahyan, ministre de la Tolérance et de la Coexistence et Parrain de l’ADMAF.
Ce prix honore le dévouement de Jordi Savall à la préservation et à la diffusion du patrimoine musical, soulignant son impact durable sur le monde de la musique et sa contribution au dialogue culturel à travers les époques et les frontières. C’est une reconnaissance de son engagement de toute une vie pour la recherche, l’investigation et la diffusion des trésors musicaux du passé.
Les chanteurs et les musiciens de La Capella Reial de Catalunya, d’Hespèrion XXI ainsi que les solistes du Maroc, de Syrie et de Turquie, sous la direction de Jordi Savall ont captivé le public du festival d’Abu Dhabi avec une évocation intéressante de la musique d’Al-Andalus et de son influence au cours de la Renaissance espagnole.
Ce programme méticuleusement conçu, embrassant cinq siècles de racines culturelles et historiques de l’Andalousie arabe, séfarade et mozarabe, a enthousiasmé un public nombreux qui a suivi du début à la fin l’intéressant voyage historique proposé : « De l’âge médiéval (époque de Nasride) à l’âge d’or (époque de Felipe II) ».
Words of gratitude during the award ceremony of the Abu Dhabi Festival
Your Excellencies Sheikn Nahyan Mabarak al Nahyan, Minister of Tolerance and Coexistence, and Madame Huda I. Alhamis-Kanoo, ladies, gentlemen, dear friends,
I am very honored to receive this prestigious distinction from the Abu Dhabi Festival, which throughout its history has been awarded to many exceptional artists, many of whom I know and admire.
I receive it in my name, of course, but I would like to share it as well with all the musicians and collaborators who have accompanied me, faithfully and with passion, throughout half a century of dedication to music and intercultural dialogue. This dialogue was already fundamental in that part of southern Europe which the Greeks called “the Hesperides”, the place where one could find golden fruits that were the source of life and eternity. Around the first millennium, this Iberian Peninsula saw the birth of the magnificent civilization of Al Andalus, so well represented by Granada, Seville, and Cordoba which were great centers of art, culture, science, and spirituality. In these places a poetic and musical culture flourished which inspired the art of the great poet-troubadours of Occitania, and which welcomed into its bosom the cultures of Sephardic Jews and Mozarabic Christians. In our concert next Monday, we will pay homage to this rich Andalusian heritage.
We call this historical and musical evocation “a dialogue of souls”, in homage to our dear and admired friend Amin Maalouf, who knew that “if our disoriented humanity is to regain some shred of hope, we must go well beyond a dialogue of cultures and beliefs to engage in a dialogue of souls. At the beginning of the 21st century, that is the indispensable mission of art”. This mission is more essential than ever, now that thousands of human beings – at the risk of their lives – seek help and refuge far from their countries because of wars, poverty, or intolerance. Let us take advantage of the wonderful fact that music is our true common language to give it back the place it deserves in education, culture, and life today.
I cannot finish my words of gratitude and hope without remembering the thousands of innocent human beings who are suffering and dying so close to us. This is why I want to express here all my solidarity with the families of the hostages and the victims of the war in Gaza and Israel. Above all, I want to appeal for humanity and an immediate end to the intolerable and indiscriminate massacre of the civilian population in Gaza.
Jordi Savall,
Abu Dhabi December 9, 2023
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