Kukulkan II (2007)
Indiana University New Music Ensemble
Daniel Stein, fl; Yi-Chun Chen, cl; Liana Gourdjia, vn; Eric Allen, vc, Edward Niedermaier, pn.
I Kukulkan's Ascent (El Castillo - March equinox)
II Water Run (Profane Well)
III Celestial Determination (El Caracol)
IV Processional-Offering (Sacred Well)
V Quetzalcoatal's Sacrifice (The Great Ball Court)
VI Kukulkan's Descent (El Castillo - September equinox)
DURATION: 20 minutes
INSTRUMENTATION: for flute, clarinet, violin, cello & piano
PREMIERES: October 31, 2009, ONIX, Mexico City; April 21, 2009, IU New Music Ensemble, Bloomington, IN.
PERUSAL SCORE (pdf of entire score...for web viewing only. If you need a hard copy printed, please order it from Pro Nova Music).
PROGRAM NOTE
Commissioned by ONIX; Dedicated to Alejandro Escuer Like many visitors to the ancient Mayan ruins of Chichén Itzá, I stood in awe before the temple of Kukulkan, the god-man known to the Toltecs and Aztecs as Quetzalcoatal or "Feathered Serpent," and the Great Ball Court, imagining the exotic rituals that have taken place there. This work is a flight of fantasy that attempts to evoke the ritualistic character of some of the monuments found at Chichén Itzá, including: El Castillo: Actually a huge solar calendar, the main pyramid of Kukulkan is a time temple that sheds light on the Mayan astronomical system. During the equinoxes, the shadow pattern of the pyramid's steps seems to show a serpent climbing up the steps in March and down the steps in September. Two cenotes, or wells (profane and sacred): The smaller profane well was used for every day needs, while the larger sacred well was used in worship, and offerings were continually made to it. Divers have retrieved skeletons and many ritual objects from its depths. The Observatory (El Caracol): The observatory was built in a spiraling design, with the windows in the dome aligning with certain stars on specific dates, showing the precision of Mayan astronomy. The Great Ball Court: The whole basis and rationale of Mayan sacrifice was the belief that the victim sacrificed was Quetzalcoatal himself, and by sacrificing the victim they were reenacting Quetzalcoatal's sacrifice at the beginning of time, thereby renewing creation. In one version of the sacrifice, Quetzalcoatal manifested himself as two persons: the twins Quetzalcoatal and Tezcatlipoca. In a ritual that took place at the beginning of time, Quetzalcoatal killed his twin, from whose body the world then emerged. At the end of significant time periods - at times when creation ran out of power - a ritual ballgame was staged at the ball field of Chichén Itzá. Each side incarnated the God Quetzalcoatal, one side as Tezcatipoca and one side as the twin Quetzalcoatal. The losers - i.e., the players incarnating Tezcatlipoca, were then sacrificed. The Mayans believed that this sacrifice - as a repetition of the original sacrifice of Quetzalcoatal - would renew, and keep the world alive. (David Dzubay)
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