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HERE LIES LOVE


Project History


David Byrne: Songs from Here Lies Love

David Byrne – Concept, lyrics & music
With Musical Contributions by Fatboy Slim

Carnegie Hall, NYC: Stern Auditorium / Perelman Stage
Saturday, 3 February 2007, 8:00 PM

Through a series of songs written by David Byrne, with musical contributions from Fatboy Slim (Norman Cook), Songs from Here Lies Love presents Imelda Marcos meditating on events in her life, from her childhood spent in poverty and her rise to power to her ultimate departure from the palace. In particular, the production looks at the relationship between Imelda and a servant from her childhood, Estrella Cumpas, who appeared at key moments in Imelda's life.

The Band:
David Byrne – guitar, vocals
Joan Almedilla – “Imelda” vocals
Ganda Suthivarakom – “Estrella” vocals
Paul Frazier – bass
Graham Hawthorne – drums
Mauro Refosco – percussion
Thomas Bartlett – keys
Production:
Mark Edwards – Production Manager
Terry Pearson – Sound
Kris Umezawa – Monitor
Contributors:
David Whitehead – Manager
Frank Hendler – Project Coördinator
RZO – Business Management
 
 


Here Lies Love – A Song Cycle

•••
David Byrne – Concept, lyrics & music

With Musical Contributions by Fatboy Slim

Original production for “Here Lies Love, A Song Cycle”
developed with Marianne Weems
•••

World Premiere Producer – Adelaide Bank Festival of Arts 2006 (PDF)
Ridley Centre, Royal Adelaide Showground
Preview: 9 March 2006 at 8.30pm
March 10, 13 and 14 at 8:30pm; March 11 at 5 & 9pm
90 minutes, no interval

Here Lies Love – A Song Cycle deals with the life of Imelda Marcos, co-ruler of the Philippines in the 70s and 80s, as well as the life of Estrella Cumpas, the woman who raised her.

Through a series of songs written by David Byrne, with musical contributions from Fatboy Slim (Norman Cook), Here Lies Love – A Song Cycle presents Imelda Marcos meditating on events in her life, from her childhood spent in poverty and her rise to power to her ultimate departure from the palace. In particular, the production looks at the relationship between Imelda and a servant from her childhood, Estrella Cumpas, who appeared at key moments in Imelda's life.


LINK TO SCENE STRUCTURE


The Band:
David Byrne – guitar, vocals
Dana Diaz-Tutaan – “Imelda” vocals
Ganda Suthivarakom – “Estrella” vocals
Paul Frazier – bass
Graham Hawthorne – drums
Mauro Refosco – percussion
Tim Regusis – keys
Production:
Peter Norrman – Video Designer
Jim Findlay – Production Manager
Wendy Yang – Costume Construction
Peter Keppler – Sound
Kris Umezawa – Monitor
John Walsh – Stage
Other contributors:
David Whitehead – Manager
RZO – Business Management
Susan Nickerson/Nickerson Research – Video Footage Research
Jane Shaw – Video Associate
Frank Hendler – Project Coördinator


Film, video, and photo stills courtesy of the BBC Motion Gallery, the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Library, the Lyndon Baines Johnson Library and Museum, the Ronald Reagan Presidential Library, Wayne Sorce, the UCLA Film and Television Archive, and the U.S. National Archives.  Special thanks to the BBC.

 


Here’s a quote from James Hamilton-Paterson’s book America’s Boy — one of the best accounts of the Marcos era, putting it in the context of both village life and global politics. From the chapter The Politics Of Fantasy: “There are moments when it seems that the world’s affairs are transacted by dreamers. There is a sadness here in the spectacle of nations, no less than individuals, helping each other along with their delusions. This way what is thought to be clear-sighted pragmatism may actually be shoring up a regime’s ideology whose hidden purpose is itself nothing more than to assuage the pain of a single person’s unhappy past.”

And these quotes from Imperial Grunts: “Just as the stirring poetry and novels of Rudyard Kipling celebrated the work of British Imperialism… the American artist Frederic Remington, in his bronze sculptures and oil paintings, would do likewise for the conquest of the Wild West… ‘Welcome to Injun Country’ was the refrain I heard from the troops from Colombia to the Philippines, including Afghanistan and Iraq… the War on Terrorism was really about taming the frontier.”

These two quotes encapsulate for me why I am here in the Philippines. Granted it is a very short trip. And at a peculiar time of year. The Here Lies Love music project might be about this conflation of fantasy, personal pain and politics that runs through history and played itself out here in a dramatically obvious way. Hamilton-Paterson nails it better than I could.

— DB, Manila, December 2005
[Link]

 

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