Magazine # 23
RELEASE DATE: 2012-11-01
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EDITORIAL BY AMARU VILLANUEVA RANCE
Some of my first memories about death involve listening to the haunting sounds of a march booming out from some unknown location in my old neighbourhood of Tacagua. I was too young to have experienced a major death in my immediate family; maybe just fortunate enough. In any case, it was soon clear that someone in the audible vicinity had died, or so I was told by my cousin. During the years I lived in that house I heard those harrowing melodies several times, without ever knowing what they were called or why they had to be played for 14 continuous hours; the first thing you listened to when waking up, and the last one you heard before going to sleep - sometimes over two consecutive days. I discovered that, somewhat like the Bethlehem star, or more precisely like the legendary tune played by Hamelin’s pied piper, this was a musical map. One only had to follow the melody to reach the site of an open-door wake. The songs functioned not only as an announcement, but as an open invitation for neighbours to come and pay their condolences. By pure chance, 20 years later I learned that these songs belong to a genre called Bolero de Caballeria, which originated in Bolivia in the 1930s during the Chaco War against Paraguay. Jenny Cardenas, an expert on the boleros and their history, told me that while they are currently associated with wakes and death, boleros have a much larger and richer history. ‘The bolero today effectively accompanies funerary rites of indigenous and popular sections of society. It is predominantly played in the marginal neighbourhoods of urban areas’. Cárdenas explains how it has both a functional role in announcing a death, as well as a traditional role which glorifies the deceased, as these are songs that were played to send-off and welcome the soldiers who fought in the Chaco War. ‘The bolero implies that the person who died sacrificed themselves in some way; we can think of this person as a hero. The dead are thus sacralised, sanctified’. Yet the implied sacrifice is not only linked to this war, ‘but to social protests and struggles against oppressive regimes, and honours miners, teachers, and unionised workers alike’. While boleros are traditionally played at wakes, visiting the General Cemetery gives us a wider understanding of the music played for the dead throughout the year. Serafín Calisaya is one of the eight guitarists who work at the cemetery all year round, singing and playing for the 15-17 funerals which take place there every day, generally accompanying the family during the journey the coffin makes from chapel to grave. He tells me that him and his colleagues are most in demand by gente popular: ‘gente jailona don’t tend to hire us. They just walk on in silence’ (for more generalisations on jailones, many true, some possibly unfair, see p.8) . Playing a selection of huayños, boleros, and rancheras, their repertoire caters for most requests from dolientes. Serafín tells me how making a living in this way has affected him spiritually. ‘I no longer have a father or a mother, so sometimes when people ask me to pray for their parents I also remember mine so I start to cry. But in order to cope I need to play different music on the weekends- happy melodies’. A slightly more upbeat guitarist called Fabian Luizaga tells me ‘one time someone came up to me during a funeral and told me: “the son of the deceased hasn’t cried a single time since the wake, can you play a song that will get to him?” So I went and played a song by Sandro called ‘My Poor Dear Mother’ [in which the songwriter remembers the times he found his mother in a corner crying, sad, and dejected] - it was pretty effective’. Fabian confesses that he likes to see people letting it all out: ‘when i see mourners crying it makes me play more passionately to reach their souls through music. It’s bad for these feelings to remain bottled up’. The traditional activities around Todos Santos (All Saints day) provide a unique insight into the relation between music and death in La Paz and the Bolivian highlands. Todos Santos takes place on the 2nd of November of every year, though associated activities begin up to a week earlier with the baking of t’antawawas, and end a week later with the Fiesta de las Ñatitas. These festivities are focused on the souls who have recently passed away and who have yet to arrive or become fully ‘socialised’ into the land of the dead, alma llajta. On the main day of Todos Santos the cemetery is swarmed, not only with mourners, but with people -predominantly from rural areas- who have come to offer prayers and music in exchange for bread, fruit, sweets, and occasionally some Bolivianos. Melancholy melodies and wailing prayers from pururas dominate the soundscape. As the ethnomusicologist Henry Stobart points out, the arrival of the souls of the dead in this region is closely identified with the sounds of huayño music, ‘which the souls are said to constantly sing, play and dance to in alma llajta, “land of the souls”’ (see p.24 for more on the metaphysics of death in the Bolivian highlands). Ceremonially, in this season huayño music is played using alma pinkillos, andean flutes made out of a bamboo tube with a knot in the middle of the instrument. The hoarse and weeping sounds that come out of these flutes are unmistakably linked to some of the deepest human sentiments, from loss and grief to romantic passion and longing. Yet these are not the only songs played on these days. Yaravis (a genre which comes from the Incan ‘harawi’ rhythm), tristes (a creole genre with roots in pre-hispanic funerary rites) and pasacalles (a musical form originating in 17th Century Spain), are also audible in the background. It is precisely these melodies which Cárdenas argues came together in the 1930s, and which, combined with the Spanish boleros, amalgamated to form the boleros de caballería mentioned earlier. This musical melting pot continues bubbling away on Todos Santos; a prime example being a very popular local adaptation of Simon and Garfunkel’s ‘Sound of Silence’ called ‘Padre Nuestro’ (Our Father), played at almost every grave. Yet as soon as we leave the cemetery and head for Chamoco Chico, the mood changes - first subtly, and then rather more dramatically. Apxatas pepper the streets, where families huddled together share bread, food and alcohol (see p.14). The spirit is decidedly festive, though the dark clothes of the luto serve as a reminder that remains an occasion centred around the dead. In contrast with the tearful huayños of the cemetery, upbeat cacharpayas are played, sung and danced to, in a spirit reminiscent of the carnival season. This genre is traditionally played to send off the dead who return to alma llajta on the 2nd of November, after their 24 hour long visit to the living. Appropriately, it is also played to close a variety of celebrations including the carnival itself, ensuring it returns in full force the following year. A week later we visit the cemetery once more to attend the Fiesta de Las Ñatitas (p. 21). If the festivities in Chamoco Chico had a celebratory feel, this event does exactly what it says on the tin - it’s a full-blown fi esta, a party. Indeed, extravagant prestes are thrown for the forensic skulls around which this festivity is centred. The cemetery brims with brass bands and colourful flowers. Hired musicians are summoned to the cemetery to play a variety of songs, notably morenadas and rancheras, usually associated with neighbourhood parties where dancing and getting drunk are the norm. The party continues away from the cemetery in locales (venues for hire), late into the night. An eerie childhood memory came to mind during the last of several trips I made with the BX team to the General Cemetery, and it seems befitting to end on this note. While walking through the cemetery’s narrow alleyways shortly after the Christmas season, I remember hearing odd whimpering beeps coming from several graves. After some investigation I learned that people buy musical cards for the deceased, just as they do for the living, placing them in the allocated holes in mausolea along with flowers, cigarettes and miniature coke bottles. These cards play Jingle Bells and Silent Night day and night, until their batteries go. What starts off as a confusion of synthesised christmas jingles, after a few days, with batteries wearing out, aptly becomes a cacophony of dying sounds. Anthropologists and journalists of the future might one day take an interest in these curious evolving traditions; just a thought. On this slightly kitsch note (a taster of our next number), we are reminded that in contrast to the sombre and austere monochrome palette which dominates this issue, death and its associated rites can be strangely lively and colourful. As we did in our previous issue on migration, we have prepared a playlist with some of the songs and rhythms mentioned above, which you can access by visiting http://tinyurl.com/BXpassing
Oversight to Overhaul
November 21/2012| articles

The bodies in the Room

When the Red Cross carried out a diagnosis of the Bolivian medical services in early 2011, one of the most distressing issues was the infrastructure of the morgue in La Paz. The conditions did not meet with minimal standards concerning the treatment of corpses, perhaps the most glaring example being the stack of bodies piled up on the floor one encountered near the front door. The morgue is situated in a warehouse at the back of the General Hospital, next to the dumping ground for hospital waste. The precarious condition of the morgue is apparent from the condition of the entrance and continues throughout the small building, with rodents and a considerable lack of space in which to operate. The morgue only has two autopsy tables, one of which has certainly seen better days. Most of the bodies are naked without body bags, an affront to their dignity. In an endeavour to transform the morgue into a more dignified place, not only for the workers, but for the families who come and find their loved ones, the Red Cross went about installing and introducing new features. This primarily consisted of a dozen new shelves, detergents and disinfectant products, as well as 25 impermeable body bags. Put together, these things brought about a drastic change in the building and its operations. Once this change had taken place, a presentation was made to the authorities demonstrating how vital this change had proven. In the following photo essay, Marcelo Perez del Carpio presents us with a set of powerful images which capture the state of the morgue before the Red Cross’s work commenced.

Marcelo’s work on the morgue was Highly Commended for the Ian Parry Scholarship in 2012, and was recently featured in the Spectrum supplement to The Sunday Times of London 

To see Marcelo’s work, visit http://www.marceloperezdelcarpio.com

Marcos and Bellas
November 21/2012| articles

Las Bellas Durmientes
(Alma Films, 90 minutes, Bolivia - 2012)
The story unfolds in a lawless world which ignores both victims and perpetrators alike. Quispe, a humble member of the special investigations police unit, embarks on a pursuit of the truth and justice behind the murder of two beautiful and innocuous models. The Sergeant, Quispe's partner in the investigation, doesn't appear to share the same motives, and instead wants to close down the case as soon as possible, showing no regard for the truth as he does his part to maintain the unfair and absurd order that reigns in society. Quispe's attempt to uncover the truth is thus thwarted by the actions of his seniors. This case, and notably the Sergeant's unorthodox approach to the investigation, reveals an unsettling side to society that is usually concealed.

MARCOS AND THE BELLAS

Marcos Loayza is one of the biggest names in Bolivian cinema, a distinguished director and screenwriter perhaps most famous for his 1995 film 'Cuestión de Fe'. Loayza studied architecture in La Paz at the UMSA, followed by cinema studies in Cuba. Theo Haynes interviews him about his latest film ‘Las Bellas Durmientes’ which will be released on the 20th of December in La Paz (Multicine, Megacenter and Cinemateca Boliviana), Santa Cruz (Cinecenter) and Cochabamba (Cinecenter).

Interview - Marcos Loayza

How and why is 'Bellas Durmientes' different from your previous work?
Well, working with actors is always the same, and in this case I worked with models who, whilst not being professional actors were experienced in this general field. I aim to have a solid script in order to produce good characters. Also the camera we used was much smaller, enabling us to shoot in tighter spaces such as inside an elevator or a telephone box etc. The fact that we used this type of camera meant that the camera had a level of presence that is unavailable with larger cameras



Is this one of your more dramatic films?
This film isn't a thriller but takes elements from this genre. It involves a balance between comedy, drama and a thriller. That is to say, this film is in some ways a thriller but with a 'Marcos Loayza' ending. Here, I am working on a particular genre and hence I am reflecting on what I see cinema to be. I am looking for a suitable authenticity and identity. I think there are people within society who try to uncover the truth and others who try to conceal it. For me, it is easier to say something about our society through humour, which enables one to say things without causing offence. I want people to laugh, but also to change their way of thinking.

Is there a specific message concerning the truth that you are conveying in this film?
It is a pretext to understand how we, as Bolivians, confront problems, how we set about finding the truth and how we resolve issues. In this case, neither those who harbour the truth, nor the murderer, are as significant as those looking to uncover the truth. I based this film on a more or less typical police structure making for a transparent society.



Do you have a theme in mind that you intent to bring to light in this film?
When I'm making a film I don't have a subject in mind, I don't say 'I'm going to do injustice'. I know that I am managing good material from the start, but I don't know the exact subject. When I face the audience, that is when I find the answers. With 'Cuestion de Fé' I was focused on territorial integration and popular culture, but in the background there was tolerance and friendship. In each film I find the answer as time passes, and my films last because they include a genuine question. Now it is topical to question why Bolivia does not want to move on from where it is, but I'm sure in a year this will have changed. I think the as a director I have the opportunity to act as a social sponge; to absorb everything and then broadcast it for the public to respond.