Echezonachukwu Nduka

Nigerian pianist Echezonachukwu Nduka to play the US

In-house West Africa

By In-house West Africa

28 Mar 2018 - 14:19

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Pianist and music scholar Echezonachukwu Nduka will perform at the Transformation Spring Recital on 29 April in the US.

Pianist Echezonachukwu Nduka will perform at the Transformation Spring Recital in New Jersey. Photo: FB

Nduka studied classical pianism at the University of Nigeria and earned an MA in Music at the Kingston University London. He has since performed across Nigeria, the US and the UK.

As part of the repertoire, the Nigerian pianist would play African classical music, including work by such composers as Fred Onovwerosuoke from Ghana and Nigeria’s Peter Sylvanus, Chijioke Ngobili and Christian Onyeji. (Onyeji composed the popular Igbo Christmas song, ‘Amuwor Anyi Nwa’).

In a post on social media inviting people to Echezona’s event, Ngobili noted the difference in acceptance of western and African classical music, writing that many African classical music enthusiasts have “hardly gone to hear and see how their own African musical instruments like udu, ogene, ekwe, etc are beaten right on the piano through the artistic concept we call ‘African Pianism’ hatched and developed since the early 1970s by African music scholars and composers themselves.

“We in the African musical arts are telling our story using the piano, and we want you to identify with it and be proud that beyond the language arts, we extended “domestication” to the musical arts too.”

Speaking about the importance of performing work from African composers, Nduka told Music In Africa that art deserves diversity.

“Every work of art has the propensity to connect to a new audience when its medium or means of expression is redefined,” he said. “African music, especially the more traditional forms are expressed classically using the same, or sometimes varying elements of harmony, counterpoint, rhythms, and forms often used in Western classical music not only for art’s sake, but also to have these works accessed on the same level as one would any European classical work.”

Nduka will also perform pieces from famous European composers Prokofiev and Schumann, both of whom have been acknowledged as important figures in the annals of classical music. The mix of western and African pieces, says Nduka, “introduces diversity into the already monotonous classical repertoire. It’s exciting to play works by Joshua Uzoigwe, Akin Euba, Fred Onovwerosuoke, or Christian Onyeji right after a Beethoven sonata.”

Nduka began playing recitals in the US last year and says working outside of his home country has been challenging but exciting. “Concertgoers here particularly like the fact that I play African classical piano works. They know their Beethoven, Chopin, Schubert and all, but hardly know anything about classical music from Africa.”

“They are curious and I’m happy to fill that gap by bringing new works to the stage,” Nduka said. “I am hopeful that in the next couple of years, through regular performances, recordings, master classes, and lecture-recitals, African classical piano music will become a major part of the classical repertoire.”

The Transformation Spring Recitals takes place on 29 April at the Transformation Church, located at 114 Route 50, Mays Landing, New Jersey. 

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