<![CDATA[Ronnie Malley - NEWS]]>Wed, 03 Apr 2024 04:37:11 -0700Weebly<![CDATA[IMAN- InnerNet Cyphers Series]]>Thu, 30 Apr 2020 03:35:17 GMThttp://ronniemalley.com/news/iman-innernet-cyphers-series
REFLECTION FROM INNERNET CYPHERS PRESENTATION SATURDAY APRIL 11, 2020
Thank you to everyone who attended my InnerCity Muslim Action Network (IMAN) InnerNet Cyphers Series. It was truly a pleasure to see you ‘virtually’ there for this storytelling workshop sharing my musical journeys. An extra special thanks to Sadia, Binta, Rami, and all the IMAN folks for facilitating it and continually supporting the arts and culture.

IMAN is one of very few organizations of its kind that has the heart and courage to understand the importance of art and expression in humanity. They not only dare to believe in such things, they also act on them, making art and culture equal with the social and health services they also provide.

One of my responsibilities in presenting the InnerNet Cypher was to provide the following  post-workshop reflection.

Though I was presenting and explaining different instruments from around the globe, it was really the stories they told -- how I acquired them, where they came from -- that I personally find most compelling. Life can be an interesting ride sometimes. If you’d have told me 15 years ago that I’d be doing music and theater tours, lecturing on world music (online during a global pandemic!), collecting and playing many world instruments (too many according to my wife), and learning about world cultures, customs, food, and languages, I wouldn’t have believed you. I grew up playing music with my family band, but also thought one day I had to become “responsible.” So, for many years, I ended up working in the corporate world (i.e., retail, banking, real estate), and that’s where I thought I had security, credibility, and most of all access to the money ladder of success.

It took a divorce, life changes, A LOT of inner soul searching, and reflection to understand what the word, “value,” really meant. It wasn’t about how much money you could accumulate in a lifetime, it was about the wealth we gain from experiences and learning, the relationships we nurture, and understanding that giving back from who we are is the ultimate way to receive. By following a path with enthusiasm and a curiosity for life, I strove to walk in rhythm with life, bumps, grooves, and all. Put simply, I wanted to “emshi fi sabeel illah,” as we’d say in Arabic, to “walk in the ways of God,” a notion found in all the Abrahmic faiths, not just Islam, as well as other beliefs. This didn't mean I had to (or wanted to) become religious with a capital "R." It meant living life with purpose, yet, at the same time with total abandon to the will of the universe. I’m grateful and humbled by those who might regard what I have or do as talent, but in the end it’s really just an expression of love for something about which I’m passionate. And that, anyone can do if they search within themselves.

I know that right now we perceive probably one of the greatest challenges of our lifetime facing this global health crisis, but I find comfort in what I’ve seen through my musical journeys of human strength and resilience to overcome adversity while still maintaining our humanity, civility, and expression through art and action. That is why I choose to think artfully and be creative, no matter what my vocation, meeting, learning, and sharing stories about people we may never have known, yet who are nonetheless as exceptional and extraordinary as any celebrity or world leader. I have hope and pray that we make it through these times and look forward to watching our humanity blossom on the other side of this new renaissance.

#imanarts
Inner-City Muslim Action Network (IMAN) IMAN Atlanta
#innernetcyphers
#physicaldistancing
#sociallyconnected
#FlattenTheCurve
#stayhome
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<![CDATA[Music is a Medium for Social Interactions and Dialogue - Interview with Ronnie Malley]]>Wed, 22 Feb 2017 08:00:00 GMThttp://ronniemalley.com/news/music-is-a-medium-for-social-interactions-and-dialogue-interview-with-ronnie-malleyPicture
 "Music is a Medium for Social Interactions and Dialogue" - Interview with Ronnie Malley, Multi-Instrumentalist, Producer, and Educator - 
by Madanmohan Rao
​February 22, 2017

This was an interview by World Music Central contributor Madanmohan Rao with whom I shared the pleasure of participating in the Jaipur Literature Festival held in Jaipur, Rajasthan in India. The performances at the Jaipur Literature Festival (JLF) were part of a larger tour with one of my groups, East Meets Middle East (EMME)

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<![CDATA[Caravanserai: American Voices Tours The Midwest]]>Tue, 16 Feb 2016 10:16:36 GMThttp://ronniemalley.com/news/caravanserai-american-voices-tours-the-midwest
From January 18 through February 7, Ronnie Malley and Zeshan Bagewadi toured the Midwestern cities of Grand Forks, ND, Fergus Falls, MN, and Traverse City, MI. They were accompanied by first class musicians Tessa Brinckman, Terry Longshore, Garrett McGinn, Alec, Lehrman, and Tyler Berg, as well as impresario and tour manager Asad Ali Jafri (a.k.a. Dj Man o Wax). The 2016 Caravanserai: American Voices tour was sponsored by Arts Midwest and the Doris Duke Foundation for Islamic Art featuring American artists with Muslim backgrounds. 

Click here to learn more about the Caravanserai: American Voices Tour 
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<![CDATA[THE WHITE SNAKE - A MODERN DAY FABLE]]>Fri, 20 Apr 2012 20:27:17 GMThttp://ronniemalley.com/news/the-white-snake-a-modern-day-fablePicture
It was a July afternoon in Chicago last year, one day after my return from working on a music research project in South Asia, when I received a call from composer and sound designer Andre Pluess. He was calling to ask if I was available to perform and co-arrange music for a new theater production. The play, called The White Snake, was a centuries-old Chinese folk tale and was yet to be written by the Tony Award-winning playwright Mary Zimmerman, who is known for her adaptation of ancient texts. Mr. Pluess and I enjoyed our collaboration on the 2009 and 2010 productions of Arabian Nights, also written by Ms. Zimmerman, and we looked forward to working together on a production from scratch.

THE WHITE SNAKE by Mary Zimmerman at OSF.
Pictured: Amy Kim Waschke, Tanya McBride, Photo by Jenny Graham

Similar to Arabian Nights, he explained that for The White Snake he wanted me on percussion and plucked strings. The play was to be produced by the Oregon Shakespeare Festival (OSF); a renowned theater festival situated in the mountains of Ashland, Oregon. He added that joining us would be fellow co-arrangers Michal Palzewicz (cello) and Tessa Brinckman (flute), two super talented, classically-trained musicians living in Ashland. After Andre described the amazing artistic community, and OSF being one of the largest Shakespeare festivals in the nation…he said, “You might have to move there for six to nine months. Can you do it?” It meant taking time off from teaching and being away from family, but from what I heard of this mecca for theatre it would’ve been foolish to turn down the opportunity.

The White Snake is an ancient Chinese story of sorcery and romance, which has evolved over the years. The basic premise of the story is that a snake comes down from a heavenly mountain and transforms herself into the form of a woman. The Lady White Snake, along with a Green Snake companion, explores the delights of the earthly world and finds love when she meets and marries Xu Xian (shyoo-shian), an endearing, yet unsuspecting, scholar. However, their love is short-lived when a Buddhist monk named Fahai, also skilled in sorcery, disrupts what he believes to be an unholy union between man and “demon” spirit. After numerous attempts to explain to Xu Xian the nature of his wife, Fahai (a crafty meddling monk in some versions, and pious, yet stubborn in others) decides to forcibly take him to the Buddhist monastery for repentance. Upon learning of this, Lady White Snake, bound by love (and child) to Xu Xian, summons the spirits of the sea to battle Fahai and free her husband. Most of the versions tragically end with Lady White Snake either dying or being magically captured by Fahai, but in some adaptations she is released from her spiritual imprisonment. Though there have been many alternate endings for the story, consistent elements have been the marriage between Xu Xian and Lady White Snake, a child born of them, and a magical sea battle against Fahai displaying the extent she would go for love.

In preparing for the music of the play, I had to display to what extent I could multi-task on instruments. At my home, I met with Pluess to discuss the instrumentation of the play and try out instruments in my studio. After we listened to some traditional Chinese music from various provinces, as well as post-Cultural Revolution and modern styles, which blend Western and Eastern elements, it became apparent that I would need to arm myself with a diverse arsenal of instruments. For percussion, I assembled a kit consisting of a zarb (goblet-shaped, wooden Persian hand drum), tar (South Asian frame drum), dawwul (Central Asian bass drum), a floor tom (Made in America!), Chinese cymbals and gongs, some auxiliary percussion (e.g. shaker, tambourine, finger cymbals), and a bell kit. For plucked strings, we agreed that I’d play oud (Mid-Eastern lute), but upon mentioning to Pluess that there was a relative of the oud in China called the pipa, we were bound for Andy’s Music, Chicago’s own ethnic instrument mart. From the first strum, he knew we had to have it along side the oud, and as an instrument in the lute family, I knew that I wanted play it. And so, our tools for the soundscape of the show were set.

Though the play was written with an American audience in mind, careful attention was paid to details conveying its Chinese origin. The music combines Western and traditional Asian motifs while underscoring the story with theatrical sensibilities. Visually, the set is expertly adorned with Asian austerity using bamboo walls, which serve to frame the stunning projected animations of Chinese calligraphy and imagery. Along with costumes that flaunt fashion reminiscent of pre-twentieth century China,  the tale vividly comes to life like a 3D storybook. In respecting the philosophies and universal parables from the East, the dialog is also rich with Chinese proverbs and colloquialisms, not to mention secrets of the Chinese drama. Performed by a diverse and dynamic cast, the current incarnation of The White Snake story at OSF offers romance, comedy, sadness, courage, transcendence, and most importantly, a way for anyone to shed their skin and relate to the human condition.
For more information, please visit: http://www.osfashland.org/browse/production.aspx?prod=236
The White Snake at OSF. Pictured: Amy Kim Waschke, Christopher Livingston, Photo by Jenny Graham
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