Agam

current Project

Sangam Ensemble in collaboration with he Melbourne Symphony Orchestra present Agam: three intertwined ancient, contemporary and futuristic stories of Tamil Australians who live and work on unceded lands of the Kulin Nation. Weaving together an anti-colonial perspective, this intercultural performance frames music as dance, visuals and storytelling to explore marginality, home, and belonging, created by Priya Srinivasan, Hari Sivanesan, Uthra Vijay, Sridhar Chari and Alex Turley with Sri Andal and Tulsidas Goswami.

Agam was performed at the Sidney Myer Bowl in March 2023 as part of a free concerts at the bowl series.

Created by
Sangam
In collaboration with
Melbourne Symphony Orchestra
Produced by
Insite Arts

Agam brings 3 intertwined stories of Tamil Australians (past, present, and future) from migrants and refugees who come from colonial pasts to live and work on the unceded lands of the Kulin Nation. The works reveal themes of home and belonging, insiders and outsiders, and existing between many worlds. This performance from a non-western perspective, imagines music as dance, visuals, history, politics, entertainment and powerful storytelling, all at once.

Agam in Tamil refers to the interior landscape. The MSO commission enables the exploration of interiority from a range of viewpoints bringing the mythological, ancient and the contemporary together. All the music has been created in collaboration with the very talented composer Alex Turley.

New Homes is a stunning Veena Concerto originally composed by Hari Sivanesan for an MSO-Sangam exchange in February 2022. The Veena is an ancient 7 stringed lute and this is the first time that a Concerto with a contemporary theme has been written for the instrument.

The theme inside the musical composition explores Sivanesan’s homeland of Sri Lanka, via oral interviews with individuals set to poetry, that explores the civil war, its aftermath and the creation of refugees and migrants who are unable or unwilling to return home. 

The work also explores what it means to create new homes in South East Victoria, the newness, the learning , the struggles and hope; juxtaposing that against reminiscing the fragmented memories, the smells, tastes, the comforts and the fears  of a home long gone and creating new homes.

Becoming brings an incredible visual and soundscape of contemporary dance, music and theatre from the perspective of a migrant girl child growing up in the turbulent suburbs of Melbourne trying to find a way to belong while being pulled between two cultures.

Her grandmother (paati) arrives in Melbourne and reminds her to look inward to find strength and to hold on to their ancestress, a female poet from the 8th century named Andal. Andal’s songs and poetry have been handed down from mother to daughter, grandmother to granddaughter for generations across the millennia. She is one of the only female “saints” of the ancient Vaishnavite traditions whose poetry remains with us today.

Becoming brings together ancient poetry written by Andal, with contemporary poetry and dance by Priya Srinivasan with powerful movement from classical and contemporary Indian dance traditions. It is set to beautiful music with haunting ragas by the renowned Carnatic vocalist and composer Uthra Vijay, with rhythmic structures created by percussionist/ mridangam maestro Sridhar Chari. The work explores new ways of understanding music from a non western context and ways of moving through fragmentation to becoming whole.

The Way Forward takes the powerful mythological character of Hanuman, known to be the figure of resistance, strength, innovation and love, as a force to reimagine our contemporary pluralistic society. He brings different fractured tribes of humans and creatures together and they build bridges.

Through episodes where he finds his inner strength, his flight across oceans, his tail being set on fire, his commitment to bringing tribes together, we are shown his interventions and his capacity to outcreate the realities he faces. He offers an example for us to look at the past as inspiration to find the way forward.

Taking 16th century lyrics, Hari Sivanesan’s composition traverses multiple genres; evocative bhajan, bhangra, r&b and classical genres, framed by a percussive mélange, to create a rich soundscape. Priya Srinivasan reimagines the story through the choreographed movements of Kalaripayattu, Sri Lankan Kandian dance, contemporary urban and classical Indian dance in a visually stunning experimental performance.

Performance History

  • 2023

Sidney Myer Music Bowl →

Melbourne, Australia

Credits

Created by
Hari Sivanesan
Composer
Priya Srinivasan
Choreographer

Supporters

Contact

Produced by
Jason Cross → Email