The Prague Post - Pianist dedicates music to Indigenous people who inspired him

EUR -
AED 4.193693
AFN 73.082756
ALL 93.842284
AMD 419.210416
ANG 2.044493
AOA 1047.711275
ARS 1703.748218
AUD 1.64513
AWG 2.058307
AZN 1.937346
BAM 1.957699
BBD 2.305147
BDT 141.056862
BGN 1.930847
BHD 0.431521
BIF 3406.064435
BMD 1.141918
BND 1.478247
BOB 7.90645
BRL 5.892522
BSD 1.144515
BTN 108.633928
BWP 15.458134
BYN 3.269115
BYR 22381.592042
BZD 2.301843
CAD 1.619799
CDF 2575.024802
CHF 0.922487
CLF 0.026889
CLP 1058.272734
CNY 7.758362
CNH 7.765203
COP 3811.333903
CRC 521.408186
CUC 1.141918
CUP 30.260826
CVE 110.371606
CZK 24.235266
DJF 203.80864
DKK 7.475178
DOP 67.585872
DZD 151.893135
EGP 55.737011
ERN 17.128769
ETB 183.596645
FJD 2.555269
FKP 0.854246
GBP 0.854914
GEL 3.020332
GGP 0.854246
GHS 13.061928
GIP 0.854246
GMD 83.936687
GNF 10037.739252
GTQ 8.732549
GYD 239.404382
HKD 8.953265
HNL 30.636994
HRK 7.534147
HTG 149.726585
HUF 355.252947
IDR 20557.949057
ILS 3.47509
IMP 0.854246
INR 108.778651
IQD 1499.267814
IRR 1570137.196472
ISK 143.596159
JEP 0.854246
JMD 180.256475
JOD 0.809601
JPY 185.30074
KES 147.663513
KGS 99.86109
KHR 4597.521199
KMF 492.166789
KPW 1027.726565
KRW 1720.830378
KWD 0.353823
KYD 0.95373
KZT 537.048133
LAK 25789.248207
LBP 102489.988581
LKR 383.185146
LRD 208.070973
LSL 18.5899
LTL 3.371787
LVL 0.690735
LYD 7.341155
MAD 10.702178
MDL 20.137804
MGA 4852.793482
MKD 61.650007
MMK 2397.363083
MNT 4094.466998
MOP 9.244751
MRU 45.674116
MUR 53.852919
MVR 17.654253
MWK 1984.159909
MXN 19.977058
MYR 4.650997
MZN 72.979714
NAD 18.589981
NGN 1567.80765
NIO 41.931356
NOK 11.173862
NPR 173.81617
NZD 1.997808
OMR 0.439062
PAB 1.144521
PEN 3.890809
PGK 5.029924
PHP 70.251359
PKR 318.202507
PLN 4.300686
PYG 6967.791102
QAR 4.17243
RON 5.235579
RSD 117.363388
RUB 87.355974
RWF 1677.256757
SAR 4.258509
SBD 9.246451
SCR 16.019745
SDG 685.715776
SEK 11.055382
SGD 1.47582
SHP 0.852557
SLE 27.83426
SLL 23945.452874
SOS 654.037452
SRD 42.921256
STD 23635.396276
STN 24.52401
SVC 10.014761
SYP 126.218588
SZL 18.579434
THB 38.117477
TJS 10.58072
TMT 4.008132
TND 3.385199
TOP 2.749465
TRY 53.507976
TTD 7.767639
TWD 36.597904
TZS 3000.392858
UAH 50.933611
UGX 4189.101217
USD 1.141918
UYU 46.064493
UZS 13753.464927
VES 769.751881
VND 30026.161833
VUV 137.19585
WST 3.160577
XAF 656.60558
XAG 0.018841
XAU 0.000277
XCD 3.086091
XCG 2.06261
XDR 0.816599
XOF 656.596947
XPF 119.331742
YER 270.691926
ZAR 18.58347
ZMK 10278.63422
ZMW 21.087553
ZWL 367.697118
  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    68.32

    0%

  • CMSC

    -0.0800

    21.98

    -0.36%

  • BTI

    0.3400

    61.8

    +0.55%

  • RYCEF

    -0.6200

    19.28

    -3.22%

  • VOD

    -0.0300

    13.05

    -0.23%

  • GSK

    0.2300

    53.32

    +0.43%

  • BP

    1.2200

    38.61

    +3.16%

  • RIO

    -2.3300

    91.25

    -2.55%

  • BCE

    0.5300

    21.4

    +2.48%

  • NGG

    0.5200

    83.11

    +0.63%

  • RELX

    0.5400

    32.81

    +1.65%

  • CMSD

    -0.0400

    22.19

    -0.18%

  • AZN

    2.9600

    193.12

    +1.53%

  • BCC

    -1.8800

    73.4

    -2.56%

  • JRI

    -0.0100

    13.1

    -0.08%

Pianist dedicates music to Indigenous people who inspired him
Pianist dedicates music to Indigenous people who inspired him / Photo: CLAUDIO CRUZ - AFP

Pianist dedicates music to Indigenous people who inspired him

Romayne Wheeler sits at his grand piano overlooking Mexico's Copper Canyon and plays music inspired by the mountains and remote Indigenous communities that he now dedicates his life to helping.

Text size:

The 81-year-old California-born composer no longer lives in the cave where he slept with his solar-powered portable piano after arriving several decades ago in the Sierra Tarahumara in northwestern Mexico.

But he feels as close as ever to the nature and Indigenous Raramuri people who welcomed him into their lives, sharing their food, music and culture.

"I feel truly that all of this area around me is my studio," Wheeler told AFP in his stone house perched on the canyon's edge, several hours from the nearest significant town along winding mountain tracks.

"Every tree, every plant, every flower -- everything here has something to tell me," he said.

Wheeler's love affair with the Sierra Tarahumara began in 1980 when he was in the United States studying Indigenous music and a snowstorm made it impossible to travel to a Native American reservation near the Grand Canyon.

Leafing through a copy of National Geographic magazine, he came across pictures of the remote Mexican region and decided to see it for himself.

"It was like coming home," he recalled, wearing the Indigenous-style shirt and traditional sandals that he now prefers to Western attire.

"The people that are most revered here are the musicians. They stand in high honor like the shamans," he said.

The mountainous corner of Chihuahua state is part of the notorious "Golden Triangle," a region with a history of marijuana and opium poppy production as well as drug cartel violence.

- Raramuri philosophy -

Wheeler identified so much with the philosophy of the Raramuri -- also known as Tarahumara -- that he came back for several weeks each year before settling there permanently in 1992.

They were "people who shared everything they had, who considered the person that is of most value is the one that helps others the most, and contributed something positive to humanity," he said.

When he first arrived, the Raramuri -- whose name means "light-footed ones" and who are renowned for their running stamina -- showed Wheeler a small cave where he could practice and keep his electric piano dry.

"My friends said sometimes with the wind just right they could hear my little tiny instrument all the way across the canyon," he remembered.

One young child, a neighbor's son, showed particular interest, so Wheeler taught him to play and sent him to study in the Chihuahua state capital.

Now Romeyno Gutierrez, his protege, is an acclaimed pianist in his own right who performs abroad and accompanied Wheeler on two tours of Europe.

"He's the first pianist and composer of Indian heritage that I know of on our continent," Wheeler said proudly.

Bringing his 1917 Steinway grand piano to the village of Retosachi was almost as much of an odyssey as Wheeler's own.

The dream to put a piano on a mountaintop was born in Austria where Wheeler, a keen mountaineer, studied and lived for 32 years, but where harsh winters made it impossible.

In Mexico, he hired a professional moving company to bring the fragile musical instrument from the western city of Guadalajara as far as it could into the mountains.

It then took 28 hours to reach Wheeler's home by truck along dirt mountain roads with the piano laid on its side, supported by piles of potatoes, he said.

"We went at a walking rhythm for most of the way because of all the potholes," he added.

- Helping humanity -

Despite the remoteness of his home, affectionately named Eagle's Nest, visits from his neighbors and the company of his dogs mean that Wheeler never feels alone.

"I feel more lonely in the city because of all the people around that have nothing to say to each other," he said.

He has 42 godsons in the area, one of the poorest in Mexico, where limited access to clean water, sufficient food and healthcare pose major challenges to communities that rely mostly on subsistence agriculture.

In the early 1990s, Wheeler decided to use proceeds from the concerts he performs around the world to establish a school, a clinic and a scholarship program.

"They're very good people. They help a lot," said one of his neighbors, Gerardo Gutierrez, who was a child when he first met Wheeler.

"They gave away blankets when it was very cold. And sometimes they got groceries for the people here," the 49-year-old added.

Giving back to the community has also given Wheeler a deeper sense of purpose.

"These years have been the most happy years of my life really because I feel like my music is doing something of value to help humanity," he said.

Q.Fiala--TPP