kortkritik

Grand Miniature Worlds

Éliane Radigue: »Naldjorlak«
© PR
© PR
12. july

In Naldjorlak French composer Éliane Radigue takes us on a journey of microscopic proportions as a seemingly simple musical situation reminiscent of her earlier work for synthesizers unfolds. Naldjorlak is a work for unaccompanied cello and Radigue’s first composition for acoustic instruments and relies on a verbal communication between composer and performer. Cellist Charles Curtis, hones in on just one note for the duration of the piece, however, this premise which at first can strike the listener as simple is anything but. 

What 91 year-old Radigue is asking of her listener is to be present and it might come as no great surprise that she has been a practicing Buddhist since the 1970's. To experience Radigue’s music you need to be able to follow sound to its silence, and that is a mental state. Naldjorlak is an invitation to deep listening. What do you hear when you stop in your tracks and begin truly listening as Charles Curtis drones on? Curtis is right at home in Radigue’s investigation of sound and his playing reminds us that without a great performer a great work of sound art does not exist. Had there been a score we could have mused that the work itself exists for the reader to experience through reading, but given the fact that composer and soloist have worked verbally it is more difficult to imagine this piece without its performer and so it’s difficult to fully know when we are hearing Radigue and when we hear Curtis. 

Curtis brings Naldjorlak to life so subtly that it’s easy to think that he is doing nothing. It sounds deceptively simple at first but if you take the time to actually experience the pace of the droning you will notice that not only are the two versions offered on this release vastly different in character and expressivity. They aren’t really drones with its implicit monotony, rather they are microscopic worlds of constantly changing textures of sound, and it is the way Curtis so masterfully mediates Radigue’s ideas that makes these recordings from Los Angeles and Paris so captivating.

Playliste

My name is Seb Doubinsky – would you like to see my playlist?

29. july

»Music is the infinite sound of humanity, in all of its manifestations. It is the essence of who we are, what we fear and what we hope for. Nobody owns music, and yet it is absolutely who you are, the very DNA of your soul.«

Seb Doubinsky is a bilingual French dystopian fiction author and academic. His »city-states cycle« has put him on the map of notable authors of the genre. He has been long-listed for an Arthur C Clarke award, won the Foreword Reviews bronze award for Missing Signal and his latest novel is short-listed for the 2025 Foreword Reviews award. He lives in Aarhus, Denmark, where he teaches French history, literature and culture at the university.

Playliste

Mit navn er Vakuumpagten – vil du se min playliste?

12. july
© Vakuumpagten

»Musik for mig er en mærkelig ting. Jeg synes egentlig, at det er lidt underligt, at jeg ikke bliver mere træt af det, end jeg gør, når man tænker på, at det er overalt hele tiden. Men grunden er nok, at musik er en af de mest alsidige ting, der findes – to stykker lyd kan have fuldstændig forskellige stemninger, rytmer (eller ingen rytme) osv., og alligevel have dét tilfælles, at de begge er musik (hvilket så åbenbart er en form for egenskab, som gør dem begge fede af en eller anden grund). Det er imponerende nok.«

Mikkel Pilgaard producerer musik under navnet Vakuumpagten sideløbende med at prøve at finde ud af, hvordan man træner sig op til at dræbe en drone. Han forestiller sig, at han kender forskel på det virkelige og det uvirkelige. Men hvis selv store tænkere er uenige om alt, hvordan skal han så virkelig kunne vide, hvad der er rigtigt og forkert?

Playliste

Mit navn er Jacob Eriksen – vil du se min playliste?

11. july
© Mateusz Szota

»For mig er musik en særlig motor for diversitet, identitet, individualitet og fællesskab. Musik har en umiddelbar evne til både at skabe og forstærke trygge rum og at ekspandere og sønderrive grænserne for eksistens.«

Kunstner, kurator, underviser Jacob Eriksen arbejder mellem Struer og Berlin. Han er leder af Sound Art Lab, festivalleder for Struer Tracks, studieleder for 89 Sound Art School og underviser på Sound Studies and Sonic Arts på UdK Berlin. 

Playliste

Mit navn er Mark Solborg – vil du se min playliste?

5. july
© Malthe Ivarsson

»For mig er musikken lyset, der strømmer ind gennem vores vinduer og rammer menneskers sind. Musikken er fællesskab – noget vi skaber sammen. Musikken er det andet sprog – der kan tales, når alle ord og samtaler er slidt i stykker.« 

Mark Solborg er dansk-argentinsk guitarist, komponist og improvisator med uddannelse fra bl.a. Rytmisk Musikkonservatorium og New School University i New York. Han har udgivet 28 albums med egne værker og samarbejdet med profiler som Evan Parker, Susana Santos Silva og Herb Robertson – ofte på det kunstnerdrevne label ILK, som han er medstifter af. Hans musik er opført i 23 lande og involverer musikere fra 15 nationer. Projekter som TUNGEMÅL og BABEL undersøger elguitarens rolle i akustiske rum, og hans virke omfatter også samarbejder med teater, film og billedkunst. Solborg er Reumert-belønnet, præmieret af Statens Kunstfond og blev i 2024 nomineret til en Danish Music Award som Årets Komponist. Han er aktuel med albummet Confluencia.

Playliste

My name is Halym Kim – would you like to see my playlist?

3. july
© Hreinn Gudlaugsson

»Music for me is like a sourdough. If you don't feed it right it is going to die. If you feed it correctly a lot of people can benefit from it.« 

Halym Kim is a drummer, composer and project coordinator based in Copenhagen. His music is mainly based in free improvisation and experimental music but performs also as a traditional Korean percussionist. He has a Master and an Advanced Postgraduate Diploma in Music Performance from RMC in Copenhagen. Together with Nana Pi he organizes Impro Camp which is a music camp for free and structured improvised music that is happening every year in Fredericia, Denmark.