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© Høgni Heinesen
kritik

Universal Music with Local Truths 

Local traditions play a central role in the second-ever Faroese opera, in which Sunleif Rasmussen reclaims a local story made famous by Wagner.

Af
  • Andrew Mellor
13. Januar 2025

On the Faroe Islands, opera is a contemporary art form and an intensely national one – more inextricably bound up in ideas of nationhood than anything happening right now at La scala. You can write that unequivocally, when there are only two Faroese operas to discuss. 

The second of them has just been born. Regin smiður arrived amid the deep snow of a Klaksvík Christmas in the final days of 2024. Its predecessor, also composed by Sunleif Rasmussen, dates from 2006. Í Óðamangarður adapted a story by the nation’s bard, William Heinesen. It was deemed »a work of haunting originality and beauty« by a critic dispatched to the North Atlantic review it, all the way from The Times in London.

Two decades later, music stands with knitwear and candle-smoke waterfalls as one of the Faroe Islands’s most recognized commodities. Eivør’s voice unfurls itself over film and gaming soundtracks and Rasmussen’s scores are broadcast by BBC orchestras. Also new – very new – is Varpið, the Faroese answer to Reykjavík’s Harpa: a hybrid of proscenium theatre and shoebox concert hall whose metal-box housing leers at an angle over Klaksvík’s main street, like part of a satellite fallen from space.

Læs videre
»The Rat and the Tree«. © Grzesiek Mart
reportage

A Modern Festival with a Memory

At Warsaw Autumn, they are not only focused on sounds. The Polish festival aims to influence reality with new names and ideas.

Af
  • Andreo Michaelo Mielczarek
6. Januar 2025
Barents Spektakel. © Nima Taheri
essay

2024: An Earful of Chaos 

Chaotic times call for chaotic music. But also soft techno, flutists and yoga balls. Jennifer Gersten and Andreo Michaelo Mielczarek wrap up the musical year in a conversation between New York and Aarhus.

Af
  • Jennifer Gersten,
  • Andreo Michaelo Mielczarek
29. december 2024

Kortkritik

© Vikingeskibsmuseet i Roskilde

14 Meters of Wave Swells from History’s Anonymous Depths

»Gently lapping,  quiveringly simple, and almost self-effacingly discreet.«

Kortkritik

© Nils Strindberg

High to Fly, Ice-Cold to Crash

»The shockwave transforms into mischievous, squelchy synth footsteps as desperation and hallucinations grow.«

© Shutterstock

Sounding Women's Work II

»You look like 50% of the world's population, but are professionalised as a minority« – peer reviewed academic articles and audio papers on gender, technology and infrastructure in Nordic sound art and experimental music.

Peer

© Login/Shutterstock.com

Sounds of Science

6 April 2021 – Our new peer-reviewed special edition on composition, recording and listening as laboratory practice. Ten audio papers, two in-depth articles and an introduction by editors Henrik Frisk and Sanne Krogh Groth.

‘Every time we listen to music or make music, we are at the same time creating social relations or socialities’

Gender and social relations in New Music: Tackling the octopus
A conversation with Georgina Born

Collection

Marcela Lucatelli. © Marcela Lucatelli

Meet the composers

Some of them are just getting started. Others are well-established names on the international scene. But what are their thoughts on the music they create and the world they live in? Read a selection of our most interesting pieces on composers and composing.

Guide

© SABRINA SANTIAGO

My name is Laura Cocks – would you like to see my playlist?

»Music is to me the subcutaneous holy matter. Finding each other in ourselves and ourselves in each other.«

Kortkritik

Yanling. © Christian Neuenschwander

The Perfect Storm

»Over time, the album grows into a brilliant piece of contemporary art, only suffering from slightly too perfect production and somewhat grandiose gestures.«

© PR

Female Composers in 20th-century Electronic Music

© PR

On the Typical, the Indistinct and the Impersonal in the Sonic Arts, Media and Auditory Culture

About

Seismograf

Welcome to Seismograf

Seismograf is an independent Danish web magazine focusing on the newest developments within the arts of sound. On this page you will find our most recent English-language content as well as collections on selected topics. Want to know more about Seismograf? Then go on and scroll down to the bottom of this page.

Collection

© Anna Cokorilo

Around the world with Seismograf

Seismograf may be located in Denmark, but brilliant music is performed all over the world. Which means we often cover events in places far, far away, as illustrated by this selection of articles.

Essays

2024: An Earful of Chaos 

Chaotic times call for chaotic music. But also soft techno, flutists and yoga balls. Jennifer Gersten and Andreo Michaelo Mielczarek wrap up the musical year in a conversation between New York and Aarhus.
Jennifer Gersten 29. december 2024

Gender, Canon, and Eastern European Women Pioneers of 20th-century Electronic Music

Feminist readings of 20th-century electronic music history cannot avoid questioning the notion of canon and canon-oriented historiographical practices. Shedding light on women composers from non-Western contexts can further come in handy in searching for ways to engage with the history of gender in music beyond mainstreaming and the rhetoric of exceptionalism.
Marta Beszterda van Vliet 24. november 2024

Another day, another rediscovery of Else Marie Pade

A good twenty years after the first rediscovery of Else Marie Pade as an electronic pioneer, she is now being branded as a visionary acoustic composer. It seems we never get tired of rewriting the story of this special artist – and writing ourselves into it.
Sune Anderberg 20. august 2024

Death and Masochism

Efterskrift enjoy the discomfort of pleasure postponed or expressed through the pain of the feeling of something missing. At the new festival MINU, the Aarhus-based ensemble will perform a concert with a simple message: everything good is allowed to die.
Macon Holt 4. november 2022

Actual Friends, Making New Maps from the Future

How do you make sense in a world filled with tragedy, grief and institutional control? In their work for MINU festival composer Conor McLean and performer Nikolaus von Bemberg turn to Charlie Kaufman’s film, »Synechdoche, New York« for answers.
Macon Holt 4. november 2022

Alien Frequencies

The mixtape has always been a format with which to swagger and seduce, meant to project both front and vulnerability. How, though, might we interpret a sampler from another star system; what might its effect on us be? A journey with Ziggy Stardust, Yuri Gagarin, afrofuturists and intellectuals from Mars.
Ben Carver 27. Oktober 2022

»My pregnant body changed things – composing with the process«

Sounding Women's Work | In a situation where the gender balance is skewed in favor of men, it takes action to change the balance so no one has a special advantage, says composer, saxophonist and author Laura Toxværd. 
Laura Toxværd 25. Maj 2022

On stage we are four bodies

Sounding Women's Work | Meshes is a performance groupe with drummers and dancers. They work with the relation between body and sound and investigates how the movement of the body can be translated into a score for a drum set, and how the sound of a drum set can be translated into a score for movement.
Meshes 10. Februar 2022

»Had I run around with the others, would I have become a composer at all?«

Sounding Women's Work | Mette Nielsen is occupied finding ways to create space for the small and fragile sounds in the music. She works with both completely traditional scores and more open notations and easy staging of sound.
Mette Nielsen 10. Februar 2022

Reviews

Universal Music with Local Truths 

Local traditions play a central role in the second-ever Faroese opera, in which Sunleif Rasmussen reclaims a local story made famous by Wagner.
Andrew Mellor 13. Januar 2025

Head to Venice and Hear Foreign Songs Everywhere

War, refugees, and destruction are inescapable at the Venice Biennale. You can feel it, see it, hear it – it's all-encompassing. Has Venice ever been this filled with sound?
Andreo Michaelo Mielczarek 18. Oktober 2024

»Ist nix für Frauen« 

Powerful Rhythms and Empowered Voices dominated at the opening night of Heroines of Sound Festival in Berlin.
Giada Dalla Bontà 6. august 2024

How we learned to love repetition

There are very few forces as powerful as insistent repetition. The German media critic Tilman Baumgärtel has written a poetic, knowledgeable and surprising book about the loop.
Sune Anderberg 13. Februar 2024

This book asks you to breathe and resonate without words

Salomé Voegelin’s book about our uncurating sound is her most personal and also most difficult to read – however, succeeding with her project, despite almost all odds. 
Morten Søndergaard 24. september 2023

Real Estate VS Culture 

»The Williamsburg Avant-Garde« is a must read not only for avant-garde music aficionados, but for anybody interested in understanding how and why creativity bursts in some places at certain times.
Sébastien Doubinsky 7. august 2023

Do you like the sound of apples?

»Engaging with Everyday Sounds« is either totally bonkers or completely inspired – either way, it will have you listening differently to the world around you.
Andrew Mellor 21. april 2023

In Northern Norway, they have a festival that cracks the iron curtain

Even when the bridges burn, we must make an effort to cross borders, was the message at the Barents Spektakel in Kirkenes, 400 km north of the Arctic Circle. Here – in the biting cold – Russian shame, claustrophobic magnetic fields and censored sound art became the starting point for a very difficult conversation.
Jakob Gustav Winckler 9. Marts 2023

It is impressed in the body

After a long hiatus due to the covid-19 pandemic, Berlin Atonal has opened the gates of Kraftwerk to the public for the first time. As limitations to collective events endure, the new project Metabolic Rift includes, in addition to the live performances, an exhibition aiming to elicit individual experience with intense stimuli. The exposition presents a convincing curatorial approach to sound, exalting its sensorial qualities and proposing an inspiring model to work with the aural and its (im-)materiality in the context of art exhibitions.
Giada Dalla Bontà 11. december 2021

Interviews

The Useless Hell

In the musical theater performance »Calls to this number are being diverted« Matthew Grouse puts the absurd working life of late modernity under the microscope.
Henrik Marstal 16. Januar 2024

Side entrance to the New Music Scene

Slowly the idea of universality is dissolving, experimental music exists everywhere and in every genre – Abbasi, Eizirik and Sanchéz-Chiong in conversation.
Jan Topolski 29. november 2023

UKRAiNATV – the future starts here

They mix art, activism and technology to create a dialogue across Europe. Meet the internet TV project UKRAiNATV, featured at Unsound 2023.
Giada Dalla Bontà 5. Oktober 2023

»We love to talk about solidarity«

The problem is not a lack of interest in Eastern Europe, but in a scarcity of access to its narratives and perspectives, says Ukrainian writer and curator Mariana Berezovska ahead of Unsound Festival 2023.
Giada Dalla Bontà 2. Oktober 2023

»I love freedom and I know why«

For months Ukrainian born composer and sound artist Katarina Gryvul didn't force herself to write, as she didn't want to associate war with music. It all changed: »An artist cannot be out of politics now«.
Marta Konieczna 1. december 2022

»I can’t kill anybody with my profession« 

It took Hania Rani many years to acknowledge that she feels much more comfortable in a music other than classical music. However, it lives – like a heavy rucksack – in the Polish artist's piano music, which is allowed to be called poppy. Now she is visiting Copenhagen and the new borderless music festival Resonator in Odense.
Mathias Monrad Møller 3. november 2022

»I would very much like to survive, thanks in advance«

Two years ago, James Black began writing an article series on religion in the Danish composer scene. Getting more and more angry, Black finally had to give up. Why?
Sune Anderberg 27. august 2022

Oil, Opera and the history that haunts us

Niels Rønsholdt's new work, »The Last Rites«, is a pessimistic satire on human nature. The opera takes place in Østerbro Ice Skating Rink, so the audience can feel the cold mechanics of desire and the growing chaos on our planet. Do we really need winter all year round?
Macon Holt 23. august 2022

Three Artists. One Hope

Three snapshots from three different lives: Kateryna Zavoloka, Katarina Gryvul and Boris Filanovsky. All work with music, their countries are at war, and they condemn Russia's invasion of Ukraine. They have not met each other and the article consists of three unique interviews with Seismograf. None of them see themselves as political artists, but they do believe that it is a human duty to speak out and fight back when the leader of one's homeland orders war against the other two's homelands. 
Julie Hugsted 9. Marts 2022
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Seismograf is supported by

The Danish Arts Foundation, The Danish Composers’ Society/Koda Culture and The Independent Research Fund Denmark.