
When the Past Begins to Make Noise Again
At Geneva’s Archipel Festival, lost instruments and occult soundscapes are brought to life in a journey through speculative rituals and experimental music.
At Geneva’s Archipel Festival, lost instruments and occult soundscapes are brought to life in a journey through speculative rituals and experimental music.
På Festspillene i Bergen lod William Kentridge og Ryoji Ikeda kunsten opfange det, der ikke længere kan siges – kun sanses.
Årets udgave af Københavns festival for ny musik rummede både soniske ritualer, kulturmøder og optrin med loops, krop og kassettebånd – og franske musikere, der spillede, som om klang kunne forandre verden.
På Genèves Archipel Festival vækkes forsvundne instrumenter og okkulte lydlandskaber til live i en rejse gennem spekulative ritualer og eksperimentel musik.<br />
This year’s edition of Copenhagen’s festival for new music embraced sonic rituals, cultural encounters, and performances with loops, bodies, and cassette tapes – and featured French musicians playing as if sound itself could change the world.
At the Bergen International Festival, William Kentridge and Ryoji Ikeda let art capture what can no longer be said – only felt.