Kortkritik
22.10.2023

A hypnotic dollop of lava

Dansk Danseteater/Copenhagen Phil: »Leaning Tree«
© Natascha Rydvald
© Natascha Rydvald

It might seem abstract, but dance is extraordinarily specific – an ultra-precise instrument of physical poetry. You shouldn’t even think about adding music unless the link is umbilical, unequivocal and clear. There are passages in Leaning Tree – a meeting of Dansk Danseteater with the Copenhagen Phil – which are utterly, mesmerizingly inspired: when the union of the aural and visual isn’t a union at all, but a single thing. Unfortunately, there aren’t enough of them. 

Choreographer Fernando Melo’s signature style is slow, legato, un-rhythmic. His group of welded human bodies often behaves like a dollop of lava, moving with a sluggish certainty. It’s hypnotic to look at but absolutely unmusical. Maybe that’s why Signe Lykke’s score for Leaning Tree so rarely channels what we’re seeing. 

Or is Melo not listening to Lykke? She speeds up or shifts gait; he can’t. Her throbbing, cooing spatial orchestral score can resemble Bent Sørensen without the fragile melodies. It livens up when congealed low brass and winds squeeze themselves into almost spectral harmonies. Tension skyrockets, but it counts for little on stage. 

Then the »leaning« – the stunningly beautiful, anti-gravitational choreographic conceit on which it all rests. It’s about 30 minutes before we see any real leaning. But gosh it’s exquisitely done, worth the wait even if it makes a lot of what went before seem like padding. 

The culmination, a vision of leaning bodies like swaying reeds, gets right into Lykke’s score. Or maybe vice versa. It’s not just glissandos we’re hearing, but elasticated harmonic movement – music composed with extraordinary delicacy of texture, harmonies built from the exacting placement and movement of individual instruments. Leaning Tree needs more of this sort of thing.

© Kasper Muusholm

Komponist og guitarist Emil Palme har lige udgivet sit solo-debutalbum Ripen. På albummet stryges sten som buer mod elguitarens strenge, der i messende og klagende mønstre frembringer en dystopisk og ceremoniel urlyd i grænsen mellem komposition og improvisation. Ripen handler om at fuldende og modne – men også om at betræde de forræderiske stier, som naturen dikterer, at alt levende skal gå, og den uundgåelige opløsning af formål, der opstår efter en opnået fuldkommenhed.

»Jeg oplever musik som noget magisk, som en kraft der kan kommunikere via energier, der ikke nødvendigvis kan forstås eller måles på. At skabe musik er for mig at have kontakt med den kraft.«

© PR

Iku Sakan is an electronic musician from Osaka, Japan. his music focuses predominantly on the potential of emotional developments through the repetitive rhythmic patterns, rotating harmonics, and resonating melodies. The decades of collecting constantly shifting sound materials, melding improvisation, and DJ'ing practices, has led him to create his own unique niche of organic music in the late 2010s. His most recent works incl. a remix for the French composer Yann Tiersen (via Mute Records) and the forthcoming musique-concrete-inspired tone poem LP OMNITOPOEIA. When you ask Sakan what music is the answer is short: »Music is the healing force.«

© Andre Hansen

»To me, music is about everything else.«

Mike Sheridan has been a part of the Copenhagen electronic musicscene since the mid 00’s. He entered the scene, barely in his teens, with his landmark debut album I Syv Sind (In Two Minds, 2008). Sheridan traced an ambient and dreamy approach, and with limited tools at hand, he constructed a teenage masterwork that few could have predicted. Among the first in his generation, Mike Sheridan launched his career to high acclaim, effectively crossing over to mainstream audiences.

Recent projects includes featuring on techno artist KÔLSCH’s album Isopolis (2021) and performances in Nicolai Howalt’s exhibhition A Journey: The Near Future at Gallery Martin Asbæk (2022). Yesterday Sherian released the album Atmospherics

Kortkritik
09.11.2023

Voldsomt charmerende Volvo  

Kresten Osgood: »Kresten Osgood & De Udeboende« 
© PR
© PR

Danmarks måske mest produktive musiker Kresten Osgood og hans 20 medlemmer stærke ensemble De Udeboende præsenterer med dette selvbetitlede album en liveoptagelse fra den aarhusianske Spot Festival. Koncerten er helt tilbage fra 2008, men det var øjensynligt en koncert, der – ligesom Osgood selv har ry for – stak i alle retninger.

Først fire covers. En skramlende, percussiontung version af »Voldsom Volvo«, så Gary Bartz’ »Celestial Blues« med Osgood på charmerende danglish-vokal og hvinende saxofoner, der i et spændende midterstykke truer med at få det hele til at falde fra hinanden, indtil en rytmisk elguitar trækker nummeret tilbage fra afgrunden. Bill Fays »I Hear You Calling« sætter tempoet ned, indtil »In the Army Now« skaber fællessangsstemning med kor og akustisk instrumentering.

Herefter begynder de originale kompositioner. En fortælling om Edalf, der på sin løbetur i middelklassedanmark anno 19XX er ved at skide i bukserne, dernæst »Det betyder jo så meget«, en sjov, men i virkeligheden også trist ode til dem i Osgoods omgangskreds, der måske tager en kende for meget coke. Sidst, men på ingen måde mindst, kommer »Deportivo La Coruña« med ultrakiksede synths, trommemaskiner og lyrik, og, som glasuren på kiksekagen, hammondorgelsolo.

Osgood og De Udeboende kommer således virkelig vidt omkring både genrer og stemninger med en sprudlende livs- og spilleglæde. Det er befriende rodet, kaotisk og fuldt af gode vibes. Hvad der mangler af rød tråd, kompenseres der mere end rigeligt for med ubestridt charme.

© Benjamin Tarp

»I play music to connect people and I sing melodies to encourage community. I believe in the transformative power of music and love.«

Lucky Lo's (Lo Ersare) mission is to unite people through music by shining a light on the dark sides of life and transforming our struggles and worries into joy and hope. In a time  where mental illness is described as Denmark’s biggest public disease, Lucky Lo sees music as a vital tool for processing the challenges we face throughout life. 

She was awarded Talent of the Year at the Danish music publisher’s awards, Carl Prisen, and the Swedish music critic's award, Skaps Prisen. Her recent album bears the title The Big Feel.