Pirrende stilstand
I arbejdet med Concerto Grosso (2018-2022), som Allan Gravgaard Madsen har skrevet i tæt samarbejde med den amerikanske Jack Quartet, har komponisten opstillet et par benspænd omkring Concerto Grosso-formatet: Strygekvartetten skulle spille op mod Aarhus Symfoniorkester i »et finmasket net af talsystemer, musikhistoriske hilsner og personlige fortællinger«. Med den for AGM typiske begrænsning til det traditionelle symfoniorkesters instrumenter – om end de bliver brugt i deres yderste potens – lykkes det at fastholde en behageligt pirrende æstetik, der efterlader mig fremadlænet gennem hele værket.
Benspændene virker ikke begrænsende, men er mere rammer indenfor hvilke, han arbejder frit og legende og med en klanglig finfølelse. Som substitut for harmonisk progression og teleologi fokuserer AGM i stedet på timbre og klang. Dragende er det. Selv har jeg ikke fundet den forvrængede reference til Irving Berlin, som AGM skriver, værket rummer, men til gengæld er der klanglige ligheder med blandt andre Arvo Pärt og Bent Sørensen. Sidstesatsen, »Notturno II«, afslører en komponist, der ikke har travlt med at være udfordrende kompleks; han hviler i det minimale – dropper symfoniorkesterets instrumenter og lader musikerne summe »con bocca chiusa« og gnide sig i hænderne (bogstaveligt talt) som drømmende ambience til JACK Quartets afrunding af concertoen.
Concerto Grosso er moderne minimalisme (findes online i en lækker videoproduktion), og det er rimeligt at kalde det Allan Gravgaard Madsens æstetiske magnum opus.
»Music for me remembers.«
Håkon Guttormsen is a Norwegian composer and trumpeter living in Copenhagen. He is educated at the Royal Danish Academy of Music and the Royal Academy of Rhythmic Music. He primarily composes scores for ensembles as well as music drama and opera. He is currently working on a work for solo violin and electronics for ILK Music’s concert series during CPH Jazz 2026 and on his first symphonic work, which will premiere at the academy in 2027. He is a member of nyMusik’s composer group in Norway and a board member of UNM Denmark.
Deadly Serious Play at Louisiana
New Sounds at Louisiana is an initiative in which the Louisiana Museum of Modern Art has invited the record label Dacapo and the music publisher Edition S to curate concerts featuring living composers. Simon Steen-Andersen was the first composer in the series, and he seized the opportunity to assemble a programme that was not only overwhelming and exhilarating, but also deeply unsettling. Lasting an hour, the concert unfolded as a continuous sequence in which each work flowed seamlessly into the next, forming a single extended statement of at least part of the composer’s artistic practice and philosophy.
Combining video and live performance, the concert served as a manifestation of several of Steen-Andersen’s key artistic strategies. Central among them are techniques of estrangement and defamiliarisation, exemplified by Asthma (2017) for accordion, air pumps, and video, a work that explores and interrogates human breathing in all its positive and negative dimensions. Amid the many grotesque and humorous scenes – accompanied by Håkon Stene’s brilliant Foley-style soundtrack of air noises, sound effects, and spoken commentary – a brief clip of brutal police violence suddenly appears. In it, an officer methodically sprays pepper spray into the faces of handcuffed demonstrators. In that instant, everything else no longer seems quite so funny, and the crooked smile freezes.
The concert was a veritable sensory bombardment. Presenting all the works attacca undoubtedly created a powerful sense of flow, but it also left the audience almost saturated with impressions. Even so, the subsequent conversation between Simon Steen-Andersen and music critic and author Thomas Michelsen felt far too brief. Yet the composer succeeded in making his point: everything he does, he said, is a form of »deadly serious play.« Exactly.
Gintė Preisaitė Turns Doubt into Music
You increasingly encounter Gintė Preisaitė in different contexts and under different names – solo as Baraboro and as part of the trio Treen. With Instruments of Forgetting and the Singing Bone, the Lithuanian-Danish composer releases her first album under her own name, and it certainly feels like her most personal work to date.
Above all, this is because Preisaitė sings on seven of the album’s eight tracks. She treats her voice as an instrument equal to all the others, and although the singing is lyrical, she primarily uses it to create texture, depth, and contrast. On »Summary Saint Mary«, for instance, layers of vocals in different registers intermingle with scraping background noise, rapid pulses, resonant bass, and a multitude of sounds of both digital and analog origin. It feels refreshingly fragmentary – a willingness to play with uncertainty. Not everything coheres, yet it is precisely this lack of cohesion that makes the music feel alive and compelling.
Only on »Nippon Dreams« – a dense collage of percussion, samples, and field recordings of Japanese voices – is Preisaitė’s vocal absent. And it is only then that one realizes how essential it has been as a point of orientation throughout the album. Its absence leaves a void that underscores the duality Preisaitė works with: the music feels both intimate and cool, present and distant.
Instruments of Forgetting and the Singing Bone does not provide many answers. Instead, it becomes yet another fascinating piece in the puzzle of Preisaitė’s singular oeuvre.