in brief
16.03.2023

Blood, sweat and Chopin

Jakub Piątek: »Pianoforte«
© PR
© PR

»They are serious machines. They have been training all their lives. They are like the CIA,« it says in the documentary Pianoforte, which follows a number of pianists up to The International Chopin Piano Competition in Warsaw. The young people experience dramas in the music that they have not yet experienced in real life. One will celebrate a possible victory with a Chopin tattoo. Another films himself endlessly with his iPhone: »The more you look like Chopin, the better«. It’s all about Chopin hair. Tangent equilibrium goes hand in hand with attitude and showmanship, which the sensitive pianistic machines must also control. The ecstasy and revolutions of the Polish-French pianistic guru's super-romantic music also demands étude (»practice«, »eagerness«, »interest«, »occupation«).

How to compete in music? Jakub Piątek’s Pianoforte depicts in a raw and moving way these piano-fighters backstage. While their nerves are sweating under their nice concert clothes. While they articulate that there is no plan B. As much as they love the polonaises and nocturnes they play, as much is their absolute respect, coupled with the fear of experiencing a blackout when it is their turn to – perhaps – write the next chapter in this piano battle, which has taken place since 1927 and is as brutal as fist fighting. But also so damn beautiful. It just sounds so damn good when 17-year-old Hao's delicate piano fingers hit the piano in the kitchen at home in China, while his mother is cooking just beside him. Bread and Chopin – that's life!

Translation from Danish: Andreo Michaelo Mielczarek

 

© Meseguer

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© Ana Alexandrino

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© PR

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Salim Washington is a saxophonist, multi-instrumentalist, composer, academic, and activist from Detroit who has been highly active on the American jazz scene since the 1970s, and also in South Africa, where he became a central figure. The spirit of John Coltrane hovers over his music, which carries both spiritual and social dimensions.

© Aske Jørgensen

»Music for us is the perfect language that we love to speak. A language where it is the individual's feelings and imagination that determine what is right and wrong. Everyone can speak the language. You don't have to be able to write or understand, but just listen. Some music requires that you listen carefully and maybe hear it several times. A bit like when you talk to someone from Norway or Sweden, you also have to listen a little extra.«

DØGNKIOSK is a Danish punk rock band with roots in Silkeborg. The band consists of bassist and singer Anders Ejner, who has been active on the Danish underground scene for several decades. Musically, DØGNKIOSK moves in a field between classic Danish punk and alternative rock. In the spring of 2026, the band will release their second album, Tæt på kanten.

© Bastian Zimmermann
© Bastian Zimmermann

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