Det danske sommervejr minder os – på godt og ondt – om, at det er tid til at holde fri og koble af. Ferien er oplagt til at få læst og lyttet til nogle af de ting, der måske ikke er tid til i en travl hverdag, og her bidrager Seismograf med en god stak indhold til lidt digital sommerfordybelse. Vi holder lukket i juli, men går ikke på ferie uden at sikre os, at der er masser af lytte- og læsestof på både dansk og engelsk til at holde hele sommeren.

Komponister på scenen
Du kan starte med at fordybe dig i 
vores seneste engelsksprogede fokus, der under overskriften Composer/Performer gennem syv artikler beskæftiger sig med komponister, der går på scenen og tilfører musikken nye performative aspekter såvel som en indbygget udforskning og genovervejelse af komponistens rolle. Fokusset udspringer af et forskningsprojekt anført af Sanne Krogh Groth, der også har redigeret fokusset, og de grunlæggende idéer opridses og diskuteres i hendes egen artikel. Norske Trond Reinholdtsen reflekterer over det 20. århundredes komponister, idet han præsenterer sit énmandsprojekt The Norwegian Opera. Juliana Hodkinson genbesøger en personlig krise i sin tekst, mens Niels Rønsholdt identificerer sig med lytteren, når han positionerer sig som fremmed i forhold til sin egen musik. Den femte artikel er en transkriberet paneldebat mellem Louise AleniusKristian Hverring og Simon Steen-Andersen fra Nordic Music Days i Reykjavik. Alenius er tilmed omdrejningspunktet for en artikel af Torben Sangild, som har oplevet en én-til-én-koncert med komponisten i sit soveværelse, der midlertidigt blev omdannet til koncertsal. Musiker, komponist og forsker Henrik Frisk afslutter med at undersøge mulighederne i det amatøristiske aspekt ved komponister, der går på scenen og påtager sig musikalske opgaver, de ikke er skolede til.

Lyt Dybt
Vores podcast Lyt Dybt har netop afsluttet sin første sæson, og der er sammenlagt 15 afsnit om alt fra undervandsoptagelser og hverdagslyd til voksvalser, midi-violiner og lyttemeditation, som du kan give dig hen til, hvis du ikke allerede har gjort det. De seneste afsnit er en del af den serie, vi kalder 
Lyden af planeten Jorden, som helliger sig fænomenet The Voyager Golden Records – to guld-LP'er indeholdende musik og lyde fra vores klode, som blev sendt ud i det interstellare rum i 1977.
I serien møder vi lektor og kunstner Jenny Gräf, mediearkæolog Jussi Parikka, forfattersaxofonist TS Høeg samt kurator og NASA-buff Jacob Lillemose, der alle forholder sig til dét at sende jordlyde ud i rummet.
Søg på Lyt Dybt i din podcast-app eller lyt med her på siden.

Senest på seismograf.org

»Hvis man præsenterer noget meningsløst vrøvl, sker der ingenting.« Søren Møller Sørensen mødte ved et tilfælde en af sine bekendte på et konditori i Cairo – den egyptiske komponist Bahaa El-Ansary. Det kom der et spændende interview ud af.

»Det umiddelbare indtryk af mødet med værkerne forandredes gradvist, og efter et stykke tid udvikler udstillingen sig i retning mod det, jeg opfatter som kernen i de fleste af Norments værker; arbejdet med materialer og titler, hvor lyd ofte er et grundelement.« Andreas Engström anmelder Camille Norments aktuelle udstilling på Oslo Kunstforening.

»Struer Tracks er på mange måder godt nyt for den danske lydkunstscene. Åbningsweekenden tegner i hvert fald et billede af en forfriskende uformel og særdeles vedkommende formidling af et meget bredt udsnit af lydkunst anno 2017.« Jakob Gustav Winckler har besøgt Danmarks eneste festival for stedsspecifik lydkunst, Struer Tracks.

Fik du vist, hvem komponisten Allan er? »Det er det, jeg er lidt i tvivl om. Derfor ville lidt mere musik have været godt,« siger han. »Men personen Allan var der – for første gang.« Læs Sune Anderbergs portrætinterview med debutanten Allan Gravgaard Madsen.

in brieflive
24.05

The Electronic Altar

 Fascia, Soli City, Nagaver
© PR
© PR

The table is a practical prop at most electronic music concerts. It has almost become a symbol of how electronic music is denied the same expressive, physical gestural language as acoustic music. This rigid symbolism was thankfully broken when the concert network Up Node hosted a showcase evening at Alice, featuring three emerging experimental electronic artists from Norway, Sweden, and Denmark.

The MacBook stood enthroned like an altar as Swedish artist Fascia opened the evening, holding a blinking flashlight above her head – each flash triggering brutal bursts of noise. When she placed a webcam in her mouth and projected the table’s mysterious objects onto the screen behind her, the boundary between stage and audience dissolved through simple yet cunning technology.

Next to his MIDI keyboard, Danish artist Soli City had his trademark moving-head lamp. Like a robotic head, the lamp lit up and rotated in sync with epic crescendos and computerized voices. Soli City’s music is built around field recordings and classical instrumentation – strings and piano – forming a universe that exposes the tension between human and technology. The animated lamp and dramatic light show took centre stage, while composer Harald Bjørn stood like a hidden puppeteer, gently guiding the futuristic narrative forward.

The table in front of Norwegian artist Nagaver had been laid flat on the stage floor, forming a low wall. Behind it knelt Ilavenil Vasuky Jayapalan, who unleashed hard-hitting, dark rhythms from a DJ mixer, enveloping Alice in a transcendent haze. The concert evolved from driving trance into a kind of karaoke performance, with Jayapalan singing over dusty tracks—and unfortunately the music felt more like a run-through than a fully realized concert.

Behind the table lie untapped potentials for auditory innovation, but practical constraints often limit performative expression. The concerts by Fascia and Soli City succeeded in breaking the boundary between mere execution and true performance, reminding us that not all music needs to be presented with the same gestures – and that sometimes all it takes is a webcam and a laser lamp to make that clear.

in briefrelease
21.05

Emergent Music

Lauri Supponen: »Dwell«
© Tuomas Tenkanen
© Tuomas Tenkanen

As an abstract micro manifesto Lauri Supponen describes his interest in »music that inhabits a second space and lingers there«, an invitation for us to dwell in the moment and discover music in its quiet emergence. 

»Gaz aux étages«, the first composition on Supponen’s breathtaking album, seems to test this idea as it unfolds with whispered bow strokes devoid of pitch. It is as if the piece itself is an entity wondering if it will prove to be music as it tentatively investigates its own constituent components. A subtle opening to an album that answers this question with clarity in its eponymous second work »Dwell« (tracks 2–5), exploring a fascinating microtonal realm. In virtuoso performances of astonishing accuracy, guitarist Petri Kumela and vocalist Tuuli Lindeberg bring Supponen’s demanding four-movement duo to life. The guitar writing in Dwell recalls Norwegian composer Martin Rane Bauck’s Fretted with Golden Fire with its drone-like microtonal strumming – a connection substantiated by the album notes, which reveal both composers know each other and have collaborated with bass clarinetist Madison Greenstone. 

The dwelling-space Supponen offers in »Eau & gaz à tous les étages« and »Opus Nen«, return the listener to a more remote sonic space, reminiscent of the album’s opening albeit with tighter compositional sense. Performed with intensity by Madison Greenstone and baritone saxophonist Sikri Lehko, they consolidate the pervasive feeling that Dwell is a uniquely inspired collaboration.

© PR

»Every moment is nothing but the uttermost end of the past. Music makes this edge wide and beautiful.«

Sven Helbig is a German composer and producer known for combining orchestral and choral music with electronic elements and a strong poetic sensibility. A self-taught musician raised in Eisenhüttenstadt, he released his debut album Pocket Symphonies on Deutsche Grammophon to critical acclaim for its emotional depth and formal precision. Helbig has collaborated with ensembles such as the BBC Singers, Fauré Quartett, and Staatskapelle Dresden, as well as with artists like Rammstein and the Pet Shop Boys. He just released REQUIEM A on Deutsche Grammophon. It is a deeply personal and reflective composition, intertwining classical Latin liturgical texts with new ones written by Helbig himself. The work revolves around themes of loss, memory, and the possibility of renewal – with the »A« in the title symbolizing Anfang (beginning) and the belief in a new start after devastation.

© Kåre Viemose

»Recently, I discovered that when a couple of thousand people clap their thick gloves in minus 30 degrees, it sounds like the softest techno – a freezing space where the cold air turns into a wave of warmth, and we, in a moment of collective devotion, become one with the rhythm, one with the invisible bond that connects us in the warmth of silence. Music is not just sounds, but a vain attempt to capture the infinite, which has always been and always will be.«

Andreo Michaelo Mielczarek has been the editor-in-chief of Seismograf since 2021. He is also a music critic and cultural journalist at Kristeligt Dagblad and Århus Stiftstidende/Avisen Danmark and has over the years written to publications such as Kunsten.nu, Glissando (Poland), Neural (Italy), Raw Vision (UK), Nutida Musik (Sweden), Kunstkritikk (DK/Sweden), Iscene.dk, B.T., and Jazz Special. He is the author (together with Lars Muhl) of the book HVA' SAA! En guidet rutsjebanetur gennem Aarhus – før, nu og i fremtiden (2024) and has also contributed to the anthology on music criticism Man skal høre meget (ed. Thomas Michelsen and Claus Røllum-Larsen, 2024). He is a founder and partner in the Polish-Danish cultural organization Kultur(a), and wherever there is a piano, he will be there, eager to coax a melody from it.