Sturm
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Description
Stormy sounds of widely varying "wind quality" blow through the pieces on the new CD by Edition Musikfabrik.
In Steffen Schleiermacher’s Das Tosen des staunenden Echos (The roar of the amazed echo) the paradox of a "roaring stillness" unfolds in a kind of cantus firmus - echoing ritual recitations from Laos - which meanders amongst the various instruments and moves towards its finale with sonic force.
Kaija Saariaho’s storm references are more literary in nature: Shakespeare’s play The Tempest serves as a backdrop for her Songbook of the same name and provides the lyrics for the pieces sung finely nuanced by Olivia Vermeulen and Peter Schöne.
In antagonisme contrôlé, by Michael Wertmüller, the storm takes place in the formal structure of the work, where the different temperatures of free jazz and new music collide: Peter Brötzmann - on of the leading free jazz-artists today - together with Ensemble Musikfabrik’s percussionist, Dirk Rothbrust, on drumset and Marino Pliakas on e-bass create a high pressure system to face the headwind of the full ensemble.
The booklet poster shows Gerhard Richter's Red-Blue-Yellow from 1973, which artistically comments on the thematic bundling of the programme from the highlights of the series "Musikfabrik im WDR". Richter has been a member of the Board of Trustees of the Ensemble Musikfabrik since 2009.
A production of Westdeutschen Rundfunks, Köln. Licensed by WDR mediagroup GmbH.
An initiative project by Kunststiftung NRW and Ensemble Musikfabrik | Landesensemble NRW.
Contents
Kaija Saariaho: The Tempest songbook for soprano, baritone and ensemble (1993–2004)
Michael Wertmüller: Antagonisme contrôlé for saxophone, percussion, e-bass and ensemble (2013/14)
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More from this series
Highlights from the radio concert series “Musikfabrik im WDR”. This edition of thematically arranged programs provides an exciting foray into recent music history. Premieres are juxtaposed with “classics” of New Music.