Reykjavík Grapevine - 03.02.2012, Blaðsíða 17

Reykjavík Grapevine - 03.02.2012, Blaðsíða 17
Launching Tectonics March gets a new modern music festival This March, Ilan Volkov is launching a new modern music festival that cor- responds with John Cage’s centennial anniversary. In addition to being an annual event on Reykjavík’s cultural calendar, he will also bring the festi- val to a new location starting next year with Glasgow with the BBC Symphony Orchestra. Read on for some highlights of this exciting programme of fifteen concerts and events involving featuring more than 150 musicians, composers and amateurs… Ilan tells me he has spent a lot of timing researching John Cage, and there will be a day in the festival dedi- cated to his work. “Two pieces are really interesting that day. One is 'Fifty-eight', which is a piece for a big wind brass band, and we are having young musi- cians from Iceland play that. It will be the big opening performance of the festival in the foyer area of Harpa on Thursday. It’s an un-conducted piece so everybody will be taking a lot of re- sponsibility for the performance. The players will really be making compos- ing decisions as performers. So it will be nice to get a different kind of energy and audience.” The selections of John Cage pieces range the gamut from his early to late works. John Tilbury will be performing one of his really early pieces—a piano concerto—which Ilan says involves hours of preparing the piano to sound like a huge percussion instrument, with every note being specifically mod- ified with different materials—some- times rubber, sometimes coins. From his later works, the orchestra will per- form a selection of time bracket pieces, which Ilan explains, have almost no score. “The musicians basically have to decide for themselves when to come in, and when to stop. Sometimes they have to decide the volume, and only the pitch is notated.” Other Cage performances not to miss include ‘Improvisation III,’ which is a piece for cassettes that will be per- formed by musicians including Reptili- cus, Slowblow and Stilluppsteypa, and ‘Music for Piano with Amplified Sono- rous Vessels’ which involves sound am- plifying vibrating vases in the hall. There will also be a full day de- voted to the Icelandic composer Mag- nús Blöndal. A pioneer in modernism during the Icelandic ‘50s and ‘60s, you could call him Iceland’s John Cage equivalent. “I decided in advance to fo- cus on Magnús Blöndal’s music,” Ilan tells me. “People know it, but they never really hear it in a serious context.” Af- ter the orchestra performs a few of his pieces, local musicians—Ríkharður Friðriksson, Jóhann Jóhannsson, Kira Kira, and Auxpan—will pay homage to Magnús’ electronic music. Finally, there will be a couple of world premieres over the weekend. One of them is a piece composed by Frank Denyer, especially written for Eldborg Hall. “We tried all kinds of acoustic things; he asked me to whistle and sing while he sat in the hall,” Ilan says. “It’s like doing something that fits the place and the orchestra, not just another kind of tick on something. It’s far more per- sonal and you feel that right away.” And Ilan himself will be debuting his collaboration with Oren Ambarchi, a piece for electric guitar and orchestra. “We are thinking about doing some- thing with very little actually written. I will be using gestures to react with the orchestra to what he’s playing on the electric guitar. It’s kind of a new way of trying to do something,” he says, also admitting that he “has no clue how it will work yet.” The festival takes place March 1 – 3 at Harpa. Tickets available at midi.is Icelanders are free-thinking He has yet to reach this stage with the Iceland Symphony Orchestra, but he is optimistic. In fact he accepted the posi- tion at Iceland Symphony Orchestra be- cause he was keen on being somewhere he could develop his ideas more freely. “There is no big tradition here hang- ing over me and telling me I can’t do something,” he says. “When you are in the first few seasons in a new hall, there is a lot of freedom as nothing is set in stone. For me that was part of the ap- peal and the fact that the culture here is open and interested in new things. People don’t think, ‘oh that’s a modern piece, I’m not interested in it.’” I ask him if Icelanders are more freethinking than others and he con- tinues to elaborate on his impressions of the country. “There is a willingness to do things, which I find refreshing,” he says. “When I worked at the BBC Scottish, I initially faced a lot of ‘No, we can’t do that.’ There’s a lot of that in the orchestra world, there’s a lot of wanting to work 9-5. They know what’s good; they don’t need to be told, to learn something new.” So far, Ilan says that the Iceland Symphony Orchestra has been recep- tive to the challenges he throws at them. For instance, he has had them rehearse a complicated piece by composer Bene- dikt Mason, in which each musician has four music stands and they have to turn in circles on an office chair to play different parts. “It was written for an ensemble rather than an orchestra, and it requires a lot of movement,” he says. “Even though people didn’t know what to expect, and didn’t understand a lot of it because it’s very tricky, there was a willingness. The attitude that I have felt is great; people are curious and they don’t have a negative impulse. This means that I can ask them to do things that I wouldn’t otherwise be able to do.” Yet, everything is very new and Ilan says they are still learning about each other, noting that there are a lot of other changes to get used to given the orches- tra’s new home in Harpa, Iceland’s new concert hall and conference hall, which opened last year. Moving to Harpa Before last year when Harpa opened, both the Iceland Symphony Orches- tra and Icelandic Opera resided in Háskólabíó, which is also a movie the- atre. I recall going to see an opera and being distracted by the smell of popcorn that came seeping through the vents in the middle of the performance. Not to mention, the listening experience has been greatly enhanced. “Yes, I think the audience is amazed to be in a place where acoustically you really hear things. This a big change, and it makes the orchestra play much better,” he says. “It’s also great that the audience has come. At first the orches- tra didn’t know how many concerts to put on; it was really only at the end of last year that we could tell that it would be really full.” Now he says the goal is to keep the audience coming. “We need to keep the audience interested in what we are doing, not only the nice location.” Ilan points out that the orchestra is also now very much at the forefront of the city, a more prominent part of the cultural life. “There is now an opportu- nity to attract a larger audience and to organise more concerts and education programmes,” he says. “There is poten- tial to go on a journey of discovery in a place like this where there is little tradi- tion, an open audience, and a fantastic music hall.” A new philosophy I mention that I get the sense that he is being marketed like a rock star con- ductor, and ask whether classical music needs a facelift, so to speak, to attract a wider audience. While he doesn’t neces- sarily see it that way, he definitely has plans to breathe life into the orchestra. “There is a tendency for people to think it is necessary to have famous in- ternational guests, but often a real con- nection with the audience is established closer to home,” he says. “In the first year that I’m here, I want very much to collaborate with the young talent that grows here. I also want to develop rela- tionships with artists, non-musicians that would collaborate on a more regu- lar basis. I want to expand the view of what the concert is, which does not have to be just one thing.” Despite the fact that Ilan says people have increasingly short attention spans in an age of instant gratification, he is optimistic that he can reach a wider au- dience. “I think there are ways of get- ting around this by offering a diverse repertoire of material and working with different kinds of artists and music,” he says. “That’s why in the Tectonics festi- val we are doing so many collaborations with people who would otherwise never work with an orchestra. It creates a completely new dynamic where things are unexpected. That’s an important part of what music is and what orches- tra life is—that’s the way it should be anyways.” Ilan says he is pleased that his ideas have been received so well. “I can keep a very traditional orchestra with reper- toire and conductors on one hand, while developing a whole new strand of con- certs on the other, which will gradually mean a different kind of audience too. Variety is important to me; I hate when I open orchestra brochures and they are almost always the same whether you are in France, England, or America.” The brochure for Tectonics—the new modern music festival that he is launching in March—will certainly not be your standard orchestra fare. It will feature a wealth of John Cage and col- laborative pieces with local musicians from a variety of scenes, including elec- tronic, improvisation, and noise. Oh Jesus, modernism Now, I take the opportunity to ask Ilan to explain modernism, which is at the forefront of the new festival. “Oh Jesus, I would say, beginning in the twenti- eth century, people—like Duchamp, like Cage, like Dada artists—started to look at things and ask totally different questions. And this resulted in a whole bunch of different strands within new music and modern art,” he says. “Take for example an old piece by Cage that takes a piano and decides that it is going to be something else. It is still played as a piano, but he completely turns upside down what the player is doing, what the composer doing, and what the listener expects when they look at the instru- ment.” And the conversation turns to John Cage, a real pioneer in modernism. “I think what’s really fascinating about him is that he decided very early on to constraints on his own power to get more out of his music. He was a com- poser trying to take himself out of the composition process, with less and less control of the outcomes, but the funny thing is that it always sounds like Cage, even if there is almost nothing there, you still know it’s Cage,” he says. “It’s kind of a whole way of think- ing, not only about music, but also about the world. It’s very philosophi- cal. From the beginning, he has been understood more by artists than musi- cians, and he has been more respected in the art world than the music world. Fewer musicians know his music than artists, who learn about it in art classes. In that sense, he was really a new fig- ure in the world of music and he is still incredibly inf luential. In many ways a lot of his work is a kind of critique of the powerful structures and he was able to take the rug away from underneath by showing things from a different per- spective. It’s difficult to explain, but for me, that’s most interesting.” Breaking boundaries One of John Cage’s concepts centred on relinquishing control and in a number of his pieces he has removed the con- ductor from the equation completely. As a conductor, I ask Ilan how he feels about this. “Well I’ve done a lot of his pieces,” he says. “In one of them, ‘Con- cert for piano,’ the conductor part was a clock. I just stood there and did the clock with my hands, sometimes mov- ing the second hands at the right time, but sometimes speeding up or slow- ing down. It’s a game, like everything he does. He’s taking rules about music and turning them upside down. He’s of course not interested in having a con- ductor show off their great expression. He is more interested in the sound be- ing what it is.” I take this opportunity to ask the silly question I had been harbouring. So you don’t have to wave a baton? Can it be anything? Like a f lashlight? I ques- tion. “Oh yeah.” he laughs. “I’ve done it once in Denmark. It was very funny. But it was kind of a disaster. They gave me a f lashlight and it stopped working in the show and it became completely dark and nobody could see anything. Yeah people do all sorts of weird stuff now.” I ask him if there any boundaries, and whether there is any point that experimentation goes too far and be- comes ridiculous, and he points out that people used to think Stravinsky was too ridiculous. “Once upon a time, ‘The Rite of Spring’ was impossible. All the orchestras in the world thought this was an impossible piece to play. And now, even youth orchestras play it very well and suddenly you are sup- posed to play bassoon very high when it was never done in the past,” he says. “It is part of a composer’s responsibility to push players to a place that they have never been before, and hopefully that is a never-ending process. The establish- ment’s role is always to object. But the artists and free-thinkers need to ignore all of this bullshit completely and try to overcome it.” Expect the unexpected As for the orchestra over the next three years, Ilan plans to continue to deliver an exciting and diverse repertoire of material and hopes that the audience will grow to trust his artistic vision. “It’s important to me that we keep what we are doing fresh and that we continue on this journey of experiencing new things together with the audience,” he says. “Ideally the audience trusts the artistic vision of the orchestra, under- stands it and takes risks with it, per- haps going to a concert not knowing very much or any of the music, because you can trust that it will be a powerful experience.” Indeed, after an hour of chatting with Ilan, I walk away trusting that we can, at the very least, expect the unex- pected.

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