Reykjavík Grapevine


Reykjavík Grapevine - 21.06.2019, Qupperneq 21

Reykjavík Grapevine - 21.06.2019, Qupperneq 21
be carried by the winds, but move through to the strings; the winds start doing something else, and the strings continue. When you start to know the music, then you start to learn that process—that something is being passed to you. That creates a differ- ent kind of perspective as you move through a piece.” “A musician can, of course, read the notes on the paper and play their part,” she continues, warming to the theme. “But they might not realise at first that their part is being passed to them from another performer or group of performers. It can speed things along if I am there to point that out. There are various degrees to why it’s interest- ing to work with performers—they are, of course, the experts on their instru- ments, so I learn a lot from them too. I can’t always be there in person when my music is performed, but I try to go as much as I can to the largest perfor- mances.” She smiles. “It’s a luxury problem.” The composer that you are Anna’s rise to prominence has been sure and steady. After attending music school and studying for her bachelor's degree in Reykjavík, she moved to San Diego in 2006 to pursue a Masters and doctorate at the University of Cali- fornia. “It’s a very good department for contemporary music, for many reasons,” Anna explains. “But primar- ily because everyone is keen to work on contemporary music there, and there’s a lot of openness to embrace the personality of the composer, rather than steering them into a certain chan- nel. There are so many paths you can take as a composer. And I really appre- ciated that in San Diego you’re allowed to become the composer that you are.” As she finished her studies in 2011, Anna released her first portrait album, entitled ‘Rhízōma,’ referring to rhizomes, or exploratory roots. “I spent a lot of time finding the right title for that album,” she says. “As a composer, when you release an album, the pieces might have been composed over five years. You’re not creating an album so much as curating pieces into an album. ‘Rhízōma’ was my first portrait album, and I wanted it to have references to roots, and the way I think about music—creating layers that grow in and out of each other. And that’s how we found this title.” Work hard and be sincere ‘Rhízōma’ had long been in develop- ment, both musically, and in terms of the release arrangements, financing and planning. But the release would prove to be a decision that would shape Anna’s career. “I didn’t realise how important it would be, at the time,” she remembers. “When I was moving to California I’d already decided I would release it when I graduated. It was a long-term goal, and it was very expensive, so I had to save up for a long time. I didn’t really have high hopes for it. You never know what’s going to happen. So it was a beautiful surprise that people paid attention and were encouraging. I found that people got to know my music through that album.” One of the two centrepieces of the album is ‘Dreaming,’ a 17-minute composition for orchestra that would go on to win the prestigious Nordic Music Council Prize in 2012. “That led to the Deutsche Grammophon release,” says Anna. “Colin Rae, who was distrib- uting ‘Rhízōma,’ had said to me that he would help make sure my music was put out on a large label.” She stops, and smiles, appreciative and mystified by the path that led her to this moment. “I strongly believe in working hard, and being sincere in what you do,” she continues. “Although this was noth- ing you ever could have planned... it worked out.” Scary music Talking amiably with Anna on a summer’s day about the open hori- zons of Borgarnes, the rich multi- disciplinary arts culture of Reykjavík, and her stints living in California and, later, Australia and England, it’s easy to forget about the seriousness and weight of her music. Although her catalogue of works is rich and diverse, it’s also characterised by certain moods that fly counter to her sunny disposi- tion; particularly, recurring dark, ominous, and even violent moods and elements. “You’re not the first person to say this,” says Anna. “I’ve also had people who know me describe this contrast between my personality and my work. Some people read my work as dark and scary, but that’s not really how I think about it.” She pauses, momentarily reconsidering. “Actually, maybe I am just making scary music. But I don’t know where this darkness comes from. I make it intuitively and naturally... but certainly not intentionally.” She peters out, staring into the middle distance. “However, I do love the lower registers and bass. Perhaps that fundament that I give to that register plays into this experience of the music.” I wonder out loud if her music gives voice to aspects of herself or person- ality that aren’t top-of-mind in day- to-day life. “Certainly, doing music is very therapeutic,” she smiles, “but I’m never angry when I write, but I am sometimes sad. Writing music is a very emotional thing for me; I allow the music to come into existence through this human experience. Something I do believe in is tension in music. It’s very important in creating structures and contrasts and how things flow from one to the next. Maybe it’s this tension that comes across as darkness.” Balance with the abstract Whatever it is that makes Anna’s music so captivating, she’s continu- ing to thrive and develop, winning the Martin Segall, Lincoln Center and Kraviz Emerging Composer awards, as well as prized commissions from The New York Philharmonic Soci- ety, The Gothenburg Symphony and The Iceland Symphony Orchestra, to name but three. She’s released three more albums—’Aerial,’ ‘In The Light Of Air,’ and ‘AEQUA’—and The Financial Times recently described her as “the most exciting force in Icelandic music since Björk.” ‘Aion’ (2018) pushed the envelope again with the inclusion of choreography by Erna Ómarsdóttir and the Icelandic Dance Company, and ‘Metacosmos’ (2017) will be performed at the BBC Proms later this year at the Royal Albert Hall. For Anna Þorvaldsdóttir, it seems the sky’s the limit. But what comes across most of all is her deep love for her calling. “I really believe in music for music,” she says. “It’s difficult to describe, but the way I have always worked comes from the music listening space—I feel a strong sense of connec- tion between sounds and textures that might not be considered harmonic or traditionally musical, but I love work- ing with sounds in a lyrical way, find- ing the balance with the abstract.” Once again, she’s describing her ocean of sound. “It is really the way I think about it, and feel it, and hear it,” she finishes. “With all these elements that are there, you might not notice all of them—because they are there to be part of a whole. You don’t pay attention to each drop, but when they all come together—it’s then they create the ocean.” 21 The Reykjavík Grapevine Issue 10— 2019 “When you grow up in a place where you’re surrounded by water and mountains, this is what you feel is normal. I feel that I still carry that now— these roots have stayed with me.”

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