Lögberg-Heimskringla - 01.06.2010, Blaðsíða 10

Lögberg-Heimskringla - 01.06.2010, Blaðsíða 10
Visit us on the web at http://www.lh-inc.ca 10 • Lögberg-Heimskringla • 1 June 2010 Donald G. Gíslason Conductor and composer Daníel Bjarnason is a typical Icelandic musi- cian, which is to say a very un- typical musician indeed. After seeing him conduct Donizetti at the Icelandic Opera, you can see him equally at home leading a chamber orchestra in support of the popular music group Hjaltalín at the Fríkirkja in Reykjavík, recording with Sigur Rós in London, or con- ducting his own compositions at the Iceland Airwaves music festival. Barely 30 years old, he has established a major career for himself in Iceland, both as a conductor of the classical reper- toire and a composer of modern- ist works for chamber ensemble. He is a founding member of the Ísafold Chamber Orchestra and is its principal conductor and artistic director. The premiere of his piano concerto last year with the Icelandic Symphony Orchestra and pianist Víkingur Ólafsson was a major event of the musical year in Iceland. Most recently, he has joined the wildly eclectic and interna- tionally successful Bedroom Community label headed by Valgeir Sigurðsson and is look- ing forward to recording more of his own music, following the re- lease of his first album on Bed- room Community, Processions. I caught up with Daníel Bjarnason at the Íslenska Óper- an on Ingólfsstræti in downtown Reykavík just after the dress re- hearsal for Donizetti’s L’Elisir d’amore to talk about his life and career in music. How did you become a conductor? Did you always want to be one? No, I wanted to be a pianist, then I wanted to be a composer, and then I started fiddling with conducting and I asked this conducting teacher to give me private lessons at school. So how old were you when you started conducting? I was about 19 or 20. Just my own music, to start with and then, little by little, conducting a few amateur orchestras. Was it because your first compositions were orchestral, rather than piano pieces? Yeah, they were chamber pieces, and pieces for small chamber groups. How did you pursue your musical education? I started studying the piano when I was seven, and then I took a little “teenager break” from the piano (laughs). To do what? Just to be a teenager. I was a lot into sports when I was a kid. But were you ever in a band? I wasn’t really the band type. I used to play in a funk band for a while, but … What instrument did you play? I played the hammond or- gan. They were called Die Garfunkel, a good name for a funk band – like Simon & Garfunkel. And where did you study conducting? In Germany, at the Musik- hochschule in Freiberg. I stud- ied with an American profes- sor called Scott Sandmeier. I decided when I finished my composition studies here in Ice- land that I didn’t want to study more composition, that I just wanted to compose, and hear my music played. So I thought that would be a good mix, to study conducting and compose on the side. Conductors are generally “alpha males.” They tend to exude an aura of command over people. Do you identify with that or are you a more negotiating, nicer, gentler kind of conductor? I’m definitely the second type, I think. The authority should come through respect for your abilities and your abil- ity to inspire people, instead of frightening them into doing things. Is there a part of the rep- ertoire that you are particu- larly attracted to? I do a lot of modern music, just because I am a composer and people will ask me a lot to do new music. But I love doing Mozart and I love the French impressionists, as well as the Russians from that period. And opera, obviously. I love opera. How long does it take you to study up an opera? A few months. For me it’s much easier if it’s in German, because I speak German, but it takes me longer to learn op- era in Italian, because I do sort of speak it, but not fluently. So it takes a few months but you never really know a piece un- til you’ve performed it at least once. Which operas have you conducted? I have conducted Mozart’s The Abduction from the Sera- glio and Così fan tutte, A Night in Venice by Johann Strauss, and, let’s see, Puccini’s Gi- anni Schicchi and Suor Angel- ica, also Ariadne auf Naxos by Richard Strauss. And L’Enfant et les sortilèges by Ravel, I did that when I was in school. And then Donizetti’s L’Elisir d’amore for the Islenska Óper- an here in Reykjavík. What is the “classical scene” like in Iceland? Is it enough for a full-time career here? Oh yeah, definitely it is, if you’re a player. There’s a sym- phony orchestra and there are lots of chamber ensembles. As a conductor, I am very lucky because there are not very many Icelandic conductors, so I get a lot of work here. But I’m also lucky in that I don’t need to have a full-time job as a conductor. And I don’t want to, even, because I am a composer, so I need at least half of my time freed up for composing. Are you still a performing pianist at all? Was that you playing the harpsichord in the recitatives for the Doni- zetti that I heard at the Íslen- ska Óperan? Yes, I like to do that. It’s more fun when the conductor does that himself rather than to have somebody else do it. It’s more hands on, somehow. Where do you want your career to go? Well, I’m very interested to see what happens now with the release of my album, Proces- sions. I basically just want to get my music more played, be able to tour with my own mu- sic, and evolve as a composer. Your piano concerto was a fairly high-profile event in Iceland this year. Could you tell me about that? It was premiered in the Dark Music Days, a music festival held every winter featuring new Icelandic music. I was conduct- ing and pianist Víkingur Ólafs- son was playing. It was a great success and a great moment for me, because it was a big piece, half-an-hour, and also my debut with the orchestra as a compos- er-conductor. So it was a really memorable event. And where do you live now? I’m more in Iceland now, but I try to go to New York as often as I can. I have a lot of friends there and I love New York. I go there just to get in- spiration. I think I’ll be based in Iceland but I definitely see myself having an international career. You are the latest artist to join the Bedroom Commu- nity label, which is not really a classical music label, except for the music of Nico Muhly. What will your role be at Bedroom Community? The reason they signed me is because of my music and that’s the main focus. Every- thing that happens besides that is in a typical Bedroom Com- munity style: collaboration with whoever might be work- ing there and I might come in as an arranger or something. It’s a fairly unusual type of set-up there at Bedroom Community, where everyone contributes to everyone else’s albums. Is that something that you look forward to? Absolutely. It’s a great thing that they don’t sign people just in one genre, in one style. They sign people that they think make good music that every- body should hear, no matter what it’s called. Daníel Bjarnason’s album Processions is available on the Bedroom Community label. In June he will be joining his col- leagues in Bedroom Commu- nity on their Whale Watching Tour to Talinn (Estonia) and Moscow. Subscribe now to L-H — the perfect investment in your Icelandic heritage 24 issues a year! Mail Cheque or Money Order to: Lögberg-Heimskringla Inc. 100-283 Portage Avenue, Winnipeg, MB R3B 2B5 Canada Tel: (204) 284-5686 Fax: (204) 284-7099 Toll-free: 1-866-564-2374 (1-866-LOGBERG) Name Address City/Town Prov/State E-mail Post/ZIP Code Phone Fax Cheque Money Order MC VISA AMEX Card Number Expiration Date Phone Cardholder (payable to Lögberg-Heimskringla, Inc.) Donation in addition to subscription $ (Canada Charitable Reg. 10337 3635 RR) Canada $47.25 price includes GST Online subscription $35 CAD Manitoba $50.40 price includes GST & PST USA $61 US An online subscription is available FREE to all print subscribers. Call or e-mail for details. International $71 US Daníel Bjarnason: A Career on Fire

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