Originally conceived as a Royal Ballet-commissioned collaboration
between composer Max Richter, choreographer Wayne McGregor and artist
Julian Opie, Max Richter’s gorgeous score to ‘infra’ is deservedly given
life of its own in this album-length release from FatCat’s
instrumental/orchestral imprint 130701 Records.
The initial setting for ‘infra’ was as a ballet - written in autumn
2008 and premiered in November of the same year at The Royal Opera House
in London – although here Richter’s score is given the full scope of a
standalone new album. Expanded and extended from the original piece, ‘infra’ comprises music written for piano, electronics and string
quintet, including the full performance score as well as material that
has subsequently developed from the construction of the album – more a
continued reference to the ballet than as a “studio album” in the
strictest sense. The composition resonates with Max’s characteristic
musical voice – majestic, involved textures; fluent and sweeping
melodies; an enigmatic and inherently intellectual understanding of
harmonic complexities that compels and mesmerizes.
Richter’s work on the ballet came initially from McGregor’s
invitiation, a request for 25 minutes of music for his piece, inspired
by T.S. Elliot’s ‘The Wasteland’ and named after the Latin term for
‘below’. This eventually became more collaborative as the project
developed – Wayne would ask for Max to extend or alter certain passages
of music in accordance with his own amendments to his choreography and
concept, whilst logging the whole process for a BBC documentary
(broadcast, along with the ballet in full, on BBC2 in November 2008).
The dance performance was backed with digital images created by Julian
Opie – observational scenes of street life, haunting and curiously
balletic despite being of the everyday – and Max’s score is an
appropriately close reference to the traveling theme:
“I started thinking about making a piece on the theme of journeys.
Like a road movie. Or a traveler’s notebook. Or like the second unit in a
film - when the scene has been played, and the image cuts away to the
landscape going by. This started me thinking about Schubert's
devastating and haunting "Winterreise" (Winter Journey), so I used some
melodic material from Schubert as a found object in parts of my new
piece.“
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