Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Anna Thorvaldsdottir. Mostrar todas las entradas
Mostrando entradas con la etiqueta Anna Thorvaldsdottir. Mostrar todas las entradas
domingo, 11 de octubre de 2020
sábado, 5 de septiembre de 2020
martes, 20 de noviembre de 2018
International Contemporary Ensemble ANNA THORVALDSDOTTIR Aequa
AEQUA presents a varied constellation of recent chamber pieces for smaller forces by composer Anna Thorvaldsdottir — ranging from solo piano to string ensemble — orbiting the large ensemble work “Aequilibria.” The album takes the listener on a journey through Thorvaldsdottir's distinctive soundworld, where sounds and nuances are as much part of the meticulously structured tapestry of the music as harmonies and lyrical material. The works are performed by the International Contemporary Ensemble, with two works conducted by Steven Schick and a work for solo piano performed by Cory Smythe.
“Internally, I hear sounds and nuances as musical melodies and in my music I weave various textures of sounds together with harmonies and pitched lyrical material. The music is written as an ecosystem of sounds and materials that are carried from one performer — or performers — to the next throughout a progress of a work. As a performer plays a phrase, harmony, texture or a lyrical line it is being delivered to another performer as it transforms and develops, passed on to be carried through until it is passed on again to yet another. All materials continuously grow in and out of each other, growing and transforming throughout the piece.
My music is often inspired in an important way by nature and its many qualities, but I do not strive to describe or literally incorporate elements from nature in my music. To me, the qualities of the music are first and foremost musical — so when I am inspired by a particular element that I perceive in nature, it is because I perceive it as musically interesting. The qualities I tend to be inspired by are often structural, like proportion and flow, as well as relationships of balance between details within a larger structure, and how to move in perspective between the two — the details and the unity of the whole.” (Anna Thorvaldsdottir)
domingo, 30 de agosto de 2015
International Contemporary Ensemble ANNA THORVALDSDOTTIR In The Light Of Air
You could say composer Anna Thorvaldsdottir is a bit of an ice sculptor. No, not the frozen water type of ice—the musical type of ICE. The Icelandic composer recently collaborated with ICE, the International Contemporary Ensemble, to create a new four-movement chamber work titled “In the Light of Air.”
And while we’re on the topic of ICE, let it be known that they are not your average ensemble. With a modular makeup of 35 leading instrumentalists, the group performs contemporary classical music in forces ranging from solos to large ensembles. In fact, they make it their mission to advance the music of the 21th century by pioneering new musical works and multimedia strategies for audience engagement.
In 2011 they created ICElab, an innovative new musical project which places teams of ICE musicians in collaboration with emerging composers to develop works that push the boundaries of the classical genre.
ICE’s latest album, titled “In the Light of Air: ICE Performs Anna Thorvaldsdottir,” is just a single product of that collaborative project. The album features two gorgeously enigmatic pieces: “In the Light of Air” for viola, cello, harp, piano, percussion, and electronics, and “Transitions” for solo cello. The performers on the album are ICE members Kyle Armbrust on viola, Michael Nicolas on cello, Nuiko Wadden on harp, Cory Smythe on piano, and Nathan Davis on percussion.
The title track is a tetralogy of works that together form a unified
structure—the four main movements are connected by texturally
fascinating transitions and framed by a prologue and epilogue. The first
movement is an airy, delicate sound world aptly titled “Luminance.” The
percussion and electronics provide a slowly rumbling bass part beneath a
gradually shifting texture of sound materials, melodic fragments, and
harmonies.
The second movement, titled “Serenity,” is an entire ocean of sound:
infinitely varied yet beautifully unified in its ever-changing timbres
and textures. The translucent calm sparkles with gorgeous harp details
and gentle piano echoes, the vast and limitless soundscape punctuated
with delicate, misty whispers of simple melodies.
The third movement is much shorter than the rest. Clocking in at less
than four minutes, “Existence” is a slow and pensive journey, each bow
stroke in the strings a deliberate, measured step through an atmospheric
sound mass of deep drones and rumbling echoes.
The piece ends with “Remembrance,” a movement which delicately
balances the lyrical, long-breathed melodies of the strings with the
harmonic depth of piano and the textural interest of percussion. In
fact, the percussion part features an installation of metallic ornaments
which Thorvaldsdottir designed specifically for use in this particular
movement. The ornaments, called Klakabönd (which is Icelandic for “a bind of ice”), were created by artist Svana Jósepsdóttir.
The other piece on the album is “Transitions,” which was commissioned by
cellist Michael Nicolas in 2014. The single movement work explores the
theme of man and machine, both of which are represented through
contrasting cello parts. Nicolas soars through the organic lyricism and
expressive melodies of man while also excelling at the metallic timbres
and technical accuracy of machine. Through his sensitive balance and
imaginative interpretation of each role, he showcases the cello’s rich
tone, wide pitch range, and stunning timbral depth. (Maggie Molloy)
sábado, 22 de agosto de 2015
ANNA THORVALDSDOTTIR Aerial
Anna Thorvaldsdottir is a composer who frequently works with
large sonic structures that tend to reveal the presence of a vast
variety of sustained sound materials, reflecting her sense of
imaginative listening to landscapes and nature. Her music tends to
portray a flowing world of sounds with an enigmatic lyrical atmosphere.
Anna’s
music is frequently performed internationally, and has been featured at
several major venues and music festivals such as Lincoln Center's
Mostly Mozart Festival in NYC, the Composer Portraits Series at NYC's
Miller Theatre, ISCM World Music Days, Nordic Music Days, Ultima
Festival, Klangspuren Festival, Beijing Modern Music Festival, Reykjavik
Arts Festival, Tectonics, and the Kennedy Center in Washington DC. Her
works have been nominated and awarded on many occasions - most notably,
Anna is the recipient of the prestigious Nordic Council Music Prize 2012
for her work Dreaming, and The New York Philharmonic's Kravis Emerging
Composer Award.
Some of the orchestras and ensembles that Anna has worked with include International Contemporary Ensemble (ICE), BIT20,
Musiques Nouvelles, the Iceland Symphony Orchestra, Yarn/Wire, BBC
Scottish Symphony Orchestra, the CAPUT Ensemble, the Oslo Philharmonic,
and Either/Or Ensemble.
Anna holds a PhD from the University of California in San Diego.
Anna’s debut portrait album - Rhízōma - was released in October 2011 through Innova Recordings and was very well received and appeared on a number of “Best of 2011” lists, e.g. at TimeOut New York and TimeOut Chicago.
Anna's new portrait album - Aerial - was released by Deutsche Grammophon/Universal Music Classics in November 2014 and appeared on a number of year end lists, e.g. at New Yorker Magazine, Boston Globe, iTunes Classical, and WQXR's Q2.
Anna's new portrait album - Aerial - was released by Deutsche Grammophon/Universal Music Classics in November 2014 and appeared on a number of year end lists, e.g. at New Yorker Magazine, Boston Globe, iTunes Classical, and WQXR's Q2.
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