Composer: Henrik Hellstenius
Performer: Elisabeth Holmertz, Cikada, Asamisimasa
Format: FLAC (tracks)
Label: LAWO
Catalogue: LWC1244
Release: 2022
Size: 1.07 GB
Recovery: +3%
Scan: yes
Places of Sounds and Words for Soprano, Ensemble and Electronics
01. I. Things, Places and People
02. II. Mutated Birds
03. III. A Girl
04. IV. Lost in Life
05. V. Animals in the Forest
06. VI. Places, People and Things
07. VII. I Only See Forms
08. Unfolded for Piano Trio
Instrument of Speech for Ensemble and Electronics
09. I. Bennett Talks
10. II. Readings
11. III. Chromsky Lectures
12. IV. Babel
What is the nature of the relationship between music and the wider reality that it exists within? Does art imitate life, or can life imitate art? Can the two meaningfully coexist? When a sound is taken from the real world and placed into a musical context, does it mean the same thing? Where does meaning come from, and how do we decide what a sound means?
Henrik Hellstenius first began investigating these questions in 2007, with Places of Sound, a work composed for a choreographed performance at the Norwegian Opera and Ballet, that combined two singers, strings and sounds from the real world. One result of this is Places of Sounds and Words (2014), a seven-movement cycle that demonstrates a curious and provocative series of interactions with and responses to sounds from the natural world. Hellstenius has described these movements as “brief music-theatrical encounters that touch on the subject of how we are present in the world yet do not participate in it”. This is music not designed or intended to draw parallels between real life and music, nor to find a way of integrating the two into a seamless, interconnected whole. On the contrary, Hellstenius’ concern in Places of Sounds and Words is to demonstrate the ambivalence of the relationship, veering been sympathy and antipathy.
Instrument of Speech (201617) moves away from the more neutral, passive, generalised sounds found in Places of Sounds and Words in favour of active linguistic sources that speak, literally, in an altogether more direct and immediate way. The composer’s concern was not simply with the fact that words and music both involve the creation of sound, but more specifically with the ways that meaning is derived. Hellstenius has described how “the manner in which language and music create meaning is profoundly different, to some perhaps even contradictory. If music creates meaning (which is in itself an extensive discussion), to most of us the manner in which it does so is nothing like the way we feel language creates meaning.”
The piano trio Unfolded, composed for Cikada in 2020, explores a similarly tense interaction between discrete, perhaps irreconcilable, types of musical ideas. Hellstenius describes it as a development from “a spare material of chords and sound objects towards a more linear music”, though the process is not quite as simple as that. Working together, the trio is initially concerned with small micro-gestures, most of which are either non-pitched, such as brushing piano strings, or have their pitch content obscured or cancelled out through dissonance, clashes and percussive impacts. As Unfolded progresses, the friction between these two kinds of material, transient and extended, doesn’t simply manifest in episodic juxtapositions but also triggers internal dissent among the players. Unlike Places of Sounds and Words and Instrument of Speech, Unfolded eventually manages to achieve an integration of its disjunct ideas, arriving at a state of unity.