Martin Lohse: Collage de temps David Lau Magnussen, Danish Chamber Players & Casper Schreiber
Album info
Album-Release:
2018
HRA-Release:
22.06.2018
Label: Dacapo
Genre: Classical
Subgenre: Chamber Music
Artist: David Lau Magnussen, Danish Chamber Players & Casper Schreiber
Composer: Martin Lohse (1971)
Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)
- Martin Lohse (1971 - ): Collage de temps:
- 1I. Presto con sonore05:47
- 2II. Andante poco dolente02:50
- 3III. Andante cantabile03:53
- 4IV. Moderato più mosso03:18
- 5V. Allegro poco agitato06:57
- 5 Momenti mobile:
- 6No. 1, Allegro con passione sostenuto03:56
- 7No. 2, Andante con dolore sostenuto05:26
- 8No. 3, Moderato con brio03:55
- 9No. 4, Menuetto. Allegro grazioso con espressione06:37
- 10No. 5, Allegro meno mosso03:43
- Moto immoto:
- 11Moto immoto10:14
Info for Martin Lohse: Collage de temps
The first couple of minutes of the piano concerto Collage de temps already give a crystal-clear, audible example of Martin Lohse’s composition technique, which he calls ‘mobile’. Fifteen seconds into the movement a rhythmically striking figure begins which appears in a variety of instrumental colours: in the piano, later with an emphasis on strings, then on the winds and with the sound of the full ensemble. A good minute later the character changes completely, and does so again shortly afterwards, and then again. The music hangs in front of the listener as independent figures – mobiles – and although they constantly show new sides of themselves you recognize them easily. Without invoking the parallel too strictly – it will not bear that – the listening experience when you concentrate on Lohse’s acoustic mobiles is almost like hearing an old Baroque rondo. First one theme comes, then another, then the first one comes back, a third shows its face, the first one returns etc. This parallel make sense not so much in the precise structuring of the score as in the experience of the listener: on the face of it we hear ‘the same’, but we have been changed by the time that has passed, so the music is not identical either to what we heard before.
There are several layers in Lohse’s music. The mechanical drive from the first theme in Collage de temps is saturated with the driving force and rhythmic certainty of American minimalism, and later motifs can cast the listener’s associations in the direction of Schubert’s Moments musicaux and Verdi’s operas. There is thus a tonal recognizability in the sculptural sound-universe. In purely thematic terms we are not far from the tonal language of the past. But the way the music is put together is radically different. The point of the title, Collage de temps – collage of times or tempi, or composite times or tempi – is almost self-evident when one listens to the music, and is a precise description of what one hears: times that have been put together. Both musical ‘times’ – tempi that are put together with other tempi – and a mixture of times and idioms from musical history, from the dance suites of the Baroque through the elegance of the Rococo and the emotional outbursts of Romanticism to the rhythmic swing and motif repetitions of Minimalism. The role of the piano soloist changes depending on the musical motif: sometimes as an integral part of the ensemble, sometimes more like a rampant bull in a china shop; sometimes again as a fully fledged soloist with emphatic, striking musical expression.
David Lau Magnussen, piano
Christina Åstrand, violin
Toke Moldrup, cello
Bjarke Mogensen, accordion
Claudio Jacomucci, accordion
Casper Schreiber, direction
No biography found.