Monday, July 29, 2013
Alva Noto, Ensemble Modern, Ryuichi Sakamoto – Utp_
Commissioned by the city of Mannheim (Germany) for its 400th anniversary, UTP was co-composed by Carsten Nicolai (aka Alva Noto) and Ryuichi Sakamoto.
The work, whose title is deducted from the word "utopia," is scored for
electronics, piano, and chamber ensemble, the latter being Ensemble
Modern. It consists in extremely slow-paced tableaux of stretched out
octaves and skeletal motives, a Butoh-like performance. The piece is
solemn and entrancing, like Morton Feldman's music -- more elegant, perhaps. It marks a new step in the evolution of Nicolai and Sakamoto's
music, together and apart, as neither of them had yet concocted
something this sparse, this naked. Their previous collaborations could
have been filed under "ambient music," but UTP
belongs in the contemporary classical bin. This is a CD+DVD set. The CD
includes a concert stereo version of the 75-minute work. The DVD has
the same performance in 5.1 surround sound, shot with a single camera
embracing the whole stage -- you won't see much of the musicians (then
again, the stage is dark and not much is happening), but you get a great
look at the big (really big!) screen in the back, where minimalistic
yet beautiful "interference patterns"-like video art unfolds throughout
the performance, minutely choreographed to the music. The DVD also
includes a 40-minute "making of" that adds close-up shots of the
musicians, an interview with the video artists, and an inside look at
the dealings between composers and performers.