That Which Has Remained ... That Which Will Emerge ... Lukas Ligeti
Album info
Album-Release:
2021
HRA-Release:
26.03.2021
Label: col legno
Genre: Classical
Subgenre: Classical Crossover
Artist: Lukas Ligeti
Composer: Lukas Ligeti (1965)
Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)
- Lukas Ligeti (b. 1965):
- 1 That Which Has Remained ... That Which Will Emerge ...: I. Voices ... Silence ... 02:57
- 2 That Which Has Remained ... That Which Will Emerge ...: II. Awakening ... Recalling ... Saposhkelekh 05:41
- 3 That Which Has Remained ... That Which Will Emerge ...: III. City of the Damned 05:46
- 4 That Which Has Remained ... That Which Will Emerge ...: IV. Elusive Counterpoint 04:16
- 5 That Which Has Remained ... That Which Will Emerge ...: V. Andenk an Bełz ... In the Papers, She Was Polish 14:06
- 6 That Which Has Remained ... That Which Will Emerge ...: Vi. Oyfn Veg ... In This Country ... 12:00
Info for That Which Has Remained ... That Which Will Emerge ...
Music as meta-memory: In 2015, when he was the artist-in-residence at Warsaw’s POLIN Museum, the internationally renowned percussionist and composer Lukas Ligeti created a unique document in words and sounds that is being presented on this album. The history of Polish Jews, which is the POLIN museum’s mission to transport and convey, led Lukas Ligeti to contemplate his own (Hungarian-) Jewish background. He conducted numerous interviews with people between the ages of 20 and 98 to talk to them about Jewish life in Warsaw. All interview partners were also asked to sing songs. By way of a precise musical notation, these memories were fed to musicians via headphones in the form of speech, rhythm, and melodies. Those, in turn, were asked to respond intuitively to what they heard and continue the conversation by their, musical means. The result is a touching composition situated somewhere between performance art and concert.
"Although Lukas Ligeti never lived behind the Iron Curtain, his family story is akin to Polish biographies. A majority of his parents’ and grandparents’ generation perished in death camps after Hungarians and Germans had implemented their murderous plan to exterminate Hungarian Jews in 1944.
The notion that the awareness of ethnic roots and the identity they help to develop is a condition necessary for human existence is obviously questionable; we should not consider ethnic identification as a necessity faced by individuals. But the experience of a family history being discontinued because of the Holocaust and, later on, the homogenizing social and historical policy of socialist states or migration must have created a field of shared experience for Lukas Ligeti and his interlocutors. It is hardly accidental that, as it seems, narrations of identity constitute the starting and final points for the composer, the audience and the voices telling stories. Yet among them, speech becomes a pretext for abstract sequences of sounds.
Although the relation between the participants in the event developed through abstract musical activities, improvising and listening to sounds, in which meaning was replaced with sound and rhythm, the impression that communication was the pivot and the means in the creation of Ligeti’s piece remains. The communication in question is one that is mediated by technology, the language of music that allows artists to cooperate, but also one that travels through time and space – to districts that have disappeared from rebuilt cities and memories of those who are no longer with us. [...]" (Piotr Cichocki)
Barbara Kinga Majewska, soprano
Pawel Szamburski, clarinet
Patryk Zakrocki, violin, viola, mbira
Mikolaj Palosz, cello
Wojtek Kurek, drums, synthesizer
Lukas Ligeti, electronics, marimba lumina
Lukas Ligeti
is a composer and improvisor whose original, innovative musical language draws from the European classical tradition, jazz, New York’s “Downtown” experimental music, and various African music traditions. Born in Vienna, Austria, he studied composition at Vienna’s University for Music and Performing Arts and holds a PhD from the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa. He lived in New York City from 1998 until 2015, when he joined the faculty of the University of California, Irvine.
The recipient of the prestigious CalArts Alpert Award in Music, his compositions have been commissioned by Bang on a Can, Kronos Quartet, Eighth Blackbird, Ensemble Modern, the American Composers Orchestra, MDR Orchestra (Leipzig), the Vienna Festwochen, Ars Musica (Brussels), Goethe Institute, and choreographer Karole Armitage.
As a drummer, he has worked with John Zorn, Marilyn Crispell, John Tchicai, Michael Manring, Elliott Sharp, Gary Lucas, etc., and leads or co-leads several bands such as Hypercolor and Notebook. He has given solo electronic percussion concerts on five continents, performing on the Marimba Lumina, an instrument designed by Donald Buchla.
Engaged in collaborations with musicians in Africa for more than 25 years, he co-founded the ensemble Beta Foly in Côte d’Ivoire and now co-leads Burkina Electric, the first electronica band from Burkina Faso. He has also collaborated on/led projects in Egypt, Ghana, Uganda, Kenya, Zimbabwe, Mozambique, Lesotho, etc.
Booklet for That Which Has Remained ... That Which Will Emerge ...