Monday 20. 1.
info Festival starts leading Belgian dance company Cie Mossoux-Bont and Czech Clarinet Quartet Factory. Cie Mossoux-Bonté (BE) Two elegant figures with a furious obsession for symmetry take their coffee amid whispers of agreeable truths in a living room of velveteen comfort. Except… certain anomalies begin to slip into their comportment and the place itself is revealed to be something other than what it first seemed. As cracks appear in their insouciance: their world divides in two, giving birth to a fashionable Venus who makes their coffee. Is it their imagination that leads them to the most insidious of confusions? Are they not themselves simply the dream of a sister who resembles them like some phantasm born of their desire for fusion? A first version of this piece was created in March 2011 at the Biennale de danse du Val de Marne (Paris). The performance lasted 30 minutes and toured extensively in this form (particularly in Germany), in combination with other short pieces. Today it has been developed into a longer sequence with the addition of a new character (the fish eater)… Concept and direction Patrick Bonté Choreography Nicole Mossoux, Patrick Bonté Performers Leslie Mannès, Maxence Rey, Frauke Mariën Live music Thomas Turine Set and costumes Frédérique De Montblanc Make-up Jean-Pierre Finotto Hair and wigs Véronique Lacroix, Catherine Somers Light design Patrick Bonté Light and set construction Aurélie Perret Technical direction David Jans Production: Cie Mossoux-Bonté in coproduction with Centre de Développement Chorégraphique du Val-de-Marne, Théâtre Debussy de Maisons-Alfort (France) and Les Brigittines – Centre d'Art contemporain du Mouvement de la Ville de Bruxelles (Belgium) www.mossoux-bonte.be Trailer: /…com/75286411# Clarinet Factory (CZ) More than one decade has passed since the foundation of the ensemble during which the quartet attempted to interpret various genres and experiment in the field of classical music, jazz, electronic music and ethno. The beginnings of the activity of the ensemble which had originally been called the Czech Clarinet Quartet, are linked to the studies of all four performers at Prague AMU, thus to first half of the nineties. he current policy of the quartet can briefly be summarised in the words of ensemble member Jindra Pavliš: „We do not want to be only interpreters and clarinet players. We are interpreters of classical and jazz music, improvisers and creators in new inter-genre projects. Formerly we played clarinets and composed music; now we are doing more improvisations, composing, playing other instruments and singing. We want to be an ensemble which has something to say. Not a museum!“ The objective of the ensemble is clear – communication – across genres and generations. All this is hidden also in the new and perhaps intentionally abstract name of the ensemble the Clarinet Factory, under which the clarinet quartet will be presented on the music scene and under which it will be known to its admirers and fans henceforward. Clarinet Factory – three clarinets and a bass clarinet; this certainly is not a traditional cast of a chamber ensemble. The sound variations offered by this set are very unusual, soothing as well as dense and pliable and full of vitality and surprise. They emerge from a repertoire of musical pieces from various eras and styles (from the Renaissance to jazz and modern music) which the members of the quartet themselves adapt. The effort of the quartet does not end with the adaptation and interpretation of known compositions. Their own compositions and premieres of novelties of contemporary authors form an additional dimension to their creation. During the preparation and implementation of individual thematic programmes they work together with a number of top Czech music interpreters (for example they recorded the „Tenerife blues“ CD withJana Koubková). At present, Alan Vitouš, the percussionist, is in a long standing partnership with the ensemble. The appetite of the ensemble to tamper with non traditional items is reflected in the organisation of the multi-media show of events held every year in June in the old quarry of Nečín, with music, projections and a fire show, and in the attendance of other musicians. The fact that the Clarinet Factory is an original, lively and successful
ensemble is shown in the invitations to significant festivals such as Inalfa
festival – Holland 96, XXII. International jazz festival Prague 97, Chopin
festival – Mariánské Lázně 97, Festival B. Martinů – Polička
99 Sommer Festival, Norimberk 2000, Jazz Lent festival, Maribor 2003, MHF
Struny podzimu (Strings of Autumn) 2006, Jazz Peak in Sofia, MHF Moravský podzim
(Moravian Autumn) 2007, performance in the concert cycles of Prague
Philharmonia, Czech Philharmony, Prague Symphony Orchestra (FOK), tour and
cognitive journey to Senegal 2003, etc., and also positive criticisms in the
press, fruitful cooperation with the Czech broadcasting studio and Czech TV. The
audience was also able to come across their music in foreign cinemas as the
quartet significantly participated in composing music for Hidden Things.
(Picture Start Company – New York). The quartet introduced itself on the
Czech theatre scene with scenic live music to the performance of the Comedy
Theatre „Les“, 2003. The ensemble of Clarinet Factory, together with
the composer Zbyňek Matějů, has also prepared and interpreted music for the
ballet performance (e)MOTION PURE – Kevel, currently being shown at the
Ponec theatre.
Christopher Willits (US) Christopher Willits is an artist- a musician, guitarist, producer, photographer, filmmaker, teacher all-in-one. Willits occupies a unique corner of the electronic-art-music universe—hovering above the intersection of electronic production’s nuts and bolts, new media art, and a wide-open creative mind. “I simply imagine, and do the work.” Willits’ tireless doing has produced over 23 albums in 10 years—solo and in collaboration with artists including Ryuichi Sakamoto, Matmos, Zach Hill, and Taylor Deupree—and an organic, multi-faceted sound that expands like the vines of an electro-acoustic kudzu plant. Christopher Willits is a teacher, a label owner (the experimental hub Overlap.org), a meditator, a tech geek, a visual/new media artist, and virtuosic musician in one. In other words, there’s no one out there quite like him. Willits designs much of his own software, and his music is a holistic universe in which all elements are interconnected; he folds his guitar lines into bleary, unrecognizable shapes and polyrhythmic textures, adding strokes of percussion, and his own voice until the whole glows with an earthly inner light. A full list of Christopher Willits’ releases and accomplishments would take up considerable column space, but a beginner’s guide to Willits includes 2002’s Folding, and the Tea (his watery 12k debut), 2006’s landmark Surf Boundaries (his first full-length record on Ghostly International), 2008’s Ocean Fire (Willits’ collaboration with renowned pianist / composer Ryuichi Sakamoto), and 2009’s Live on Earth Vols. 1 & 2 (a pair of self-released live albums dedicated to his fans and supporters) and 2011's GOLD, a sound bath of immense relaxation. Willits completed his Master's Degree in Electronic Music at Mills College where he studied with Pauline Oliveros and Fred Frith. At Mills he explored structure-generating processes in music; a focus not unfamiliar to former Mills affiliates John Cage and Steve Reich. Prior to Mills, Willits focused on painting, video art, sound art and music at the Kansas City Art Institute. Willits is also the Founder/Director of the experimental record label and community catalyst Overlap.org . /…rwillits.com |
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