musica assoluta, Paavo Järvi, Isabelle Faust, NDR Radiophilharmonie, Christian Tetzlaff, Sharon Kam – Thorsten Encke: A Portrait (Live) (2017) [FLAC 24 bit, 44,1 kHz]

musica assoluta, Paavo Järvi, Isabelle Faust, NDR Radiophilharmonie, Christian Tetzlaff, Sharon Kam - Thorsten Encke: A Portrait (Live) (2017) [FLAC 24 bit, 44,1 kHz] Download

Artist: musica assoluta, Paavo Järvi, Isabelle Faust, NDR Radiophilharmonie, Christian Tetzlaff, Sharon Kam
Album: Thorsten Encke: A Portrait (Live)
Genre: Classical
Release Date: 2017
Audio Format:: FLAC (tracks) 24 bit, 44,1 kHz
Duration: 01:10:28
Total Tracks: 6
Total Size: 618 MB

Tracklist:

1-01. Thorsten Encke, Stefan Rapp, Christian Tetzlaff, Edicson Ruiz, Lauma Skride, Isahy Lantner, Volker Jacobsen, Gustav Rivinius and Sharon Kam – Preludes for Ensemble (Live) (15:14)
1-02. Thorsten Encke, Eivind Gullberg and NDR Radiophilharmonie – Wanderer (Phantasy for Orchestra on Themes of Richard Wagner’s Der Ring des Nibelungen) (Live) (11:52)
1-03. Thorsten Encke and musica assoluta – Hommage à 14 players (Live) (08:29)
1-04. Thorsten Encke and musica assoluta – Un beau brin de fille for Chamber Orchestra (Live) (07:52)
1-05. Thorsten Encke, Boris Faust, musica assoluta and Isabelle Faust – Echoes for Violin, Viola and Orchestra (Live) (12:40)
1-06. Thorsten Encke, Paavo Järvi, musica assoluta and Die Deutsche Kammerphilharmonie Bremen – Nyx for full orchestra (Live) (14:19)

Download:

A Portrait oft he composer Thorsten Encke „When you embark on an artistic project, structural considerations can serve as a spark of inspiration. Like an architect, you roll out a blueprint, jot down a series of notes, and establish a basic framework of interval relations. Then you thoughtfully furnish the interior by relating motifs to one another and assigning them dramatic roles within the musical narrative. All of this is certainly necessary. But then, new ideas take you on detours, unplanned inspiration imposes itself on your thoughts, and the structural spark of inspiration dwindles with each new effort. The work acquires a life of its own; it wants to grow beyond its former limits. As an artist, you have to surrender and try to sense where the journey leads you.A wrestling match often arises between what was planned and what is possible: the delicate task of choosing the most promising path that branches off into the scrub. One needs to remain open to new possibilities while becoming confident in the consistency of one’s ideas. That is what inspiration is all about. One should always attempt to achieve a balance between formal construction and sheer inventiveness. Invention should take precedence over structure; in the best of cases, the latter remains under the surface as a kind of firm inner cohesion.

Invention is what shines in a work; it is what astounds the listener. On the other hand, an overtly visible structure is nothing more than a skeleton, placed in evidence to satisfy our anatomical curiosity. “Music is life; it is movement, rhythm, and Gestalt.” That is what a female audience member once said to me after a concert, and I agree. The listener has the right to expect such things from a musical work: movement, rhythm, and, most of all, Gestalt, e.g., a form one can grasp. The Gestalt confronts the listener and offers itself as a partner in dialogue. The listener decides whether she wants to enter into that dialogue; she decides how she perceives the Gestalt, and whether she will let herself be moved. If the listener is willing to actively participate in that process, she is creating the work herself. Only the Gestalt offers us an inkling of the great fabric of life, a shimmering reflection of eternity. Whenever music inspires a listener in this way, it manages to fulfill its most noble purpose.

As a composer, I spend many hours alone at my desk, painstakingly fleshing out my ideas. The written score reduces the vast array of sonorities I had previously imagined. It obliges me to formulate a clear vision, without blurring the contours. The score’s limitations force us to become inventive. The problem of notation in itself is what ultimately leads us to express ourselves in new ways. What is my current personal motto? This, perhaps: to retain a love of experiment in terms of content and expression; to remain clear in my musical language.

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