The other day, I saw someone post, “what if the first person that saw an angel was just super high and saw a peacock?”
Then, today, I saw this: pic.twitter.com/xACz7NfXfK
— Melissa Tyndall (@melissatyndall) December 22, 2022
The other day, I saw someone post, “what if the first person that saw an angel was just super high and saw a peacock?”
Then, today, I saw this: pic.twitter.com/xACz7NfXfK
— Melissa Tyndall (@melissatyndall) December 22, 2022
Music fun fact: The world record for longest continuous note blown on a wind instrument belongs to Vann Burchfield, who played a note for 47 minutes on his soprano saxophone. Burchfield used circular breathing, a method that uses stored air in the cheeks. pic.twitter.com/zS65wU5Iuk
— Robert Komaniecki (@Komaniecki_R) December 26, 2022
Synth boy pic.twitter.com/sVVWsb3rHU
— score follower (@incipitsify) December 26, 2022
Heiko Wommelsdorf
Music for Neighbours
10 loudspeakers, vinyl players, LP „Illegal Loopz #1“
«Loops» Galerie Kai Erdmann, Hamburg
#compositionclass
today's lesson#compositionclass pic.twitter.com/pNJNvSM5uF
— Kreidler (@_Kreidler) December 6, 2022
today`s lesson#compositionclass #aestheticthinktank pic.twitter.com/fYAfyKc7vw
— Kreidler (@_Kreidler) December 20, 2022
today's lesson#compositionclass #aestheticthinktank pic.twitter.com/J5NFcOy3S2
— Kreidler (@_Kreidler) January 17, 2023
Das Opera Lab hat vom 1.-24. Dezember 2021 einen Adventskalender performt. Jeden Tag ein Musiktheater-Piece an ihrem Schaufenster in Berlin-Schöneberg, inspiriert aus Material des Kreidler-Werkfundus, jeden Tag eine andere Verschwörungstheorie. Es ist alles anders als ihr denkt, wacht auf!
Hier der Zusammenschnitt.
The Kreidler Conspiracy Christmas Advent Calendar
Supported by Initiativ Neue Musik Berlin
Performers: Anna Weber, Georg Bochow, Günter Wolf-Lemke, Gina May Walter, Nolundi Tschudi, Sophie Cathrin and David Eggert
Directors and Dramaturgy: Anna Weber, Georg Bochow, Günter Wolf-Lemke, Gina May Walter, Nolundi Tschudi, Sophie Cathrin and Evan Gardner
Stage & Costume Design: Günter Wolf-Lemke
Production Management: Julie Kurzke
Light Design: Santiago Dolijan
Live Video: Marta Maluva
Sound Engineering: Simon Walker
Social Media: Louise Knauer, Will Roseliep
Artistic Director: Evan Gardner
01 -24 Dec 2021 17:00, 17:30, 18:00 & 1830
DAS LABOR MONUMENTENSTR 5 10829 BERLIN
STREAMING ON YOUTUBE/ OPERALABBERLIN
Opera Lab Berlin presents the Kreidler Conspiracy – the world’s first live music theatre advent calendar! At long last The Lab at Monumentenstraße 5 is letting the public have a sneak peak and unveils its Popup Store for Truth. From December 1st right through 24th the collective for contemporary music theatre will perform a shrewd and musically virtuoso showdown of conspiracy theories using compositions by the concept music artist Johannes Kreidler.
Every day a new formation of performers from the ensemble will expose a new conspiracy with and around Kreidler’s music. How does rope jumping explain the secret intrigues behind 9/11? What’s the connection between shoes falling on guitars and the Illuminati? And did you know, that Prince Charles is a vampire – and that opera lab holds him prison? Come to the fireplace, where Opera Lab Berlin will retell the 21st century’s most popular tales. Untruths, which manipulate our Zeitgeist’s narratives from the depth of the web of social media, proclaiming the new salvation or catastrophe. Or becoming reality.
Witness how festively the velvet curtain will swing open daily at 5 pm and open a new door to an alternative truth. Walkers-by can then partake in the inner workings of the laboratory by gazing through the shop window wearing disinfected bluetooth headphones. Short performances as well as social distancing and obligatory medical masks will ensure a safe art degustation in fresh air. Come and enjoy links and connections, where there are none; tasty concept music Christmas recipes; Elvis and Big Foot; glitter and chocolate.
Forget love, Christmas 2021 will become a feast of truth!
Mein Text „Zur Interpretation“, auf englisch erschienen in „Movement to Sound – Sound to Movement„, steht jetzt im originalen Deutsch online.
http://www.kreidler-net.de/theorie/kreidler__zur_interpretation.pdf
Auch Neue Musik, die extremst genau notiert ist, benötigt Interpretation. Artikulationsweisen,
dynamische Stufungen, Verlaufsformen der Crescendi oder Ritardandi, Haltung auf der Bühne, bei
fixierten Medien die Raumbeschallung, der Gesamtausdruck, die Qualität der Klänge, sowieso: schöne
bzw. gut klingende Klänge hervorbringen, das fordert von den Interpreten Interpretation; aus den
Noten Gestalten bilden, den Notentext lebendig werden lassen, den Stil des Stückes auch in eine
Körpersprache bringen, eine Körpersprache erst dafür finden. Auf dem Weg der körperlichen
Aneignung durch Interpreten passiert vielleicht überhaupt: ein Musikstück verstehen.