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Larcher 1280x608

Thomas Larcher over The Living Mountain

wo 19 feb 2020 - 3 minuten leestijd - Tekst: Het Concertgebouw

In seizoen 2019-2020 was Thomas Larcher composer in residence van Het Concertgebouw. Na een aantal keren uitstel klinkt dan eindelijk, op 30 april 2022, in de Kleine Zaal de wereldpremière van The Living Mountain, een nieuw werk dat hij speciaal schreef voor Asko|Schönberg. Een werk als een reis in klank, woord en beeld: het is geïnspireerd op de beelden van het berglandschap van Südtirol van gevierde kunstenaar-fotograaf Awoiska van der Molen die tijdens het concert worden vertoond. Ook put Larcher uit het boek The Living Mountain van de Schotse Nan Shepherd.

Thomas Larcher schrijft over zijn nieuwe werk, The Living Mountain:

'Being submerged in natural surroundings, amidst water, branches, amidst the natural environment: this is where the Dutch photographer Awoiska van der Molen has always been drawn. I knew her work long before I was invited to be "artist in residence" at the Concertgebouw, having seen her photographs closely at her first solo outing at the FOAM, here in Amsterdam.'

Tekst gaat verder onder de afbeelding

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'I had seen them on the internet even before that, but to see these images "live": this made an incredible impression on me. It seemed to me that through the process of being printed and presented in a very specific and impeccable way, these photos had developed a stature and quality completely different from those I knew online.'

Tekst gaat verder onder de afbeelding

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'Through this experience I discovered a similar practice of our working fields: The care for detail and precision, the amount of mental energy put into a "piece of art" can "energize" a photo or a piece of music enormously. So much that you could write on almost any topic or theme, or photograph whatever you want, but the process of how and with what care it had been done would always shine through and define the picture or the music more than anything else.'

'Having seen this exhibition I also turned back to my own origins again… Nature and, in my case, especially mountains had always played an enormous role in my life, as an active mountaineer as well as a composer. I embarked on an exploration of nature and the discovery of alpinism after having read Novalis when I was 17 years old. My first pieces were named after regions in my mountainous backyard.'

Tekst gaat verder onder de afbeelding

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'Having seen this exhibition I also turned back to my own origins again… Nature and, in my case, especially mountains had always played an enormous role in my life, as an active mountaineer as well as a composer. I embarked on an exploration of nature and the discovery of alpinism after having read Novalis when I was 17 years old. My first pieces were named after regions in my mountainous backyard.'

'My relation to mountains has been constantly changing. At one point I imagined an unspoilt Atlantis, I found a wide open, empty space for my soul to roam around and to let my inner self connect with musical ideas... at other times I defined routes by their difficulties: climbing could be a challenge, I could experience extreme situations and dangers.'

Tekst gaat verder onder de afbeelding

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'What I never had experienced, though, was such a thorough and at the same time unpretentious look at the mountains as Nan Shepherd has shown me and as also Awoiska has provided me with. In Shepherd's book The Living Mountain it is not about mystifying the mountains nor about "testing oneself" in this surrounding (using the mountain as an outdoor gym as Reinhold Messner would say)… there is no need for that here. It is about discovering their beauty in one specific sound, in one look, in one single picture the eye captures (and which disappears again within fractions of a second). It is about hearing the whole universe of music in one cry of a bird or in a waterfall a mile away. And it is about hearing, feeling and experiencing yourself, being completely "inside yourself" and at the same time "seeing yourself" from outside.'

Tekst gaat verder onder de afbeelding

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'Much could be said about all that, but the best thing is to read the book! And then go back and look at Awoiska's pictures again and intensely.'

'I have tried (and in fact am still trying at this very moment) to identify some small but significant passages from The Living Mountain and to discover again this "wide, open and empty space"… this time to discover it within myself and give my inner self time and space to connect with the music that is constantly flowing and roaring inside of me.'

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