Frode Haltli/Trygve Seim and Maja Ratkje

| When: |
Friday, March 5, 2010, 8 pm |
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| Where: |
Norway House 3410 West Dallas [map] |
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| Tickets: |
This concert to free of charge |
Frode Haltli - (Norway) accordion Trygve Seim - (Norway) saxophone Maja Ratkje - (Norway) voice, electronics
Presented in collaboration with the Royal Norwegian Consulate General in Houston An
extremely prolific artist, Maja Ratkje’s wide-ranging creativity has
been revealed in an explosion of work over the past 15 years.
Ratkje is an artist who clearly sees no boundaries. She is a free
improvisor, but also a composer for other musicians. Her primary
instruments are voice and electronics. But her astonishing vocal
dexterity and range of sounds might confuse the listener as to which
they are hearing. Her conservatory training may be clearly evident in
much of her work; but her credentials for noise-making would not be
debated by many. But this particular noise, while truly anarchic, has a
beautifully detailed and meticulous quality. There is a personal humor
and strange beauty that mark her work across the board, affirming
Ratkje as an artist whose uniqueness and personality are identifiable
in any context (regardless of medium). The caliber and wide-range
of her work can be testified by a list of her collaborators and
ensembles, who include: SPUNK, Trinacria, Jaap Blonk, Jazzkammer, Frode
Haltli, Jaga Jazzist, Carlos Giffoni, Paal Nilssen-Love, Ikue Mori,
Matmos, Zeena Parkins, Otomo Yoshihide, and Fe-mail.
The
tightly focused clarity in the duo of Frode Haltli and Trgyve Seim is
expressed with an austere beauty worthy of their famed record label,
ECM. Frode Haltli is placed firmly among the small and
distinguished individualists who have made the case for the accordion
as a distinct medium for the investigation of modern consonance and
dissonance. But in spite of his ‘new-music’ credentials, Haltli’s
sound is one of direct and simple beauty, with a range of colors that
contain trace evidence of folk forms and echoes of a Nordic tonality. The
serene and controlled saxophone of Trgyve Seim had its original
inspiration in the ‘Nordic Sound’ of ECM stalwart Jan Garbarek. But
Seim has distinct warmth and expression that are all his own. His
compositions are perfectly balanced; exhibiting a focus on the
composite whole of their parts. Seim not only transcends influence; he
erases categorical markers of ‘jazz’ and ‘new music’, forging a unique,
intimate, and direct type of chamber music.
Links: Maya Ratkje: http://www.ratkje.com/ Frode Haltli: http://www.haltli.com/ Trygve Seim: http://www.trygveseim.no/
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