Teamet vokser og formes!

Andrea Lopez Robles (f. 1992) er festivalprodusent og sceneprodusent fra León, Mexico. Etter hun fullførte utdannelsen sin ved Universidad de Guanajuato med en grad i kunst- og kultur har hun jobbet for flere festivaler, teatre, museer og kulturorganisasjoner i Mexico og Skandinavia, blant annet: Festival Internacional Cervantino, Teatro del Bicentenario, og Instituto Zacatecano de Cultura. Hun henter inspirasjon fra fjellene, å løpe rundt backstage, mexikansk mat og i menneskene hun møter. Hun flyttet nylig til Bergen hvor hun tar en master i interkulturelle studier, samtidig som hun starter i Borealis som produsent.

Runa Halleraker (f. 1995) fra Trondheim studerer for tiden en master i kunst ved KMD, UiB, hvor de arbeider med maleri, ord og installasjon. Deres første soloutstilling fant sted ved Galleri Fisk i november 2019 og nå nylig If They Hit Just Right ved Kiosken i Bergen. Nylige gruppeutstillinger inkluderer Kommunikation ved Färgfabriken i Stockholm og MERGE ved Cafe Gallery Project & Dilston Grove i London. På siden av studiene har Runa arbeidet med fotografi, design og kommunikasjon, for blant annet Stormfestivalen og Pstereofestivalen, og her hos Borealis som praktikant i 20/21. Nå tar hun steget opp som kommunikasjonsmedarbeider for festivalen.

Émilie Fanor-Fontaine (f. 1991) fra Paris var praktikant i festivalen i 20/21, og går nå inn i rollen som frivilligansvarlig i Borealis! Med en bred bakgrunn innen både film, filosofi og nordisk, har hun de seneste årene vært aktiv som gjestekurator, assisterende redigerer og frivilligkoordinator hos blant annet Cinemateket i Bergen, Isme Film, BIFF og Bergen Fringe Festival. Hun tok sin master i valorisasjon av kino- og audiovisuell kulturarv ved Université Paris 8 og Stockholms Universitet, og sikter mot å bli filmregissør. 

Abigael Asgedom (f. 1994) har vært med oss siden 2019 – først som praktikant og deretter i posisjon som administrasjonsassistent. Hun tar nå fatt i nye arbeidsoppgaver her i Borealis. Fra og med høsten 2021 er hun også prosjektansvarlig for våre månedlige gratisarrangement Borealis- og Papillon Listening Club, og for arrangementer knyttet til vår nåværende gjestekunstner Marshall Trammell. Abigael er opprinnelig fra Eritrea, og flyttet til Bergen for å studere. Hun har fullført en bachelor i sosiologi ved Universitet i Bergen, og var lenge aktiv i organisasjonen Papillon – en multikulturell møteplass for unge mennesker. Hun er grunnlegger av African Student Union i Bergen, og deltar i kunstprosjektet Oi! med utspring fra kunsttriennalen Bergen Assembly. Abigael driver også aktivt med musikk under navnet DJ Joy, og har opptrådt på flere festivalen som Hot! Hot! Hot! i Bergen, Blak Outside i London og Vers Libre 24-hour DJ Live Stream.

Konferansen «Kvinner i musikken»

Fredag 28. mai arrangerte Bergen kommune konferansen «Kvinner i musikken» i anledning avdukingen av Kim Friele-statuen i Bergen. Bidragsyterne til festivalen var mange og gode, og gikk du glipp av denne viktige begivenheten så kan du se hele konferansen her:

Daglig leder for Borealis Tine Rude deltok i en av samtalene på konferansen sammen med festivalen Beyond The Gates. Du finner vårt bidrag 1 time og 12 minutter uti sendingen.

Raven Chacon og BIT20 Ensemble på NRK P2

9. mai ble fire verk av Raven Chacon kringkastet på NRK P2 på programmet Spillerom Søndag. Opptakene ble gjort under Borealis 2021 der BIT20 Ensemble fremførte et repertoar av Chacon inkludert en verdenspremiere av verket Owl Song – skrevet for ensemblet og festivalen. Hør verkene og intervju med Chacon – gjort av Borealis sin podcast-produsent Christiane Meldgaard.

Raven Chacon er komponist, utøver og installasjonskunstner fra Fort Defiance, Navajo Nation – det største reservatet for urbefolkningen i USA. Han har presentert arbeider som soloartist, i samarbeid med andre, eller med kunstnerkollektivet Postcommodity på alt fra Whitney Biennalen, documenta 14, REDCAT m.fl.

Interessant debatt om partiturmusikk og ‘politisk korrekthet’ på ballade.no!

Det foregår i disse dager en interessant debatt på ballade.no om partiturmusikkens plass på festivaler for ny musikk, og om ‘politisk korrekt’ kuratering. Debatten startet med et innlegg fra komponist Jon Øivind Ness der han ytrer bekymring for partiturmusikkens fremtid og bruker Borealis som eksempel. Hans innlegg ble besvart av musikerne og komponistene Jennifer Torrence, Astrid Solberg, Elias Nurmi Schomers og Inga Margrete Aas først, og deretter også Borealis-ledelsen. I ettertid har det kommet refleksjoner rundt temaet fra Trond Reinholdtsen, Dagfinn Koch og Emil Bernhardt. Les deg opp på debatten på ballade.no.

In Defense of the Disturbing

Photo: Thor Brødreskift/Borealis. Depicted: score for Borealis 2021 commission «De Composition» by Ruth Bakke.

This is a translation of a response by Borealis’ Artistic Director Peter Meanwell & Managing Director Tine Rude to a text by composer Jon Øivind Ness published on the online cultural magazine ballade.no 22 April 2021. Original text by Borealis on ballade.no.

In a recent article for the online cultural journal Ballade headlined “Disturbing that scored music is being displaced”, Norwegian composer Jon Øivind Ness expresses concern for the future of scored music in general, and worries that Borealis in particular «programmes anything» just to be politically correct. It’s sad to read, but his concerns in no way resonate with us.  

It appears Ness was inspired to write his article after reading a review of our 2021 festival in the national newspaper Klassekampen written by Magnus Andersson – a review which is limited in scope, based on only 3 of 5 days of the festival, and then on only parts of the programme. It seems clear too that Ness has neither been to this year’s festival, had a look at the full programme, or even watched our Online festival content or heard the concerts and conversations that have already been broadcast on the BBC and NRK (Norwegian National Radio). If he had, perhaps he wouldn’t be so concerned, and could instead reflect on how the composers at our festival present a rich and varied world of contemporary music. Instead Ness sweeps away the music and art at Borealis by building an argument without knowing anything about what the programme actually contains. 

Scored Music is doing fine at Borealis

Scored music has a good life at Borealis, sitting alongside other musical expressions by artists and composers from Bergen, Norway and the World. Every year the festival commissions new works from Norwegian and international composers, both scored music for traditional ensembles and for new constellations of musicians. At the same time, we also create space for various experimental musical expressions, which gives us the opportunity to listen to and think about music in new ways. 

In light of Ness’ article, it seems we need to make a list of what scored music could be experienced at this year’s festival: if he took part in this year’s opening concert he’d have heard works written for the Royal Norwegian Naval Forces Band by composers Agnes Ida Pettersen, Ruth Bakke, Svein Henrik Giske and David Longa, and later in the evening enjoyed Sarah Hennie’s scored work Contralto, performed by the Norwegian ensemble Aksiom. During the break, he could have strolled around an exhibition of composer Raven Chacon’s scores, watched films of Opera Avgarde’s newly written micro-operas from West Norwegian composers, or heard the young musicians of Åsane Unge Strykere perform works by Nils Henrik Asheim. Elsewhere in the festival he could have heard newly composed works from our Borealis Ung Komponist participants – our mentor program for composers at the beginning of their careers, heard Ruth Bakke premiere her new work on the organ of Storetveit church, or enjoyed Ricardo Odriozola’s solo violin concert which overflowed with both new and older scored music. The classically trained accordionist Andreas Borregaard performed new commissions from Marcela Lucatelli and Philip Venables, and if that wasn’t all too much he could have attended the wonderful closing concert with the excellent BIT20 Ensemble where four scored works by composer Raven Chacon brought this year’s festival to a close. 

Be nice! 

It is important that we address the way Jon Øyvind Ness talks about the artists who have been at Borealis. In his text, he reduces them, and ironically himself, to being just representatives of their gender, orientation, skin color and age, without showing any insight into what they have contributed artistically to the festival. Even if you don’t like Linn da Quebrada or Abdu Ali’s music, it is essential to know the context in which their music and art was presented. Quebrada is a Brazilian musician with an embodied political performance practice, in a country where right wing politics persecutes the bodies and very existence of those who do not conform. Quebrada’s work greatly influenced classical composer Marcela Lucatelli, whose scored work Drift for accordion player Andreas Borregaard was premiered in the same festival, and the documentary was shown as a natural extension of this contribution to the festival. If it’s difficult to understand how Abdu Ali can perform at a festival of contemporary music, then just taking part in the online event Abdu Ali’s as they lay at this year’s festival could have increased that understanding. Focused on the voices of Black musicians and composers exploring creative solidarity across the Atlantic, inspiration was drawing as much upon Holberg prize winner Paul Gilroy as Paulo Freire, and people listened to each other and brought new perspectives as to what it means to exist as a musician in today’s society.

If you want to criticize the artistic profile of a festival then please do not extract two random voices from the whole to build a shaky argument. Especially not when they happen to be black and queer – then the whole enterprise becomes reactionary and unfair.

Political correctness or real change?

Borealis has always promised to be a festival that explores and celebrates how experimental and new composed music is being made now, in all its nuance and complexity. Scored music has been with Borealis since the beginning – and still is! But Borealis has never been a festival that consists of scored music just for the sake of it. Ness may well wish for a festival like this, but it is not Borealis, nor is it our mandate or mission. We want to represent the world as it actually looks, with a great diversity of important voices and ideas, not to diminish the field through narrow-mindedness. 

And let us be crystal clear – quality is at the top of our agenda. The question is where to look for quality, and what you consider excellent. There are an infinite number of talented, exciting and challenging musicians and composers in the field, and we are clear that we will find these.

Unfortunately, Ness reasserts the rather crude and lazy binary: “the good old days” vs “political correctness”. This is flawed at its very core. It assumes that what happened before was only about quality, and now the only qualifier is some kind of over eager identity politics.  It is a classic mistake to assume that the past was all excellence and apolitical.

After all, the existence of cis white male bodies has never felt the need to be political, because they have held all the privilege. It hurts to lose privileges, but the solution is not to shout «politically correct» to undermine the natural currents and necessary changes that must take place now. Would it be preferable for the festival to be «politically incorrect»? Should we maintain the centuries old tradition of only allowing one group of people on to the platform at the exclusion of others? Has resorting to «political correctness» as a critique become a shorthand to express some ugly ideas in the field of culture? 

Contemporary music also has context

We believe that neither humans nor music, scored or otherwise, exist in a vacuum. 

Just as Schubert was inspired by Goethe, and Grieg by Ibsen, composers of contemporary music today draw their inspirations from many places – from dance, from landscape, from technology, to other musical forms. Just as some composers explore what music can be through the medium of the orchestra or sinfonietta, some explore what music can be through the medium of their own bodies, through non-musicians or even non-human actors. 

Just as the trauma and politics of the Second World War fractured the consensus of late romantic music spawning a multitude of ways of exploring the new world through composition, (cf. Stockhausen, Messiaen, John Cage, Boulez even Richard Strauss and Poulenc) so music today also responds to the world we live in, which just in the last year has included seismic shifts in popular political consciousness  around the Climate Crisis, systemic racism and Nationalism.

Nor should we ignore the fact that just as once women, Black and indigenous people were excluded from voting, so, for much longer they were excluded from the conservatoire and from the concert platform. Few people today would question universal suffrage, but in concert halls and opera houses these historic biases linger on. Repertoire is still monochromatic, and the absence of diverse voices a reality. 

Happily though contemporary music today is being made by people from inside and outside the conservatoire, from across the world, with different identities and view points, different creative impulses and lived experiences. This in turns means new role models, and new audiences entering a space of attentive listening and critical enquiry

For Borealis one cannot exist without the other, as musical genres and boundaries blur and develop. For example to consider the musical aesthetic of noise, one that we hear at least as far back as the Italian Futurist compositions of the 1910s, it’s crucial not only to explore the work of a score based composer like Peter Ablinger (as we did with BIT20 Ensemble in 2018), but also to invite a DIY noise musician from outside the conservatoire to perform (as we did with underground artist B L A C K I E in 2019). 

To consider contemporary music as beyond contextualisation does a disservice to its complexity and brilliance, and is an insult to the capacity of its listeners to stretch and explore. 

So, rather than accusing us of displacing scored music, or having a diffuse artistic agenda marked by political correctness, perhaps a visit to Borealis and broader insight into the program would reveal that this year’s festival actually explores different ways of expressing the art of composing. Just like life, and the world we live in, contemporary music does not benefit from a single narrative – it includes‚ but is not limited to‚ notes on paper, or the experiences of ‘white men who have passed 50’. Having different musical voices in our contemporary and experimental music festivals can only lead to more discovery, more delight, and more discussion. We will fight for Jon Øyvind’s right not to enjoy everything at the festivals he attends, but Borealis will continue to present a dynamic and strong programme with exciting and exploratory composers, musicians and artists from Bergen, Norway and the world. And we’ll do this ensuring that we represent the breadth of society. To do anything else would be unconscionable.

Tine Rude & Peter Meanwell

Festivalstaben 2021

Runa Halleraker (de), praktikant (kommunikasjon)
runa@borealisfestival.no | +47 93 45 70 02

Émilie Fanor-Fontaine (hun), praktikant (frivillige & distribusjon)
emilie@borealisfestival.no | +47 91 66 27 02

Said Abdullahi (han), praktikant (produksjon)
said@borealisfestival.no | +47 98 14 03 25

Kjetil Aabø (han), teknisk konsulent
kjetil@borealisfestival.no | +47 93 20 56 66

Line Jensen (hun), co-produksjonsansvarlig
line@borealisfestival.no |+47 91 13 06 41

Aslak Bjørge Hermstad (han), transport & logistikk
logistikk@borealisfestival.no | +47 97 12 28 83

Davone Sirmans (hun), produsent
davone@borealisfestival.no | +34 667 014 173

Maja B. Sundt (hun), produsent
maja@borealisfestival.no |+ 47 45 61 23 57

Marthe Serck-Hanssen (hun), produsent
marthe@borealisfestival.no | +47 47 05 61 75

Oda Førde Braanaas (hun), produsent
oda@borealisfestival.no | +47 907 181 98

Kjartan Magerøy Aarseth (han), produsent (Radio Space)
kjartan@borealisfestival.no | +47 91 69 12 85 

Fraser Keddie (han), digital produsent
fraser@borealisfestival.no | +47 91 91 81 73

Christiane Meldgaard (hun), podkast
christiane@borealisfestival.no | +45 41 83 33 83

Ben Speck (han), videoansvarlig
ben@borealisfestival.no | +47 91 85 64 08

Gabriela Passos (hun), billetter
billett@borealisfestival.no | +47 98 08 28 52

Johanne Karlsrud (hun), festivalfotograf

Thor Brødreskift (han), festivalfotograf

Thomas Bush (han), visuell profil & design

Borealis 2021 var fantastisk!

Fem dager – både Live&Online – med musikk, samtaler, forestillinger, workshops, bading, FM-jakt, sol, regn og ikke minst båter som synger for full hals. Borealis 2021 fortsetter Online – mer informasjon om dette kommer veldig snart, men i mellomtiden kan du nyte synet og lyden av Raven Chacon’s Chorale for fire skip med tåkelur som ble fremført under festivalen, 20. mars kl. 13.30, av Trollfjord, Magne Viking, Nordnorge og et av Forsvaret sine skip.

En kreativ høst

Gjennom hele høsten 2020 har Agnes, Mirte, Tord og Vegar jobbet sammen med sine mentorer Raven Chacon, Øyvind Torvund og Alwynne Pritchard for å skrive nye musikkstykker til ensemblet Currentes. Med vidt forskjellige bakgrunner innen koreografi, klassisk komposisjon, kirkemusikk & improvisasjon har de fire utfordret og hjulpet hverandre for å nå målet: urpremiere av fire verk på Borealis i mars 2021.

Vi har intervjuet alle fire for å få et bedre innblikk i prosessen og metodene deres!

Les intervjuene med: Mirte | Vegar | Tord | Agnes