Alte Turnhalle, (neben der Kirche), Heerstrasse, 3993 Grengiols
Grängjer Kulturtäg
THE LETSCHT GRAATZUG
For flute quartet, sound art and narrator - PERFORMANCE
The glaciers are melting, familiar things are disappearing and what seemed eternal suddenly turns out to be ephemeral. The poor souls who have had to atone for their sacrileges in the "Chalte Wasseru" for hundreds of years are full of hope - this suffering and painful remoteness is not eternal - they will soon be redeemed.
The two composers Andreas Gabriel and Stefan Mattig incorporate traditional Valais folk music by the "Walpen brothers" from Grengiols into their works and combine it with innovative, unconventional and experimental approaches.
Just as crevasses and fissures open up in the glacier, the music is also "broken" and reflected upon anew, thus placing it in contexts that take the audience beyond the boundaries of folk music and into modern, multi-layered worlds. The concert evening ends on a hopeful note with the "Armu Seelen Jodler" as a metaphor for the redemption of lost souls.
Performers:
VIBRATION4
Rozalia Agadjanian, flute
Eliane Williner, flute
Raphaelle Rubellin, flute
Eliane Locher, flute
Stefanie Ammann, speaker
New works by Andreas Gabriel and Stefan Mattig
Sound Art: Hannah Locher
Texts: Rolf Hermann
Note: This text was translated by machine translation software and not by a human translator. It may contain translation errors.
For flute quartet, sound art and narrator - PERFORMANCE
The glaciers are melting, familiar things are disappearing and what seemed eternal suddenly turns out to be ephemeral. The poor souls who have had to atone for their sacrileges in the "Chalte Wasseru" for hundreds of years are full of hope - this suffering and painful remoteness is not eternal - they will soon be redeemed.
The two composers Andreas Gabriel and Stefan Mattig incorporate traditional Valais folk music by the "Walpen brothers" from Grengiols into their works and combine it with innovative, unconventional and experimental approaches.
Just as crevasses and fissures open up in the glacier, the music is also "broken" and reflected upon anew, thus placing it in contexts that take the audience beyond the boundaries of folk music and into modern, multi-layered worlds. The concert evening ends on a hopeful note with the "Armu Seelen Jodler" as a metaphor for the redemption of lost souls.
Performers:
VIBRATION4
Rozalia Agadjanian, flute
Eliane Williner, flute
Raphaelle Rubellin, flute
Eliane Locher, flute
Stefanie Ammann, speaker
New works by Andreas Gabriel and Stefan Mattig
Sound Art: Hannah Locher
Texts: Rolf Hermann
Note: This text was translated by machine translation software and not by a human translator. It may contain translation errors.