Ströme (feat. GewandhausChor) Martin Kohlstedt

Cover Ströme (feat. GewandhausChor)

Album info

Album-Release:
2018

HRA-Release:
03.05.2019

Label: Warner Classics

Genre: Classical

Subgenre: Choral

Artist: Martin Kohlstedt

Album including Album cover Booklet (PDF)

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  • 1SENIMB (feat. GewandhausChor)05:07
  • 2TARLEH (feat. GewandhausChor)06:02
  • 3AUHEJA (feat. GewandhausChor)06:23
  • 4NIODOM (feat. GewandhausChor)06:04
  • 5KSYCHA (feat. GewandhausChor)06:19
  • 6JINGOL (feat. GewandhausChor)04:52
  • 7THIPHY (feat. GewandhausChor)06:29
  • 8AMSOMB (feat. GewandhausChor)06:34
  • Total Runtime47:50

Info for Ströme (feat. GewandhausChor)



If you close your eyes, the space around you begins to pulsate. A choir of 70 people, united, yet physically separated from each other, and Martin Kohlstedt in his pulpit built of keyboard instruments. As the participants engage in a moment of contemplation, they are doing what all human beings do simply to stay alive: they breathe.

Winding their way between the performers are the melodies that radiate from Martin Kohlstedt's piano. As if bouncing off a glittering vault, they are reflected and fragmented ad infinitum. Bar by bar the structure becomes further illuminated, and the complex process of interaction becomes comprehensible while remaining beyond our grasp. The architecture of this space seems to reach to infinity. Synthetic sounds and elements of noise exert a pressure that transforms pillars of rhythm into lucid melodies. Broad syllables melt into clangourous vowels. Everything is subject to transformation. Everything is dependent upon something else. And no-one says a word.

STRÖME (Currents) is the latest refinement of a Kohlstedt snapshot. It is the result of lively collaboration between the composer and pianist, with his feisty intuition, and a performing collective, Leipzig‘s GewandhausChor. On this album, Martin Kohlstedt's modular compositions – not ‘works’ as such, but rather compendiums of interconnecting musical ideas – once again break new terrain. Kohlstedt resonates with the choir, and above all with its director Gregor Meyer, sparking emotional impulses between the singers and indirectly stimulating movement in their bodies. As participants in this experiment, the members of the GewandhausChor adopted innovative musical methods, not working from traditional notation. Each singer was free to take individual creative initiatives. A wealth of patience was required on both sides and a fundamental tension courses through all the recordings, which draw to electrifying effect on modules from previous albums. Martin Kohlstedt is known for music that exercises a magnetic power and here it draws performers and listeners into a field of social warmth, of intimate negotiation, of breaking away and coming together.

With STRÖME, Martin Kohlstedt leaves us in no doubt as to the power that lies in the presence of real, live performers. As they strive for a shared sensibility, they become a ceremonial community that subsumes the listener. This makes STRÖME into an almost archaic, but highly energetic phenomenon. It is also daring, in that it pulls off the masterstroke of making a classically trained chorus fundamental to Kohlstedt’s free association. Everybody involved is pushed to their limits and this is precisely what makes the instrumental and vocal elements meld time and again into something that is both elevated and eternally new.

Martin Kohlstedt, piano GewandhausChor Leipzig


Martin Kohlstedt
Intuitively Martin Kohlstedt feels his way through this body of wood, felt hammers and steel strings. The young composer, who grew up in the forests of Thuringia, doesn’t just put on an anonymous fingerplay - he perpetually opens himself up with each and every moment, with every stroke of the keys. An attempt to create something close and personal - beyond sophisticated classics or artificial pathos. Kohlstedt isn’t reenacting a play, he’s holding a musical conversation with his instruments. At times he might even lose his self-control and get carried away. Particularly in a concert setting, one might take note of this kind of aggressive straightforwardness, perhaps making him seem vulnerable. If you were standing off to the side, you could even find it cheesy. Nevertheless, the argumentation between character and piece is so fierce, that you just can’t get around it. Consider yourself lucky under these circumstances - because that’s exactly what Martin Kohlstedt needs, this soundbox, his audience.

This exchange was captured within his two albums “Nacht“ (2014) and “Tag“ (2012) (Night and Day respectively), published by himself. Besides solo performances, he is part of the electronica bands Marbert Rocel and Karocel and also melodizes motion pictures.

Booklet for Ströme (feat. GewandhausChor)

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