Following her move to Germany in 1976, she continued her
studies at the Musikhochschule in Stuttgart, studying composition with Milko
Kelemen and chamber music with Günter Louegk. She regularly attended the
Darmstadt Summer Courses for New Music and, in 1980, received a teaching
position at the State University of Music and Performing Arts Stuttgart.
Between 1997 and 2000, Hölszky was professor of composition at the Rostock University
of Music and Theatre and since 2000 she has been professor of composition at
the Mozarteum University of Salzburg. Since 2002 she has been a member of the
Academy of Fine Arts in Berlin. She has been the recipient of numerous prizes
including most recently the Bach Prize of the Free and Hanseatic City of
Hamburg (2003).
In addition to a number of works for the stage, Hölsky’s
compositions include choral and vocal works, orchestral and chamber works,
instrumental works and works for percussion.
A new release from
Wergo www.wergo.de/shop entitled Wie ein glasernes meer, mit feuer
gemischt…(What looked like a sea of glass mixed with fire…) brings together three significant works
that feature the organ. …und ich sah wie
ein gläsernes Meer, mit Feuer gemischt… for solo organ, Efeu und Lichtfeld for violin and organ
and …und wieder Dunkel I for
percussion and organ.
WER 6789 2 |
Organist Dominik Susteck www.dominiksusteck.de has made
contemporary music something of a speciality working with students to whom he
devoted numerous projects with compositions by György Ligeti, Kurt Schwitters,
John Cage and Terry Riley. Susteck has played numerous first performances of
works by Erik Janson, Luis Antunes Pena, Stefan Froleyks, Peter Köszeghy, Timo
Ruttkamp and Joana Wozny. As a composer
and organist Susteck has received many awards and, since 2007, has been the
composer and organist at St. Peter Art Centre, Cologne. For Wergo www.wergo.de/shop he has already recorded organ works by
Stockhausen's, Ligeti and Rihm.
A high metallic motif over a pedal underlay opens …und ich sah wie ein gläsernes Meer, mit
Feuer gemischt… (…and I saw what looked like a sea of glass mixed with fire…) for
organ (1996/97). Soon there is
an organ outburst followed by a series of sudden phrases and outbursts. There
is a steely quality to much of the writing as shafts of sound or fire, interact
with glacial chords. Susteck is a fine soloist, managing all of this work’s
unpredictable moments with panache. Later the organ fairly roars with life, interspersed
by a little staccato motif. There are some terrific dissonances and slurred
phrases. Hölsky creates an amazing tapestry of sounds, often hardly sounding
like an organ, otherworldly, angular, complex in structure and rhythms, creating
so many colours and textures before dancing to an overpowering coda.
This is an amazing work that vividly creates what the
composer describes as ‘…vivid pictures of light and colour alternate with calm
and mysterious moments…’
Efeu und Lichtfeld (Ivy
and Field of Light) for violin and organ (2008) is said by the composer to be a poetic metaphor for ‘the
restrained yet lively simultaneity of these two very different instruments’.
Violinist Sabine Akiko Ahrendt www.wergo.de/shop/en_UK/artists/23/sabine-akiko-ahrendt
joins Dominik Susteck, opening with rapid,
shrill violin bowing that adds even more to Hölsky’s organ textures. The music
is often percussive, often shrilly bowed with sudden pin point notes and chords
from the violin punctuating this sound world. The organ provides a background
out of which it too sends sudden sounds, often with pulsating, longer held
notes that strangely compliment the violin figurations. Ahrendt draws a
tremendously raw sound as the work ends.
One feels that, despite little forward momentum, a
tremendous journey has been completed. This work is brilliantly played. With both
instruments very well balanced.
Percussionist, Jens Brülls https://myspace.com/percussionmalletsdrums
, https://en-gb.facebook.com/jens.bruells
joins Dominik Susteck for …und wieder Dunkel I (…and again Darkness
I) for percussion and organ (1985/90). Again I am grateful for the
composer’s comment that each movement of this work is ‘associated with a
fragment from Gottried Benn’s poem ‘Ein Wort’ – the composition can also be
understood as a musical realisation of the patterns of movement in the poem as
a whole’. The text of the poem is given in the CD booklet.
The first movement, …ein
Wort (…a word) opens with an animated organ motif soon joined by a variety
of drums giving a wealth of texture to the organ that provides a staccato motif
in a variety of textures. Both percussion and organ seem to have their own
musical line yet strangely complement each other. At times it sounds as though
the drums are trying to conquer the organ as it continues its unstoppable
phrases. Both seem to run out of steam at the end.
Movement II, …ein
Glanz (…a glow) brings a mysterious, pulsating organ over which percussion
rumble before the music slowly heaves itself up with unearthly sounds. Hölsky
creates what in many ways is closer to that of an electronic sound world, so
unlike conventional instrumental sounds are these. This is quite remarkable
music showing that Hölsky has a very fine ear for colour and texture. As the
organ pulsates louder the percussion counter with louder rolls of tam-tam before
the music fades to the end.
Rhythmic percussion opens the third movement, …ein Flug, ein Feuer, ein Flammenwurf, ein
Sternenstrich… (…a flight, a fire, a burst of flames, a steak of stars…) to
which the organ adds loud chords. Organ bursts occur against colossal drum
rolls with further thundering deep pedal notes against lighter percussion creating
squalls of sound. As the coda arrives, individual percussion instruments allow
the music to gently and delicately fade.
Finally we come to Movement IV …und wieder Dunkel, ungeheuer, im Ieeren Raum um Welt und ich. (…and
again darkness, awesome, in the empty space around the world, and I) that
brings a broad spacious, cavernous
atmosphere with the organ providing an underlying surface over which a
multitude of percussion sounds appear. This is otherworldly music again. There
are arpeggios on organ against rhythmic percussion, pulsating organ sounds and much
detail going on, brilliantly captured by these artists before the music fades
at the end.
This is a strangely captivating work that creates the most
remarkable sounds from both organ and percussion.
Lovers of contemporary organ music will want to have this
disc but, given the spectacular nature of Hölsky’s sound world, many
contemporary music enthusiasts will be just as rewarded by this new release.
The performances are spectacularly fine and the recording is
absolutely first rate. There are excellent booklet notes. Whilst the playing
time is just over 44 minutes in duration, the spectacular content more than
compensates, in fact one feels that nothing could really follow.
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