O světě, který tu je i není - o věcech výjimečných i banálních, podivuhodných i trapných, temných i oslnivých, tristních i směšných, paradoxních i logických, stejně tak však i o věcech temně zářících, tragikomických, podivuhodně banálních, výjimečně trapných či zcela logicky paradoxních. A o sobě, který tu je i není stejně tak.

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úterý 21. května 2024

Vladimír Hirsch / Lux Antiqua (LP)

CZ:

Vladimír Hirsch - Lux Antiqua 

Skladba pro orchestr, smíšený sbor a integrované techniky. 2017-2022. (LP ©2023 Integrated Music Records-Catch 067). Hudebníci:  Vladimír Hirsch - elektronika, klávesové nástroje, syntezátory, perkuse, integrovaná technika. Czech Integrated Ensemble & Choir. Participace: Martina Sanollová a Dominika Karčovská - vokální aditiva. Produkce: Ars Morta Universum. Album foto: Jan Vávra Písecký

Strana 1: 1-Sequentia I, 2-Sequentia II, 3-Sequentia III. Strana 2: 1-Sequentia IV, 2-Sequentia V, 3-Sequentia VI 

Konceptuální album, založené na dialogu ústředních, jakkoli minimalisticky úsporných repetitivních sborových motivů s instrumentálními tématy v duchu autorova integrovaného hudebního pojetí. Jedná se o práci oratoriální povahy typu hudebního rekviem, avšak bez přítomností sólových vokálních partů a bez kompozičního členění do podoby tohoto standardního klasického útvaru. Orchestrálně-industriální prvky ve svém přiměřeném množství přidávají vhodnou dynamickou sílu hudebnímu projevu, kde dominuje vrstevnatá polytonalita s historickými stylovými odkazy a obrazotvorná alchymická práce se zvukem (Tom Saivon).


EN:

Vladimir Hirsch - Lux Antiqua

Composition for orchestra, mixed choir and integrated techniques. 2010-2022. (LP ©2023 Integrated Music Records-Catch 067). Musicians: Vladimír Hirsch - electronics, keyboards, synthesizers, percussion, integrated technology. Czech Integrated Ensemble & Choir. Participation: Martina Sanollová and Dominika Karčovská - vocal additives. Produced by Ars Morta Universum. Photo album: Jan Vávra Písecký

Side 1: 1-Sequentia I, 2-Sequentia II, 3-Sequentia III. Side 2: 1-Sequentia IV, 2-Sequentia V, 3-Sequentia VI


"A conceptual album, based on a dialogue of central, however minimalistically repetitive choral motifswith instrumental themes in the spirit of the author's integrated musical concept. It is a work of an oratorical nature of a musical requiem type, but without the presence of solo vocal parts and without compositional articulation into the form of that standard classical formation. Orchestral-industrial elements in their reasonable amount add suitable dynamic power to the musical expression, where the layered polytonality with historical stylistic references and imaginative alchemical work with sound" (Tom Saivon).



neděle 7. dubna 2024

Vladimír Hirsch / Katagenesis (review by Side-Line magazine)


Czech artist Vladimir Hirsch has been involved with numerous projects and can be easily considered as one of the most prominent Industrial/Experimental artists from Czechia. He released an impressive number of works during the past twenty years and now joined hands together with Zoharum to unleash new work.

The album has been conceived as a classical opus and that’s not a coincidence. Classical music definitely appears to be an important source of inspiration, but also an experiment to mix it with Industrial sound treatments and pure Experimental field recordings. Heavy and bombastic, sometimes into epic arrangements, but still revealing a few subtle elements, this work brings Neo-Classic and Industrial music together. 

I don’t know of many artists like Vladimir Hirsch. He brings different styles together and doesn’t hesitate to build up a bridge between Classical- and Industrial music. This is an imaginary Soundtrack or music for Experimental dance performances. The sound of Hirsch reminds me of Stravinsky for its complexity with Industrial sound treatments on top. This is pure drama and sonic extravaganza!

The originality of the work appears to be equal to its unique, Experimental format. This music isn’t always easily accessible and especially some of the longest cuts are hard to endure. 

This is a superb album for a very restricted number of music lovers…

Side Line magazine, 2021

Vladimir Hirsch – Katagenesis (Album – Zoharum) (side-line.com)



úterý 1. srpna 2023

Vladimír Hirsch - Ex Litteris Of St.Paul (pro-live version/remix)


Vladimír Hirsch - Ex Litteris Of St.Paul (pro-live version - remix) https://lnkd.in/eEGMHxGQ

The abbreviated and adjusted version of the album for live performance. 2020. 
Tracks: 1-Colossians (Col 3:15), 2-Ephesians (Eph 2:14), 3-Corinthians 1 (Cor 15:13), 4 Colossians-(Col 1:13-14), 5-Eleison, 6-Thessalonians 2 (Thes 2:4), 7-Romans (Rom 16:18), 8-Galatians (Gal.4:29), 9-Hebrews (Heb 3:8), 10-Philippians (1:29-30), 11-Thessalonians 1 (Thes 4:16), 12-Colossians (Col 1:15-16), 13-Coda.

úterý 6. června 2023

Vladimír Hirsch / Katagenesis

The album contains three opuses with a similar thematic framework, associated with the meaning of the album's name, however of different means of expression:

(I) Symphony No.5 "Axonal Transit",

(II) Symphony No.6 "Metaspheres"

(III) Hymn (Do Not Let Us Perish)

Available on https://vladimirhirsch.bandcamp.com/album/katagenesis in physical and digital form.






Vladimír Hirsch / Ex Litteris Of St.Paul


The conceptual album, is thematically based on selected citations from St.Paul's epistles. Inspired by the painting "Saint Paul of the new century" of Vladimír Hirsch the Younger (artistic names Vladimír Hirscher, Caer8th), which became the cover art of the album. 


1 Colossians (Col3:15) 
     
Let the peace of Christ rule in your hearts, since as members of one body you were called to peace
 
  

2 Ephesians (Eph 2:14)
     
For He Himself is our peace, who has made the two one and has torn down the dividing wall of hostility

  

3 Corinthians 1 (Cor 15:13)
     
If there was not necessary the resurrection of the dead, then not even Christ has been raised

  

4 Colossians (Col 1:13-14)
    
He has rescued us from the dominion of darkness and brought us into the kingdom of His beloved Son, in whom we have redemption, the forgiveness of sins.
   
  

5 Thessalonians 2 (Thes 2:4)  
     
Someone will oppose and exalt himself above every so-called god or object of worship, so he will seat himself in the temple of God, proclaiming 
himself to be God

  

6 Romans (Rom 16:18)
     
For such people are not serving our Lord Christ, but their own bellies. By smooth talk and flattery they deceive the hearts of the naive 

  

7 Galatians (Gal.4:29)
     
The son born according to the flesh persecuted the son born by the power of the Spirit. It is the same now

  

8 Hebrews (Heb 3:8)
     
Therefore, as the Holy Spirit says: “Today, if you hear His voice, do not harden your hearts, as you did in the rebellion, in the time of testing in the wilderness”

  

9 Philippians (1:29-30)
     
For it has been granted to you on behalf of Christ not only to believe in Him, but also to suffer for Him, since you are encountering the same struggle I have
 


10 Thessalonians 1 (Thes 4:16)
     
For the Lord himself will come down from heaven, with a loud command, with the voice of the archangel and with the trumpet call of God, and the dead in Christ will rise first



11 Colossians (Col 1:15-16)
     
The Son is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn over all creation. For in Him all things were created, things in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible



12 Coda - Corinthians 1 (Cor 13:2)
     
If I have the gift of prophecy and can fathom all mysteries and all knowledge, and if I have absolute faith so as to move mountains, but have not love, I am nothing



ALBUM WRITTEN, RECORDED, MIXED & MASTERED AT cATCHARROW RECORDINGS STUDIO, PRAGUE, CZECHIA, 2019. COVER PAINTING: VLADIMÍR HIRSCH THE YOUNGER (AKA CAER8TH AKA VLADIMÍR HIRSCHER)
Released January 9, 2020 by INTEGRATED MUSIC RECORDS, Catch 075





úterý 29. listopadu 2022

Sensus loci

Sensus loci (excerpt) by photographer Jan Vávra with music by Vladimír Hirsch (Catharsis from the album "Tobruk", 2008). Photos from Olšanské cemeteries, Prague, Czechia

úterý 28. ledna 2020

Vladimír Hirsch - Hymn: Do Not Let Us Perish (St.Wenceslas)

Variations on Old Czech chorale „Svatý Václave“, op. 96. "St.Wenceslas chorale" originated probably in the end of 10th century or in the beginning of the 11th century. It is a church hymn, which is sung regularly also today. The authorship of the original song is sometimes attributed to another Czech saint Vojtěch (St.Adalbert of Prague), the bishop of Prague, missionaire and martyr.

Vladimír Hirsch' s variations Hymn: "Do Not Let Us Perish" is a composition for integrated techniques, created in 2015 for the thematic album “Katagenesis” which will be released in December 2020 by Old Captain label.

Saint Wenceslas (or Wenceslaus; Václav in Czech), Prince Wenceslaus I (907-935), Duke of Bohemia from 921 until his death in a plot by his own brother, Boleslav the Cruel. His martyrdom, and the popularity of several biographies, quickly gave rise to a reputation for heroic goodness, resulting in his being elevated to sainthood, posthumously declared king, and seen as the main patron saint of Czechia.




sobota 21. července 2018

"Poems about love and wine" (Full Moon magazine interview)

He began with a post-punk, but his musical journey soon moved away. Already in the early 1990s, the name Vladimir Hirsch has become a solid and significant part of our and, in turn, European electronic music. In Prague, the composer and medical doctor have released more than thirty albums, either solo or as a member of Der Marabu, Skrol, Aghiatrias, and others. He is remembered as a man who invented the concept of integrated music, a ground plan on which continuously and originally interconnects the influences of industrial, dark ambient and classics. However, Vladimír Hirsch's musical and compositional span is much broader, as will the following interview, which emerged shortly before the release of a new album of one of his Subpop Squeeze project.

Vladimír Hirsch

The Subpop Squeeze project is described as a more entertaining face of your production. Does that mean you're here to relax and clear your head from musically harder topics?

Even so, it is a reflection of the fact that rock principles are still close to me, and I need to move around them at times, even though they may be talking only in the broader outlines of this type of my work. Since 1996, when I initiated the project, and rather as a studio alternative, I paid attention to it only marginally, and for almost fifteen years I did not think about it. Until recently - somewhat overwhelmed by standard concert productions - I decided to reanimate it so that it could be presented live, connected with other works and was something more than relaxing side creations.

Your albums are often based on a particular concept or topic. Is it the same thing about an Anacreontics, or is it a free collection of songs?

Free collection of songs is not my style of working, the album is usually considered to be the only song in its own way, where its individual parts correspond not only to the way in which it is usual but also thematically. Quite often, it is a story, a whole of epic character, but in this particular case it is not a coinciding factor, they are ironizing paraphrases of topics inspired by the forgotten ancient genre of poems of love and wine.

As you talked about, you mentioned the important role of producer Tom Saivon. What would Anacreontics be different from without his presence?

Tom Saivon focuses on dramaturgy and sound. Several pieces have been created at his impetus to revive the collection and give things within the theme more diversity and the most dynamic course. I'm not a friend of the genre drawers, but I like Tom's album characteristic as "electro-industrial-thrash metal synthesis," where the proportion of the guitar component - however more or less the sound manipulated - can be seen as a result of that influence.

Tom Saivon has been producing some of your albums for years with you in the Skrol ensemble. On the one hand, it brings the advantage of mutual trust, you know what to expect from each other. Can you also prevent co-operation not threatening the stereotype?

Our attitudes are not and have never been the same, even though there is trust between us. The producer's view is, therefore, a priori view from a different angle, which gives me, which is completely immersed in the matter, a distance, the possibility of seeing the thing from the outside, discovering and revising the mentioned stereotypes and, alternatively, offering alternative solutions to specific issues. In principle, we approach each new album in order to achieve the strongest possible result in the essence of the message. However often, on the basis of a sharp confrontation, we will usually come to a solution that we both can accept for ourselves without having to consider it a mechanical compromise. This is the very thing I appreciate most about this collaboration.

You've got decades of composing and recording, and you're not questioning the role of the producer; on the other hand, some of your production goes without it. What is the key to deciding where the presence of a producer is desirable and when not?

The producer is often a medium of commercial success for the record, which is not the same case of our cooperation. I am used to working without his production in all that part of my music that moves in the narrower sphere of contemporary classical music. If the product is intended for more integrated, electronic, industrial or similar sound characteristics form, the producer's role is more significant. This is due to his focus, the practices of classical music are not close to him. This, however, does not mean that he only focuses on the above-mentioned forms, it is about the overall homogeneous and convincing form of the resulting shape, to which aim is all subordinated.

With Subpop Squeeze, you've performed live several times in recent months. Will you continue this?

I have been performing as Subpop Squeeze since December 2014, and as a new album was made, I also changed the concert program by replacing older songs with new ones. At the moment, I would like to present live the final version, planning to perform in Czechia, Poland and Germany and maybe also in other European countries that are in the process.

Among the cult projects you've found belongs Skrol. What does their future look like?

The Skrol band has not officially ended its existence but it is inactive for a long time. We last performed live regularly in 2011 and 2012, from which shows a live mini-album was created. We have enough material to work on, but timeliness, along with other purely practical reasons, hinders us in concrete plans, even though we definitely do not resign on concert production.

Martina Sanollová's singing plays an important role in Skrol, you also add vocals, while a great part of your next production is instrumental ...

Even in my solo production, where the instrumental component plays the most important role, it is not the exception of using the vocals, just the opposite. Sometimes, however, I change their sound properties using technologies so much that they are not read primarily as a vocal party. Nevertheless, the collaboration with a number of vocalists (or rather female vocalists) confirms the importance of the role of human voice in music. I use a spoken word in many cases, as is the case with the new Subpop Squeeze album. Speech as such I consider to be a musical expression, its rhythm, tone, and color is an essential element for me and a contribution to the musical message.

And are vocals and vocals in the creation of songs for the Skrol dominant, or should they accompany and complement the instrumental component?

All the Skrol songs were based on the original instrumental base, which in many cases also acts as a stand-alone unit, some albums have their full instrumental alternatives. The vocal component of Skrol was practically always playing the role of an instrument but not just to accompany it. Although some of Skrol's songs are not accompanied by a vocal part, in others there can be no doubt that Martina's rich, expressive and emotionally exerted expression is not only a complementary role. On the contrary, these pieces form a kind of core and the most important parts of the board. It is always a matter of development, sometimes the vocal part takes on a partially dominant role - nevertheless, the goal has always been a complexly compact matter, no matter what role that element plays.

TECHNIQUE MANIPULATES

Your solo album Scripta Soli is also in process. How far are you?

I've been working on Scripta Soli for a long time. This is a relatively large title, based on work with field recordings that have been gained over several years. The essence of the project is the transformation or the musicalization of the originally seemingly non-musical form. It should be a very ambient album, certainly the quietest of my products, but it also seems to be the most practical. Since it requires a very specific type of work and concentration, I am waiting for a moment when my time allows me to devote myself fully to it. At present, about half of the material is processed.

Musically you deal with serious topics - emotions, different aspects of human action, religion, history, and being, play an important role. But electronics and other instruments have their sound boundaries as well. Do you often say that you have to come to a compromise between the idea of how the emotions or feelings in the composition sound and what are the technical possibilities?

Working with the sound is the essence of the vertical division of the composition and offers a plethora of solutions. However, it must be stressed that even the most sophisticated technical possibilities do not give the musician comfort, everything is, or must be, guided by him. Technology is a good servant, but a bad lord. Either you who rules or you manipulate yourself. In this case, a perfect trap will slip. It happens that I fail to realize my idea, but I see it as my own imperfection, not as a technical problem given by the limitations of instrumental and instrumental sound sources. I am not limited by them, the source or the inspiration can, in theory, be any hearing perceptions that surround us.

The musician can sink into a microscopically consistent work on a single sound or moment - when do you know that this is the ideal and ultimate state and can be continued?

I prefer complexity. The sound characteristic, however important and significant to me, is not the only attribute of the song. I always understand it as a relationship between detail and a whole. If I find compatibility, consistency, and testimony of authenticity, I can go on.

I assume you are not only a musician and composer but also a listener. What lately did Vladimír Hirsch enjoy most in music?

Recently, it was a great pleasure for me to finally record all the symphonies of my favorite composer, Miloslav Kabeláč. I am not completely enthusiastic about some versions, but it was filled with a shameful gap in the discography of Czech modern classical music and its prominent representatives.

INTERVIEW OF VLADIMÍR HIRSCH
by RICHARD KUTĚJ

Subpop Squeeze - Introscan & Anacreontics

neděle 15. července 2018

Vladimír Hirsch - Discography on Bandcamp


Bandcamp pages of the composer, instrumentalist and sound designer Vladimír Hirsch, integrating modern classical, industrial and dark ambient music with a genre overlap conception.

BANDCAMP albums - Solo works

Vladimír Hirsch - Bandcamp solo works


Besides creating solo works, he is the leading personality of bands and projects Skrol, Aghiatrias, Zygote (CZ), Luminar Ax, Subpop Squeeze, and Tiria, the former member of experimental post-punk group Der Marabu.






                                                                                                © Integrated Music Records 2018







Quora: "What the biggest contribution of Czechia to the world?

(Originally written Quora question: "What is the Czech Republic's biggest contribution to the world?")

The Czech Republic´s existence is only 25 years long and there is not anything special or substantial contribution to the world in the period between 1993 and today in my opinion.

But, Czechia´s - thus, the country in whole (both in contemporary and historical context) heritage is rich. What is the biggest one cannot judge. Everybody can choose :-)

1. Music - throughout more than one thousand years old history of Czechia - can be considered beneficial in both European and worldwide context, several times co-determined or determined a newly arriving era in musical art, above all in music of Classical era (Jan Václav Stamic, Jan K.Vaňhal, Josef Mysliveček, Antonín Rejcha), as well as by original attitudes in Baroque (Adam Michna, Jan Dismas Zelenka), Romantic era (Czech national music - Czech music school): Bedřich Smetana, in late Romanticism the greatest Czech composer Antonín Dvořák - among other things, the founder of American classical music and in Czechia born Gustav Mahler), and modern classical music (inimitable composer Leoš Janáček and Bohuslav Martinů), discovery in microtonal music (Alois Hába), high modern era (Miloslav Kabeláč, Petr Eben). More in my article: Czechia the heart of Europe | Music

2. Arts - in general, the Czech art is known worldwide for its individually made, mouth blown and decorated art glass and cut crystal, garnet and other gems jewelry, decorative and applied art. Painting: works of the Gothic era - Master of Vyšší Brod altar, the founder of the style, which dominated European painting around 1400. Baroque - An exceptional Czech artist Václav Hollar, the etcher of worldwide recognition. Art Nouveau and modernism - Alfons Mucha, world famous and one of the best known Czech artists. Abstract painting - František Kupka: a pioneer of abstract art, influencing substantially all modern painting movements. Interesting personalities in expressionism, cubism, and Cubo-expressionism, original post-war symbolism (Mikuláš Medek) and “explosionism” movement (Vladimír Boudník). Film and theatre: Karel Zeman, a pioneer with special effects (culminating in successful films such as artistically exceptional "Vynález zkázy" (A Deadly Invention, 1958); so-called Czech New Wave of the 1960s (linked with names of Miloš Forman, Věra Chytilová, Jiří Menzel, Ján Kadár, Elmar Klos, Evald Schorm, Vojtěch Jasný, Juraj Herz, etc.) and director František Vláčil with the original manuscript and the deep psychological impact with the extraordinary high-quality art received international acclaim; Jan Švankmajer - a filmmaker, known for his animations and features, which greatly influenced artists worldwide. Original Czech cultural phenomenon came into being at the end of the 1950s. This project called Laterna magika (The Magic Lantern) considered the first multimedia art project in international context.

3. Literature - Comenius (philosopher and writer), the innovator who first introduced pictorial textbooks, F.Kafka - widely regarded as one of the major figures of 20th-century literature, humorist J.Hašek (The Good Soldier Švejk - the book which was translated into 60 languages). Names as B.Hrabal, K.Čapek and M.Kundera cannot be forgotten. Poetism - Czech literary avant-garde style and movement in poetry (main representant Jaroslav Seifert, Nobel Prize holder).

4. Architecture - Czechia is the country with rich architectural heritage from the Romanesque period until modern times, being the place of origin of several unique styles - unique mixture of Romanesque and Gothic style represents St. Procopius Basilica in Třebíč, considered to be the most bizarre work of the European architecture of the 13th century, Czech Baroque due to its complexity and uniqueness became an independent concept art history, an architectural singleton is the Baroque Gothic style (Jan Blažej Santini), a specifically Czech architectural style, called ‘Rondo-Cubism’, came into existence after 1918. Together with the pre-war Czech Cubist architecture, it is unparalleled elsewhere in the world. There are also contemporary Czech architects whose works can be found all over the world, e.g. works of Jan Kaplický.

5. Science - Prokop Diviš: lightning rod inventor; Jan Evangelista Purkyně: anatomist and physiologist of the first half of 19th century, discoverer of Purkinje cells in the brain (1837), was the first to use a microtome to make wafer thin slices of tissue for microscopic examination. He is also known for his discovery in 1839 of Purkinje fibers, the fibrous tissue that conducts electrical impulses from the atrioventricular node to all parts of the ventricles of the heart. Other discoveries include Purkinje images, reflections of objects from structures of the eye, and the Purkinje shift, the change in the brightness of red and blue colors as light intensity decreases gradually at dusk. Purkyně also introduced the scientific terms plasma and protoplasm the substance found inside cells. He was one of the best-known scientists of his time. Josef Ressel: ships propeller inventor. Gregor Mendel: the founder of the modern science of genetics, in Czechia born and working; Bedřich Hrozný - orientalist and linguist who deciphered the ancient Hittite language and laid the groundwork for the development of Hittitology. Sigmund Freud, neurologist and the founder of psychoanalysis; Jaroslav Heyrovský: the inventor of the polarographic method, father of the electroanalytical method. Otto Wichterle - inventor of soft contact lenses. Stanislav Grof: founder in the field of transpersonal psychology; Antonín Holý - chemist of world recognition, inventor of the most effective drugs in the fight against the AIDS epidemic.

6. Statesmen and influential personalities - St.Adalbert of Prague (in Czech svatý Vojtěch): Czech priest, bishop of Prague, who brought Christianity to nations of Central Europe - Hungarians, Poles, and Prussians. Přemysl Otakar II: Czech king, ruler of seven other countries, his reign stretched from Silesia to the Adriatic coast, founder of many towns and cities not only in Czechia, but in contemporary Poland and Prussia (13th century). Charles IV: Holy Roman Emperor. probably the most famous personality of the Czech state ever. He rebuilt the city of Prague as the capital of Central Europe and one of the intellectual and cultural centers of Europe. In 1348, he founded the Charles University in Prague, which was named after him and was the first university in Central Europe and third in Europe. Jan Hus - theologian, a Catholic priest, philosopher, who became a church reformer, an inspirer of Hussitism, a key predecessor to Protestantism and a seminal figure in the Czech Reformation (14–15th cent). King George of Poděbrady (Jiří z Poděbrad) - well known for his idea and attempt to establish common European institutions and supranational insignia. It is seen as the first historical vision of a European unity forgoing the European Union (15th century). Above mentioned Comenius (Jan Ámos Komenský) - inventor in educational systems, the theory of education, practical educational work, methods of education (17th cent.); Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk - the main personality of the founding of free modern Czech (and Slovak) democratic state in 1918

7. Soldiers - Jan Žižka: controversial Czech general, a contemporary and follower of Jan Hus, successful Hussite military leader (died 1424). He is considered to be among the greatest military leaders and innovators of all time. His accomplishments in this regard are especially unique and noteworthy as he had to quickly train peasants to repeatedly face highly trained and armored opponents who usually severely outnumbered his own troops, and for this, some have considered him to be the greatest general in history. Žižka developed tactics of using wagon forts, called vozová hradba in Czech (wagons fortification) as mobile fortifications, predecessors of tanks, with an original multifunctional armament of soldiers; Josef Václav Radecký (known internationally as Joseph Radetzky von Radetz): Czech nobleman and field marshal, chief of Austrian army (Czech lands were at that time a part of Austrian empire) who is considered one of the best commanders of 19th-century Europe. During his military career, he actively participated in the defeat of Napoleonic France and the reform of the army. Josef František - fighter pilot of World War II, the highest-scoring Allied ace in the Battle of Britain (1940)

8. products - Czech beer, worldwide known product of Pilsener (Plzeň/Pilsen - the city in the western part of Czechia) types of beers brewed by original technology using Czech raw materials (Bohemian hop); Bohemian glass - glass products made by original technologies, cutting-edge design and inimitable craftsmanship (incl.co-called Bohemian crystal - hand cut glass products). porcelain and jewelry, using own raw-materials, e.g.Bohemian garnet in the jewelry; Tamara and Věra radar system (passive sensor) of third generation, able to recognize targets of “stealth” type; Semtex worldwide known explosives; some original products of the Czech cuisine - above all pastries (salty and sweet as “koláče” & “buchty”), Czech finger sandwiches, Prague ham: a type of brine-cured, stewed, and mildly beechwood-smoked pork boneless ham, Shpikachki (špekáčky) - type of sausage, made from finely cured mixture of pork and beef with smoked bacon liner, Bohemian breaded dumplings, pickled sausages (called “utopenci”, which means “drowned”) and fishes (“zavináče”), cheeses and vegetables (well known Znojmo pickled cucumbers), beer cheese, ripened cheeses (well known “Olomoucké tvarůžky” etc.), Czech potato pancakes, etc.; liquors - Wallachian “Slivovice”: strong plum brandy and “Becherovka”: sweet herbal liqueur from Karlovy Vary.

9. Czech words, which became international - robot (invented by Karel Čapek in his stage-play R.U.R., derived from the word “robota”, which was a compulsory unpaid work for landowners in the past), pistol (from Czech word “píšťala”), houfnice (English “howitzer”), polka, dollar (from Czech word “tolar”), hocus-pocus, tunel (in the sense of “tunnel the bank” - to rob the bank's assets by transferring money elsewhere by its own owners)

10. Sportsmen - football: Josef Bican, the greatest goalscorer of football history in Europe (and probably in whole world), Emil Zátopek - long-distance runner, only person to win the 5,000 metres, 10,000 metres, and marathon in the same Olympics, Věra Čáslavská - seven Olympic gold medals holder in gymnastics, all in individual events, which is an all-time record among female Olympians, Martina Navrátilová - tennis player, arguably the best female tennis player of all time, multiple winner of women's singles title at Wimbledon, Jaromír Jágr - ice hockey player, the best European player in the history of Canadian-American National Hockey League, ranking overall 2nd in points, third in goal scores, and first in the number of game-winning goals in all history of NHL.

(I hope that the other great personalities of Czechia I did not mention will forgive me) :-)

                                                                                                    Vladimír Hirsch (Quora, 2018)



neděle 8. dubna 2018

Vladimír Hirsch - Scripta Soli

Vladimír Hirsch / Scripta Soli 




















"Scripta Soli" (“The writings of the earth”) is a thematic album for integrated techniques & field recordings. 2011-2017. The album is based on a fictive experience during apocalyptic war catastrophe, perceived from the position of a person imprisoned in the bunker. In epic form, it consists in descriptions of his feelings, memories, fears, visions and expectation of inevitable in echoes of devastating actions on the surface, as though, all sonically interpretated by the ground. Musical idea and rendition of the figurative opus is carried out as "musique concrète intergrée" by the work with field recordings, electroacoustic and digital techniques through metamorphic musicalization of primarily non-musical elements, typical for the musician, in case of this album as an essential manner. 

1 Indictum
2 Omen
3 Impressiones
4 Exanima
5 Camera delusionis
6 Erebeum
7 Centuria
8 Fuga / Acquiesce
9 Dacryon
10 Amorphes
11 Guttae ultimae
12 Consummatum




Musicians: Vladimír Hirsch - electronic keyboards, synthesizers, samplers, pianos, digital technologies, field recordings, spoken word; Nadya Feir - vocals, Dominika Karčovská - vocals (soprano), production by Tom Saivon. Recorded at CatchArrow Rec ordings studio, Prague, Czechia
CD (© 2017 Old Captain - OCCD33)




neděle 21. ledna 2018

A brief history of Czech music


Czech music - throughout more than one thousand years old history - can be considered beneficial in both European and worldwide context, several times co-determined or determined a newly arriving era in musical art, above all in music of Classical era, as well as by original attitudes in Baroque, Romantic and modern classical music.



Early music

The musical tradition of Czechia arose from first church hymns, whose first evidence is suggested at the break of 10th and 11th century. The first significant pieces of Czech music include two chorales, which in their time performed the function of anthems: “Hospodine pomiluj ny” (Lord, Have Mercy on Us) from around 1050 (the authorship is sometimes ascribed to Svatý Vojtěch (St.Adalbert of Prague), bishop of Prague snd missionaire, living between 956 and 997), unmistakably the oldest and most faithfully preserved popular spiritual song to have survived to the present, and the hymn "Saint Wenceslas" ("Svatý Václave") from around 1250. Its roots can be found in the 12th century and it still belongs to the most popular religious songs to this day. In 1918, the song was discussed as one of the possible choices for the national anthem.

First documented personalities and records appear in Czechia in the 14th century, following the founding of a department of musicology operated from the very start of the Charles University in Prague in 1348, e.g. the composer of liturgical songs Záviš of Zápy or hymnographer Domoslav. They are several records of Czech love songs from the 14th century of courtly type "Dřěvo se listem odievá" (Trees Are Putting on Leaves) or "Jižť mne všě radost ostává" (All My Joy is Waning). As an example of the record of medieval notation can serve Gradual of Arnošt of Pardubice from 1363. Important insight into the beginnings of Czech music brings Jistebnice hymn book from 1430, which contains representative collection of liturgical, martial and spiritual songs, created until that time, including Christmas carols. The Czech carol "Di est leticie" was  known in the Middle Ages all over Europe, another one with the origin in the beginning of 15th century, "Virgo partit filium" (Narodil se Kristus Pán) is regularly sung even today. In the book, we can find also famous Hussite battle hymn "Ktož jsú boží bojovníci" (Ye Who Are Warriors of God).



Baroque and Renaissance

The most important composers and musicians of Czech renaissance - predominantly of various forms of sacred music - were Jiří Rychnovský, using advanced renaissance vocal polyphony, Šimon Bar Madelka, Ondřej Chrysoponus Jevíčský, Jan Trojan Turnovský, remarkable for his well-handled polyphony technique and careful work with words in relation to music, Jan Simonides Montanus, Pavel Spongopaeus Jistebnický, Kryštof Harant of Polžice and Bezdružice, combining his music with oldier compositional techniques, and Jan Blahoslav, music theorist emphasizing the need for the musical rhythm to correspond with the chronometric system of prosody of the verses.

To the most notable Czech composers in Baroque era - and also in general - belongs Adam Michna (all name Adam Václav Michna, Chevalier from Otradovice) working  in early Baroque, also organist, choir leader and poet who initiated the development of Czech music and became a significant inspiration for Czech artists of future generations. His works content pieces, which cannot deny Renaissance echoes. His music acts with remarkable vivacity, comprising both humour and tragic of daily life. About 230 of his compositions from three Czech and two Latin collections are known today. Best known are his 3 hymn cycles, Česká mariánská muzika, Loutna česká and Svatoroční muzika. His poetry remains very vivid with intense influence of senses.

The most important Czech figure of the Baroque Period was the composer Jan Dismas Zelenka, the personality of outstanding innovative spirit, next eras anticipating harmonic invention and mastery of counterpoint. He is called "catholic counterpart" of Johann Sebastian Bach, who studied Zelenka's works and was influenced by him. From Zelenka's opuses belong to most the important an extensive collection of sacred music (masses - above all his last six, called "Missae Ultimae", oratoria and cantatas). From other works are notable his concertos and sonatas. The works of Zelenka remained unknown for a very long time, because they were in the possession of the Saxon king. In 19th century, Bedřich Smetana copied some of them, but the real appreciation of the composer and his opuses started only in the 1960s with the boom from the turn of the 20th and the 21st centuries. Gradually, many of his compositions have been performed and recorded in world premieres, above all by new Czech, German and Swiss ensembles and soloists, using original instruments and vocal techniques of Baroque period with a great success.

To the other prominent Czech Baroque personalities belong trumpet virtuoso and composer of sonatas and other technically brilliant pieces with main role of brass and wind instruments, Pavel Josef Vejvanovský, the most important in hymnal tradition of Czechia, composer and organist of Middle Baroque Václav Karel Holan Rovenský, whose magnum opus, "Cappella Regia Musicalis" from 1693, massive collection of hymns and sacred songs (772 pieces) of the Roman-Catholic liturgy in the Czech language was continually reprinted throughout the ensuing centuries and has been the basis for many Czech hymnals and mainly, a representative of the late baroque style, composer and organist Bohuslav Matěj Černohorský, deeply influencing the musical evolution in Czechia not only as a composer, but also as a teacher. His fugue "Laudeatur Jesus Christus" is cited by the Baroque Music Library as an excellent example of its kind, He composed fugues and toccatas for organ, as well as vocal works. In Czechia born Heinrich Ignaz Franz von Biber, very beneficial composer for the violin in the history of the instrument cannot be forgotten.

Composer, stylistically of the late Baroque, but important also for the development of early classicism was František Ignác Antonín Tůma. His sacred works, which were known to Haydn and Mozart, were noted by his contemporaries for their solidity of texture and their chromaticism. Among them we find some 65 masses, 29 psalms and five settings of Stabat Mater. He composed also instrumental music, predominantly trio and quartet sonatas, sinfonias and partitas with preferred role of string instruments.



Classical and Romantic era

Czech composers significantly contributed to the birth and development of Classicism in music. The style developed already deep in Baroque era from sources, created by local musicians thanks to exceptional activity of musical life at that time (the English music historian and traveller Charles Burney called Czechia “European conservatory”).

Among all Czech contributive musical personalities excelled symphonist and one of founders of classicist composition Jan Václav Antonín Stamic (generally known by germanized name Johann Stamitz), the father of famous Mannheim school, substantially innovating structure of symphonic works and sonata form. His main innovation is the four-movement structure of symphony. He was the first composer to use it consistently - more than  half of his 58 symphonies and nine of his ten orchestral trios are in four movements. He also contributed to the development of sonata form, most often used in symphonic first movements but occasionally in finales and even slow movements as well.

To other Czech composers who significantly contributed to the development of classical music belong Jiří Antonín Benda in bringing the musical form of melodrama to life, the author of over 70 symphonies and almost 100 sacred works Jan Křtitel Vaňhal (generally known as Johann Baptist Vanhal), being considered highly influential to Mozart, making use of many features, which appeared later in large scale of famous composer's works, being also substantially discoverable in symphonies, prefiguring Beethoven's works.

Josef Mysliveček, a pioneer in the composition of music for wind ensemble and the master of compositional models in the genres of symphony, Italian opera, and violin concerto, called "Il Divino Boemo" (A Divine Czech) or Antonín Rejcha, whose work directed from classicism to romanticism, but his innovative methods of composition, which he applied in a variety of works, leaving their mark on the works of Beethoven and Schubert, and techniques such as bitonality and polyrhythm, derived often from folk music, directly anticipates that of modern composers far in advance.

Also Jan Ladislav Dussek (baptized Václav Jan Dusík) is considered a predecessor of the Romantic composers for piano, especially Chopin, Schumann and Mendelssohn. He composed large scale of piano sonatas and concertos, and also the highly unusual chamber sonata with percussion, an extremely rare example of pre-20th-century chamber music that includes percussion.

Romantic era in works of Czech composers started also with Jan Václav Hugo Voříšek by melodically inventive early Romantic idioms in his music, e.g. "impromptu", which term was used for the first time in relation to his piano pieces and subsequently used by Schubert, Chopin and numerous other composers.



In later Romanticism begun the period, which brought Czech music an international fame. It was practically initiated by Bedřich Smetana, the pioneer of a musical style which became closely identified with his country's aspirations to independent statehood. He is considered the founder of the Czech national school of music and the truly Czech nationalist composer. To his major works belong symphonic poem "Má Vlast" (My Country), operas with dominating themes from Czech legends, history and traditions, above all "Libuše" and "Prodaná nevěsta" (Bartered Bride) and an extensive collection of solo piano works, including many folk dances, especially polkas. Smetana had been a virtuoso performer on the piano, and those compositions, augmented by the more mature piano pieces of his difficult last years, constitute an important body of piano literature.

The most famous Czech composer and one of the leading world composers of all time was Antonín Dvořák. Dvořák’s own compositional style, usually denoted as Classical-Romantic synthesis, is considered the fullest recreation of a national idiom with that of the symphonic tradition, absorbing folk influences and finding effective ways of using them. Dvořák was also substantially influential for the growth of American classical music (being the director of Conservatory in New York between 1892-5), where he composed the most famous work "Symphony No.9 From The New World", in which he also showed the way how to work with genuine American music in classical rank. This symphony belongs among the most favourite compositions of this kind in the world. Neil Armstrong took a recording of the New World Symphony to the Moon during the Apollo 11 mission, the first Moon landing, in 1969, and left it there as some  representative  document  of  the  culture  of  human
civilization. To Dvořák’s most important works belong also Symphonies No.7 & 8, funeral mass "Requiem", considered to be one of the best compositions of that kind ever, oratorial work "Stabat Mater", a spiritual hymn "Te Deum", "Concerto for violoncello", two collections of "Slavonic Dances", string quartets and "Rusalka", the most famous operatic work.

Other famous late romantic composers were Zdeněk Fibich, the author of symphonic poems and scenic melodramas, and in Czechia born symphonist and one of leading conductors of his generation Gustav Mahler. Also some of leading composers of Czech Modernism, Josef Suk, Vítězslav Novák (both pupils of Antonín Dvořák) and Leoš Janáček, had their roots or beginnings in Romantic era.

The period between second half of 19th century and first half of 20th century, can be considered the golden age of Czech music, represented mainly by so-called "The Great Four" of personalities of already mentioned Bedřich Smetana and Antonín Dvořák also modernists Leoš Janáček and Bohuslav Martinů, but with inconsiderable role of several other, lesser known, but for the development of modern and contemporary music important composers.



Modern era

Leoš Janáček, composer of an original, inimitable modern musical style, inspired by Czech (above all of Moravian and Silesian region of Czechia) and other Slavic folk music and musical characteristics of folk speech, which is a major sign of his rendition of opera singing. He presented a previously unheard world of music, sometimes even almost from otherworldly spheres, which major example is his "Glagolitic Mass". Janáček's music employs a vastly expanded view of tonality, using unorthodox chord spacings, structures, and modality. To his other distinctive works belong "Sinfonietta", operas "Káťa Kabanová", "Jenufa"  and "The Cunning Little Vixen",  rhapsody "Taras Bulba", string quartets, and other chamber works.

Josef Suk was influenced first by Late romanticism, but in later pieces he uses more extended harmonies to create a personal and complex style, based on chromatic polyphony with a direction towards the freedom of atonal music. This concentration on dissonance created music which always showed a tension due to the absence of any musical relaxation. To his best works belong the symphony "Asrael", written in response to the deaths of his wife and Dvořák, "Fairy Tale Suite", the cycle of piano works "Things Lived and Dreamed", and the trilogy of symphonic poems A Summer's Tale", "The Ripening" and "Epilog". Suk won a silver medal at the Art competitions at the Olympic Games 1932 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles, with his work "Into a New Life".

Bohuslav Martinů, a prolific modern symphonist and opera composer, moving in many distinctive directions with neoclassicism, expressionism and jazz music in veins. He usually belongs to the so-called "Great Four" (as they are sometimes called altogether with Dvořák, Smetana, and Janáček). Martinů created over 400 musical work during his life, from which 6 symphonies, "Concerto for violoncello and orchestra", "Field Mass", "Gilgamesh" oratorial work, the extensive collection of piano concertos and chamber music have to be mentioned. From operatic works  stand out "Juliette", "Plays about Mary" & "The Greek Passion".



In the first half of 20th century started his career the discoverer and one of major world composers of microtonal music, Alois Hába. To the most important personalities in high modern era belong original keys creator and symphonist Miloslav Kabeláč and a composer of modern sacred works (above all for organ) Petr Eben.


Musical events in Czechia

Already in 13th century, Czech King Wenceslas II organised the first major musical event in the country, that was to draw the attention of all of Europe. He held a musical competition in Prague, inviting the most famous European musicians and the king also took part personally, as a minstrel. The most famous music festival in the country of today is Prague Spring International Music Festival of classical music, founded 1946, a permanent showcase for outstanding performing artists, symphony orchestras and chamber music ensembles of the world.



The wealth of musical culture in Czechia lies in the long-term high-culture classical music tradition during all historical periods, especially in the Baroque, Classicism, Romantic, modern classical music and in the traditional folk music of particular Czech lands. Since the early eras of artificial music, Czech musicians and composers have often been influenced by genuine folk music, which is can be recognized already in records of Czech music since 14th - 15th century, and dances.


Vladimír Hirsch (2014)
published in Czechia - the Heart of Europe

čtvrtek 22. června 2017

Vladimír Hirsch / Scripta Soli (review by Michael Barnett)

Vladimír Hirsch - Scripta Soli

SCRIPTA SOLI (can be translated as "Writings of the earth/ground") is a thematic album, based on a fictive experience during apocalyptic war catastrophe, perceived from the position of a person imprisoned in the bunker. In epic form, it consists in descriptions of his feelings, memories, fears, visions and expectation of inevitable in echoes of devastating actions on the surface, as though, all sonically interpretated by the ground. Musical idea and rendition of this figurative opus is carried out by the work with field recordings, electroacoustic and digital techniques through metamorphic musicalization of primarily non-musical elements, typical for the musician, in case of this album as an essential manner, thus, "musique concrète intergrée" as basic idea of the epic work.

Tracks:
1. Indictum
2. Omen
3. Impressiones
4. Exanima
5. Camera delusionis
6. Erebeum
7. Centuria
8. Fuga / Acquiesce
9. Dacryon
10. Amorphes
11. Guttae ultimae
12. Consummatum

2017 Old Captain - CD, digipak, 60 minutes

Michael Barnett
This Is Darkness, 2017

Download: Scripta Soli
Review: This Is Darkness - review by Michael Barnett










neděle 26. března 2017

Subpop Squeeze - Anacreontics

Subpop Squeeze / Anacreontics





















Thematic album of the project, which is an alter ego of Vladimír Hirsch. Dark-electro-industrial-thrash synthesis. Created between 2014 and 2016. Recorded at CatchArrow Recordings studio, Prague, Czechia. CD released by E-Klageto/PsychKG, Germany.

Musicians & participants: Vladimír Hirsch - electronic keyboards, synthesizers, samplers, digital technology, Nadya Feir - vocals, El - vocals, Timothy Simmons - recitation, David Icke - spoken word. Production & lyrics by Tom Saivon. Photography & artwork by Gelso Nero & Jan Vávra. Product manager: Martina Sanollová

Conceptual work, named intentionally gracefully after ancient Greek genre of "songs about love and wine", but created with obvious sarcastic and mocking undertone both in musical processing in style, called dark-electro-industrial-thrash synthesis (T.Saivon), with critical, sometimes almost cynical texts, however verbal component plays mainly the role of background. Rock principle of thrash metal characteristics and electronics are surrounded by industrial and dark ambient soundscapes. 

Tracks:
1 Derm
2 Obsessive Tap
3 Discharge
4 And All Love Dead
5 Thanatic
6 Neikothropy
7 Burning Tongues
8 Transient Spell
9 Scratch
10 Roaring Secrets
11 Shy Of The Light

The album released on March 23, 2017 by E-Klageto (A Division of Psych.KG), Germany (cat.no. Exklageto 16). 



















Order: psychkg@online.de 
+ via PayPal on http://www.vladimirhirsch.com/e_menu.html#Anacreontics, http://www.vladimirhirsch.com/cz_menu.html#Anacreontics
or on mail adresses vladimir.hirsch@gmail.com.

Vladimír Hirsch as Subpop Squeeze




sobota 7. ledna 2017

Vladimír Hirsch - Selected Organ and Piano Works

Vladimír Hirsch - Selected Organ & Piano Works cover

A selection of compositions, created between 1977 and 2012. Two discs album. The collection of combines unpublished tracks or adjusted versions of previously released material. All tracks revisited, re-recorded and remixed at CatchArrow Recordings studio, Prague, Czechia, 2012. Musicians: Vladimír Hirsch - organs, pianos, electroacoustic, analogue and digital techniques

Vladimír Hirsch playing organ
Tracklist:
DISC 1

“NENIA” for organ & integrated techniques, Op. 62; 1999-2008
1 Nenia

”ELEGY” for organ, telharmonium & gas organ, Op. 65; 2001
2 Elegy Part I
3 Elegy Part II

“HYMNUS Č.2” for organ, Op. 56; 1998
4 Hymn No.2

ORGAN PRELUDES from Op. 39; 1996, Op. 58; 1998 and Op. 64; 1999
5 Prificatio
6 Mechanical Sketch I
7 Mechanical Sketch II
8 Exodus Prelude

9 Hymn For Bells And Organ - excerpt from the soundtrack “JÁKOB'S LADDER”, Op. 83; 2009

From “DANZE E MARCE", suite for organ, piano & integrated techniques, Op.57; 1998
10 Teorema
11 Convulsione

“AMORPHEAE” for organ, crystalophone & integrated techniques, Op. 86; 2010
12 Amorphea I
13 Amorphea II

“PARTITA FOR PIANO”, Op. 18; 1988
14 Partita For Piano

“AION” for piano, Op. 33; 1992
15 Aion Part 1
16 Aion Part 2

DISC 2

“TRIGONAL SONATA” for piano & integrated techniques
17 I. Grave. Ambiguamente
18 II. Allegro. Espressivo
19 III. Molto adagio

“SIX BAGATELLES” for piano, Op. 16; 1987
20 Bagatelle 1
21 Bagatelle 2
22 Bagatelle 3
23 Bagatelle 4
24 Bagatelle 5
25 Bagatelle 6

“DETAXICHEN” for 2 pianos & tapes, Op. 41; 1996
26 Azygea
27 Epikrasis

“NOSTALGIE” for piano, Op. 43; 1997
28 Nostalgie I
29 Nostalgie II
30 Nostalgie III
31 Nostalgie IV

“CATS ON THE ROOFTOP” for 2 pianos, Op. 4; 1977
32 Cats On The Rooftop

“LAMIADAE: SYMMETRIC VARIATIONS” for pianos & integrated techniques; Op. 88; 2012
33 Symmetric Variation 1
34 Symmetric Variation 2
35 Symmetric Variation 3

“THIRD EYE” for piano & integrated techniques, Op. 69; 2003
36 Third Eye

© 2013 Integrated Music Records - Catch 054 (2CDR), suRRism-Phonoethics – sPE_0143 (DIG)




Album for download

středa 2. listopadu 2016

Vladimír Hirsch - Organ Concerto No.2 "Horae", Part III. Pugnax



Concerto for organs, integrated techniques, clockworks and field recordings, op.90, with subtitle „Organ Concerto No.2“ (2011). Live at Kalisz Ambient Festival, October 28, 2016

Composer Vladimír Hirsch live
Vladimír Hirsch

úterý 3. května 2016

Interview for Last Day Deaf (Anastasia Andreadou, Christos Doukakis)

Vladimír Hirsch , the Czech composer, has developed his own aesthetics and unique style of music in the last 30 years. Being not afraid to experiment in order to create, he combines his classical studies and his journey through post-punk , industrial and dark ambient sounds. The result is a soulful new path in the universe of music. That’s the world of Vladimír Hirsch: unique and magic.......


Read more on

Vladimír Hirsch

Vladimír Hirsch , the Czech composer, has developed his own aesthetics and unique style of music in the last 30 years. Being not afraid to experiment in order to create, he combines his classical studies and his journey through post-punk , industrial and dark ambient sounds. The result is a soulful new path in the universe of music. That’s the world of Vladimír Hirsch: unique and magic.

Hello Vladimír, you are coming from Prague a historical city that is a famous tourist destination nowadays. Tell us few things about the Prague music scene and life over there in general.

Of course I love Prague, but the city as a popular holiday destination has an impact on the lives of its residents. The historical sites are overwhelmed by tourists and moving around the city to enjoy the beauty can get really annoying for the citizens. The music scene in Prague and the whole of Czechia [1] – at least  the one I have been active in so far without feeling like I belong to the same genre – is very small and fragmented, with hardly any labels interested in dark ambient or similar genres. The current situation cannot be compared to the 1990s and the verge of the century when activities in the field of avant-garde music flourished, above all thanks to the long existence of the international Prague Industrial Festival, organized by Ars Morta Universum platform, that is my colleagues from Skrol band, Tom Saivon and Martina Sanollová. They brought an amazing amount of musicians from around the world to Czechia and established a more concentrated artistic cooperation. The festival was not strictly “industrial”; it covered all kinds of avant-garde music. Unfortunately, it stopped for financial reasons.

Is it easier or harder being a musician in Czechia in comparison to being one in other countries?

As I mentioned before, being a musician in the field of “experimental” -I do not like this word because it implies something coincidental and I am certain that I know what I do- or avant-garde music in Czechia, is hard.

Listening to your works, one can find traces of industrial, classical, ambient, noise, experimental and even experimental jazz in some parts. Sometimes, your work would even bring to our mind the Greek composer Iannis Xenakis.  What are your influences then?

I do not like genre inclusion. However, I do understand the occasional necessity to simplify things to be able to work with words. My education is classical and I passed through several periods in my history with music- the standard classical music, experimental jazz or post-punk- before I found my own musical direction. I could write a very long paragraph of influences and a huge list of artists in general but will mention the names of those that really tempted me to do similar work. From music, I have always been attracted to the spiritual strength in the aching reality of the Czech composer Miloslav Kabeláč, the close encounters of space and detail of György Ligeti, the mathematical order in chaos of Iannis Xenakis that you mentioned, the ability to move in micro space of Giacinto Scelsi as well as the pure and sharp bone-penetrating or animate industrialism of SPK.

Tell us a few things about your musical past; you used to play in a post-punk band many years ago, right?

Yes, except for my solo works, I also have had several musical projects – the post-punk band Der Marabu in 1980s, the more or less neoclassical martial industrial Skrol, the dark ambient Aghiatrias, the dark electronic Subpop Squeeze, Luminar Ax and Tiria. In all of them, I have tried to develop other facets of music I am associated with, this or that way. I have been composing since I was a teenager, when – as a pianist and an organ player – I started to write classicist pieces with elements of experimental rock. In 1986, I joined the post-punk band Der Marabu and simultaneously started to apply modern classical forms to electronic music. This resulted in a more transgressive industrial style and the foundation of Skrol. It was the point when my idea of the so-called “integrated” musical form was born:  a transformation of modern classical and dark ambient, industrial and noise components into a homogenous indivisible structure.

Apart from your musical influences, what else inspires you to write music?

Music is the other eye to help me see and the stretched hand I use to search beyond. Can anything be more inspiring?

What other forms of art and which artists in particular inspire you?

My artistic philosophy or general visions were partially inspired by painting and literature: the renaissance and mainly modern abstract visual art, spiritually oriented artists, the metaphysical transformation in Mikuláš Medek’s paintings [2] above all. There are a lot of particular inspiration sources in both poetry and prose- Graham Greene’s salvation of the damned or Jorge Luis Borges’s imaginary worlds, for instance.

Being someone with a musical education, why did you choose to create in a more experimental field than to follow the path most composers do?

Above all, I am interested in searching my own expression, in finding cohesion within my personal philosophy, thoughts and feelings; simply being authentic. I do not want to repeat what has already been done, to live the life of somebody else. I am used to working in consecutive phases: idea, conception, creation. Ideas are elusive; they cannot be counted as a regular phase of work, yet they seem to be resulting from an inner continual process of search that has a life of its own. At the moment, when an idea is born in my consciousness, it remains there like some permanent question mark until the end of the work.

The name of your other project, Aghiatrias, is a collage of the Greek words ‘Aghia’ and ‘Trias’ meaning Holy Trinity. Are you religious? Is religion or spirituality in general amongst your influences?

Yes, you hit the target. I work with some philosophical principles, both consciously and, mostly, unconsciously. Those ideas result in a natural flow of expression. Spiritual insight is definitely my main inspiration, as are the themes of de-spiritualisation, materialistic decay and anthropocentrism of the modern human. This conflict represents metaphysically the central idea of my concept of “integrated music”, which consists in the collision and reconciliation of two seemingly spiritually opposite worlds inside of an individual.

Modern age, developing technology and music: What do you think that future will bring for music? In addition, for your last three albums, you preferred digital to physical format. Are you keeping track of the digital era? 

Technology, in general, has helped my musical aims a lot; it has extended the action potential for both means of expression and independence from other people which is very important for me. I am not a prophet, but, in my opinion, music, and not just it, has been stuck for a long time at an impasse. For reasons mentioned above, i.e. de-spiritualisation, the natural values have been quietly substituted by their holograms. The result is formal art without content. It is no fault of modern technology; everything can be misused. The crucial question is how much space we are willing to give to those cheap idols. In the case of my last albums, the reasons for digital releases were prosaic – the lack of publishers, because I am a bit too prolific. Of course, a physical release would have been much better.

You are returning to Greece a few months after your last performance. Is Athens an inspiring city? Are you looking forward for this masters’ reunion?

The cradle of European civilization is always an inspiring place. I thank you for the invitation I am definitely looking forward to it!


Anastasia Andreadou – Christos Doukakis

Ad [1] The name Czechia, although hardly ever used in the English-speaking world, dates back in the 19th century. In 14th April 2016 the country’s political leadership voted to register “Czechia” as the official English-language short name at the United Nations (Ed.).

Ad [2] Mikuláš Medek (1926-1974) was a Czech painter. With his abstract, surrealistic art, Medek, is considered among the most important exponents of the Czech modern painting in the post-war period (Ed.).