FOREST COMPLEX
Music
The concert has been on April 17, 2024.
The concert
INN SITU’s concert format developed especially in resonance with the exhibition: The human perspective of nature is invariably shaped by the observer. It usually tells as much about itself as about the object being observed. It comes therefore as no surprise that over the centuries, music has dealt in manifold ways with Nature as the “other”.
The concert program included works from Early Italian Baroque to improvisations to a world premiere by the Austrian composer Peter Jakober. Rupert Enticknap, Richard Eigner and Martin Mallaun interpret this music with their own tools: countertenor, zither, live electronics and field recordings.
Martin Mallaun
“Whether in improvisation, electronic music, baroque lute music, alpine folk music or contemporary music, the Tyrol-born performer is always searching for new forms of sonic and stylistic expression on the zither.” (music information center austria)
In addition to studying zither performance at the Tyrolean State Conservatory, Martin Mallaun also majored in botany at the University of Innsbruck – in the context of this project an ideal combination in resonance with Uta Kögelsberger’s work.
Martin Mallaun performs concerts internationally and makes guest appearances at such renowned festivals as the Edinburgh International Festival (UK), Munich Biennale (DE) or Wien Modern (AT). As a botanist he has been researching the effects of climate change on the vegetation of Alpine ecosystems as part of the GLORIA research project since 2001. (www.gloria.ac.at).
Rupert Enticknap
is a Berlin-based countertenor and artist, whose range includes opera, contemporary music, dance and installations. As a singer specialising in both baroque and contemporary music he has performed at the ROH Covent Garden, Bavarian State Opera and La Monnaie in Brussels, among others.
Richard Eigner
is a composer, sound artist and percussionist. The focus of his work lies in the symbiotic use of acoustic elements and electronically generated sounds. In Austria he ranks as one of the leading artists engaged in the integration of field recordings.
In addition to his work as a musician, Richard Eigner also teaches the class “TransArts” at the University of Applied Arts Vienna.