Post Description
To account for the continuing work of Jóhann Jóhannsson in proper detail is almost self-defeating. Not that it can't be addressed, but that it's so constant and ongoing, a reflection in process as much as, or even more so, than product. Copenhagen Dreams is on the one hand "just" another album from the Icelandic-born, Copenhagen-based musician, again assisted in part by a series of regular musical collaborators and performers, with an emphasis on the gently experimental and beautifully mood-setting. It is also another in the series of film soundtracks that have made up a vast swathe of his artwork, even beyond his standalone albums over the past decade. Copenhagen Dreams is not out to surprise, but to reaffirm and extend a body of work and a considerable reputation.
But leaving it at that is both unduly and unnecessarily bloodless. The film in question, originally released a couple of years ago by director Max Kestner, is the kind of documentary that a hundred years of motion pictures, television, and more has made into a kind of subtle genre, the documentary study of a city that relies on impression, editing, and visual and sonic sense presented to a viewer. From the multiple soundtracks created over time for Dziga Vertov's groundbreaking Russian study Man With a Movie Camera forward, the idea of crafting music for such a study is equally strong, whether to capture a hustle-bustle, a quiet contemplation, or a range in between. That Copenhagen Dreams tends toward the latter isn't a surprise given Jóhannsson's work; it's the pleasure in hearing what he does that is the key to listening.
The choice of subject for the documentary does allow for more interpretive space than might be guessed. For nearly anyone who is not Danish or living in or near the country, it's arguably something near to a blank slate beyond name and location, its comparatively recent history, from Lord Nelson and Kierkegaard to Hans Christian Andersen and the Christiania district, at most the scope of trivia questions and random Wikipedia trawls. Musically the area may be most famous for the well established Roskilde Festival as much as anything else. Since Copenhagen is not Moscow or any similar large capital city that has colonized the imagination of millions, it allows Kestner to focus on the city as it is as opposed to what it must be or live up to.
As such the soundtrack to Copenhagen Dreams functions predominantly in its own right as impressionistic and not necessarily cohesive, a series of quick sketches that impress on the mind only in quick bursts. Yet for all the activity the film shows or implies, there's a general unity that essentially is Jóhannsson as he has established himself, simultaneously classically-tried and placed in a 21st-century context with the technological possibilities provided. Straightforward piano-only songs such as "She Loves to Ride the Port Ferry When It Rains" intertwine with thicker arrangements and unsettled elements, perhaps its own reflection of a centuries-old city looking into an unknowable future.
"Eleven Thousand Six Hundred and Sixty-Nine Died of Natural Causes" is the name of the first track, a minute-long piece that starts with piano on its own before backward masking layers over the second half, a repetition of a simple melodic figure throughout. The melody recurs in "The Song About the Hyacinths", one of several moments in the album where themes play out once more; in this case, Jóhannsson adds quickly plucked strings to not only distinguish the piece but to provide a crackling energy that further echoes elsewhere in the album.
Thus, the skittering glitch of "The Jewish Cemetery on Møllegade" floats above a subtle loop of keyboards before strings slowly move almost like a series of great sighs, distant tones adding to a feeling of alien activity, perhaps even a restlessness that belies the title's implication-- or suggests deeper feelings at work, especially notable in a country that was largely successful in saving its Jewish population from the depredations of Nazism. Similarly nervous-sounding tracks like "There's No Harm Done" contrast with moments of pure elegiac impact, such as the matching of piano and chimes on "Here, They Used to Build Ships", a suggestion of something magical but irrevocably departed. If the apparent formula is clear, the results still resonate, and when the strings appear towards the end, the result is a sudden crushing emotion, as if something else further were lost.
Those longer pieces that appear by default linger a bit more in the memory, but also tend to move beyond one core element, a chance for Jóhannsson to stretch out within the confines of the film's requirements. "A Memorial Garden on Enghavevej" lets its central piano melody flow between relentless minimalism and a music-box prettiness, concluding with what could almost feel like sparkles, while the last piece "They Imagine the City Growing Out Into the Ocean", one of several tracks featuring múm's Hildur Guðnadóttir on vocals, has both a quality of benediction in its slow string beauty and a suggestion of a future, however melancholic. If that is to be considered "typically" Jóhannsson at this point, it is no less powerful, or enjoyable, for that reason.
Label: NTOV – NTOV5
Format: Vinyl, LP, Album, Green Transparent
Country: UK & Europe
Released: 02 Jul 2012
Genre: Classical, Stage & Screen
Style: Modern Classical, Score
A1 Eleven Thousand Six Hundred And Sixty-Nine Died Of Natural Causes
A2 They Leave Everything Behind
A3 They Fed The Sparrows Leftovers And Offered Grass To Scherfig's Turtle
A4 An Eiffel Tower By The Lakes
A5 Three Thousand Five Hundred And Ninety One Benches
A6 The Jewish Cemetery On Møllegade
A7 They Dream They'll Get There
A8 A Memorial Garden On Enghavevej
A9 A Six-Lane Highway
A10 He Hit Her On The Head With "The Wind In The Willows"
B11 He Says It's The Future
B12 There's No Harm Done
B13 They Had To Work It Out Between Them
B14 The Song About The Hyacinths
B15 It Will Take Some Time
B16 She Loves To Ride The Port Ferry When It Rains
B17 A French School On Værnedamsvej
B18 Here, They Used To Build Ships
B19 They Imagine The City Growing Out Into The Ocean
TER INFO
- Ik probeer verschillende stijlen muziek te plaatsen waarvan het grootste gedeelte onder New Age valt. Plaats ik eens een cd die er wellicht iets vanaf wijkt (in uw mening) of niet onder valt, prima maar maak er geen scene van. Geniet van de muziek!
- Onderstaande uitdrukkingen spreken mij aan, dit staat los van New Age.
- De huidige LOSSLESS muziek die gepost is, is gecheckt tenzij anders vermeld!
- Bevalt mijn muziek niet, sla mijn spots over.
- Bevalt mijn muziek: voeg mij toe aan uw witte lijst of creëer een filter die
Mijn spots weer geeft.
“Wie op dankbaarheid rekent is een koopman, geen weldoener.”
~Fliegende Blatter~
“Zelfs ondankbare mensen zijn nuttig: zij helpen u wel te doen zonder eigenbelang.” ~Jules Claretie~
“Dankbaarheid kan alleen voortkomen uit een opgewekt innerlijk leven en een zeker vermogen tot liefhebben.” ~Robert Saitschick~
INFO:
- Verzoekjes zijn welkom. Plaats verzoekjes bij de meest recente spots. Ik kijk niet verder terug dan 2 dagen!!!!!!
- Hou mijn spots in de gaten om te zien of uw verzoekje er tussen staat!!
- Heb geduld, zoeken kost tijd! Als uw verzoek niet binnen 2 weken op spotnet staat dan is er niets te vinden. Plaats dus niet steeds dezelfde verzoekjes!
Muziek:
De andere kunsten overreden ons, maar de muziek verrast ons.
~Eduard Hanslick~
Na de stilte komt muziek het dichtst bij het zeggen van het onzegbare.
~Aldous Huxley~
Muziek is de blikopener van je ziel.
~Henry Miller~
Muziek en ritme vinden hun weg naar de verborgen gebieden van de ziel.
~Plato~
Enjoy the feeling
Comments # 0