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Der Kulturhof |
By Paul Acquaro
I am wondering if it would be better if I did not write anything about
the Potentiale Festival. It feels like I'm exposing a precious secret. It's not
that I think I have any great influence on the course of events, but rather,
when something seems so perfectly done, do we really want anyone else to know
about it? Well here goes: the Potentiale Festival, a
small improvisational music festival situated in the middle
of Germany, strikes a wonderful balance between the medieval charm of the
canal encircled alt-stadt Kalbe, the entropic aesthetic of old barns and former storehouses, and the connection of people though improvised music, folk-art, and
hob-nobbing.
Kuenstlerstadt Kalbe is the vision and sweat of town resident Corinna Köbele. The
organization has taken many old, decaying buildings and converted
them into the shabby-chic creative spaces that now host varoius festivals,
in addition to Potentiale, of New Music and dance and theater, as well as
offering a range of art and music workshops and camps for students. An aura of creativity and freedom was in the air during the weekend in June that
Potentiale nestled into the village - the sun was shining, the birds were
chirping, bees buzzing (standing under some of the trees, one could hear an
incredible drone), and the mood was high.
This was the fourth edition of the festival. Curated by Leipzig based drummer
Steffen Roth, the festival brings together improvising musicians for
four days of collaboration and spontaneous configurations. The premise is that
each artist has a solo set, then a "plus ..." set for which they pick others
from the pool of musicians to play. Being that many of the musicians
do not know each other, the 'hanging out' component of the festival is an important aspect, and so every set was full with the small audience and all of
the musicians at the festival. Everyone was listening intently, whether it was
to hear familiar sounds in new settings, see new faces making unfamiliar
sounds, or just to take copious notes
(actually, that was just me). There was even a space that offered people a
place to play who were not on the program, where is where some exciing and unexpected configurations popped up.
THURSDAY NIGHT (6.16)
The festival began on Friday at 5 p.m. with the dedication of the 2022
Landmusikort award. Local and state
dignitaries were on hand to recognize the importance
of efforts like Kunstlerdorf Kalbe. Intriguingly, throughout the chairs set up
in the large barn space (where most of the concerts took place) were hand
drums, percussion fish, and various bells. After the opening, Peter Grunwald, director of the
Kloster Michaelstein warmed up the audience by directing them in a percussion 'circle' - albeit not really in a circle (he told me later that the circle shape does work
better, but it seemed not to faze any of the newly minted
percussionists).
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Chris Corsano, Hanne de Backer, Yuko Oshima |
With the audience loose and rhythmically ready, the first performance of the
night kicked off with American percussionist Chris Corsano and his selection
of Japanese, France-based percussionist Yuko Oshima and Belgian baritone
saxophonist Hanne de Backer. The percussion heavy trio began as the
church bells from the nearby Dorf Kirche chimed for 6 p.m. The trio began slowly,
extracting sounds from their instruments, Oshima with a violin bow against her
cymbals, Corsano gently striking his drums with padded mallets, and De Backer biting
down on her reed and blowing. Then, vocalizing through her
sax, De Backer began ramping up the tension, with the two drummers lending
an eager hand. Soon overblowing the instrument and playing short repetitive riffs, DeBacker dove
deeper and deeper into the rich tonality of her instrument. Corsano and Oshima
gave each other space but also left no beat untouched. It was an invigorating
opening set.
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Jasper Stadhouders |
This was followed by a dinner pause. In the Kulturhof, a lovely tree
festooned, courtyard surrounded by buildings dating from the middle ages
(but luckily, modern toilets), a caterer was serving chili con- and sin- carne.
Beer, wine and various soft-drinks were available, and picnic and high tables
with umbrellas and leafy shade offered relief from the bright sun and clear
blue skies. Slowly, as there was no real rush, the satiated small audience
wandered back to the barn for the next set, where the Dutch guitarist
Jasper Stadhouders had strapped on a electric guitar and was fiddling with
his amps. For the next 45 minutes, Stadhouders showed just how much sound
could be made by not playing the guitar but rather playing with it. Hardly touching
the fretboard, he let the magnetic fields reverberate forming and shaping
the sounds in the space between the instrument and the amplifiers.
Modulating the vibrations with the pickup switches and by applying slight
touches to the strings, his used a minimalist approach to create a big
sound. Still vibrting the barn with feedback, Stadhouders picked up the
guitar and began smearing the sound-palette with light touches to the fretboard, applying a slide, and detuning the strings, letting the overtones pile high.
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Sylvan Schmidt |
Outside of the barn, opposite the entrance to the courtyard, were old, stately
willowy and leafy trees along the side of the canal that surrounded the
alt-stadt. Each house lining the banks of
the canal had a small, flat bridge leading to the gravel road on the other
side. However, this is a detour, as the next set was happening
through the courtyard and across the street in the Saint Nicholas
Church, an old stone church in the middle of idyllic green patch with a few
Yurts set up to house the craft events happening the next day. Here, Swiss
trumpeter Sylvan Schmidt played a solo show from the resonate middle of the
cross shaped chamber. The straight wooden pews did not invite relaxation but
did help focus the listener on the austere tones from the trumpet. Schmidt
began with a stuttering set of tones with much air surrounding them, which
eventually led to long modulating streams of sound. The stone walls and high ceiling provided
a split-second delay, reflecting the sound with in a dry, rapidly decaying
wave. Listening to both was hypnotic.
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Olaf Rupp, Georg Wissel, Harald Kimmig, and Yuko Oshima |
Returning to the barn, we were greeted by the newly formed group of German
saxophonist Georg Wissel, guitarist Olaf Rupp and violinist Harald Kimmig,
along with Oshima on percussion. They began tentatively, putting out
musical feelers, but a quick musical camaraderie soon manifested. A
patchwork of ideas, leaning toward the quieter side but with focused energy,
quilted the performance together. Towards the end, it grew so quiet that the
effervescent birds outside the barn almost out-chirped the performers, but then not
to be outdone, Rupp began played a repeated figured that pushed the others to a musical high point.
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Ulrike Brand, Simon Rummel, Harald Kimmig, and Georg Wissel |
The evening ended back at the church. The mood, set by cushions for the
audience to sit along side the performers, the light of candles from the pulpit,
and the gentle darkness, was given an appropriate soundtrack by German
cellist
Ulrike Brand, Kimmig, and Colonge based micro-tonal harmonic player
Simon Rummel. The set began with Brand and Kimmig playing quietly and then
soon joined by Rummel who was playing his own creation, a microtonal reed-organ (which simply needs to be
seen). Sticking to three or four notes, the overall impact was a meditative dissonant drone that brought the evening of music to a gentle close.
FRIDAY MORNING (6.17)
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Free Jazz Installation at the Gericht |
By the camper van and tenting spot, next to the "Gericht" and "SPA - Spielplatz
Anarchie", two of the Kuenstlerstadt's other big locations on the other side
of the town from the Kulturehof and church (which sounds far, but is actually just around a corner) there was
a coffee cart. Though I had picked up a to-go cappuccino at a bakery on my way
into town, there is never enough coffee. It was a good cup, which
I drank while making small talk with some of the attendees. I then entered the "Gericht" building, a grand decrepit turn of the
20th century stone building that gave name to the street it was on (Gerichtstrasse)
that the organization used for art installations. A movie was being set
up, the remnants of workshop on furthering the work of the Kuenstlerstadt, and
a display exploring Free Jazz were among the finds in the various rooms. The
latter featured large blown-up quotes from Derek Bailey's book
Improvisation and a display of the book
Fred Van Hove at 80 from Dropa Disc (sorry,
sold out).
Across the street at the SPA, a lovely, smaller room set up with a drumkit,
seats for an audience, and a chalkboard for musicians to use to sign up for ad-hoc
concerts, Roth and Wissels were playing an ad-hoc set of music.
In the backyard was an old Trabi showing off how to do entropy right and people, sipping their coffees, dotted the
spaces in-between. Around the corner, at the church, the day's events were beginning. Ulrike Brand was about to lead a workshop and crafts folk were setting up.
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Ulrike Brand |
I missed the opening moments of Brand's performance and when I arrived, she was eliciting a myriad of tones from the cello, from slight brushes against the strings to violent sawing. Her playing grew more animated as she continued, mixing extended techniques along with more traditional musical motions. From the wings of the church, Wissels and Kimmig were slowly advancing, emitting soft tones from their respective instruments. Soon, Brand pulled the end pin from her cello out, which was long enough that when she attached a wheel to it, she could play standing up. The musicians crossed paths, then continued in their separate directions, Brand eventually walked out through the open door ... and that's about where the set ended.
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Bruno Angeloni, Stefan Deller and Steffen Roth |
After a bit of downtime, the next event was at the SPA where Roth had
teamed up with Leipzig colleagues saxophonist
Bruno Angeloni and bassist Stefan Deller.
As they began playing, more and more musicians and audience entered, likely
attracted by the energy that the trio was transmitting. Angeloni, on alto
sax, dazzled with an unending array of fractured lines and Deller was a dynamic
instigator. Roth added a concentrated energy that guided the group through
this unexpected highlight.
FRIDAY EVENING
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Harald Kimmig |
The afternoon was busy in the Kunstlerhof. One could play the Digeradoo, try screen
screen printing, learn civil disobedience, and more. In the barn, Kimmig
was getting ready for his solo set. The crowd settled in - a little larger in
number than the previous night - as Kimmig began plucking a series of single
notes and double stops, then segueing into a mix of classical runs, integrating them with textural sounds and dynamic tempos. The result was that while
the techniques were extended, the overall effect was very organic and flowing.
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Chris Corsano |
Corsano began his solo set by blowing a piccolo clarinet into a vibrating plastic lid. It was a squeaky affair, which
the percussionist followed up with by continuing to blow the clarinet into a
floor tom while striking another with a mallet. Then the clarinet became a
mallet. Finally, both the mallet and acting mallet were replaced by drumsticks and Corsano
leaned into a heavy and powerful beat. As the volume cooled off, the pulse began
to break into fractions and accents appeared in unexpected places,
effectively pulling the listener along in a tumble of rhythmic ideas. Corsano
is an expressive player both physically and musically and his set cast a
hypnotic spell.
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Sylvan Schmidt, Hanne de Backer, Artum, and Steffen Roth |
After a dinner pause, trumpeter Silvan Schmidt had assembled a quartet for his
"plus ..." set. Performing with him was de Backer, Roth, and an
'outside the program' musician, Artum, playing electronics. The group
began slowly with the trumpet and sax playing a modulating buzz, the drums
energetically pulsating, and the electronics filling the center with unusual
aural textures. The restraint finally broke after a extended electronics
section, de Backer began playing animatedly, expressing her notes
physically. Roth's playing grew louder and more aggressive, while
Schmidt continued playing long, legato tones, heading towards an ecstatic peak
that suddenly dissolved.
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Olaf Rupp |
Olaf Rupp was up next with is solo set. Switching to his signature Day-Glo
green Stratocaster from the nylon string classical guitar that he played the
previous night, he still approached the instrument in a classical manner -
propped up on his left leg, neck upright, using his fingernails to pick the
strings precisely and freely. He often juxtaposes dense, packed phrases with
simple reverberating lines, which is how this set unfolded. In addition to the
fingerpicking, Rupp used a violin bow to pull tones and sonic textures from
the guitar, and at one point used two slides to produce a startling descending
sound.
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Reiko Okuda, Olaf Rupp, Jasper Stadhouders, and Chris Corsano |
In a sense, Rupp's solo approach was the opposite of
Stadhouders set on the previous night, which was interesting for the next
ensemble put together by the Dutch guitarist and included Rupp, pianist
Reiko Okuda and Corsano. After a short quiet intro, Corsano picked up the
pace and Okuda began playing arpeggiated runs, to which Stadhouders
responded with rapid scales. Meanwhile, Rupp hung back, dropping
little tone bombs from time to time. The group got into noisy jazz/rock
territory for a stretch before things got a bit stranger. Some implements I've seen with guitars include a screw driver ala Joe
Sachse, or a bedspring that Nels Cline keeps in his back-pocket, but this
was the first time I've seen spoon. Stadhouders used it, along with a slide, to
create a wild array of new sounds.
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Hanne de Backer |
As the night was winding down, we all made our way back across the street to the
church for de Backer's solo set. Enshrouded in the quiet darkness, de Backer was lit up in the pulpit. She began with a soft melody and the light glinted off her
baritone sax as she gently swayed in her seat. Her melody was tinged with a
bit of blues and then some vocalizations, her tone grew
rawer, sometimes agonized. As the gurgling, polyphonic blasts bounced off the walls of the church and the yellow light reflected off the bell, the concert felt quite spiritual.
CODA
There was still one more act this evening, vibraphonist Els Vandeweyer and
Okuda's METAL ILLUSION, but unfortunately other responsibilities pulled me away from Kalbe. It was only halfway through the festival, but the creativity flowing through this intimate festival had, so far, been nothing short of inspiring.
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