14 August / SUNDAY / 20.00–20.30 / Multimedia hall / Laboratory of Culture – Różana 2
Ensemble Phoenix: Alex Buess – Portrait
Alex Buess – “Vortex V1_01″
Alex Buess – “Khat”
Alex Buess – “N.S.”
Jürg Henneberger -Conductor/Piano, Christoph Bösch -Flutes, Sebastian Hofmann -Percussion, Christof Stürchler -Soundengineer
The “Ensemble Phoenix Basel” invites annually experimental musicians with rather non-academic background to cooperate. These artists come from areas such as noise, free improvisation, sound art, etc. From this series of concerts, which we call “blank”, the cooperation with the Polish sound artists Kasper Toeplitz and Robert Piotrowicz and the Swiss saxophonist and composer Antoine Chessex originated. The invited musicians are commissioned to design one work for the half of a concert. This “conceptual composition” is then rehearsed in the presence of the artists during an intensive week and leads to a concert – in most cases performed together with the creators of the works. The musical ideas are often not transported in these projects through traditional notation, but can be based on graphics, sound files, verbal instructions, timelines, etc. and need to be “translated” into music. This requires of the participating members of the ensemble additional knowledge in the field of electronics and openness for unusual musical paths. Precisely because of this different creative process arises an innovative music.
Swiss composer Alex Buess is connected with the “Ensemble Phoenix Basel” by a decade’s long friendship. He works both as a sound mixer and as a composer with us. His compositions are his musicians written on the body and are developed together with them.
Musicians: Jürg Henneberger -Conductor/Piano, Christoph Bösch -Flutes, Toshiko Sakakibara -Clarinets, Jens Bracher -Trumpet, Remo Schnyder -Saxophone, Samuel Wettstein – Synthesizer/Piano, Sebastian Hofmann -Percussion, Maurizio Grandinetti -E-Guitar, Aleksander Gabrys -Doublebass, Thomas Peter -Electronics, Christof Stürchler -Soundengineer
Personnel
The Ensemble Phoenix Basel was founded in 1998 by Swiss conductor and pianist Jürg Henneberger, flutist Christoph Bösch and percussionist Daniel Buess. Right from the start, this highly versatile orchestra for contemporary music had a significant impact on the cultural scene of its home city. Today, it is one of the most important groups of its kind in Switzerland and has also gained an international reputation.
The number of musicians onstage can range from two to almost thirty, making the ensemble ideally suited for performing the works of contemporary composers. This might be fairly common practice in companies these days, but what gives the Ensemble Phoenix Basel its unique edge is how it incorporates, and is driven by, the impulses and preferences of its individual members.
Location and Orientation
The Ensemble Phoenix has had close ties to the cultural centre Gare du Nord ever since its opening. The centre, located in Basel’s German railway station Badischer Bahnhof in the north of the city, not only serves as a venue for the ensemble’s annual concert series, but is also where the group works and rehearses as orchestra-in-residence.
One could certainly describe the Ensemble Phoenix as a „railway station orchestra“ of sorts, but very importantly, it is also a touring company: constantly on the move, exploring new horizons, and coming back with even more projects and new contacts.
This quest for new experiences is characterized by both constancy and curiosity. It allows the group to keep expanding the scope of its activities, from the aforementioned concert series at Gare du Nord to small tours in Switzerland or appearances at international festivals. As Ensemble Phoenix Basel could celebrate its 15-year anniversary on December 12th 2013, its musicians are in full stride: for a decade and a half, they have been cultivating and promoting a form of diversity without which Basel as a music city would be lacking essential impulses in the contemporary field.
Stages
Even a cursory glance at the group’s schedule reveals an extraordinary range of concert activity. For example, during the last couple of years alone, the ensemble not only performed at numerous events all over Europe (such as the Venice Biennale 2010, or the Bludenz Contemporary Music Days), but also in the U.S. (2011 BEAMS Electronic Music Marathon, Boston), Mexico (Festival del Centro Historico), Argentina (Teatro Colón, Buenos Aires), and China. As part of the Culturescapes Festival, the group visited Turkey and the Baltic countries.
The ensemble’s original programmes developed for Gare du Nord usually get performed in other Swiss cities as well. Over the years, the group has built up a fruitful long-term collaboration with particular venues, such as the cultural centre Dampfzentrale in Bern. The Lucerne Festival, meanwhile, has already hosted three successful performances of the group. For additional productions, the ensemble frequently works with partners such as ISCM Basel, the Basel Music Academy, the city theatre and various choirs and groups from the region. One example of such a partnership is the yearly „Final Concert for Compositions“ at Basel’s University of Music, which is traditionally performed by Ensemble Phoenix as part of its young composer’s support program.
Focus points
The Ensemble Phoenix believes that staging world premiere performances of new compositions, together with all the organisation and commissioning work involved, is an excellent way of supporting and coaching new talent. Numerous young musical creators and composers from Switzerland and elsewhere have benefited from this program – not just occasionally, but on a regular basis. The list of composers that have repeatedly worked together with the ensemble is impressive. Other types of collaboration with composers are also explored, including the joint improvisational creation of concert pieces or even entire programmes. Concept developments and cross-over projects have been realised with musicians such as Kasper Toeplitz, John Duncan, Helmut Oehring, Z’EV, or Zbigniew Karkowski. Projects of this kind require a solid background in electronic music, which Ensemble Phoenix is able to provide thanks to its members Alex Buess and Thomas Peter, both of them composers and specialists in the field. Yet another type of experimental performance are double-bill concerts with other orchestras, such as Ensemble ö! orEnsemble Vortex from Geneva. The close contact and creative friction resulting from such encounters are always a source of stimulation and mutual inspiration.
Contemporary musical theatre plays an important, even central, role in the work of the Ensemble Phoenix. After past collaborations with the Theatre Basel – «The Unanswered Question» with Christoph Marthaler (2000), Mauricio Kagel’s «Mare nostrum» (2002) or Georg Friedrich Haas‘ «In vain» (2003), to name a few – commissions for musical theatre have increasingly been initiated autonomously in recent years. Helena Winkelman’s chamber opera «Envidia» (2011, in collaboration with Teatro Colón in Buenos Aires), Matthias Heep’s «L‘orient n‘existe pas» (2011), or Helmut Oehring’s «Gunten» (2008) are just some of the most recent examples. Besides that, Jürg Henneberger and other ensemble members can often be found among the cast of Gare du Nord’s own musical theatre productions. Acting and scenic know-how are skills that directors have come to expect from ensemble members.
United
A series of CDs documenting the different stages of the group’s development is available, while a concert/portrait CD highlighting the ensemble’s live qualities has been released by Musiques Suisses(Grammont). Moreover, the group has founded its own label, United Phoenix Records, that will compile and regularly release new concert recordings online, along with older treasures from the audio and video archives. United Phoenix Records will also be open to solo and group projects of various Phoenix members. The label aims at establishing a network of „performers, composers and artists“.
Swiss Radio DRS 2 has often been on location at concert evenings of the Ensemble Phoenix Basel, which is why these events are now among the most frequently recorded and broadcast contemporary music productions in the country.
Prices
Ensemble Phoenix Basel received on September 13th 2003 during the „European Culture Award“ ceremonies in Lucerne the „Ensemble Award «Thies Knauf» New Music“, in 2003 the „European Culture Prize“ of the Foundation Pro Europe and both in 2004 and 2006 the Prizes of the Ernst von Siemens Music Foundation.
In March 2014, Ensemble Phoenix Basel was nominated among 14 other Swiss music creators from any music branch for the first „Swiss Music Award“ of the BAK. The first „Swiss Grand Prix Music“ will be presented on September 19th 2014 by Federal Councillor Alain Berset at the festival „Label Suisse“ in Lausanne.
André Fatton
http://ensemble-phoenix.ch/en/