Combining video with music performance is hardly new, but criticism of some such attempts, like the Bill viola video grafted onto a concert performance of Wagner's Tristan und Isolde, has focused on the distraction caused by video extraneous to the work it is accompanying. The La Fura dels Baus production of the Ring cycle, seen live in Florence, did better at integrating spectacular video effects into the action. Robert LePage's break-the-bank multimedia Ring did not, showing again that expense does not equal greatness. The difference here is that van der Aa has studied recording engineering and video editing as well as composition, so that he and his creative team can plan the work, from the beginning, as an integrated work combining all of these aspects.
M. van der Aa, Close-Up, S. Gabetta, Amsterdam Sinfonietta |
Van der Aa has also incorporated dramatic video into concert works, such as his cello concerto Up-Close, premiered in 2010, in which soloist Sol Gabetta interacted with an actor in a projected video, including some choreographed movement by Gabetta and the accompanying ensemble, the Amsterdam Sinfonietta. (See a clip in the video embedded below.) Some of the pieces on this evening's program will feature video and other technological effects, incorporated into chamber music performance. The Phillips Collection presents Michel van der Aa and the International Contemporary Ensemble tonight (May 10, 6 pm), as part of its Leading European Composers series. Tickets: $20.
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