|          Transcending
  the Boundaries
  
               The
  Festival of Musical Action
  
         Multimedial
  Music-Theatre in Lithuania
  
                
          
               The
  7th Festival of Musical Action, December 7-8 1996
  
               Lithuania
  National Drama Theatre
  
                
          
               -Zachar
  Laskewicz, Australian composer of multimedial music-theatre, performed at this
  festival and has written this article on the remarkable cross-fertilization
  between different artistic genres. 
  
                
          
               "The
  Festival of Musical Action" is a major event held annually in Vilnius, the
  capital city of the ex-Soviet state of Lithuania. 
  It could certainly be suggested that the need for ground-breaking
  artistic events such as this is due to the massive changes that have been
  brought about by the new intellectual and artistic freedom now that they are
  separated from an oppressive Soviet regime. 
  Whether or not this is true, it is certainly one of the most exciting
  events I have had the pleasure of witnessing in Europe. 
  It was free from pretensions and western aesthetic ideals, attempting to
  extend the forms of communication binding music, theatre, and dance which can
  communicate with today's audience in a dynamic but fragmented 'musical' language.   From my experiences
  here both as composer and theoretician I feel that such a state of
  multimediality has still not been reached to the same degree in western Europe
  because of the strength of hundreds of years of European history which have
  resulted in the Europe of today.  Philosophical,
  political and economic concepts have brought about  a rigidified society of specialists and an elitist concept of
  musical communication.   My
  work as a composer has from the very beginning been involved with an extended
  concept of musical communication.  I
  must confess that my time at the "Festival of Musical Action" was indeed a
  dream come true.
  
                
          
               I
  first heard about developments in contemporary Lithuanian music while attending
  a music-semiotics conference in Finland.  A
  musicologist there described the changes brought about since their independence,
  and the search for a musical language which would express this new-found
  freedom.  One of the students from a
  Lithuanian music academy heard my paper on a multi-medial approach to musical experience and told me about the "Festival of Musical Action", and the artistic director Tomas Ziburkus was
  soon in contact with me after I had returned to the Netherlands. 
  It took unfortunately two years before they were successful in getting me
  to perform there.  I managed to find
  out a bit about the history of the festival from Ziburkus himself, who told me
  that they received no support from the government but from local and European
  sponsors who were interested in the event. 
  Although not condoned by the traditional musical 'establishment', its
  popularity among young musicians and artists and the Lithuanian community in
  general had ensured its success.
  
          
          
               Tomas
  Ziburkus wrote his thesis on contemporary music-theatre during his studies at
  the music academy in Vilnius.  This
  thesis included the work of such figures as Mauricio Kagel who have challenged
  traditional approaches to 'musicality' and 'musical expression' by using
  media which don't belong to the categories propagated in western musical
'institutions' (both universities and conservatoria). 
  Ziburkus told me that the intention of the festival was to explore all
  possibilities of 'musical expression', allowing many different types of
  experimental music-theatre and multi-media performance to take place. 
  The ultimate purpose was to demonstrate that music has the possibility of 
  being so much more than simply 'the sound it makes', but a way of
  experiencing reality, a form of artistic expression which goes beyond rational
  translation into verbal form but that can be expressed in many different
'non-musical' ways.  This festival stands against the distinctions set-up and
  perpetuated in western culture, and is an event free from preconceptions about
  how music should be defined, resulting in an open atmosphere in which the
  existing artistic boundaries can be transcended. 
  
  
                
          
               
      The
  programme took place over a period of two evening concerts on a Saturday and a
  Sunday.  The selection of
  performances was varied and presented 'multimedial' mini-concerts from
  France, Denmark, Australia, Russia, America and of course Lithuania. 
  Carol Robinson, an American musician living in Paris, gave a performance
  of clarinet music combined with theatrical movement and lighting effects. 
  The Danish performer Christer Irgens-Møller presented a programme for
  prepared voice, machinery and water called Water/Vand/Vatten/Eau/Aqua/Agua...
  involved with electronically adjusted vocal improvisation reacting to the
  amplified sound of water dripping from cups into buckets, combining natural and
  electronic sounds in an exciting fashion.  Since
  1989 Irgens-Møller has been a part of the group SKRÆP - an experimental music
  forum from Copenhagen.  A
  music-theatre group from Austria presented a more staid form of music-theatre,
  embedded in the Austrian approach to dance and music. 
  A highlight of their performance was Schafer's theatre work La Testa
  d'Ariane which involved a bodiless head only able to react to musical
  sound, put on show for a carnival.  It
  was wonderfully brought to life by the actor/singer Gunda Ksning and was
  accompanied by the skills of the accordionist Alfred Melichar. 
  The Austrian performance seemed quaint and almost stale in comparison to
  the dynamism of the Lithuanian performances.   
  My own concert included two major solo performance works for performer,
  slides and tape based on Russian futurist experimental 'ZAUM' poetry 
  , interspersed by a composition for masked flute performer and tape ['Incantation Music']  which
  explores the sound-based qualities ofive
         
       
          
               There
  were many things that struck me about the festival, although the most striking
  of these would have to be the relationship between the audience and the
  performances.  It didn't appear to
  be viewed as an avant-garde or 'fringe-event', and was held in a major
  theatre situated in the centre of the city and as such attracted an extremely
  large audience made up of many different types of people both young and old.  The audience reacted and interacted with the performance in a
  dynamic way, which can be compared to the passivity of a standard audience in
  western Europe who have a bloated conception of the solitary and all-powerful
  figure of the 'composer'.  For
  this festival, this whole notion has been rethought, and the composer is at once
  a dancer and a singer and a musician.  Text
  is wrapped together with sounds and movements to create the whole complex
  multimediality of musical performance, and the audience itself becomes part of
  this totality.  How wonderful it was
  to see an audience who were considered equally able to 'create' the
  performance for themselves, an idea which seems still absent in some western
  European 'contemporary music' circles which seem to consider that the
  (usually male) composer holds some kind of transcendental musical truth. 
  
  
                
          
               This
  is the first time I have really felt like I was involved in an event-be it not
  an officially sanctioned one-in which my work really fitted.   Composers and musicians were given the chance to
  demonstrate that the shells provided for them by their culture are only
  constructions and that there are many other communicative possibilities open to
  them as creative artists.  Anyone
  interested in taking part in this festival should contact me or Tomas Ziburkus,
  the artistic director of the festival, at the addresses below. 
  I'm also interested in organising such a festival in Brussels, and
  anyone interested in taking part should send me information about their
  performance work.  Although European
  music is still in many ways restricted by cultural and philosophical boundaries,
  events such as the "Festival of Musical Action" and new developments on the
  theatre-scene I regularly encounter in central Europe demonstrate to me that
  nothing remains static.  The
  unavoidable forces of change will ensure that there will be an exciting future
  for multimedial musicality. 
  
                
          
               Tomas
  Ziburkus:
  
               c/o
  Lithill music agency
  
               Universiteto
  4
  
               Vilnius
  2001
  
               Lithuania
          
                
          
               Zachar
  Laskewicz:
  
               c/o
  Nachtschimmen music-theatre scores
  
               Rogierlaan
  283
  
               1030
  Brussels
  
               Belgium
          
               
    
     
    
    
      
    
    
       Laskewicz, Z.(1995) "Words Without Meaning or Meaning Without Words:      towards a musical understanding of language", International Summer
      Congresses for Structural and Semiotic Studies, Music Semiotics Seminar, June
      10-16, Imatra, Finland. 
     
    
      
      ZAUM: Composition for live performer, slides and tape using 'meaningless'
      sound poetry from the Russian futurist poets Khlebnikov, Kruchenykh and
      Kamensky around which I have created a 'musical' sound/movement language. 
     
 
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