“You have to concentrate and go deep inside,” is how
Ludovico Einaudi describes the process of composition. “You need to have energy
to search and if you search you will find. It is like digging in the ground to
find a diamond.”
The method must work because the Italian pianist/composer
has generated a huge following from his albums and performances and has been
recognised with an Order of Merit of the Italian
Republic, the Italian equivalent of knighthood. His music sounds a little
like the process he described: introverted, hypnotic and polished like a gem.
| Ludovico Einaudi |
For his 2006 album Divenire
the composer worked with the Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Orchestra and Nightbook (2009) was an exploration into the
use of synthesized sounds with piano. For his Perth Festival concert Einaudi will be performing with the six-piece
ensemble from his most recent album In a Time Lapse. The album was released in
2013 and has the feel of an older man musing on life and the ephemeral nature
of time.
“I was reflecting about the way
we experience our life in lots of different moments, and the album is about
bringing the things we love into a single moment in time,” he says, speaking
slowly and thoughtfully over the phone from Milan.
“As we grow older we lose the
ability to experience life as we do when we are children where every moment is
unique and new. We need to refresh ourselves, so everything becomes as fresh as
when we were a child.”
Einaudi drew on a wide variety of
sounds to achieve his vision for the album including electronics, piano and
orchestra.
“I wanted to bring all my world
into one. This album is my world of desires with sounds.”
The track Corale features lush
strings swaying moodily between minor and major chords. Time Lapse mixes
minimalistic piano rhythms with electronic sounds accompanied by a relentless
heart beat pulse. The metallic ring of a glockenspiel opens Life and the piano
and strings join to sing a haunting melody reminiscent of Elena Kats-Chernin’s
bittersweet music.
The rhythmic complexity and
darker sounds in Newton’s Cradle reveals a more rigorous composing technique. Einaudi
studied at the Conservatorio Verdi in Milan and in the eighties worked with
experimental giant Luciano Berio.
“Our music is very different but
a good teacher is one who lets you find your own direction. Berio was a very
open-minded composer. We would talk about birds and plants and it was always a starting
point to talk about music.”
Einaudi’s music has changed since
those days. “I was experimenting, connected to the avant-garde. I was writing
with a modern language, which is what I had to do in order to understand it was
not what I wanted to do.”
In 1983 when he was thirty he
began to find his own voice. “It was a process; you discover in a work that you
have achieved something, so you follow it.”
He now aligns himself with the
minimalist school: Glass, Reich and Arvo Part. And the topic of nature which
came up in conversations with Berio remains a strong theme. It is where Einaudi
goes to find refreshment.
“I like to walk in the countryside, in the mountains and at Piedmont [the family home set in a vineyard garden]. Whenever I am in a new city I spend time walking around the parks. It is what I do when I compose.”
And you can hear it in his music.
In a Time Lapse is full of nature-inspired music: the deeply soothing track
Waterways, a spacious meditation Two Trees and Walk which opens with Arvo
Part-sparseness.
Stravinsky and Bach are important
influences and Einaudi adds Mozart, Monteverdi, The Beatles and African music
to the list. He loves music that “talks, opens reflection for people in a
concert”.
“Music is an emotional experience
and a logical process. Music can take you to a complexity of different
experiences. It is something that happens to me when I listen to Stravinsky and
Bach.
“I like it when the music brings
you to a different level of experience. Music makes you think, music brings
emotion, bring you to new territory and you feel an illumination in what you
perceive. I hope this will happen when people listen to my music.”
Saturday 8th February
7:30pm
Perth Concert Hall
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