Jon Oivind Ness: Morkganga/Marmaele

Kai Grinde Myrann, Marianne Baudouin Lie, Trondheim Synphony Orchestra and Opera

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With this release, we are presented with two recent works by contemporary composer Jon Øivind Ness, performed by cellist Marianne Baudouin Lie and the Trondheim Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Kai Grinde Myrann. This album is exclusively available at Native DSD in Stereo DSD 512, DSD 256, DSD 128, DSD 64 and DXD. It is not available on SACD.

In the mid-nineties, Jon Øivind Ness’ music was decidedly playful and humorous, akin to the spirit of Frank Zappa and art-rock collective the Residents. The pieces had a diary-like vibe, exemplified by his use of kitten play, friends popping over for a visit, attempted phone calls to non-existent numbers. The music would later go down a different path, becoming much more serious, some might even say gloomy. These days he likes to juxtapose the two side by side, with more the somber passages interspersed with humorous elements that often border on the ludicrous.

The moment Ness first set eyes on the word ‘Mørkgånga’, he immediately knew this was going to be the title of one of his works. Mørkgånga is not first and foremost about its literal meaning, which is ‘the dark corridor’. Rather, it is another kind of diary entry about a walk in the forest to the gorge actually called Mørkgånga, at Krokskogen, north-west of Oslo, which the composer thought he’d try to carry out for the sake of researching this very piece. On his journey, he encountered various challenges, with several animals, including a swarm of wasps, a viper and a hawk doing their best to scare him out of the forest. While there is undoubtedly a great deal of disturbing seriousness in Mørkgånga, the parts which feature the animals are almost cartoon-like.

The cello concerto Marmæle is not dissimilar to Mørkgånga in several ways. Where Mørkgånga tries to warn you not to “mess with the forest”, the message of Marmæle is “don’t mess with the sea”. In Mørkgånga the orchestra is an expressionist forest, while in the opening of Marmæle the orchestra plays the role of the sea, with the cello taking on the role of the marmæle (in Norse folklore, a half-man and half-fish sea creature). If you’re nice to the marmæle, you’ll be fine, but if you treat it badly it can make some pretty scary things happen around you when you’re out at sea. In a way, these two pieces are programmatic music fables that comment on environmental issues in a deliberately naive way, once again in the spirit of the Residents.

Marianne Baudouin Lie – Cello
Trondheim Symphony Orchestra
Kai Grinde Myrann – Conductor

Tracklist

Please note that the below previews are loaded as 44.1 kHz / 16 bit.
1.
Marmaele (2015)
23:22
2.
Morkganga (2014)
32:59

Total time: 00:56:21

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