Renske Vrolijk - RVSMILE

U-turn / Ostrava Days

November 1, 2005

Official Ostrava Days photo's

Today the office of Ostrava Days published photo's of the institute, rehearsals and festival. And, as should, they also published some photo's of the people behind the scenes who made it all work!

Posted by Renske at 19:49 UTC |

September 30, 2005

To play with expectations

Ostravská Banda
Ostravská Banda (Photo: Femke de Jong)
Blink Blink plays, as most of my pieces, with expectations. I wanted Blink Blink to be optimistic and short and give it an impression of being longer without being too short.

Therefore I was delighted Zsolt Nagy picked up the spirit of the music so well and even suggested the trombone players to stand up at a particular point to underline the effect.

You can see and hear it, to decide for yourself if I succeeded achieving my goals by watching the video of the first performance in Ostrava.

This trip has been made possible by:
Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds Fonds voor de Amateur Podiumkunsten

Posted by Renske at 21:33 UTC |

September 17, 2005

Ostrava 05 Epilogue

Anyone who thinks Ostrava Days 2005 was only hard work and no fun,

OR

anyone who thinks that new music buffs lack humor, reconsider

AND

please take a look of the encore of Zs Ensemble after one of their concerts.

See the Encore!

This trip has been made possible by:
Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds Fonds voor de Amateur Podiumkunsten

Posted by Renske at 21:29 UTC |

September 9, 2005

Composer portraits Ostrava Days 2005

I found the time to put the one minute composer portraits online as I promised a couple of posts ago. All footage is shot during rehearsals.

The composers are (in alphabetical order):

View through camcorderscreen
Rehearsal Elizabeth Kelly
(Photo: Daniela Dostálková)
Ivan Brkljacic
Georgia Kalodikis
Elizabeth Kelly
Alex Mincek
Mei-Fang Lin
Charlie Looker
Trevor Siemens
Chiyoko Szlavnics
Matthew Welch

Have fun!

This trip has been made possible by:
Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds Fonds voor de Amateur Podiumkunsten

Posted by Renske at 15:38 UTC |

August 30, 2005

The wise man of Ostrava Days

Petr Kotik conducting JPO
Petr Kotik conducting JPO (Photo: RV)
The wise man of Ostrava Days is Petr Kotik. This summer course with festival is his idea. These three weeks is his counterweight to the Darmstadt Summer course. I visited Darmstadt in 1996 (just as a visitor) and it helped to stay away from music for many years.

Ostrava Days just did the opposite to me. It validates my decision to return to music as a good decision. For what I have heard from people who attended Darmstadt, the summer course there is a large scale enterprise with 300 student composers who are in competition to get their music performed.

Ostrava days is a much smaller event (only 30 resident students), lasts about one week longer and nearly all students have concerts. The amount of students guarantees that relationships are easily established.

The concerts, the lectures, the meetings with Zsolt Nagy and the rehearsals for Louis Andriessen's La Passione felt as a warm bath.

I was even interviewed by Czech international radio after the performance of Blink Blink!

I heard that a lot of Czech composers don't want to come to Ostrava because Ostrava has the worst reputation of all Czech city's. Those people miss an important festival in a town that it is finding it's way up. I really like the town a lot.

I assume Ostrava days will continue to grow, and I hope it will be acknowledged by a lot of media attention and more and more new music lovers finding their way to the festival.

On the other hand I hope the organization will keep the amount of resident students low and maintain the fine selection of lecturers like Christian Wolff, Alvin Lucier, Zsolt Nagy, Petr Kotik and Louis Andriessen.

Petr Kotik gave an interview to Czech Radio in which he explains his thoughts about Ostrava Days.

This trip has been made possible by:
Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds Fonds voor de Amateur Podiumkunsten

Posted by Renske at 19:47 UTC |

August 29, 2005

Ostrava Days Festival

Me at bus stop
Me @ bus stop - Ostrava Days poster
(Photo: Mylène Meester)
The Ostrava Days conclude with a one week festival of concerts in either the Dum Kutury (House of Culture, or in short: Philharmonic Hall) or the well equipped concert hall of the Janacek Conservatory. This last week functions as a pressure cooker. While the first week only has seminars, discussions, private meetings and lectures, the second week adds rehearsals, last week added 2 concerts a day, except for Monday; we then had three concerts to go.

Although my amount of time was limited during these last week I had my camcorder with me during several rehearsals giving me the opportunity to shoot some footage. I created a couple of one minute musical portraits of 10 of my fellow resident students.

I will put them online as soon as I am back in Holland.

BTW, the Ostrava Days 2005 ended on August 27, but I have some more postings due for my blog.

This trip has been made possible by:
Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds Fonds voor de Amateur Podiumkunsten

Posted by Renske at 20:45 UTC |

August 20, 2005

Rehearsal stress

View through camcorderscreen
Fixing technical problems
(Photo: Daniela Dostálková)
Oh boy, after the rehearsal of Blink Blink this morning this Czech lady came up to me and asked if I knew what "blink" means in Czech. I said I didn't and then she said: "It means to vomit". I mean, the piece meant to be whimsical, but I didn't choose this meaning option. I am kind of embarrassed by this.

The rehearsal went okay, by the way, except for one glitch. My laptop, containing the samples necessary for the piece, never failed on me but now it crashed. I could revive it rather quickly though, but it was the cause for some sweating on stage.

Ostravaská Banda played very well, and with some attention from Zsolt Nagy things started to work out as I intended. The people picked up the humor in the music so I am fairly confident for the premiere on Wednesday.

This trip has been made possible by:
Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds Fonds voor de Amateur Podiumkunsten

Posted by Renske at 14:12 UTC |

August 18, 2005

Rehearsals in Ostrava

Rehearsal in Ostrava Philharmonic Hall
Rehearsal in Philharmonic Hall (Photo: RV)
Last week Ostrava Days was all about seminars lectures and individual meetings and by the end of the day drinking beer in one of the local pubs.

This weeks schedule has changed things a little. Now we have all of the above plus rehearsals. This puts a strain on everyone, but once in awhile you see one of the participants disappear for a couple of hours to catch up sleep.

This morning and afternoon I withdraw for a while, just to be on my own for a moment and to do some work for myself. Yesterday I helped out with a rehearsal lead by Petr Kotik. I have prepared some audio stuff for Louis Andriessen's La Passione. This piece is going to be performed during the final concert of the festival at the end of next week.

Another thing that is about to happen is the upcoming rehearsal on Saterday with Zsolt Nagy. We are going to work on Blink Blink with Ostravská Banda for the premiere next Wednesday and I am really looking forward to that.

This trip has been made possible by:
Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds Fonds voor de Amateur Podiumkunsten

Posted by Renske at 15:47 UTC |

August 15, 2005

Being a tourist in Ostrava

Ostrava skyline
Ostrava skyline (Photo: RV)
One of the virtues of Ostrava is that there are hardly any tourists. One of the resulting charms is that the locals hardly speak any language but Czech. This is bound to get you in all kinds of funny misunderstandings, but the local population on average is very willing to help you out.

Before traveling to Ostrava I bought a Czech-Dutch dictionary, but the words simply didn't sink in. It took the man behind the hotel reception-desk 3 full days to learn me my room number in Czech.

Wandering around the city center this week I couldn't agree less with the travel-guides who barely mention this city, because the town center is very nice and a lot of buildings are being reconstructed. But today I discovered the other side (the fume and smoke side, so to speak) of this city.

We went with a group of people to the Coal mining Museum, that is absolutely worth a visit. Someone tipped us off to also climb the hills near the museum for a view of the town. What you see is actually rather shocking; chimneys galore, and they are fuming all of them. It is all heavy industry and it is so much, that in a way it is becoming charming again.

If you are ever in the proximity of this town, just know, it is worth a visit.

This trip has been made possible by:
Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds Fonds voor de Amateur Podiumkunsten

Posted by Renske at 13:14 UTC |

August 12, 2005

Ostrava Days

Ostrava city center
Ostrava City Center (Photo: RV)
For the first time in 11 years I behave like a student. I am one of the resident students of the Ostrava Days 2005 in the Czech Republic.

I had never heard of the Czech town of Ostrava and when I looked it up in a travel-guide it didn't appeal to me at all. The travel guide describes the city as: "If you can't avoid going to Ostrava, the city is as good as any". And although Ostrava isn't exactly Prague, Paris or Amsterdam, it does has its charms.

Visiting the classes is something I have to get used to again. Seminars are often 3 hour stretches without a break. And most of the stuff is rather brainy. This morning we had a lecture by Makis Solomon on Cellular Automata in the music of Yannis Xenakis.

For someone who usually tends to skip this intellectual information it was actually refreshing for a change. Not that I will ever use Cellular Automata in my music, but I just got some ideas because of it that might end up in my compositions.

This trip has been made possible by:
Prins Bernhard Cultuurfonds Fonds voor de Amateur Podiumkunsten

Posted by Renske at 15:04 UTC |