Kaija Saariaho: Composing intricate soundworlds
Kaija Saariaho, one of the world's most celebrated composers, turns her innovative mind to the trumpet as she sets out to create a new concerto.
Since the 1980s, composer Kaija Saariaho has been lauded for her explorations of sound and music, from tape and live electronics mixed with layered orchestral textures, to opera, song cycles and smaller scale pieces. In the 麻豆社 Music Magazine鈥檚 top 20 composers of all time, Kaija Saariaho is the only one alive today; as she moves into her eighth decade, there鈥檚 no sign that she wants to stop creating the magical sounds she has become known for. Kaija was born in Helsinki in Finland, but since 1982 has spent most of her time living and working in Paris. Keval Shah meets Kaija in Helsinki just as her most recent opera Innocence is having its Finnish premiere - part of her 70th birthday celebrations. But there鈥檚 not much time for Kaija to rest after the conclusion of this huge, 10-year project. A text message prompts her to start thinking about a new work and a new challenge: a trumpet concerto. We visit jazz trumpeter Verneri Pohjola on a grey Helsinki day (with plenty of candles) to find out how Kaija鈥檚 composition process develops through collaboration with the musicians who will be playing or singing her music. And we hear some unexpected trumpet techniques that may find their way into the new concerto - from flap tonguing to what Verneri calls 鈥榳hite noise'.
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