The album Who We Are is the first studio recording of the collaboration between pianist Leif Ove Andsnes and saxophonist/composer Marius Neset. They are joined on the record by flautist Ingrid Softeland Neset and cellist Louisa Tuck.
The central piece on the album, Who We Are, was commissioned by Leif Ove Andsnes for his Rosendal Chamber Music Festival, where it has been performed in concert twice, most recently in 2022. On the album, a version of “Prague’s Ballet” and the duets “Chaconne”, “Road to Polaris. Part 1″and “Waterfall Jig” are also included.
About Who We Are
The collaboration between Marius Neset and Leif Ove Andsnes began with the piece ‘Prague’s Ballet,’which they performed together during Marius Neset’s quintet concert in Håkonshallen at the Bergen International Festival. Leif Ove Andsnes attended the rest of the concert and says:
– I was extremely impressed by both his originality and the level of his work with his quintet. I thought that he was operating at a fascinating frontier in writing for those of us who don’t improvise, and decided to commission a work from him for the Rosendal Chamber Music Festival. He accepted the commission, and we aimed at having something ready for the Festival in 2020.”
Did you give him free rein?
2020 was the year when Beethoven’s 250th birthday was celebrated, so I said, ‘There are no restrictions, but if you want, you can use something by Beethoven as your point of departure, for instance the second movement of the Seventh Symphony’.”
“I was very pleased that Leif Ove wanted to collaborate more after ‘Prague’s Ballet’,” says Marius. “I had assumed that we would only work together that once, and thought, ‘What an experience it was to play with him; what a fantastic pianist.’ But then he contacted me again later that year. We met up in Bergen, talked about what we might consider doing at Rosendal, and decided on a combination including flute and cello. Actually, it was probably Leif Ove’s suggestion to invite Ingrid and Louisa to participate in what seemed to me to be a really exciting chamber quartet.”
How did you feel about the idea of using Beethoven?
“Positive. The chords in the second movement of the Seventh Symphony became, in a way, the basis for the harmonic concept of Who We Are. I played around these chords quite a bit for a while, but eventually I changed direction completely, and did it in my own way. All the same, I feel that there are some allusions to Beethoven here and there in Who We Are.”
How do you explain the title?
“Considering that the point of departure was in some respects Beethoven, I began to reflect on how we become the musicians we are. For my part, it is probably the result of everything I have listened to, studied, and played through the years. I wrote the work in four parts. The first is called ‘Beginning’, while the second is ‘Legacy’, which can be construed as referring to everything that helps make us the people we are. ‘Legacy’ was the part that I wrote first, just before Norway went into lockdown for Covid in 2020, and the title Who We Are derives from that.”
What effect did the lockdown have on your composing activities?
“It became clear fairly quickly that the 2020 festival would be cancelled, and then a few weeks went by when I didn’t have the energy to do anything at all. Everything seemed so uncertain, but after a while I decided to try to write something despite the situation. That became part three, ‘Uncertainty’, and it expresses the doubt and insecurity that I, and probably everyone else, felt during that period. I find it interesting that what happens around me, both musically and in society in general, has an impact on what I do, either consciously or unconsciously. Although I have a lot of musical ideas and tools that I can use for harmonies, rhythms, and so on, for me music is very much connected to feelings.”
In what way?
“I let my feelings take control when I’m composing. I constantly have to make choices, try out different alternatives, and make decisions based on the feelings that are evoked by what I hear.”
What is the final part called?
“It’s called ‘Evolution’. I wrote it in a somewhat elated mood in the late spring, after I had talked to Leif Ove and found out that it would be performed after all. Admittedly, not as a festival concert, but as a closed concert filmed for TV by NRK and broadcast as part of the show ‘Hovedscenen’. And in 2022 we finally got to perform Who We Are at the Rosendal festival.”
“I think that Who We Are turned out to be incredibly good, and I really love it,” says Leif Ove Andsnes.
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credit: Helge Hansen
album: MARIUS NESET & LEIF OVE ANDSNES – Who We Are
formats: LP / CD / DL / Dolby Atmos
label: SIMAX
release date: 20th September 2024
catalogue no.: PSC1401 / PSLP1401
P & C 2024 SIMAX / GRAPPA MUSIKKFORLAG AS
Tracklist:
01. Who We Are Part 1 — Beginning
02. Who We Are Part 2 — Legacy
03. Who We Are Part 3 — Uncertainty
04. Who We Are Part 4 — Evolution
05. Waterfall Jig
06. Introduction to Prague ́s Ballet
07. Prague ́s Ballet
08. Road to Polaris Part 1
09. Chaconne Part 1
10. Chaconne Part 2
11. Chaconne Part 3
Line up:
Marius Neset: Tenor and soprano saxophone
Leif Ove Andsnes: Piano
Louisa Tuck: Cello
Ingrid Neset: Flute
The music, composed by Neset, was recorded at Oslo’s Rainbow Studio in the course of three days in December, 2023.