


Swiss composer Jürg Frey joins with the Prague Quiet Music Collective for three recent works exploring delicate tonal shifts, structural lists, and slow, evolving forms, balancing between consonance and dissonance, the ensemble — featuring clarinets, strings, guitars, double bass, and percussion — interprets Frey's subtly shifting frameworks with a deep sensitivity.
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Jurg Frey-composer
Anna Paulova-bass clarinet
Ian Mikyska-electric guitar, viola da gamba
Milan Karnik Jakes-violin
Luan Goncalves-double bass
Renata Rakova-clarinet
Morten Barrikmo-bass clarinet
Tanja Orning-cello
Anders Forisdal-electric guitar
Hakon Stene-percussion
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Label: Another Timbre
Catalog ID: at232
Squidco Product Code: 35801
Format: CD
Condition: New
Released: 2025
Country: UK
Packaging: Cardboard Gatefold
Recorded at Brevnov, in Prague, Czech Republic, in June, and September, 2024, by Jan Pniak.
"Three recent works written for and played by the excellent Prague Quiet Music Collective, whose first CD release this is. I really don't know how Jurg creates so much brilliant music. He's just finished a long score we commissioned, but more about that at some point in the future, I'm sure. In the meantime enjoy these three typically exquisite pieces."-Another Timbre
Interview with Ian Mikyska of the Prague Quiet Music Collective
First could you tell us about the Prague Quiet Music Collective. When was it set up, and what exactly were its aims?
We started the ensemble in 2021. At that point, I'd been increasingly involved with the world of reductionism / post-minimalism / post-Cage / post-Feldman / Wandelweiser etc. for some time, and I'd also been back in Prague for a few years. I'd been working with Milan Jakeš (violin) and Luan Gonçalves (double bass) for years. They're both musicians who feel at home in jazz, free improvisation, contemporary and experimental music... Most importantly, though, they were also the ones who responded with the most excitement when I gave them some of my favourite albums to listen to: Jürg Frey's Grizzana, Circles and Landscapes, and Collection Gustave Roud (all on Another Timbre), Eva-Maria Houben's music, and the like - I remember Luan was in the hospital for an operation and I sent him Michael Pisaro's album asleep, street, pipes, tones, and the reply I got back a day later made it clear that listening to it at night in a virtually empty hospital was quite an experience. (That version is by Kristine Tjøgersen and Håkon Stene and it's one of my all-time favourite albums, so it's kind of surreal for me that Håkon is playing with us on this new Another Timbre release!) The fourth member to join the ensemble was Anna Paulová, a true clarinet star (think Mozart concerto soloist) but also an extremely open and curious artist who's genuinely just as happy riding with us in a packed car to play four notes in the space of an hour in an empty factory near Opava as she is being the star soloist in Europe's gilded halls.
However, the fifth and absolutely most crucial member of the ensemble is Nikola Štefková, our manager / executive director / fundraiser / PR manager - the heart and soul of the ensemble. I met Nikola when she was a producer at Czech Radio, and after she left, I approached her about producing a sixth-tone harmonium project that was only a vague plan at the time. She ended up securing such amazing funding that I decided to push my luck and suggest that we also use this money to start an ensemble. I remember how nervous I was before that meeting, because it involved turning an 18-month project into a permanent venture. It turned out that this was (and remains) Nikola's favourite music, with her favourite composer being Eva-Maria Houben, so I really needn't have worried.
Since then, the goal has remained the same: to present this music, which rarely gets enough airtime, to commission new pieces by composers working in this style, as well as occasional commissions to composers who don't, as a kind of open invitation to try working in this direction. We've also tried to present our music in curated programmes with an emphasis on the concert situation, frequently incorporating lighting, stage design, collaborations with other artists, and so on. Every year we present three programmes that we produce ourselves (one of them being the Prague Quiet Music Festival, the others have included exhibitions, spoken word and music concerts, outdoor concerts, staged concerts) as well as performing at other events (mostly in the Czech Republic and Slovakia, though we're also doing some shows in Poland and Scandinavia in 2025).
How did PQMC come to commission pieces from Jürg, and how have you found working with him?
I think the fact that our group has such a clear and outspoken focus on this kind of repertoire, rather than it being one of the kinds of music we play, is one of the reasons we've been so well received in the community. On the very first batch of commissions we did in 2021, we had Eva-Maria Houben, James Weeks, Linda Catlin Smith and Fredrik Rasten. Since then, we've been able to commission composers including Klaus Lang, Jack Langdon, Sylvia Lim, Matej Sloboda, Ferdinand Schwarz and many others.
We knew we wanted to work with Jürg, of course. We got in touch more or less as soon as it made sense, but Jürg was already busy with commissions at the time, so our first collaboration - Longing Landscape - had to wait until 2023. I guess Jürg was happy with how things went when he came to Prague for our festival in 2023, because he then went on to write us another two pieces, one of them for a larger ensemble of eight people. These are the three pieces on this album.
Rehearsing with Jürg is something really special. In rehearsal, composers can frustrate musicians by either having an idea that's too clear or not clear enough. Jürg has a way of doing neither: of not really talking that much about how we're playing the piece, but rather of what the piece is about; what he imagined the piece could do and be... All this happens in quite abstract terms, and yet at the end, you feel like you've understood something and your being inside the piece starts to make more sense. That being said, when Jürg was specific about how he wanted us to do something, it was often not what you'd expect - I remember a lot of phrases like "faster and louder", "swinging, like jazz", "more in tempo, with a clear pulse", and so on.
That last part also points to something else: the fact that Jürg is neither writing the music he used to write nor writing the music that anyone expects of him. Jürg also performed a solo set at that year's festival, which featured a lot of really radical pieces from the 1990s. Then there's the more "Romantic" side (heard on the albums I mentioned in my previous response) and the circular music pieces, but the compositions he's been writing in the last few years (including Longing Landscape and the other ones on this album) work very differently on a formal level, particularly concerning memory, time, and phrases.
That's very interesting. Could you say more about how you see this new phase in Jürg's work, and a little about each of the pieces on the album?
I was worried you'd ask me that - now I've written myself into a corner!
One thing to consider is the selection of pitches, which seem to live in a strange borderland between consonance and dissonance - as soon as you feel you've settled in to a familiar tonal landscape, there are new notes shifting you elsewhere. And it really feels like there's motion, too, not just an extended modal palette - it's like tonal music that doesn't quite go anywhere.
I'm mostly talking about the middle section of Longing Landscape. It starts around 8 minutes into the piece and is by far the longest, running all the way to the 25-minute mark. It's based on a slow 13-bar loop. First, the guitar plays its 13 bars of material. Then, the violin joins (with different material), then the bass clarinet and double bass (likewise). Then the double bass switches to a different 13-bar phrase, then the bass clarinet, then the violin, and finally the guitar. The loop is too long and too complex to really be perceived consciously (unless you've been primed by reading this paragraph before you listen, I suppose), but it certainly has a perceptual effect; a slow, gradual realisation. It's similar to what happens with musical memory in some of the long Feldman pieces like Piano and String Quartet, but even more stretched out and with a lot more tonal variety, so you feel this palpable gap between your sensuous perception of the music, which mostly goes by very slowly, and the intellectual or conscious appreciation of it that begins emerging gradually. In Feldman, these two elements seem a lot more unified; here, there's a pleasant tension.
Parts A and C of Longing Landscape, which begin and conclude the piece, work on the principle of the "list": each instrument is presented with a set of vertically ordered materials that they can play at any time, but they must be played in order, in tempo, and without repetitions. As a player, you are simply asked to listen to the situation and place the sounds in time (you also have a choice of tempo and, therefore, duration). There is also a very slow melody running along this "list" material, a kind of cantus firmus, which is played by all 4 instruments in turn in section A and by a guitar with e-bow in section C. The interpretation of the list in these sections is also a lot to do with pacing; being aware of where everyone else is in their lists and melodies.
All of the above is also true of The sound never has walls - Longing Landscape was the first of these pieces, and The sound never has walls feels like a distillation of this "list" idea in a sense, as well as adding new possibilities of interaction, allowing the musicians to operate in between the list and any additions to the melody (played by the guitar) as they see fit.
"Fleetingness" was written specifically with the combined forces of PQMC and asamisimasa in mind, and it's a kind of large-scale version of the "list" idea - while the lists in the previous two pieces generally consists of one or two notes, here, it is the page that serves as the basic unit of music. The score is composed of seven pages, each of which can be played by any instrument and repeated (except page IV). What results is a larger and freer playing field, though still emphasising one's responsibility to the others and containing something of the lopsided tonality that I talked about in Longing Landscape.

Artist Biographies
• Show Bio for Jurg Frey "Jürg Frey was born in 1953 in Aarau, Switzerland. Following his musical education at the Concervatoire de Musique de Genève, he turned to a career as a clarinetist, but his activities as composer soon came to the foreground. Frey developed his own language as a composer and sound artist with the creation of wide, quiet sound spaces. His work is marked by an elementary non-extravagence of sound, a sensibilty for the qualities of the material, and precision of compositional approach. His compositions sometimes bypass instrumentation and duration altogether and touch on aspects of sound art. He has worked with compositional series, as well as with language and text. Some of these activities appear in small editions or as artist's books as individual items and small editions (Edition Howeg, Zurich; weiss kunstbewegung, Berlin; complice, Berlin). His music and recordings are published by Edition Wandelweiser. Frey has been invited to workshops as visiting composer and for composer portraits at the Universität der Künste Berlin, the Universität Dortmund and several times at Northwestern University and CalArts. Some of the other places his work has developed are the concerts at the Kunstraum Düsseldorf, the Wandelweiser-in-Residence-Veranstaltungen in Vienna, the Ny music concerts in Boras (Sweden), the cooperation with Cologne pianist John McAlpine, the Bozzini Quartet (Montréal), QO-2 (Bruxelles), Die Maulwerker, incidental music, as well as the regular stays in Berlin (where during the last years many of his compositions were premiered). Frey is a member of the Wandelweiser Komponisten Ensemble which has presented concerts for more than 15 years in Europe, North America and Japan. Frey also organizes the concert series moments musicaux aarau as a forum for contemporary music." ^ Hide Bio for Jurg Frey • Show Bio for Anna Paulova "Anna Paulová is a prominent Czech clarinetist. She began playing the clarinet at age eleven under Karel Mezera, continued her studies at the Prague Conservatory with professors Milan Polák and Ludmila Peterková, and since October 2013 has been studying at the Academy of Performing Arts in Prague in the clarinet class of professors Jiří Hlaváč and Vlastimil Mareš. Paulová has earned several accolades, including second prize at the Prague Spring International Music Competition in 2015 and first prize at the Bohuslav Martinů Foundation Interpretation Competition in 2016. In January 2019, she won a special award-the Golden Medal (High Distinction) of the Vienna International Music Competition. She has collaborated with esteemed musicians such as pianist Ivo Kahánek and violinist Jan Fišer." ^ Hide Bio for Anna Paulova • Show Bio for Ian Mikyska "Ian Mikyska is a Czechoslovak composer, improviser, and multi-instrumentalist based in Prague. His work spans various media, including installations, texts, theatre, walks, radio, and video. Mikyska often explores connections between perception and concept, delving into themes of impermanence, ecological topics, meditative practices, and everyday experiences. He co-founded Stratocluster, an ensemble for multimedia improvisation, and the Prague Quiet Music Collective. Additionally, Mikyska is active as a translator of prose, poetry, journalism, and academic texts from Czech to English, focusing on music, art, philosophy, and related fields." ^ Hide Bio for Ian Mikyska • Show Bio for Morten Barrikmo "Morten Barrikmo is a Norwegian clarinetist specializing in contemporary music. He is known for his versatility and has performed with various ensembles and orchestras, contributing to numerous contemporary music projects." ^ Hide Bio for Morten Barrikmo • Show Bio for Tanja Orning "Tanja Orning is a cellist, music researcher and composer from Oslo. Orning specializes in working with and performing new and experimental music, including both notated and improvised music. Orning studied at the Norwegian Academy of Music (NAM), in London with William Pleeth and in the USA with Janos Starker as a Fulbright Fellow (MA in Performance at Indiana University). Orning held the position of co-principal cellist in the Stavanger Symphony Orchestra (1994-2000) while teaching at the conservatory. She left her orchestral job in 2000 to realize her own musical and interdisciplinary projects as a performer, improviser and composer, alone and in various ensembles: Cellotronics (solo), asamisimasa (Norwegian Grammy 2012 and 2015), Kyberia duo, Ametri string quartet, Oslo Sinfonietta, Christian Wallumrød Ensemble, Boa trio, Dr. Ox duo, Wunderkammer, Sound of Movement with dancer Ellen Johannesen and the Performance Group Mobile Homes. She regularly plays with the Lemur ensemble, Oslo Sinfonietta and Ensemble Ernst. As an improviser, she has been part of the improv community in Norway in collaboration with e.g. Lemur, Christian Wallumrød, Trygve Seim, Michael Duck, Lene Grenager, Ståle Storløkken, Eivind Lønning, Kjetil Gutvik, Natasha Barrett, Per Zanussi, Helga Myhr. A common thread in Orning's musical world has been a close collaboration with composers to realize new works. Orning has commissioned and premiered about 150 new works by composers in Norway and abroad, including Simon Steen-Andersen, Natasha Barrett, Øyvind Torvund, Trond Reinholdtsen, Maja Ratkje, Annesley Black, Kristine Tjøgersen, Simon Løffler and Mathias Spahlinger. She has performed at festivals such as Darmstadt, Donaueschingen, Huddersfield, Ultima, Ultraschall, Stavanger International Chamber Music Festival, Olavsfestdagene, Trondheim kammermusikkfest, Molde jazzfestival, Kongsberg jazzfestival, Vossajazz, Novara Jazz Festival, Shared Sounds (Berlin) and Taktlos (Zürich). Orning has composed solo and chamber music and for the symphony, and is i.a. performed at the Ultima Festival, Dark Music Days (Reykjavik) and around Norway. Orning has participated in a number of recordings of contemporary music, and in 2005 she released her solo album Cellotronics (Albedo). In 2000, she received a 2-year Government Grant for Young Artists. She is the jury leader for the Arne Nordheim Composer Award established by the Ministry of Culture. She has several years of experience as a committee member and leader in the Norwegian Cultural Council. Orning has a doctorate in the field of performance practice from NAM (2014). The dissertation "The Polyphonic Performer", examines how the role of contemporary musicians is expressed and understood in different contexts, and how this is expressed in experiences with performers. This was investigated through practising and performing cello solo works by Helmut Lachenmann, Morton Feldman, Klaus K. Hübler and Simon Steen-Andersen. She worked as a postdoc at the Norwegian Academy of Music 2015-20 in a project "Towards a new performing role in the 21st century. A study of the portfolio musician's qualification requirements in a globalized work and music life." Orning worked as an associate professor and researcher in modern music history, performance practice, work interpretation and aesthetics at the University of Oslo from 2014-2015. She was also employed as an associate professor at the Barratt-Due Music Institute 2014-2015. At the Norwegian Academy of Music, she teaches contemporary music, development of artistic projects, and she supervises Master students and Artistic research fellows. Orning is also appointed Professor of Classical Music Improvisation at the University of Agder." ^ Hide Bio for Tanja Orning • Show Bio for Anders Forisdal Anders Førisdal is a Norwegian guitarist specializing in contemporary music. He has premiered numerous works and is recognized for his innovative approach to the guitar. ^ Hide Bio for Anders Forisdal • Show Bio for Hakon Stene Håkon Stene is a Norwegian percussionist acclaimed for his performances in contemporary music. He has collaborated with various composers and ensembles, contributing significantly to the contemporary percussion repertoire. ^ Hide Bio for Hakon Stene
2/28/2025
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3/4/2025
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2/28/2025
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Track Listing:
1. The Sound Never Has Walls 19:42
2. Fleetingness 12:33
3. Longing Landscape 35:57

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