David Bowie s t a r g a z e Anna Calvi Soap & Skin Laetitia Sadier Dutch premiere

A homage to David Bowie

Tribute to Blackstar is a homage to David Bowie, the legen­dary pop star who died in 2016. Together with singers Anna Calvi, Laetitia Sadier (Stereolab) and Soap&Skin, the musical collective stargaze will perform Bowie’s critically acclaimed final album Blackstar. 
Exciting new arrangements by composers, such as Aart Strootman, Jherek Bischoff, André de Ridder, and Josephine Stephenson, have been specially written to explore the emotional depths of Bowie’s music. The composers work with the adventurous ensemble’s possibilities, resulting in completely new versions of songs like Lazarus, I Can’t Give Everything Away and Blackstar.

INFO

dates : Sat 23 June 2018
starting time : 10 pm
venue : Het Concertgebouw

ticket prices
: standing ticket € 11
: seat stage € 26
: balcony seat € 41
: – day ticket
: standing ticket € 34
: standing ticket CJP/students € 20
: seat stage € 82
: seat balcony € 130

ticket saleswww.hollandfestival.nl

running time : 1 hour, no interval

websites
www.we-are-stargaze.com
www.annacalvi.com
www.soapandskin.com
www.laetitiasadier.bandcamp.com

CONTEXT

introduction : 9.30 pm by Jet Berkhout and Carine Lacor
Bowie Remix : Sun 17 June – 5 pm, Conservatorium van Amsterdam

CREDITS

music : David Bowie

arrangement : Jherek Bischoff, André de Ridder, Josephine Stephenson, Aart Strootman a.o.

concept and musical coordination : André de Ridder

vocals : Anna Calvi, Soap & Skin, Laetitia Sadier

music performed by
stargaze
Jeffrey Bruinsma, violin
Thora Sveinsdóttir. viola
Alistair Sung, cello
Lisa de Boos, bass
Aart Strootman, guitar
Ramon Lormans, percussion
Maaike van der Linde, flute
Marlies van Gangelen, oboe, English horn
Ausiàs Garrigós Morant, clarinet
Romain Bly, trumpet, horn
Morris Kliphuis, cornet, horn

guests : James McVinnie, piano, organ
Jherek Bischoff, e-Bass

production : stargaze

world premiere : Hamburg, 1 May 2018

BACKGROUND INFORMATION

In 2016, after the death of British rock star David Bowie, the German conductor André de Ridder directed and curated Tribute to Blackstar, a performance in memory of Bowie, inspired and partly based on his last album Blackstar, released on 8th January 2016, just two days before Bowie’s death. The concert was performed at the BBC Proms and featured his Amsterdam-Berlin musical collective stargaze and the singers Anna Calvi, Laetitia Sadier and Anja Plaschg (Soap&Skin). Bass guitarist Jherek Bischoff and organist James McVinnie were also part of the line-up for this concert.
For more than forty years David Bowie set his stamp on the world of pop music, as style icon and as musical chameleon, astonishing the world with his ground-breaking artistry. With twenty-five studio albums to his name and record sales of over 140 million albums, he was one of the most successful artists of recent decades. This was certainly one of the reasons why De Ridder and his fellow musicians wanted to pay tribute to him.
André de Ridder was first smitten by Bowie’s work when as a teenager he saw the single Let’s Dance on MTV. Then in 1987 when De Ridder saw Bowie’s Glass Spider Tour performance in front of the Berlin Reichstag, he found this an amazing and unsurpassable rock experience. In Tribute to Blackstar De Ridder wants the harmonic and chamber music qualities of Bowie’s songs to emerge.
Bowie is also a major source of inspiration for singer Anna Calvi. When she was only ten she formed a band, The Rock Spiders, inspired by Bowie’s band The Spiders from Mars. ‘You can really see the music,’ she says. ‘It’s very visual. I’m very much in for trying to create music that you can see as well as hear’.
The first version of Tribute was premiered at the Royal Albert Hall during the 2016 BBC Proms, with an impressive line-up of guest artists including Michel van der Aa, Jherek Bischoff, John Cale, David Lang, Anna Meredith, Gren Saunier and Josephine Stephenson. A new version of this tribute will receive its world premiere on 1st May 2018 in the Hamburg Elbphilharmonie and will then be performed at the Amsterdam Concertgebouw during the Holland Festival. An unusual feature of this tribute is that three female singers interpret Bowie and his songs: Anna Calvi, Laetitia Sadier and Anja Plaschg. The arrangements are by De Ridder himself, but there are also contributions by other composers, including Jherek Bischoff, Josephine Stephenson and Aart Strootman. The rhythms, melodies and emotional depths of Bowie’s music are explored and accentuated, an approach made possible by the adventurous work of the stargaze ensemble. This has created completely new versions of Lazarus, Lady Grinning Soul, I Can’t Give Everything Away and Blackstar.

BIOGRAPHIES

The British singer, songwriter, producer and actor David Bowie (1947-2016) was renowned for his innovative music and stylish presentation. He was interested in music from a young age and found great inspiration in Elvis Presley. Fats Domino and Little Richard were also great favourites of his. Bowie was a multi-faceted and creative individual who grew up in Brixton, London, forming his first band when he was only fifteen. Bowie was more than a musician: he painted, was a dancer, and performed in various kinds of theatrical shows. He was also an art collector, owning pieces by Francis Picabia, Damien Hirst and Henry Moore among others. His work was experimental and pushed at the boundaries of musical genre. In 1969 he released ‘Space Oddity’, a recording which brought him his first real taste of fame. Among his greatest successes was the album The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars, based on one of Bowie’s alter egos. This album made Bowie a superstar and was followed by other releases, including Aladdin Sane (1973), Pin Ups (1973), Diamond Dogs (1974), Young Americans (1975), Station to Station (1976) and Low (1977). In 1980 Bowie made his Broadway debut in The Elephant Man. His most important collaborators were Brian Eno and Tony Visconti. As a stage personality he was ‘larger than life’, his flamboyant costumes and androgynous appearance becoming an iconic element of his image. His last album, Blackstar, was released on 8th January 2016. Bowie passed away just two days later.

The Berlin-Amsterdam orchestral collective s t a r g a z e was founded in 2013 by André de Ridder. The ensemble performs a wide range of projects in contemporary pop, electronic and classical music, and has worked with The Magnetic North, Jherek Bischoff, Shara Nova, Owen Pallett, Villagers, The Dodos and many others. stargaze has appeared at the Holland Festival, the Eight Bridges Festival, Cologne, Into The Great Wide Open, Wonderfeel, the Kilkenny Arts Festival and the Ruhrtriennale, and has had guest appearances at the Amsterdam Muziekgebouw aan ’t IJ, the Barbican Centre, London and the Volksbühne, Berlin. stargaze is ensemble in residence at the Haldern Pop Festival, Germany. In 2013 the ensemble commissioned various artists to create their own version of Terry Riley’s renowned composition In C. In 2015 stargaze performed the piece with Riley himself for the opening of the Amsterdam-based World Minimal Music Festival. stargaze’s repertoire includes string quartets by Sufjan Stevens and Bryce Dessner, David Lang’s Death Speaks and music by Bartók and Ligeti. The ensemble recently performed Mica Levi’s music for the film Under the Skin. They also recently created an adaptation of Bach’s cantata Nach dir, Herr, verlanget mich. In 2015 the musicians released their first EP Deerhoof Chamber Variations with the Transgressive Records label.

Anna Calvi (1980) is an English singer-songwriter and guitarist known for her intense and romantic style which combines influences from alternative rock, sixties pop and the twentieth century classical music of composers such as Steve Reich and Olivier Messiaen. After a long period of uncertainty about her voice, during which she trained herself by singing along for hours to records of Édith Piaf and Nina Simone, she released her debut album Anna Calvi in 2011 at the age of thirty. The album was a Europe-wide success and gained Calvi a nomination for the Mercury Music Prize. The following year she was invited to be on the jury for the same prize, and in 2013 her second album One Breath received a Mercury Music Prize nomination. Calvi’s fans include fashion designer Karl Lagerfeld, former Talking Heads frontman David Byrne, and ambient musician and producer Brian Eno. Eno has described her as ‘the biggest thing since Patti Smith’ and also performed on her debut album. David Byrne made two guest contributions to Calvi’s recent release, the EP Strange Weather, on which Calvi covers five of her favourite songs. Calvi herself has made guest appearances on albums by Noah And The Whale and Marianne Faithfull. In 2015 she was on stage with Eva-Maria Westbroek and the Dutch Metropole Orkest for the first ever Holland Festival Proms. In 2017 she announced that she had written the music for the 2017 opera The Sandman, based on a short story by E.T.A. Hoffmann and directed by Robert Wilson.

Anja Plaschg aka SOAP&SKIN has played piano since she was six. At the age of 14 she began violin studies and developed an interest in electronic music. She attended the Graz Polytechnic for Graphic Design, but dropped out at 16 and moved to Vienna shortly afterwards. There she studied art at the Academy of Fine Arts in the master class of Daniel Richter, but at 18 dropped out again. After only playing a handful of concerts she was already being dubbed a ‘Wunderkind’. In 2008 she played German singer Nico in the play Nico – Sphinx aus Eis by Werner Fritsch in Berlin and Vienna, performing several songs in it, including Janitor of Lunacy, from her first EP. Her first album, called Lovetune for Vacuum, was released in March 2009. It received excellent reviews and placed in the Austrian Top 10. The album also achieved chart positions in Germany, Belgium and France. Music journalists have already claimed to see in her a new star of Austrian alternative pop music. At the Amadeus Austrian Music Awards 2009 she won in the category ‘Alternative/Rock’. In 2010 she won an European Border Breakers Award for her international success. The death of her father in 2009 was a defining element of her second album Narrow, which was released on February 10, 2012. With this release she reached number 1 in the Austrian album charts as well as other international chart positions. In the meantime, she has composed music for the new staging of Romeo & Juliet for Thalia Theater in Hamburg as well as for the Burg Theater in Vienna for the play Antigone, both directed by Jette Steckl. At the same time she composed the film music for the movie Sicilian Ghost Story directed by Fabio Grassadonia and Antonio Piazza, which was screened as opener in Cannes in 2017 as part of the ‘Semaine de la Critique du Festival de Cannes’.

The French singer Laetitia Sadier, who also plays guitar, keyboard and trombone, was born in 1968. She was a founding member of the avant-pop band Stereolab, together with her former partner the guitarist Tim Gane. She was also instrumental in forming Monade, a post-rock band, active until 2009. She has collaborated with various groups on a wide range of projects, contributing to recordings made by The High Llamas and for Blur’s top twenty hit ‘To the End’. She recorded the song ‘Bonnie and Clyde’ with Luna and sang the lead vocals in ‘Haiku One’ on the Sigmatropics album Sixteen Haiku & Other Stories, based on the poetry of the Greek poet Giorgos Seferis. Sadier has also collaborated with the German electronica group Mouse on Mars, writing songs and touring with them. In 2010 Sadier released her first solo album: The Trip. This was followed by Silencio, Something Shines and Find me Finding You. She appeared on the Deerhoof album Mountain Moves in 2017 with the song ‘Come Down Here and Say That’.

Jherek Bischoff is a Los Angeles-based composer, arranger, producer and multi-instrumentalist. He has performed at venues and festivals all over the world, including the Royal Albert Hall, Carnegie Hall and the Radio City Music Hall. His list of collaborations includes work with the Kronos Quartet — for whom he has composed commissioned works — Bang on a Can, David Byrne, Robert Wilson and Neil Gaiman, among others, and his work has also been performed by the Seattle Symphony, the Adelaide Art Orchestra and Stargaze. His critically acclaimed albums include Cistern and Composed, and the co-release Strung Out In Heaven: A Bowie String Quartet Tribute. In August 2016, Bischoff was the artist in residence for Times Square’s Midnight Moment, which included a nightly broadcast of his video for “Cistern” on Times Square’s electronic billboards and culminated in two live performances in the middle of Times Square. Bischoff’s composition and performance credits in film and television include his work on Netflix’s Wet Hot American Summer: First Day of Camp, and his theatre work includes The Sandman, a collaboration with Robert Wilson for the Düsseldorfer Schauspielhaus, Das Fliegende Klassenzimmer, for Theater Basel, and Johnny Breitwieser, for the Schauspielhaus in Vienna.

James McVinnie is a British organist with a boundless passion for music which has led him to collaborations with the world’s best composers and musicians. Many contemporary composers have written music especially for him, including Nico Muhly, Martin Creed, Richard Reed Parry of Arcade Fire, Shara Nova, David Lang and Bryce Dessner. Between 2008 and 2011 McVinnie was Assistant Organist at Westminster Abbey, where he also directed the choir. He has played on many state occasions which were broadcast live on television, including the 2011 Royal Wedding. Prior to his appointment at Westminster Abbey, he held similar positions at St. Paul’s Cathedral, London, St. Alban’s Cathedral and Clare College, Cambridge. In 2014 McVinnie made his debut at the Royal Festival Hall, London with one of the six re-opening recitals on the recently restored 1954 Harrison & Harrison organ. In the summer of 2009 McVinnie made his solo debut at the Salzburg Festival performing with the Freiburg Baroque Orchestra under Ivor Bolton. McVinnie records with the Icelandic label Bedroom Community. His debut release for this label was Cycles, written for him by Nico Muhly. This appeared in 2013. He was a guest performer at the Holland Festival in 2014, playing works by Nico Muhly in two different concerts. In 2017 he performed again at the Holland Festival, in the Festival Proms, in collaboration with Tom Jenkinson aka Squarepusher. In the same year he also performed with the Los Angeles Philharmonic at the Reykjavik Festival, in the Barbican Centre, London and at the Philharmonie de Paris. In 2018 he will return to Glyndebourne in Barrie Kosky’s production of Handel’s Saul.

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