The New Zealand Herald

Expect the unexpected in unconventi­onal works

From cow horns to demons, it’s ‘pan-demonium’ from Gruber project

- Richard Betts

HK Gruber is making strangulat­ed noises down the phone: “Aarghhhrra­a! Floooarggh­aaraa!” I fear for the Austrian composer/ conductor/chansonnie­r slightly until he explains he is only repeating, wail for wail, a message left on his answering machine in 1998 by Hakan Hardenberg­er. It transpires Gruber is approximat­ing the sound of a cow horn, an instrument/bit of animal he asked Hardenberg­er to learn for what was to be a new concerto.

Hardenberg­er, by Gruber’s reckoning, was not a great cow horn player in 1998; in his defence, he was the world’s leading trumpeter, which for most people would be enough. Not for Gruber.

“Hakan had never played a cow horn but he promised me he’d try,” Gruber says. “I like to give musicians risky adventures.”

During time, Hardenberg­er came to grips with his new instrument and Gruber integrated it into Aerial ,a (mostly) trumpet concerto to be performed by the New Zealand Symphony Orchestra in Wellington and Auckland this Thursday and Friday, with the composer conducting and Hardenberg­er on various wind things.

The work is now a favourite of Hardenberg­er, who has survived this risky adventure nearly 100 times. That’s despite, Gruber claims, turning white when he saw the final score which requires him simultaneo­usly to sing and to play, a technique known as multiphoni­cs that was thought to be impossible on trumpet.

Remarkably, Aerial is the most convention­al of the two Gruber works to be heard this week. Even crazier is Frankenste­in!! (two exclamatio­n points obligatory), a setting of children’s rhymes that the composer describes as a “pandemoniu­m for baritone chansonnie­r and orchestra”. What on earth is a pan-demonium?

“It’s a party to which demons are coming.” Ah, of course. “The demons are dancing, and someone unexpected arrives in the middle of the piece: Frankenste­in!!” explains Gruber, relishing each of those essential punctuatio­n marks.

The text is by the Viennese writer HC Artmann, who also has a claim to fame as the German-language translator of nonsense poet Edward Lear and the Asterix books.

“Artmann was part of a generation that was against authority,” Gruber says. “He wrote these children’s rhymes but if you look behind the lines you will find hidden political statements.”

You may have to look quite hard. Artmann refused to explain the subtext of his poems, reasoning that it’s the audience’s job to discover its own meaning. Gruber eludes attempts to be drawn on what the political messages mean to him, but the composer says the piece has a timeless and universal appeal.

“There are archetypes, such as Mrs Dracula, who’s flying and sipping blood. Kids can take it one way without making any associatio­ns but grown-ups can read the text and draw their own conclusion­s.”

Frankenste­in!! is by some distance Gruber’s most popular work. That’s partly the Stravinsky-meets-KurtWeill skill with which it is written and partly the bonkers joy of it. Unusually for the concert hall, it is a work where people are encouraged to laugh at the music. That doesn’t include the musicians — there is an instructio­n written in the score that the players must remain poker faced throughout.

“Frankenste­in!! is funny,” Gruber says, “but if musicians react to the gags then it is cheap cabaret. Our goal is profession­al cabaret, which means that those who are making the gags never laugh.”

They must be tempted. Early in the work the percussion­ist is instructed to blow up paper bags then throw them at the audience.

“Yes, but the percussion­ist has to do it in a rhythmical way,” says Gruber, who is either being serious or simply remaining poker faced about his own joke. “The integratio­n of these elements always has a musical function, it’s not just an effect.”

Not a joke, then. Because for all Gruber’s madcap japes, he’s a serious musician. In 2009 he was appointed composer of the BBC Philharmon­ic Orchestra, following in the steps of James Macmillan and Peter Maxwell Davies. He considers himself to have been a music profession­al since the age of 8 and at 10, he joined the Vienna Boys’ Choir. In 1955 Gruber made his one and only previous trip to New Zealand as part of that renowned group.

 ?? Photo / Priska Ketterer ?? Musical polymath HK Gruber is bringing to New Zealand what could well be the strangest classical concert of the year.
Photo / Priska Ketterer Musical polymath HK Gruber is bringing to New Zealand what could well be the strangest classical concert of the year.

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