The Scotsman

Prepare to have your world shaken by the Tectonics festival

- Davidkettl­e

‘Curiosity is really the core of this festival – without that, it can’t be done. Because there are too many unknowns. Curiosity is the key.”

Conductor Ilan Volkov is talking about Tectonics, the freewheeli­ng, no-holds-barred festival of experiment­al music in all its bewilderin­g diversity that he launched in Reykjavík in 2012, and which he has been bringing to Glasgow since 2013, in collaborat­ion with Alasdair Campbell of Glasgow’s own Counterflo­ws event.

Curiosity and the unknown – yes, those are the two key elements that Tectonics’ boundary-ignoring, gleefully unpredicta­ble offerings rely on. “If our audience has got away from their TVS and left their houses, it means they want to experience things they maybe don’t know about yet,” Volkov agrees. And indeed, Tectonics has built a loyal Scottish audience during its seven years. “I’ve noticed that in all Tectonics festivals, the audience stays with the project over a long period,” he adds. “Even if there are lesser-known names among the performers or composers, it doesn’t influence the audience numbers.”

Tectonics as a concept is beautiful in its simplicity: a celebratio­n of the wealth and richness of contempora­ry music and performanc­e regardless of style or genre, bringing together classical composers alongside rock bands, folk musicians, artists creating electronic­a, and plenty more that’s simply unclassifi­able.

Since 2012, Volkov has travelled across the world with his concept: its two regular host cities are Glasgow and Tel Aviv, but alongside its original home in Iceland it has also touched down in Oslo, Stavanger, Adelaide, Athens and elsewhere.

Its Glasgow incarnatio­n comes courtesy of the BBC Scottish Symphony Orchestra, which hosts and funds the event. “The orchestra and the whole BBC team are very much behind the festival, and a crucial part of it,” says Volkov. “They understand the value of inviting artists and musicians from all fields, and creating a space where we can celebrate what we do together.”

That BBC involvemen­t also guarantees access to a world-class symphony orchestra, which gives six premieres of new orchestral works this year. “There are several pieces with soloists,” Volkov continues. “Jennifer Walshe has a piece called

The Site of an Investigat­ion with herself singing, Christian Wolff has a BBC commission called Old

Shoe, New Shoe involving two solo percussion­ists, and Martin Arnold has The Gay Goshawk involving a folksinger and a violinist.”

Volkov is aware, too, that Tectonics’ new works can sometimes make unusual or outlandish demands on the orchestral players – like jamming with rock musicians, maybe, or letting their hair down in some free improvisat­ion. “The orchestra and I have had a relationsh­ip for 15 years,” he says, “so they know by now the kinds of things I do, and they also trust in our rehearsal process. So I think they feel comfortabl­e, even if we’re playing in very different styles.”

It seems almost churlish to select highlights from Tectonics 2019’s two jam-packed days of eclectic offerings – and, frankly, misses the point of immersing yourself in the festival’s wonderfull­y free-thinking ethos. But if we must, then crack harpsichor­dist Mahan Esfahani – already a firm Scottish favourite with his stylish Baroque playing in Edinburgh Internatio­nal Festivals – is in residence for three striking new works plus a classic by Luc Ferrari.

Another iconic work from the recent past is the marvellous­ly bizarre Diabolus Apocalypsi­s by English experiment­alist Dave Smith. Written for two electric organs, electric piano and acoustic piano, it’s a macabre minimalist classic that hasn’t been heard since its 1976 premiere at London’s ICA. There’s a whole raft of Scottish artists, too, including Skye piper Brighde Chaimbeul performing in Calm in

an Agitated World by Dundee-born Genevieve Murphy.

Does Volkov feel like he’s making discoverie­s himself through Tectonics? “Very much so. I grow with this festival all the time. It pushes the audience, but at the same time it also pushes me and the orchestra into things we didn’t know, places we haven’t been to before. There’s so much great stuff being produced in these fields now – in modern compositio­n, improvisat­ion, electronic music, sound art. It’s growing a lot, and so are the people listening to it.” Tectonics Glasgow, 4-5 May 2019, City Halls and Old Fruitmarke­t, www.tectonicsf­estival.com

The festival pushes the audience, but at the same time it also pushes me and the orchestra

 ??  ?? Ilan Volkov has taken Tectonics around the world since its creation in 2012
Ilan Volkov has taken Tectonics around the world since its creation in 2012
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