Arild Andersen's
Electra was composed for the Spring Theater in Athens for their production. These "18 Scenes," as they are subtitled, represent various cues and serial music for the production of Sophocles' deeply moving classic.
Andersen collaborates with both European and Greek musicians here, among them the great vocalist
Savina Yannatou, guitarist
Eivind Aarset, drummer
Patrice Héral, and trumpeter
Arve Henriksen. The music is heavily arranged, taut, and spacious. Everything is understated yet utterly dramatic. Voices, drum programs -- courtesy of
Andersen and
Nils Petter Molvær -- brass, electric guitars, chorus, and solo voices are given direction by
Andersen's bass and conducting, allowing a sort of musical story to emerge that not only informs but works independently of the dramatic work they accompany. This is spirit music. Its goes under the radar and slowly, purposefully enters the listener's unconscious and body, creating a space for impressions created by the emotions and unconscious. Like
Peter Gabriel's score for The Last Temptation of Christ, the music here suggests more than it demands. It points ambiguously inward and is seductive by its subtlety. It's not "jazz," but then, it isn't anything else either, because it holds so much more inside than mere classification. This is simply a wondrous piece, darkly haunting, yet utterly beautiful for what it leaves out as much what is here. Given what
Andersen has created here, the stage production was blessed. ~ Thom Jurek