Friday, April 17, 2026

PHILIP GLASS — SATYAGRAHA (PARIS, OPERA GARNIER)


Philip Glass’s Satyagraha, staged at the Opéra de Paris under the inventive direction of Bobbi Jene Smith and Or Schraiber, and conducted by Ingo Metzmacher, unfolds as a mesmerizing convergence of music, movement, and meditation. From the very first notes, Glass’s minimalist score, with its repeating arpeggios and slowly evolving harmonies, establishes a hypnotic rhythm that permeates the auditorium. The production immerses the audience in a contemplative sonic landscape, where every gesture, vocal line, and musical phrase seems charged with quiet spiritual intensity.

The singers deliver performances of extraordinary precision and expressive subtlety. Anthony Roth Costanzo (counter-tenor) captivates with ethereal, floating tones that underscore the opera’s meditative quality, while sopranos Ilanah Lobel-Torres and Olivia Boen offer luminous, sustained passages that echo the score’s hypnotic repetition. The baritones, Davone Tines and Amin Ahangaran, bring a grounding, resonant presence, and the chorus—including Adriana Bignani-Lesca (alto), Deepa Johnny (mezzo-soprano), Nicky Spence (tenor), and Nicolas Cavallier (bass)—provides a collective voice of moral steadfastness, weaving together the soloists’ lines into a tapestry of contemplative intensity. Each vocal entrance and sustained note enhances the work’s ritualistic cadence, inviting the audience into a heightened state of attention and spiritual reflection.


 

Smith and Schraiber’s choreography accentuates this trance-like atmosphere. Dancers move with deliberate, almost ritualistic precision, their physicality mirroring the hypnotic patterns of the music. The interplay of orchestra, singers, and movement creates a rare form of immersive theatre: time seems suspended, and the stage transforms into a space for shared contemplation rather than narrative drive.

The spiritual dimension of Satyagraha is heightened by its oratorio-like qualities. Sung in Sanskrit, the text invokes ancient wisdom, and the singers’ vocal lines, from the ethereal counter-tenor to the sonorous bass, articulate a collective sense of devotion. The production renders Glass’s minimalist score not merely as music, but as an enveloping experience of mindfulness, resilience, and ethical steadfastness.

Ultimately, this staging at the Paris Opera transforms Satyagraha into an almost sacred experience. It is less about dramatic climaxes than about immersion, repetition, and reverent attention. One leaves the theatre not merely entertained but subtly altered, carried along by the serene insistence of persistence and contemplation, delivered as powerfully through the singers’ ethereal and grounded presence as through music and movement.

Monday, April 13, 2026

LAURIE ANDERSON AT THE PHILHARMONIE DE PARIS

On the evening of 12 april, the Philharmonie de Paris welcomed the unique collaboration of avant-garde icon Laurie Anderson and the genre-defying jazz ensemble Sexmob for their performance of Republic of Love. From the very first notes, it was clear that this concert would defy conventional expectations.

Anderson, known for her groundbreaking multimedia performances, brought her signature blend of spoken word, storytelling, and electronic textures to the stage. Her voice, at once intimate and theatrical, guided the audience through a series of narratives that explored love, politics, and human connection in a way that was both poignant and playful.

Sexmob, led by the virtuoso trombonist Steven Bernstein, provided a dynamic and often unpredictable musical foundation. Their improvisational jazz sensibilities interwove seamlessly with Anderson’s compositions, creating a soundscape that could swing from sultry, muted grooves to explosive, kinetic bursts of energy. Each member of the ensemble shone individually while never losing sight of the collective dialogue between music and narrative.

Visually, the performance was minimal yet impactful. Anderson’s occasional use of projections and electronic devices added texture without overwhelming the music, allowing the audience to focus on the interplay between her words and the ensemble’s expressive performance.

Republic of Love felt like an invitation to experience music and storytelling without boundaries. The audience, at times silent in reflection, at times laughing at Anderson’s wry observations, was fully engaged throughout. The evening ended with a sense of both wonder and intimacy, a reminder of the power of live performance to transport, provoke, and connect.

This collaboration was a triumph, demonstrating that when avant-garde artistry meets jazz improvisation, the result is not just a concert, but a shared journey through sound, emotion, and thought.

Sunday, April 5, 2026

THE END OF MUSIC? THIS IS THE REIGN OF GHOST MUSICIANS...

 


 

The music industry has weathered the decline of physical formats and the era of piracy, but the current crisis is unprecedented: the collapse of the “generation layer.” Suno, a generative AI platform, has decoupled music production from human talent. With $300 million in annual recurring revenue and 2 million subscribers, users are generating an astonishing 7 million songs daily—equivalent to Spotify’s entire catalog every two weeks. Producing polished music now requires only a laptop and a modest subscription, and the quality is increasingly impressive.

Monetizing Infinite Content
Suno’s $2.45 billion valuation followed $250 million in venture capital funding. The platform treats music as a pure commodity: anyone with a basic subscription can compile tracks and sell them online. One independent user made $8,500 in six months by simply selling AI-generated music packs. However, as output approaches infinity, the value of each song declines toward zero.

AI Pop Stars Are Here
Record labels are signing AI-generated acts, while streaming services fill playlists with fictional artists. Telisha Jones created Xania Monet, an R&B and gospel act, entirely with Suno, securing a $3 million record deal without appearing on camera. Human artists, such as Kehlani, express alarm at AI displacing real musicians, noting that AI tailors content using extensive data on listener preferences, including replicating human voices. Ghost artists on Spotify and TikTok, like Blow Records, accrue millions of streams and earn substantial royalties from passive listening alone.

Fraud and Criminal Exploitation
The democratization of AI-generated music has also fueled a dark economy. Streaming royalties are vulnerable because platforms distribute revenue based on play counts. Michael Smith, using AI to generate hundreds of thousands of tracks and a bot network, streamed them billions of times across major platforms, defrauding the system of over $8 million. Authorities note that while the content and listeners were fake, the financial losses were very real. This highlights systemic vulnerabilities in the digital music ecosystem.

Electronic Dance Music Under Siege
Generative AI is transforming electronic dance music (EDM) by replacing human ghost producers. EDM’s reliance on structured beats and synthesized sounds makes it especially susceptible. Suno has updated its platform to function as a digital audio workstation, enabling precise beat alignment for club tracks. Digital retailers like Beatport and Bandcamp are imposing bans on fully AI-generated music to protect human artistry, but enforcement remains challenging. As synthetic tracks flood the market, EDM culture is shifting its focus to live performance and community-based value, emphasizing human presence over digital perfection.

Saturday, April 4, 2026

SOUNDSCAPES AND SILENCE (PIERRE SCHAEFFER)

 

 "I live in a world that is always there for me, and this world is as much about sound as it is about touch and sight. I move through an “atmosphere” as I would through a landscape. The deepest silence is still a soundscape like any other, against which the sound of my breath and the beating of my heart stand out with an unusual solemnity. We can glimpse how strange a world suddenly deprived of this dimension would be to us through a technical glitch, when a film’s soundtrack is abruptly interrupted, or in certain dreams. We recall Baudelaire’s dream, and his “moving wonders” over which “hovered—a terrible novelty—everything for the eye, nothing for the ear—a sense of eternity.” As if the ceaseless murmur that permeates even our sleep were merging with the sense of our own duration."

 

 "Je vis dans un monde qui ne cesse pas d’être là pour moi, et ce monde est sonore aussi bien que tactile et visuel. Je me déplace dans une “ambiance” comme dans un paysage. Le silence le plus profond est encore un fond sonore comme un autre, sur lequel se détachent alors, avec une solennité inhabituelle, le bruit de mon souffle et celui de mon coeur. Quelle serait pour nous l’étrangeté d’un monde subitement privé de cette dimension, nous pouvons l’entrevoir à la faveur d’un incident technique, lorsque la bande sonore d’un film est brutalement interrompue, ou dans certains rêves. On se souvient de celui de Baudelaire, et de ses “mouvantes merveilles” sur lesquelles “planait — terrible nouveauté — tout pour l’oeil, rien pour l’oreille — un sentiment d’éternité”. Comme si la rumeur continuelle qui imprègne jusqu’à notre sommeil se confondait avec le sentiment de notre propre durée."

Pierre Schaeffer, Traité des objets musicaux, p. 104-105.





Monday, March 30, 2026

[READING] KANDINSKY - LA MUSIQUE DES COULEURS


 

Published by the Centre Pompidou and the Philharmonie de Paris, Kandinsky: La musique des couleurs (2025) invites readers into the luminous world where painting and music converge. Wassily Kandinsky, a pioneer of abstraction, believed that colors could sing and shapes could resonate like chords. His canvases are not mere visual records—they are symphonies, orchestrated with rhythm, harmony, and emotional intensity.

This volume explores the delicate, sometimes elusive dialogue between sound and sight in Kandinsky’s work. Through essays, archival materials, and vibrant illustrations, it traces his quest to render music visible and to make color feel like a note, a phrase, or a melody. Kandinsky’s experiments with synesthesia—the blending of sensory experiences—challenge the boundaries of perception, asking viewers not only to see but to feel, to “hear” the vibrancy of a crimson triangle or the resonance of a swirling blue circle.

Kandinsky’s interest in music was not merely theoretical. He maintained close relationships with many musicians of his time, including composers associated with the avant-garde in Germany and Russia. He corresponded with Arnold Schoenberg and was inspired by the developments of atonal and expressionist music, seeing in their compositions a parallel to his own quest for abstraction. He also collaborated with performers and ensembles, attending concerts that shaped his understanding of rhythm, dynamics, and the emotional power of sound, which he sought to transpose onto the canvas. These interactions illustrate the lively cross-pollination between visual art and music in the early twentieth century, where ideas moved fluidly across mediums.

The book situates these visual-musical experiments within the intellectual and artistic currents of early twentieth-century modernism, highlighting the spiritual, philosophical, and experimental impulses that guided Kandinsky. It considers the tension at the heart of his practice: the attempt to translate the temporal, intangible art of music into the spatial, material art of painting. In doing so, Kandinsky created works that do not merely illustrate sound but embody it, offering an experience that unfolds over time, much like a composition performed or a melody remembered.

Kandinsky: La musique des couleurs is both an analytical study and a sensory journey. It encourages readers to engage with painting as one engages with music: to listen with the eyes, to feel the rhythm of forms, and to discover the emotional resonance of colors. In this way, the book captures the radical ambition of Kandinsky’s vision—an art that speaks across the senses, bridging the seen and the heard, and inviting a new way of experiencing the world.

Friday, March 20, 2026

[REVIEW] BOULEZ : SUR INCISES

This album Sur incises – Messagesquisse – Anthèmes 2, featuring Jean-Guihen Queyras, Hae-Sun Kang, and the Ensemble intercontemporain, is a remarkable showcase of Pierre Boulez’s visionary approach to contemporary music. Spanning three distinct works, the album highlights Boulez’s unparalleled command of rhythm, timbre, and structural innovation.

Sur incises, a reimagining of Boulez’s earlier Incises, unfolds a dazzling sonic architecture for three pianos, three harps, and three percussionists, combining precision with radiant color. Jean-Guihen Queyras’s cello contributions add a remarkable depth, perfectly blending with the Ensemble intercontemporain’s intricate textures.

Messagesquisse, written in 1976, offers a subtler, introspective side of Boulez, exploring delicate interplay between instruments and nuanced harmonic shifts. The Ensemble’s interpretation brings out every subtle contour of this intimate chamber work.

Finally, Anthèmes 2, composed for violin and electronics, demonstrates Boulez’s late-career fascination with spatialization and live sound transformation. Hae-Sun Kang delivers a virtuoso performance, responding to the electronic textures with astonishing sensitivity and precision.

Together, these works reveal Boulez’s extraordinary ability to merge intellectual rigor with sensuous sonic beauty. This album stands as a testament to his enduring influence on contemporary music, offering listeners a rare and deeply immersive encounter with one of the 20th century’s most innovative composers.

 

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

"SUSPENSION" IS ONLINE

Inspired by chance and floating atoms, Suspension lets sound drift in suspended motion...

    

 

 

Apple Music

Deezer 

Qobuz 

Amazon Music 

JOHN ADAMS' NIXON IN CHINA


John Adams’ Nixon in China stands as a landmark in contemporary opera precisely because of its distinctive musical language, which blends post-minimalist energy with cinematic lyricism. From the opening notes, the score establishes a hypnotic, propulsive rhythm that mirrors the relentless choreography of politics, while still leaving room for introspective nuance.

 

Adams’ orchestration is remarkable in its clarity and color. Strings often provide a shimmering, almost ethereal backdrop, while woodwinds and brass punctuate moments of political ceremony or personal tension. Percussion, from delicate cymbal washes to insistent rhythmic patterns, adds both drama and momentum, creating a sense of inexorability, as though the historical events themselves are unfolding in real time before the audience.


Harmonically, Adams favors slow-moving shifts and layered textures over traditional Western progression. This allows repeated motifs to accumulate emotional weight, making even seemingly simple phrases resonate deeply. The music often feels both monumental and intimate at once: the vastness of global politics is conveyed without sacrificing the human vulnerability of the characters.

Vocal writing is equally sophisticated. The roles demand singers capable of sustained lyrical lines within a rhythmic, almost speech-like framework. Nixon’s arias, for example, combine declamatory passages with moments of unexpected tenderness, while Mao and Pat Nixon are framed by music that underscores both authority and quiet introspection. The interplay between ensemble and orchestra is carefully calibrated; Adams’ choral writing, particularly in the mass ceremonial scenes, transforms the chorus into both a visual and sonic instrument, embodying collective ritual without diminishing individual expression.

One of the most striking achievements of the score is how it captures time and place. The music evokes the grandeur and strangeness of Maoist China through subtle modal inflections and occasional pentatonic gestures, yet it remains unmistakably Adams: American, modern, and psychologically attuned. The combination of repetitive motifs, layered textures, and shifting tonalities creates a sound world that feels both contemporary and timeless—a mirror of the historical and human themes at the opera’s core.

John Adams’ music in Nixon in China is a masterclass in post-minimalist opera. It transforms political history into living drama, using rhythm, texture, and vocal lyricism to illuminate both the monumental and the personal. It is music that lingers long after the final note, compelling the listener to reconsider the interplay between power, history, and human emotion.

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

[READING] MICHAEL NYMAN - EXPERIMENTAL MUSIC. CAGE AND BEYOND

 


Michael Nyman’s Experimental Music: Cage and Beyond is widely recognized as one of the most insightful examinations of post-war avant-garde music, particularly the transformative work of John Cage and his influence on contemporary composition. First published in 1974, the book has since become a cornerstone text for understanding experimental music in the second half of the 20th century.

Nyman’s approach is both scholarly and accessible. He situates Cage’s innovations—such as indeterminacy, prepared piano, and the use of silence—not merely as eccentricities, but as part of a broader philosophical and aesthetic movement that challenged the very definition of music. Nyman extends the discussion to other composers who followed Cage, demonstrating how experimental practices evolved into what he terms “the beyond,” encompassing works that are conceptually radical, structurally unconventional, or aesthetically challenging.

One of the book’s greatest strengths is its historical and theoretical context. Nyman traces the lineage of experimental music from early 20th-century modernism through Cage, Morton Feldman, Earle Brown, and others, highlighting the intellectual currents—Zen philosophy, abstract expressionism, and post-structuralist thought—that informed their work. This contextualization helps readers understand experimental music not as isolated oddities, but as part of a vibrant, ongoing dialogue in the arts.

Nyman’s writing is both rigorous and engaging. He blends analytical precision with anecdotal insights, making complex ideas about sound, time, and structure comprehensible without oversimplifying. The book’s inclusion of musical examples, score excerpts, and illustrations further aids comprehension, making it valuable not only to theorists and scholars but also to composers and performers seeking practical insight into experimental techniques.

Critically, some readers might find Nyman’s perspective somewhat Eurocentric and Cage-focused; while he acknowledges other streams of experimental practice, the emphasis remains heavily on the American avant-garde. Additionally, certain passages assume a baseline familiarity with music theory, which could be challenging for casual readers. Yet, these are minor quibbles in a work that remains remarkably lucid for a text of its scholarly ambition.

In conclusion, Experimental Music: Cage and Beyond is an essential read for anyone interested in 20th-century music, avant-garde composition, or the philosophical underpinnings of sound as art. Nyman not only illuminates Cage’s revolutionary contributions but also maps the ongoing exploration of musical boundaries, making this book both a historical record and a guide to thinking about music in radically new ways.

 

CYCLICAL DREAMS INTERVIEW (1)


 

CYCLICAL DREAMS INTERVIEW (2)

 


CYCLICAL DREAMS INTERVIEW (3)

 


Thursday, March 5, 2026

SUSPENSION


 I’m thrilled to unveil my new album, “Suspension”, a journey into the spaces between sound and silence. This work drifts beyond the familiar edges of ambient music, exploring abstract textures and fleeting atmospheres that linger like echoes in a quiet room. Each track is a suspended moment, a fragment of time where perception stretches and shapes dissolve.


Releasing it on Bandcamp Friday feels especially fitting. It’s a day that celebrates independent music and the bond between listeners and creators. Every listen, every download, every share becomes a thread in a larger tapestry, connecting you directly to the artists who make these sounds possible.


“Suspension” is an invitation—to pause, to wander through sonic landscapes, and to let the unexpected guide you. Your support today ensures that experimental music continues to breathe, grow, and reach ears ready to explore the unknown.


Step in, drift along, and thank you for sharing this suspended space with me.