| // Date: April 18, 2010, 20:00h> www.centraltheater-leipzig.de
> www.myspace.com/maxrichtermusic
> www.myspace.com/hauschka// Venue: Central Theater, Bosestr. 1, 04109 Leipzig
 // Tickets: 20.- € / 14.- € (Concessions)
 // Ticket reservation: 0341 - 12 68 168
 
Max Richter trained in composition and piano at Edinburgh  University, at the Royal Academy of Music, and with Luciano Berio in  Florence.
On completing his studies, Max co-founded the iconoclastic classical  ensemble Piano Circus, where he stayed for ten years, commissioning and  performing works by Arvo Pärt, Brian Eno, Philip Glass, Julia Wolfe and  Steve Reich.
In the late 90s he worked with a number of electronic artists,  notably Future Sound of London on their album 'Dead Cities". He  subsequently collaborated with FSOL over a period of two years, also  contributing to the albums "The Isness" and "The Peppermint Tree and  Seeds of Superconsciousness". Max also collaborated with Mercury Prize  winner Roni Size, on "In the Mode".
In June 2002, Max released his debut solo album, "memoryhouse",  recorded with The BBC Philharmonic Orchestra. This was followed in March  2004 by FatCat's release of "The Blue Notebooks", with featured  readings by Tilda Swinton.
In 2005 Max produced Vashti Bunyan's outstanding comeback album  "Lookaftering".
2006 saw the release of "Songs From Before" based on Haruki Murakami  texts read by Robert Wyatt. That same year, Max began performing "from  The Art of Mirrors", an evolving score to previously unseen Super 8mm  films of Derek Jarman.
Max's more recent work continues to stretch the notions of what  Classical music is. 
‘24 Postcards In Full Colour’, released in August  2008, is an experimental work made up of 24 composed ringtones.
Max works widely in film music, installation and the theatre, most  recently on INFRA, made with Wayne MacGregor and Julian Opie for The  Royal Ballet, London. The Ballet was the subject of a BBC 'making of'  documentary.
Max was named 2008 European Composer Of The Year for his score to Ari  Folman's Waltz With Bashir, for which he was also nominated for the  Prix France Musique.
 
 Hauschka is the alias of Dusseldorf?based pianist / composer Volker  Bertelmann, whose work is based upon an exploration of the possibilities  of the 'prepared' piano - a playfully disruptive intervention into the  preconceived idea of the piano as a pure-toned, perfected instrument  waiting for a gifted virtuoso to play on it. Instead, Volker explores  and influences the outcome of his playing by getting right down inside  the instrument - clamping wedges of leather, felt or rubber between the  strings; preparing the hammers with aluminium paper or rough films;  placing crown corks on the strings, weaving guitar strings around the  piano's guts, or pasting them down with gaffa tape. These little  modifications throw up an array of rustling, drumming, shivering,  scraping, resonating sounds which either provide the focus / drive for a  piece or hook the ear into an intriguing, slightly unusual frame. As "Room To Expand" shows, his resulting tracks are composed both  originally and charmingly, forming vivid, unconventional pieces made  through what Volker terms a playful "research-enthusiasm". 
Always assured and adventurous!
 | > April 18, 2010 
 
 
 
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