BørneKlang: Klanglabyrint - Klang Festival Copenhagen Experimental Music Menu

BørneKlang: Klanglabyrint

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Programme

Klanglabyrint (Klang-labyrinth or, literally, tone-labyrinth) is an interactive sound installation designed for- and in collaboration with children and young people. A space for exploration and co-creation of sounds and music, the aim of the labyrinth is to inspire creativity and make experimental music accessible to children and young people. As a participant in the labyrinth, you will be guided by professional musicians through an artistic process centered around the creation of new soundscapes by way of everyday objects. The labyrinth is a collaboration between composer Rosali Grankull and musicians from the musical collective Damkapellet.

As a composer, Rosali Grankull is particularly interested in the interplay between qualities of sound, tactile sensations of physical materials, and corporeal experiences of spatial movement. Likewise, Damkapellet have a special focus on the creation of open spaces wherein creativity and curiosity can flourish. As such, they are the ideal team for creating a room where the sometimes abstract and inaccessible world of experimental music is made decidedly concrete and can be explored on a sensorial, bodily level. The musicians guiding the participants through the labyrinth are: Julija Morgan Kiibus, Rosali Grankull, Tove Bagge, and Kirstine Lindemann. 

 

[Klanglabyrint was created in collaboration with from the Swedish Arts Council, Folkets Park in Malmö, and the Helge Ax:son Johnson Foundation. The attached photos were taken by Johannes Bergil.]

Venue

KU.BE

Dirch Passers Allé 4 2000 Frederiksberg

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Artists

Rosali Grankull (1984)

Rosali Grankull is a composer, musician, and sound artist based in Gothenburg, working with acoustic instruments, objects, literature, microphones, and people.

Damkapellet

Musician- and composer collective with a mission to advance diversity on the Danish music scene. The collective performs music by women, non-binary, and transgender people, and experiments with collective co-creation of music.