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Marko Ciciliani

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Marko Ciciliani (born February 23, 1970) is a composer, audiovisual artist and performer.

Life

Marko Ciciliani was born in 1970 in Zagreb, Croatia. In 1971 his parents emigrated to Germany where he predominantly grew up in Karlsruhe.[1]

Starting in 1990 he studied composition and music-theory with Ulrich Leyendecker at the Hochschule für Musik und Theater Hamburg. From 1993 to 1994 he spent a year in New York City, studying at the Manhattan School of Music with Nils Vigeland. After returning to Hamburg he continued his studies until his graduation with Manfred Stahnke. In 1996 he emigrated to Amsterdam, Netherlands, where he studied until 1998 as a post-graduate student at the Royal Conservatory of The Hague. His principal teachers during that time were Clarence Barlow and Louis Andriessen.[2]

Ciciliani remained in Amsterdam until 2010, living primarily as a free-lance composer. Between 1997 and 2004 he also worked as copyist for the Dutch publisher Donemus. Since the early 2000 he was also increasingly active as a sound-engineer and performer of electronic music. He performed with many leading ensembles and orchestras, as the Royal Concertgebouw Orchestra, Melbourne Symphony Orchestra or the SWR Orchestra, as well as MusikFabrik and ASKO.

In 2007 Ciciliani started a PhD at the Brunel University London under supervision of Bob Gilmore and Johannes Birringer. He completed his doctorate studies in 2010 with a thesis on interrelationships between visual media and music, specifically in the context of using light designs as part of compositions.[3] In 2010 he moved to Vienna/Austria, taking up a teaching position at the University of Music and Performing Arts, Vienna. In 2011 he became guest-professor at the Institute of Electronic Music and Acoustics (IEM) of the University of Music and Performing Arts Graz. In October 2014 he was appointed full professor for computer music composition and sound design at the IEM.[4]

Work

Open Form Period

Already in his early works Ciciliani showed a fascination for works of open forms which formed the center of his works from 1999.[5] This interest was partly fed by his fascination for the music of John Cage which was one of the reasons why he went to study in New York City with Nils Vigeland - a formed close collaborator of Cage. In order to be able to extend open form and algorithmic principles to the realm of electronic sound synthesis, he started using SuperCollider in 2001. His open form period culminated with the live-installation "Map of Marble" which was premiered at the Zagreb Biennale in 2005 [6] Also in 2005 he released the CD "Voor het Hooren Geboren" containing open form chamber music played by ensemble Intégrales.

Improvisation and No-input Mixer

From 2000 Ciciliani started experimenting with electronic improvisation. Between 2001 and 2005 he co-organized the concert series Kraakgeluiden in Amsterdam with Anne LaBerge.[7][8] This weekly series featured electronic improvised music and became an important center for the experimental music scene in the Netherlands.

As an instrument for improvisation Ciciliani used a no-input mixer, a mixing board in which internal feedbacks are generated by connecting the outputs to the inputs.[9][10] In 2008 he released the CD "81 matters in elemental order" which was entirely produced and composed with the no-input mixer. Shortly after this release he stopped performing with the no-input mixer.

Audiovisual Works

Ciciliani started to work with lighting as an important part of his compositions in 2003.[11] This became one of his main areas of interest which also led to his dissertation at Brunel University in 2010. In 2005 he founded his own ensemble “Bakin Zub”, which focusses on multimedia works which combine instrumental parts, live-electronics and visuals.

More recently, Ciciliani has primarily worked with live-video in his audiovisual works,[12] as for example in his solo compositions "Via" or "Formula minus One". After having realized two works using laser in 2007 and 2009, he used this medium again in his recent work "Steina" for violin, live-electronics, live-video and laser.

In 2015 Ciciliani produced a book titled "Pop Wall Alphabet". It is a transmedia work combining 4.5 hours of music (included as a DVD with the book), roughly 300 pages of digitally generated texts and 27 images. The work is based on condensations of material from publications of pop music, be it as superimpositions of songs, rearranged texts or combined artworks as images. The music was described a "monlythic verticalisation of sound".[13] The focus of this work is a study of perception and acoustic pareidolias.

Performances and Residencies

Ciciliani's music has been performed in more than 35 countries in Europe, Asia, Oceania and the Americas. It has been programmed by festivals and concert series of alternative experimental music like Experimental Intermedia/NYC, Club Transmediale/Berlin, SuperDeluxe/Tokyo, Findars/Kuala Lumpur, Ibrasotope/São Paulo or the NowNow Series/Sydney; just as much as by festivals for post-avantgarde music as Wien Modern, Huddersfield Contemporary Music Festival, Maerzmusik, Condit and many more.[12]

His music has been performed by high ranking ensembles like ICTUS ensemble, ensemble Intégrales, ASKO, Zeitkratzer, piano possible and many more. In his recent work, however, Ciciliani has focused on works for smaller settings, solo works and works for live-electronics alone. He also regularly performs with a repertoire of audiovisual solo compositions.[14]

In 2009 Marko Ciciliani was recipient of the prestigious Villa Aurora Stipend, a three-month artists residency in Los Angeles. Also in 2009 he was composer-in-residence of the 14th Composers Forum in Mittersill/Austria. He received numerous project-residencies at STEIM, ESS, ICST and ZKM. In 2014 Ciciliani has taught at the Darmstadt International Summer Courses for New Music where he also presented a portrait concert.[12] This invitation took place as part of the IEM's studio residency at the Summer Courses. In 2016 he has also been invited individually as teacher to the Darmstadt International Summer Courses for New Music, where he offered individual lessons and a.o. a workshop on audiovisual composition, titled "Music in the Expanded Field".[15] Two of the winning works (Kranichstein Prize for Celeste Oram and Kranichstein Stipend for Reiko Yamada) went to works that were part of this course.[16]

Research

Ciciliani has various publications in the field of performance studies and audiovisuality. He has developed a method for the analysis of performance practices in electronic music.[17][18] Here performance is understood as an audiovisual event which becomes part of the presented work and therefore gains aesthetic relevance. With this method the analysis of a particular performance practice results in a graph on a parametric field, which facilitates the comparison of different performance practices with each other.

To regard performance as an audiovisual event is in line with Ciciliani's longer lasting research in the field of audiovisuality which has resulted in his dissertation and other publications.[19][20]

In 2015, Ciciliani has been granted a PEEK project by the Austrian Science Fund with the title "GAPPP – Gamified Audiovisual Performance and Performance Practice" (AR 364). It is an artistic research project with a run-time of three years, which will investigate elements from computer games in the context of audiovisual composition and performance.[21]

Selected works

  • miris misli for large orchestra 1994  ~ 20'
  • Starring: Peater Mallet for three percussionists 1994/95  ~ 40'
  • k: die S.kalierung einer Bewegung - Tek...kno  for singer/narrator and live-electronics 1995  ~ 11’
  • Bosch tapped the gas pedal and the caprice moved forward... for two performers and live-electronics (collaboration with Jeff Kowalkowski)  1996-2000  ~70’
  • Tullius Rooms for piano, live-electronics and soundscapes 1999/2000 ~80'
  • Fabric Reverie for chamber orchestra, CD and a reciting conductor 2000 ~15'
  • Homerun for alto and 8 instruments (rec., cl., trb., pno., perc., el.-guit., vln., db.), 5 movements 2001  20'
  • Matrosen, Leprakranke, Opiumraucher, Spione. Mit so 'ner Familiengeschichte, wie haben wir da was anderes werden können als Schlampen? for viola 2001    20'
  • Maske for no-input mixer 2002  ~30’
  • KörperKlang for viola, alto-sax, piano and live-electronics 2003  ~13’
  • Just because you're not paranoid doesn't mean that they're not after you for solo-violin, large ensemble, live-electronics and light 2003  ~15’
  • Sequenced Seizure for string quartet ~30'  2004
  • Map of Marble for voice, percussion, live-electronics and computer generated lighting ~80'   2004/2005
  • My Ultadeep I for e-guitar, e-bass, vln/vla, sopranino sax, didjeridu, perc., electronics and light ~65'  2006/2007
  • Alias for e-violin, electronics, light and laser ~20'  2007
  • Jeanne of the Dark for electric guitar/bass, electric vln., perc., live-electronics, video and lighting ~60’    2008
  • Dromomania for two pianos, live-electronics, soundtracks and lighting ~40’  2009
  • Black Horizon for two table-top guitars and four players ~21’  2009
  • All of Yesterday’s Parties for voice, electric guitar and live-electronics  ~12’  2010
  • Pop Wall Alphabet for soundtracks  ~4 hours and 30 minutes  2011–14
  • Heterotopolis for violin, baritone guitar/6-string fretless bass, modular synthesizer, digital synthesis, live-electronics, lighting and laser (collaboration with visual artist Marcel Bühler)  ~55’  2011/12
  • Time Machine for sensor-equipped bass-clarinet (SABRe), live-electronics, live-video and lighting 16'  2012/13
  • LipsEarsAssNoseBoobs (Gloomy Sunday) for electric violin, percussion, keyboards, live-electronics and video ~14’  2014
  • Formula minus One for electric violin, live-electronics and live video ~10' 2014
  • Via for live-electronics and live-video ~14’ 2015
  • Steina for violin, live-electronics and live-generated video and laser design ~28’ 2015
  • Audiodromo for four percussionists, live-electronics and live-video ~10’ 2016

CD, DVD and book releases

Full Releases

  • Bosch tapped the gas pedal and the Caprice moved forward… (62:28), 2001, collaboration with Jeff Kowalkowski, released by NoHarmDone/NYC
  • Tullius Rooms for piano, electronics and soundscapes (78:27), 2003, piano: Josh Dillon, electronics and inside piano: Marko Ciciliani, released by Unsounds/Amsterdam in coproduction with RadioBremen
  • Voor het hooren geboren (71:24), 2006, five chamber-musical works performed by ensemble Intégrales, released by Coviello Classics/Darmstadt
  • 81 Matters in elemental Order (58:46), 2008, for no-input mixer, released by Evil Rabbit Records/Amsterdam
  • Jeanne of the Dark (49:21), 2011, for electric violin, electric guitar, electric bass, keyboards, electronics and percussion, released by Ahornfelder/Hamburg
  • Pop Wall Alphabet (approx. 270'), 2015, a book containing a DVD, 311 pages with 27 color images, private print for promotion only

Compilations

  • Kraakgeluiden/Document 1 (2003) released by Unsounds/Amsterdam, contains improvisation with Yannis Kyriakides, Lucio Capece and Yoshio Machida (9:57)
  • Music for Baby (2004) released by Amorfon/Tokyo, contains Pavillion for string ensemble (5:12)
  • Young European Generation (2005) released by Zeitklang/Berlin, contains KörperKlang for viola, alto sax, piano and live electronics  (12:13) ensemble Intégrales
  • Jorge Isaac Solo (2007)released by Electroshock Recordings, Moscow, contains Quartz Stalagnat for recorder and electronics (18:15) performed by Jorge Isaac
  • Test Tone Anthology (2009) released by: Medama Records, Tokyo, contains improvisation with Yoshio Machida (7:12)
  • Kofomi #14 (2010), released by ein–klang records, Vienna, contains Zwischenraumstudie for flute, clarinet, viola and cello (5:34)
  • Anthology of Dutch Musik (2011) released by MuziekCentrum NL, Amsterdam, contains an excerpt from the 80 minute composition Map of Marble (6:39)
  • Weapon of Choice (2011) released by Ahornfelder, Hamburg, DVD, contains Alias for electric violin, live-electronics, lighting and laser (20:41) performed by Barbara Lüneburg
  • Etude Gone Badum (2013) released by Ahornfelder, Hamburg, contains Black Horizon for two table-top guitars and four players (21:32) played by Håkon Stene and Marko Ciciliani
  • Reciprocity – Nico Couck (2013) released by Champ d'Action, Antwerp, contains All of Yesterday's Parties for voice, electric guitar and live electronics (12:27) played by Nico Couck
  • Palavras e Sons (2015) released by NMElindo, São Paulo, contains Dromomania (job of dying's done) for electronics (9:34)

References

  1. ^ Mihali, Alexander: Skladatelj treceg milenija, Zagreb: WAM – webzine about audio and music, 6/2007
  2. ^ Hiller Egbert: Einbrüche des Unvorhersehbaren, Neue Zeitschrift für Musik, Mainz: Schott Verlag, 4/2010, p.62f
  3. ^ "Brunel University Research Archive: Dirty light: The application of musical principles to the organisation of light as an extension of musical expression into the non-figurative visual realm". Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  4. ^ "Visitenkarte von Ciciliani, Marko; Univ.Prof. Mag. Ph.D. - KUGonline - Universität für Musik und darstellende Kunst Graz". Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  5. ^ “Voor het horen geboren”, CD liner notes, Darmstadt: Coviello Classics, p.3
  6. ^ Oskamp, Jacqueline: Onder Stroom, Amsterdam: Ambo, 2011, p.46f
  7. ^ Metselaar, Helen: Women and 'Kraakgeluiden': the participation of women improvisers in the Dutch electronic music scene, in: Organised Sound Vol.9, Issue 2, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004, pp. 199-206
  8. ^ "ANNE LA BERGE". Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  9. ^ Simonis, Lukas: Marko Ciciliani, Controleer de Onvoorspelbaarheid, Fake Magazine, June 2003
  10. ^ Holmes, Thom: Electronic and Experimental Music, Third Edition, New York: Routledge, 2008, p.187
  11. ^ Hiller Egbert: Einbrüche des Unvorhersehbaren, Neue Zeitschrift für Musik, Mainz: Schott Verlag, 4/2010, p.63
  12. ^ a b c Berliner Festspiele. "Berliner Festspiele - MaerzMusik". Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  13. ^ Gottschalk Jennie: Experimental Music sinde 1970, New York: Bloomsbury, 2016, p.160
  14. ^ "www.ciciliani.com - performing". Retrieved 31 March 2015.
  15. ^ "Internationales-Musikinstitut - calls". Retrieved 28 November 2015.
  16. ^ "www.internationales-musikinstitut.de=". Retrieved 12 September 2016.
  17. ^ "Towards_an_Aesthetic_of_Electronic-Music_Performance_Practice". Retrieved 28 November 2015.
  18. ^ "Evaluating_a_method_for_the_analysis_of_performance_practices_in_electronic_music". Retrieved 28 November 2015.
  19. ^ "Brunel University Research Archive: Dirty light: The application of musical principles to the organisation of light as an extension of musical expression into the non-figurative visual realm". Retrieved 28 November 2015.
  20. ^ "Scanline_Synthesis_as_a_sonification_method_for_digital_images_techniques_and_aesthetics_a_critical_reflection". Retrieved 28 November 2015.
  21. ^ "Austrian Science Fund". Retrieved 12 December 2015.