-
Susan Philipsz: Living in Berlin, the history
is so raw and you still feel it.
-
I think it's that it doesn't
want to hide its past.
-
When I first came to Berlin,
-
this was one of the first
places I came to actually.
-
Train stations, they're very evocative
places, places of departure and separation.
-
That has a melancholy feel
about it, I think, the station.
-
I love that sound.
-
I'm interested in the emotive and
psychological effects of sound.
-
Often I'm just looking for a place that has an
interesting acoustic or architecture history.
-
Like in Kassel, for instance, it was the
atmosphere of the train station that drew me.
-
“Study for Strings” started from
standing at the platform's end
-
and thinking about sound coming from a distance.
-
I discovered that Kassel is where they made
major deportations of the Jews to Theresienstadt,
-
which was a concentration camp where
they sent all the creative people.
-
I started thinking about Pavel Haas
who'd composed this composition,
-
“Study for Strings,” while
he was interned in the camp.
-
It was to feature in this
propaganda movie for the Red Cross.
-
They wanted to pretend that
everything was great in the camp.
-
It was really tragic because it was straight after
it was shot, they were all sent to Auschwitz.
-
In the original composition,
it was a 24-piece orchestra.
-
What I decided to do was to
record just two of the parts.
-
Silence really makes you think about the absence
of the other performers who would've been killed.
-
-
Eoghan McTigue: There was never a point where we were
working together as a collective.
-
It just seemed to develop out
of our shared life together.
-
After we moved to Berlin, it became
clear that Susan was getting very busy.
-
I started to manage some of Susan's productions.
-
Susan is much more intuitive and can determine
the tone or the atmosphere of a space.
-
Susan has a very good understanding of space,
-
when a space is layered and
when the meaning is just there,
-
just below the surface,
-
and then just doing something very
minimal to let it reveal itself.
-
Susan Philipsz: I was invited to make a work that
marks the 80th anniversary of the
-
annexation of Austria to Germany as
that happened after Hitler's speech.
-
It's not something that they're proud of,
but they want to acknowledge their part in it.
-
With each new project in public
space, I make a sound test just
-
to get an idea of how the sound
would be in this particular space
-
because sometimes it can do
really unpredictable things.
-
You can place anything in the Heldenplatz, I mean and it will take on a political connotation because of the context.
-
At the beginning, I tested a work which used the sound of a viola.
-
And another work where I actually used my voice.
-
Singing has always been
-
part of my life, singing with my sisters.
-
Then I was in a band for a little while.
-
Then I became aware of what happens when you
-
project your voice into a room
and how it can define space.
-
I think it's clear that I don't have a trained voice.
-
I'm singing in a way that you
might sing if you were on your own.
-
The songs I've sung in the supermarket
I originally
-
performed live where I sang over
the PA system at hourly intervals.
-
It has quite a disarming effect because you feel
like you're listening to something quite private.
-
I'm trying to create this sense of
solitude in this very public place.
-
I thought of songs as found objects.
-
Singing them unaccompanied and
then placing them in a particular
-
context could make you see the place in a new way,
-
or the words might take on a new meaning.
-
The song “Lowlands,” which was
this old 16th century Scottish
-
ballad about a sailor who comes back to
say a final farewell to his loved one,
-
it's a very sad lament, but the context
prevents you from really being moved.
-
Recording for my voice, or battling with
the sounds of the trains and the traffic,
-
you're all of a sudden aware
of where you are because the
-
ambient sound is really loud and hostile.
-
When I was really young, I was more interested in
-
the historical part of the museum
rather than the painting galleries
-
because I found that really boring.
-
“War Damaged Musical Instruments” is a work that
has been going for a few years now.
-
I've been recording these musical
instruments that have been damaged in war.
-
The first ones I came across
were the ones here in Berlin.
-
That led me to different musical
instrument museums here in Germany.
-
It was clear to see that these instruments
could never play music anymore.
-
They were so badly damaged. But
they still could produce sound.
-
Sometimes it would be a very fragile, delicate
sound, and it was really more about the breath.
-
I became interested in breath
being a metaphor for life.
-
Each of the speakers plays a tone from the
“Taps” and represents a different instrument.
-
Originally it was used on the battlefield.
-
It was one of the signals that
meant it was safe to come back.
-
It makes you wonder who was the last person
to have played it and what happened to them.
-
As a student I wanted to make political art with a
capital P, but I was never happy with the results.
-
Those political themes come through
the work in a more subtle way.
-
In Vienna, the work that was the
most successful was the sound of
-
me rubbing the rim of four crystal wine glasses.
-
It does have this kind of feeling of a voice.
-
I wanted to give voice to those forgotten
voices who were persecuted during the Holocaust.
-
By defining the space with sound, you draw
attention to and remind people what happened here.
-
Sound can really act as a trigger for memory, then
can bring you back to a particular place and time.
-
I wanted to bring those voices
from the past into the present.