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Yayalar: "Inspired By The Gezi Park Protests"

Yayalar:

18.09.2014 17:46

When DW commissioned a piece from Turkish composer Tolga Yayalar for his country's Bilkent Youth Symphony Orchestra, he saw the 2013 Gezi Park protests as a natural source of inspiration. DW: Your composition "Tableaux Vivants d'une Résistance" premieres in Bonn on September 23. What are we going to hear? Tolga Yayalar: It's a sixteen-minute piece for an orchestra of eighty performers. The initial idea was to use some of the sound material I collected during the 2013 Gezi Park resistance in Istanbul. I used a little bit of material, some subtle metaphors, but then the music took over, and it's taken on a shape of its own. Because this is for a youth orchestra and the young people were the main actors in the resistance, I wanted to dedicate the piece to all the young people in the orchestra. So are you transforming noise into music? What motivated me was the phonic experience of the street action. It was a one-of-a-kind experience. You hear all these people running and shouting, you hea

When DW commissioned a piece from Turkish composer Tolga Yayalar for his country's Bilkent Youth Symphony Orchestra, he saw the 2013 Gezi Park protests as a natural source of inspiration.

DW: Your composition "Tableaux Vivants d'une Résistance" premieres in Bonn on September 23. What are we going to hear?



Tolga Yayalar: It's a sixteen-minute piece for an orchestra of eighty performers. The initial idea was to use some of the sound material I collected during the 2013 Gezi Park resistance in Istanbul. I used a little bit of material, some subtle metaphors, but then the music took over, and it's taken on a shape of its own. Because this is for a youth orchestra and the young people were the main actors in the resistance, I wanted to dedicate the piece to all the young people in the orchestra.







So are you transforming noise into music?



What motivated me was the phonic experience of the street action. It was a one-of-a-kind experience. You hear all these people running and shouting, you hear the police attacking, the gas canisters falling. I wanted to transform that into music somehow using classical instruments. So there are some noisy passages.







The background is quite political, then - what is your own statement with this piece?



I don't see the protest as a protest primarily against the government but a declaration of every social and cultural segment of society declaring their rights and their freedom from any kind of authoritarian regime. I really, really support that. I wanted to write a piece that is meaningful in concept and subject matter.







Do you think music has the power to support such protests?



Yes, absolutely. I can't estimate the scope of the effect. But I think it's important to voice these concerns in any way possible, and music is one. It creates awareness and lets people know what's going on.







Is it global contemporary music - or does it have Turkish elements?



I'm Turkish, I live in Turkey, so of course there's something Turkish in it; that's inevitable. There's nothing on the folkloric level but deep down, there is, there has to be - just nothing overt.







I read that your background is more in rock and jazz, and then you moved into contemporary classical music - do you still feel a gap between these different forms of music, personally, in your compositions?



That's a difficult question. I started out playing rock'n'roll, then jazz and of course, that gives a very different perspective to music. I think I benefit a lot from that. The fact that I've never trained as a classical musician affects my music in a positive way. While teaching, I have to make up for the difference. But lots of people come from a different background these days, so the distinction is not that dramatic anymore.







Often, contemporary classical music is difficult to understand. It has a very elite audience. Do you think the young musicians are able to perform your music with the full range of emotion?



I have a certain style I spent years developing, so I wouldn't want to change that too much. But of course, it's a youth orchestra and there are limitations on the technical and the psychological sides, so I had to change my approach slightly. I kept everything a little simple. On the other hand, I chose the subject matter deliberately. I thought it was something meaningful for them, something that they would understand. The piece is sometimes very physical, a lot of gestures, noise, it's almost like going out in the street and going, Bang! Bang! Those things would be harder to demand from more senior musicians. But younger musicians have the energy and the curiosity.







Your work will be played at the Beethovenfest Bonn - was that idea stimulating to you when you were writing your piece?







Yes (laughs). It's a little scary to be in the same program as Beethoven's Ninth. Nobody can compete with that piece - especially that one! So I chose not to. I didn't want to write something big and flashy, because Beethoven always wins. So it was very motivating, but it's also a lot of pressure. I used some small but important chords from the Ninth and am very curious how it's going to sound!







Adelheid Feilcke spoke with Tolga Yayalar. Renowned ensembles in Europe, the US and South America have performed music written by the award-winning composer from Istanbul, born in 1973. Before turning to composition, he played electric guitar in rock and jazz bands. His new piece, "Tableaux Vivants d'une Résistance," commissioned by



 
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