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Showing posts with label Kringkastingsorkestret. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Kringkastingsorkestret. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

The powerful performance by Karpe Diem doing "Tusen Tegninger" in Oslo last month -with Kork & Traces- that put another big lump in my throat that day


Karpe Diem m/ Kork - "Tusen Tegninger" (Live Minnesceremoni Oslo 2011), Oslo Spektrum, August 21, 2011. http://youtu.be/boQPp2pen60

Karpe Diem performs "Tusen Tegninger" (A Thousand Drawings) with Kork, The Norwegian Radio Orchestra/Kringkastingsorkestret, and the Traces Gospel Choir doing chorus). National Day of Remembrance for Attacks in Oslo and Utøya, Oslo Spektrum, August 21, 2011.
The couple shown in the audience at the end of the video above are Crown Prince Haakon and his wife, Crown Princess Mette-Marit. Her step-brother, Trond Berntsen, an off-duty police officer working security at the AUF youth summer camp on Utøya, which his own son was attending, was the second of the 69 murder victims of Anders Behring Breivik on the island.


Though I try my best to be as organized as possible when I'm writing here or thinking about what I'll be posting here in the near-future, with often a couple of dozen ideas in some degree of completion in cold storage as a Draft, just waiting for a photo or bit of serendipity to strike to make it seem extra delicious, the problem is that being a one-man band here as I am, with no staff or 'significant other' to peer over my shoulder occasionally to remind me of things I need to mention or say from time-to-time, sometimes, unfortunately, ideas slip thru the cracks.
Good ideas that leave me quite exasperated and mad at myself later when they come flooding back to me.

Today, or rather Tuesday night, about the time I saw the Marlins lose to the Mets in extra innings- 12:45-ish, and Matt Dominguez's first Major League at-bat, which was a HBP, hit-by-pitch- I received an email from a wonderfully talented and thoughtful friend overseas.
She wrote that she'd finally been able to spend some time catching-up on the latest adventures here at the blog over the weekend, after getting back from a trip home in Sweden to see her family, and not really doing anything online for a week.
Yes, a real vacation!
Even though it's getting colder there already.

Anyway, she sorta chided me for not having yet posted something here on the blog that I had mentioned in a previous email to her and some mutual friends who also live in England.
Something that I had seen and which had absolutely floored me, as it had her, though perhaps to a lesser degree.
It was a performance that was, in a word, fantastiske, plus, it put a real lump in my throat on a day when I already had several.

In my own view, it was perhaps one of the five MOST AMAZING things I'd seen or heard all year, which makes my neglecting to post it here all the more embarrassing and upsetting for me.

As soon as I saw two simple words she'd written in the subject header, I swallowed hard, because she was right, I had meant to post it two weeks ago and time was, like summer, running out.

The two words? Karpe Diem.
Not the Latin phrase, per se, rather, the Norwegian hip-hop duo of Chirag Patel and Magdi Abdelmaguid, that, prior to watching the Memorial Service LIVE via NRK's website, I'd only had a vague-to-general knowledge of, having read some things about them before and seen a few of their vids on YouTube.
(That's saying somethingm since I hate hip-hop, at least as it's practiced here in the States.)

I guess it won't come as a surprise to those of you of a more sleuthful persuasion that I'm specifically referring to their masterful performance in Oslo at the Spektrum, as part of the National Day of Remembrance for 22/7, the Minneseremoni, where they were, by far, the youngest of the many talented performers that Sunday afternoon, morning Miami time.
(I've already written several posts about the myriad performances that day.)

And being much younger, of course, they were even more conscious of and the national trauma of so many young people -55- being among the 77 murdered that day in July, which made them an inspired-if-not perfect choice for reasons that you'll see.

After you watch their amazing August 21st performance, watch this video from the original single release, which overtly shows the religious aspects of this song about faith and tolerance, as the two of them, a Muslim and Hindu, are shown in various houses of worship throughout Norway.
It's really quite original and moving!
Maybe even genius!


Karpe Diem - Tusen Tegninger (Official music video, from their album, "Aldri solgt en Løgn") Directed by Kavar Singh.
Er både svart og hvit
Er både glad og trist
Han så på passet mitt og kastet et blikk og traff meg
For jeg var fuglen på bakken, og han var tvunget til å ville kappe vingene av meg før jeg fikk sunget
Sunget ut om profeten og om gud
Alle disse temaene som ellers er tabu
Du, tror du må si du ber i smug
Når du veit at mange av dine ville sett på deg som sjuk
For det er sjukt at du må si at gud setter oss fri
Jeg utsetter og si at du ser på muslim
Til jeg allerede har gjort et inntrykk
Vente til vi blir litt kjent, og Magdi ekke sinnsyk
Du ekke redd fordi det er ukjent
Du har rett fordi du tror du kjenner meg og jeg er ustemt
Falsk, du må stemme meg fint
For at jeg er hyggelig, Selv om, men det ekke fordi jeg er muslim

Er både hvit og svart
Er både rik og blakk
Hun sa hun aldri hadde møtt en kar som ikke drakk
Og spurte meg om gud dømte meg svart hvitt
For til og med muslimene hun kjente drakk litt men
Brorskapet ekke lenger mellom de som tror på det samme
Har en bror som er hindu, og det handler om å godta
At andre har en mor som, og kanskje en far som
Lærte dem noe annet som
Livet som at himmelen er et mål og livet kanskje er casting
Har ikke masse svin på skogene, jeg har masse marsvin
Og et marsvin er hodepine og aspirin og hvis det får oss til å gjøre gode ting, så hva synes du om at
dama tror på gud og sånt
aner du hvor mange som har spurt meg det du spurte om
Lurte på, hvorfor jeg ikke tar de valga de tar
Du kanke gi gud, så bare gi faen

As of today, September 7th, there are exactly 14 days left to watch the entire Memorial program -or individual selections- at the NRK website: http://www.nrk.no/nett-tv/klipp/777779/
It will be removed on September 22nd.
Don't waste the opportunity to see something very special, which I watched LIVE when it aired via the NRK website.

Karpe Diem's official YouTube Channel is

Official website: http://www.karpediem.no/

Official website for Kork, the Norwegian Radio Orchestra - Kringkastingsorkestret

For more information on the Traces Gospel Choir, based in Oslo, please see http://www.tracesgospel.com/

Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Haunting performance of "Eg ser' by Bjørn Eidsvåg, then naming the 77 victims who perished 22/7 -powerful emotions that grabbed Norway -and me


Bjørn Eidsvåg - Eg ser (Live Minnesceremoni Oslo 2011), Oslo Spektrum, August 21, 2011.
http://youtu.be/0oMhPDBvSG4


12 minuters eftertanke/12 Minutes of Reflection.
(Live Minnesceremoni Oslo 2011) Oslo Spektrum, August 21, 2011.

Adil Khan, Maria Bonnevie, Ane Dahl Torp, Ingrid Bolsø Berdal and Nicolai Cleve Broch read aloud the names of the 77 victims who perished in the terrorist attacks in Oslo and Utøya on July 22nd.

------

In my post of Monday, Moved to tears... heart sure to follow... Something truly amazing that I saw for myself -the National Day of Remembrance in Oslo
I noted how truly moved and heart-broken I was by the combination of these two performances back-to-back, about 90 minutes into the program.

I also noted at the time that I was writing it late Sunday night that an online video of Sunday's performance of Eg ser (To see) by singer and song writer Bjørn Eidsvåg had not yet been posted online, so I could share it with you and you could see for yourselves how powerful and moving that performance had been.

But now, thanks to the efforts of jockemustafa in Sweden, you can finally see it for yourself, as Eidsvåg is backed up by Kringkastingsorkestret, a.k.a. Kork, the Norwegian Radio Orchestra.

The performance after the victims names were read, continuing this sad and haunting theme, was the Kork performing Beethoven's 7th Symphony, 2nd Movement.


The complete program broadcast can be seen until September 20th at the Norwegian TV/NRK website at

NRK's information homepage for the attacks, with timeline, graphs and photos, is at: