Marie Samuelsson life and biography

Marie Samuelsson picture, image, poster

Marie Samuelsson biography

Date of birth : 1956-02-15
Date of death : -
Birthplace : Stockholm, Sweden
Nationality : Swedish
Category : Arts and Entertainment
Last modified : 2012-01-18
Credited as : Musician, pianist, Composer

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At first glance, the Swedish composer Marie Samuelsson might appear hopelessly eccentric and atypical. She has found inspiration in howling wolves; her topics encompass theoretical physics and Magica de Spell (the flamboyant witch from the world of Donald Duck and Uncle Scrooge); her background includes dance, improvisation, multimedia exploration, and rock 'n' roll. Yet Samuelsson is a poet and visionary, a composer whose spellbinding music redefines the experience of listening to music. Indeed, critics have described her work as powerful, irresistible, mysteriously physical, profound, spiritual, suggestive, and richly descriptive. But Samuelsson's powerfully individual and meticulously sculpted works set her apart from most contemporary composers: not only are they accessible and appealing, but they engage the listener in an inner dialogue in such a way that the memory of a Samuelsson composition remains in the listener's consciousness as a secret garden, a magical place to visit and revisit.

With her extraordinary mastery of acoustic and electronic techniques, Samuelsson effortlessly, it seems, translates her deep creative impulse into finely wrought sonic masterpieces, in which irresistible labyrinths lead the listener to unexpected dimensions of moods, inner landscapes, illuminating visions, and profound insights. Exemplifying her brilliant exploration of inner worlds is I Am--Are You?, a piece for French horn, voice, and tape based on a haunting text by the poet Magnus William-Olson. In this piece the words and music effectively become one, as the listener, slowly descending into the mysteriously infinite world of the psyche, first discerns a dialogue of two souls painfully asserting their individuality, only to enter an enigmatic zone where the idea of personal separateness assumes a spectral aura.

Unlike many composers who reach artistic clarity only after many struggles, Samuelsson, it seems, asserted her personality as a composer early in her career. Thus Signal, a work for saxophone quartet and electronics composed during her student days, brought instant international fame. Indeed, the manic, nervous, obsessive energy of this brief composition easily seduces the listener into searching, through obsessive listening, for the elemental source of this explosion of genius. However, what ultimately captivates the listener is not the sonic surface, despite its remarkable charm and fluency, but the composer's inimitable spirit. Regardless of style, structure, instrumentation, mood, and color, any work by Samuelsson provides a glimpse of this extraordinary artist's rich inner world.

As remote as the sonic trajectories may seem, the listener, even when the music seems to be moving in strange directions, always feels the composer's reassuring presence. Often astounding, enigmatic, unsettling, and even overwhelming, Samuelsson's world is reassuringly human: her astonishing originality is strangely familiar. While classical music has often been defined in terms of dichotomies between the intellect and a resistant physical element, Samuelsson prefers an approach based on the idea that human beings exist in a unified world where spiritual and material energies do not oppose each other. Neither cerebral nor physical, her music reflects profound creative impulses that transcend intellectual categories.

With her natural openness to movement, poetry, and the spoken word, Samuelsson redefines music, abandoning the classical idea that music, unlike language, refers only to itself. Indeed, the differences between music and poetry are undeniable, but in a work such as That Night, for example, a choral composition inspired by William-Olsson's poetry, the very idea of clear meaning becomes irrelevant, as Samuelsson's music explores the mysterious ambivalence of presence and absence, prompting the listener to confront the paradoxes of life at an experiential level, without resorting to preconceptions and ideas.

Released in 2003, Samuelsson's album Air Drum received immense critical and popular acclaim. The title piece is, in fact, Air Drum III, for orchestra--and three large metal drums that Samuelsson found at a ventilation company. At first glance they threaten to overpower the orchestra, as eerie reverberations quickly invade the composition's sonic space. However, it quickly becomes apparent that Samuelsson had something else in mind. The elemental force in this piece is air, which reduces the drums to simple instruments. Interestingly, she named the work Air Shaft, perhaps wishing to expand the image of a column of air. Although not quite accurate, the English translation has been accepted, apparently even by the composer herself. Works included in Air Drum have been performed in Sweden and abroad, and they represent the full range of Samuelsson's genius.

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