Rok Zalokar Trio – Port Songs | Villa For Forest

Datum: Sa, 30.11.2019 um 20:00
Veranstalter: Verein Innenhofkultur
Ort: Villa For Forest, Viktringer Ring 21, Klagenfurt

Rok Zalokar ( SLO) - piano
Alessandro Fongaro ( ITA) - bass
Ruud Voesten ( NL) - drums
Eintritt: 12 € | StudentInnen 6 €

Rok Zalokar is a pianist & composer leading his award-winning trio, playing in avant-garde pop group Kukushai and is a half of hiphop/jazz/noise duo Millon Ear.

He is currently with one foot in Rotterdam(NL) and one foot in Ljubljana(SLO), being an active member in the music scene of both.
After only half a decade of being active on the European music scene, he has received critical acclaim for his work and has had high profile performances, while still maintaining a hands on “Do-it-yourself” approach to the entire body of his creative output. He graduated from jazz piano at Codarts academy, Rotterdam, where this trio came together. They were awarded with Erasmus Jazz prize and already performed at one of the biggest European jazz festivals North Sea Jazz.

Port Songs project was premiered at Jazz festival Ljubljana last year, afterwards trio went into the studio and an album is going to be released on November 29th on Modigo records.

Port Songs is a cycle of compositions, ports were common denominator in the period of it’s conceptions. There are those ports were composer lived – Rotterdam and Copenhagen, and the special port city where jazz music first came into being – New Orleans. Multicultural by nature, ports are providing a conceptual framework of influences, that include poems, Indian rhythms, choral singing… and all this serves as a starting point for daring improvisations.

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am Mi, 25.06.2025 um 20:00

Noise, Silence, Action | Villa For Forest

Villa For Forest, Viktringer Ring 21, 9020 Klagenfurt In this event, the GMPU Experimental Music Workshop will perform works by Pullitzer Prize recipient, Diné musician and artist Raven Chacon; experimental music mavericks Christian Wolff and James Tenney; and founding member of the Fluxus Movement Alison Knowles. Each work explores alternative forms of musical notation including graphical scores and text-based event scores that result in sounds and actions that challenge the very definition of music and prompt innovative and unconventional performance practices. These works also encourage a new form of listening and engaging with music by probing extremal and liminal musical spaces: from the almost imperceptibly soft and sparse to the loud and dense. In some cases, the music even reaches "beyond sound" through the consideration of colonial histories and the navigation of social systems and their corresponding power dynamics.

Free admission