One of the pleasures of growing older is discovering that your ears can still be surprised. This year, I once again attended the KLANG Festival together with my old friend Martin Malgreen, chair of the festival’s board. KLANG has for many years been one of Copenhagen’s most important platforms for experimental music, creating a space where curiosity matters more than familiarity and where listening itself becomes an active practice. On Wednesday evening we moved through three very different concerts. The first, KLINGGGG by Wassermann, Anker and Parkins, was primarily acoustic. The human voice played the leading role, although often in forms that barely resembled what we normally think of as singing. Strange sounds, whispers, clicks, extended vocal techniques and unexpected interactions between the performers constantly challenged the boundary between language and sound. Then came Ann Rosén’s Walking in the Now. Here, the visual dimension became central. Watching marks and gestures emerge on the screen while the sound unfolded created an experience somewhere between concert, drawing and performance art. It was a reminder that listening is not always something we do only with our ears. Finally, Jena Jang’s Necrocore – Somatic Noise. An intense and uncompromising noise performance. Dense walls of sound, physical vibrations and electronic distortion transformed the concert hall into something closer to an environment than a musical performance. At moments it felt almost less like listening to music and more like being inside it. Three concerts. Three radically different approaches to sound. What I admire about festivals like KLANG is that they remind us that music is not a genre but a question. What counts as music? What counts as listening? And how much of our understanding of art is really just habit? Not every experiment succeeds. Not every work speaks equally strongly to every listener. But curiosity remains one of the most underrated cultural virtues. And KLANG continues to reward it.

06/14/2026 20:34:20


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