Now you can subscribe to this blog through the simple buttons, one for all posts and one for all comments to posts. I have also added the new improved blog roll, so the info from the blogs I have on my radar are updated in real time.
Author Archives: MaLj
Nothing to tell
The art of blogging has been almost given up and forgotten in the last months, during which I have done very little online – except checking my Facebook and Myspace and a discussion forum, but not contributing much. I read other people’s music blogs, though, when the subscribed ones drop their newest content in my reader.
Haven’t been painting or composing or writing much lately either. I studied painting once a week from February to May, but did nothing new that I want to show here or in an exhibition (we have an annual amateur salon on the local library but I wasn’t prepared to participate this summer), just still life exercises in acrylic on cheap paper, to learn more about light, balance and colours.
Musically, I am jumping between very different things. I have been learning some jazz standards on piano (I am not very good at playing and can’t improvise much), for example “Hallucinations” by Bud Powell. Then I have been playing the piano part to “Åkersbergavalsen” a lovely waltz written some years (or decades?) ago by Ove Gardemar. It was used when a song group led by Christina Nordstrand was entertaining old people at a hospital with spring and summer tunes. I have made and published (on SibeliusMusic) some revisions to my song “Elisabeth dansar” – a short, lyrical tune for children. Yesterday I started to put the music from Beethoven’s op. 131 into Sibelius notation, to see if I could learn something about string quartet writing by this exercise. (There seems to be a file of the LvB op131 in Finale notation available at Project Gutenberg but it is an experience to notate it from the pocket score, too) I often get ideas for new compositions and sound works, but nothing that seems important enough to start working on. You have to imagine at least some sort of listener for a piece, and if not, don’t waste your time. Being a composer is really frustrating most of the time, especially if you are not a performer yourself, and if you lack the social skills needed to build a network of contacts in the musical world…
Hope you are having a nice summer, readers!
mercury playground (poem)
Mercury Playground
Suddenly shadowed, the heavens imploded again
Dark clouds, dark grey over a quiet grey village
Thick curtains of crystals, wet, dropped down in silver
Shockingly cold, wrapping all ground in winter anew
like some sweet-scented lace, or a veil of white lilies
Laid folded in layers, wet, draped on the surface
Sun-melted then, when spring came to its nature once more,
was changing reflection, rejecting the goodness
in children out playing, wet, dipped in the snow drifts
Mercury, mercury, changing forever its silvery wings
Projecting and fleeing, like letters and mirrors
The playground now poisoned, wet, drowned in the icing
MaLj 29 March 2008
Upcoming concert with Alan Hilton’s music
United Reform Church, Ickenham – 19 April 2008 at 4.00pm
An afternoon of music by Alan Hilton in the presence of the composer.
Chaconne
Also published on my YouTube page!
The road and the water
Music composed and played by Maria Ljungdahl.
Also on YouTube
A music video for Michael
The lead sheet for the music in this video – “Ignoble Simplicity” – is published by the composer Michael Morse on SibeliusMusic.com, at
this page
and the ensemble version at
this page.
Christmas time
Celebrating atonality
Alex Ross blogs that tomorrrow, Monday 17 December, is