Atlas of Imaginary Places Marina Baranova
Album info
Album-Release:
2021
HRA-Release:
12.11.2021
Label: Neue Meister
Genre: Classical
Subgenre: Instrumental
Artist: Marina Baranova
Composer: Marina Baranova (1981)
Album including Album cover
- Marina Baranova (b. 1981):
- 1 Baranova: Leviathan Town 02:49
- 2 Baranova: The Rain Spirits' Realm 01:36
- 3 Baranova: Islands Adrift 02:09
- 4 Baranova: Diamond Desert 02:15
- 5 Baranova: Constellation Machine 02:32
- 6 Baranova: In Limbo of Dreams Unresolved 02:38
- 7 Baranova: Enchanted Hills 02:03
- 8 Baranova: The Rainbow Bridge 03:53
- 9 Baranova: Celestial Seacraft Flying over the River 02:11
- 10 Baranova: No-Fairies' Forest 02:13
- 11 Baranova: The Lake of a Thousand Eyes 02:35
- 12 Baranova: The Garden 01:54
- 13 Baranova: Polar Zone 03:26
- 14 Baranova: Cradle of Clouds 02:45
- 15 Baranova: The Canopy of Heaven 02:15
- 16 Baranova: The Clutch 03:21
- 17 Baranova: Caverns Beyond the Sea 02:58
Info for Atlas of Imaginary Places
Marina Baranova knows a thing or two about conjuring fantastical worlds. Since her childhood when she’d sit with her fairy tale books open in front of the piano translating the pictures she saw into sound worlds up to her last album, where she envisioned a darker side to Debussy, the Ukrainian composer and pianist’s imagination has always played an active role in the music she plays. For her latest release, 'Atlas of Imaginary Places', she lets it run the show. For it, Baranova worked with the Danish visual artist Christian Gundtoft and Ukrainian writer Volodymyr Kompaniets to conceive more than just an album. “I wanted to create this alternative listening experience,” she explains, “Don’t underestimate the power of imagination, now more than ever, it’s important to remember we have this treasure within us.”
Different from the concert experience where the connection between artist and audience ends with the music’s final note, 'Atlas of Imaginary Places' allows conversations to carry on. Through a specially-designed website, the three artists mapped out a whole new world that can be explored through visitor’s every sense; visuals, story-telling and sound. “Of course, the music will be on the streaming platforms too, but it’s primarily a platform where you can go deeper into this world we’ve created. You can zoom in and out of this map, listen and read and slowly explore this fantastical place,” explains Baranova, “I want people to unfold this whole universe for themselves.”
For the project, Christian Gundtoft and Volodymyr Kompaniets worked independently from each other, only having Baranova’s untitled music as the starting point for their own creations. “I didn’t want anything to influence their own imagination and conception,” explains the pianist. The 17 tracks on the album, however, contained enough material for the artists to delve into, Baranova’s music is after all known for its vivid imagery that immediately conveys intense pictures, emotions and story-lines, and the pianist has said in the past she “sees” sounds as colours. “Opal domes burning bright in the rays of the evening sun”, “green sea stretching out horizon-to-horizon”, and “cane leaves, sharp like centaurs’ arrows” are just some of the rich visual descriptions strung together by Volodymyr Kompaniets inspired by Baronova’s music.
Like glimpses of an unknown archipelago seen through layers of mist, Baranova’s sound world is a spectacular setting that reveals itself slowly to listeners. The album’s opening track, 'Leviathan Town', expresses the trepidation one might feel in entering these uncharted waters, “I composed this piece during the first lockdown, at that time no one, myself included, knew what was happening. I tried to express this strange and confusing feeling in the piece,” says Baranova. It’s an enigmatic journey that cycles through moments of light and warmth, before being shadowed by mystery again. The juxtaposition between lightness and darkness, gentle melodies and somber tones is something Baranova plays with in the entire album, making the music unpredictable from start to finish. To add to the fickle feeling, she also changes from a structured classical playing style to free-flowing jazz frequently, “Both my parents are musicians, my mom is a classical musician and my father a jazz pianist, so I always had everything under the same roof,” explains Baranova.
'Canopy of Heaven' exemplifies just how comfortable Baranova feels in oscillating between the two genres; over a romantic bed of chords and arrangements inspired by Mendelssohn’s Songs Without Words, the melody – borrowed from the 20th-century jazz standard, The Masquerade - flutters freely, “These two pieces seemed to belong together, both fit in the world of Venetian gondolas and masquerade balls,” says Baranova. With influences that span two hundred centuries, Baranova manages to create an impressive piece that feels like a meditation on familiarity and strangeness.
'Atlas of Imaginary Places' is proof that our imagination is in fact a portal, and beyond it exist places that can be accessed and shared by all. The intimacy and synchronicity between the artists in creating 'Atlas of Imaginary Places' made it seem like they “shared an island”, a magical space Baranova is now inviting others to explore too. It isn’t a linear journey, rather it delineates a space outside time that can be explored in an infinite number of ways. On a first listen, one might appreciate the vastness of the landscapes painted, and on another, ponder the depth of its minute details. The music is both ample and deep, and in delving into any given track, any given island, listeners are left with a feeling that there’s always more to look out for, making their own exploration an active part of the listening experience. In the album’s focus piece, 'Constellation Machine' the music seems to directly inquire at the listener. With its languid melodic looping and halting the music poses the question “where to from here?”. For Baranova, something’s definitely changed going forward, “For me, this is the moment of transformation. Those transformations are not so easy for us, but they are very important”.
Marina Baranova, piano
Marina Baranova
Born into a musical family in Ukraine, Marina Baranova began playing the piano when she was five years old. Just two years later, she was accepted into a music school for talented children in her home town of Kharkov. At age 11, Marina won first prize at the International Competition for Young Pianists in Ukraine, which preceded her first international concert tour in Finland.
In the late 90’s she moved to Germany to begin studying with Professor Vladimir Krainev at the University for Music, Theatre and Media in Hannover. Throughout her studies in Hannover, she won at least one internationally renowned competition every year. Marina still resides in Hannover, her base with which she returns from international tours across famous concert halls in Germany, Austria, France, Italy, Spain, Benelux, Poland, Israel, Latin America and Thailand.
Marina’s passionate musical interpretation and performances have won over the public and press alike at a wide range of festivals. Festivals such as the International Piano Festival Ferruccio Busoni and the Merano Classic Festival in South Tyrol, Italy, the Viennese Music Week, the Beethoven and Schumann festivals in Bonn, the Granada Piano festival, Schumann Fest Week, Leipzig, and the Beethoven Night in Heidelberg have all seen Marina enhance her international reputation. A sought-after soloist, Marina has performed with the German Radio Philharmonic, the Würtembergischen Philharmonic conducted by Ola Rudner, the Leipzig Gewandhaus Quartet, the Slaska Philharmonic Orchestra, the Bromberg Radio Orchestra conducted by Tadeusz Strugala, the Romanian Bacau Philharmonic Orchestra and the Jerusalem Strings in Yad Vashem, Israel. Her performances have been broadcast on German national TV and Radio including her debut concerto performance in Berlin and her concert performance in the Trierer Kurfürstlichen Palace.
Her debut CD „Marina Baranova plays Schumann“, released by Pianissimo Music in 2012, was given rave reviews by the press. Jaochim Kaiser described her as a skilled and captivating interpreter of Schumann’s music.
Alongside her career as a classical pianist, Marina’s interests also lie in cross-over projects in Jazz, New Music and World Music. For example, She has been involved in numerous world premiere performances of composer Damian Marhulets’ electro-acoustic compositions, including „STELLAR - Wandering Stars Suite“, on which she collaborated with award winning guitarist Frank Bungarten, and „Triangulation“, which was performed at the Beethoven Fest in Bonn. In the world music arena, Marina performed with klezmer legend and clarinettist Giora Feidman at the Vienna Konzerthaus with a program of Jewish songs and songs by Schubert. Shortly following this project, Marina was asked to perform as a guest soloist with Feidman in a CD production, where they recorded numerous compositions together.
Marina Baranova is herself also a talented composer. Her latest CD „Firebird“, where she collaborates with renowned percussionist Murat Coşkun, is completely made up of her own compositions. „Firebird“ was released in 2013 under the Pianissimo Music label and was distributed by Edel Music. Marina and Murat are also touring this program together as a duo.
This album contains no booklet.