21.03.2024
Music
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Stian Westerhus and Maja S. K. Ratkje - All Losses Are Restored

Stian Westerhus and Maja S. K. Ratkje - All Losses Are Restored

To many of their followers’ big surprise, Stian Westerhus and Maja S. K. Ratkje, who are usually associated with effect pedals, samplers, amplifiers and computers at three digit decibel levels, put aside all things electric and performed an acoustic set at Oslo Jazz Festival in 2019.

Ratkje and Westerhus, now armed with a 19th century pump organ, fiddle, acoustic guitar, some metal scrap and their voices, have gradually composed, developed and expanded their new and unique repertoire, performing at concerts, for Norwegian national broadcasting (NRK), and are now releasing this album - All Losses Are Restored.

A Shakespearian wind hit the two as they were looking for inspiration moving on from their first live appearance in 2019. Would it make sense to combine their new musical expression with the mystical, brutal and flowery universe of William Shakespeare’s words? So many songs have already been made, so much music, from large staged works and inspired instrumental works to miniatures. A never-ending textual source. The task seemed both challenging and enticing.

All Losses Are Restored is an album consisting of six new songs (although Verona is previously recorded by Westerhus), all composed by Ratkje and Westerhus and with lyrics solely built upon Shakespeare’s body of work. Most obviously some of the Sonnets, such as number 30, which also contains the albums title. Other Sonnets used are number 73 (That time of year...), 137 (Though blind fool...) and 46 (Mine eye and heart...). Apart from these, a sidekick is given to no less that Hamlet, Macbeth and Romeo and Juliet, with various contextualisations.

In the few occasions where Ratkje and Westerhus have performed live the response has been nothing short of overwhelming. Critics have used terms such as “One of the decidedly strongest musical moments of the year”!

Their musical expression give associations to both the old Kristiania in the 1890’s, as well as emigrated Norwegians in the Midwest – reciting Shakespeare whilst loading their guns underneath the table of the saloon!

The revelation Ratkje/ Westerhus

Maja S. K. Ratkje and Stian Westerhus’ concert was an overwhelming experience of beauty. The two musicians are known for their electronics and music that might be cool in the unpleasant way. This was the complete opposite, with just their voices, harmonium and acoustic guitar, so profoundly beautiful I could feel it in my chest. (…) — Molde Int. Jazz Festival, 2020 review – S.Iversen, Jazz i Norge

Maybe the most surprising appearance (…) They seduced the audience with a highly intimate acoustic performance. The unfolding  ow of soulfully gleaming song-lines were permeated by oblique- subtle tonal nuances and roughening percussive interventions. Both developed in dense and continuously tense and evident interplay. They enabled the audience to breath with the  ow of their performance thereby kindling immanent cathartic potentials. (…) It could clearly be felt that the music was permeating epochs creating a speci c atmosphere of a past time re-imagined. It felt not so much as a genre-defying work but rather as a time transient work. — Oslo Jazz Festival, 2019 review – H.Bolte, All About Jazz

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