Kunsthall Trondheim
Past event

Muddersten

Foto: Serge Kolosov

Welcome to concert with Muddersten at Kunsthall Trondheim!

Muddersten is a type of mudrock whose original constituents were clays. It looks like hardened mud and, depending upon the circumstances under which it was formed, it may show cracks or fissures, like a sun-baked clay deposit. Fertile clay and fat soil, compressed, dried out and turned into stone. Still delicate flowers will find their way through its cracks and fissures, prosper in its barren ground. It’s all about hydraulic; the phenomena that liquid is almost impossible to compress. Plants soak up water by their roots and pump it into their expanding cells. The cells are built up mainly on cellulose which won’t break under pressure, nor will the water they contain. Once the pressure from below is too strong the surface will break. The names of the improvisations on this record are perhaps not all that important; skyggesildre, kjempeløk, stjerneskjerm, blodstorkenebb, strid kråkefot, høstfloks, sibiriris. In the end nothing is really all that well defined anyhow and the circumstances remains unclear. Clay, rock, water, flower, cellulose and photosynthesis. The hardened, the flowing, the persistent and the growing. Nevertheless, the relentless striving and the drought stillness seems constantly present simultaneously in these sessions. Motion and friction, like wild flowers pushing their way through an unforgiving mudrock. Water fighting dehydration.

Muddersten was established as a trio in 2015, and released their first album, Karpatklokke, on SOFA in January 2017. The release have been very well received and internationally acclaimed on the scene for improvised and experimental music in numerous reviews and articles for its unique and peculiar nature.

Håvard Volden – electric guitar, tape machines (Jenny Hval, Moon Relay)
Henrik Olsson – objects, friction and piezo (Skogen, Gul3)
Martin Taxt – microtonal tuba and electronics (Microtub, Verdensteateret)

Tickets for the concert can be purchased at Kunsthall Trondheim for 100,-, and 50,- for students.