Borealis Ung Komponist - a mentoring program for and with young composers

 
 

Who: Borealis - a festival for experimental music

What:
Borealis Ung Komponist

Where: Norway

Project period:
2024-2025


About the project:

Borealis Ung Komponist is a mentoring program for and with young composers. The program aims to add new voices to the contemporary music field by providing development opportunities and expertise to the new generation of Norwegian composers. Borealis Ung Komponist adds a multifaceted creative energy to the music scene and draws attention to Bergen and Western Norway. Borealis Ung Komponist supports and collaborates with local ensembles that focus on newly written contemporary music. Four gatherings with workshops are held ahead of the festival where the participants have the opportunity to work in close collaboration with a local ensemble and with support from three different mentors. The works are performed at the festival which takes place in March each year. In addition, Borealis collaborate with several organizers in the area to ensure more performances of the works. Hardanger music festival and Kunsthuset Kabuso have previously presented the works of Borealis Ung Komponist participants as part of their programs. In this way, a larger audience is reached at the same time as the composers, the ensemble and the pieces are allowed to develop even more

 
 

About the organisation:

Borealis is Norway's biggest festival of contemporary music outside of Oslo. It celebrates genre crossing music and art and takes place over 5 days each March in Bergen, Norway. The festival presents concerts, installations, performances, lectures, film screenings and radio broadcasts at concert venues of all sizes across the city – from art galleries and cultural arenas to surprising places you may not have visited before. Borealis is a place for adventurous listeners, celebrating music that doesn’t fit neatly in to any boxes. We present new projects from Norway and around the world that push the boundaries of what music is and how we listen. But we are more than just five days of concerts and events in March. As an organisation, we are here all year round, thinking about how we can create experiences and spaces that reflect the society we live in, whilst trying to contribute to the society we want to see. For us this means working hard to present gender balance in our programming and giving space for many different expressions of excellence. It means thinking not just about who is on stage, but about who feels excluded from our audience.

 
 
 
 

Related projects



 PROJECTS FROM OUR FIVE PRIORITY AREAS

All  ·  Children & youth  ·  Music & culture  ·  Health & research  ·  Climate action  ·  Social impact investment


Previous
Previous

Girls Thrive Programme

Next
Next

Afghanistan - SAIH