Mustapiste

Experimental art review

Svevning in Stromness

How do we learn a piece of music? For me, an active process of doing is required to embody the learning. This is what we typically refer to as practice.

We repeat gestures again and again with an intuition that this will have an effect in the future – a semi-voodoo ritual we reduce to simply practice – but it is about as personal as it gets when it comes to being a musician.

For Norwegian guitarist and composer Fredrik Rasten, practice is an embodied process, with a serious importance given to intervals – listening to the relationships between notes.

Rasten’s performance and compositional practices also contain the restriction of a guitar’s  timbre and register, which make sustained sound a short affair (later, Rasten discovers sustain through electro-magnetic bows). Hence, a continuous re-plucking of strings is needed to form this vertical conception of the music.

This re-plucking creates variation within stasis, the material properties of the instrument, the fingers, the surroundings, resound with variation as the player, seemingly unconsciously, creates microscopic timing changes.

Through this repetitive process, another is taking place; the re-tuning of the strings, which manifest as the acoustic phenomena of beating. Giving the piece its Norwegian name: Svevning.

Often, the changes which happen in the middle of this sedimentary structure of tones, are difficult to pin-point, however, re-contextualise the surrounding layers…

The piece, which took Rasten some 5 years to finally formalise, takes shape in two large movements. First, the harmony changes via small commas (fractions of intervals) and the second by larger commas.

A fundamental aspect to the piece is how to create a sense of modulation within Just Intonation Harmony: In short, a base frequency changes by a ratio of 4/3 up, shooting all the other relations of the chord up by a factor of 3; what was the 5th harmonic now becomes the 15th harmonic, what was the 3rd becomes the 9th and so on.

Larger numbers (in other words, harmonics) are reached with this process, for example, the 99th harmonic (11th harmonic, fundamental shifted by 3rd harmonic twice;
11 x 3 x 3 = 99).

Rasten instructs to tune this 99th down to the 98th harmonic, but how? Well, half of 98 is 49 so, we can use the previous fundamental’s seventh, which we imagine as the new fundamental. A 7th harmonic of the 7th, as 49 is indeed 7 times 7.

Keep in mind that the actual pitches except the returned string are exactly the same the whole time – only one tiny change – a retuning of less than a fraction of a semi-tone, gives claims to feel a new, distinct fundamental.

It is the job of the player to unpack these relationships and understand where to shift the awareness in the chordal structure using the voice to gently re-affirm the pitch and aid in tuning of the next step.

So the piece continues, re-establishing landing spots before diving into the next series of harmonic modulations.

The relationships change, resulting in a felt experience of harmony.

 

  1. A smaller island to the southwest of mainland Orkney ↩︎
  2. The Old Man of Hoy is Britain’s tallest sea stack ↩︎

Listen to Fredrik Rasten play Svevning

Released on INSUB records

Watch the Finnish premiere of Svevning

On nylon strings: Mark Reid Bulatović | 30.05.2025 | Asbestos Art Space, Helsinki

One response to “Svevning in Stromness”

  1. […] text about my piece Svevning, written by guitarist / composer Mark Reid Bulatović, is featured at Mustapiste.fi ________________________________________________________________________________ August 2025: I […]

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