green&blue dreamin’
When nature falls into sleep, we ask: will it be given the chance to awaken once more after the next winter? Can we afford to dream of a future filled with greenery, the eternal song of forests and rivers?
This intertwining of anxiety for the Earth and longing for the pure force of nature was the inspiration for the concert programme, in which a space of sounds and images will render the fragility of the world around us — without, however, robbing us of hope for renewal.
In Aleksandra Kaca’s Coal, a sonic image of blackness becomes a story about the tension between destruction and light. Sound, like a stroke of Kline’s brush on canvas, takes the form of a pulsating contrast in music. In Wojciech Błażejczyk’s Aether, invisible electromagnetic waves are transformed into a sonic landscape that makes us aware of the pervasive nature of technological pollution. In green&blue dreamin, Katarzyna Krzewińska confronts us with the dissonance between the noise of the city and our need for contact with nature — she collides sounds from field recordings with the performative gesture of musicians touching branches, water and flowers.
The two premieres of the evening — Jeanne Artemis’s Ashes on my tongue and Aled Smith’s Screaming Flesh — carry a direct question about the planet’s future. Artemis’s work, written specially for Hashtag Ensemble, combines pessimism and hope in a poetic image of touching soil and dust that simultaneously crumbles and endures. Smith takes us into a vision of the future in which forests exist only in dreams, and the screaming body remembers wounds inflicted on the Earth that cannot be healed.
Each of these works is like a separate fragment of a larger story — about loss, about the omnipresence of technology, about the unceasing need to find new forms of coexistence between humanity and nature. Together they create a space in which music becomes an instrument for preserving the memory of a world unspoiled by technology: a warning, but also a tender act of love for what we can still save.
Programme:
Aleksandra Kaca Coal (2020)
Wojciech Błażejczyk Aether (2020/2024)
Katarzyna Krzewińska green&blue dreamin (2024)
Jeanne Artemis Ashes on my tongue (2022)*
Aled Smith Screaming Flesh** (2025)*
*world premiere
** “Co-financed from funds of the Minister of Culture and National Heritage from the Culture Promotion Fund under the ‘Composer Commissions’ programme, implemented by the National Institute of Music and Dance”
Performers:
Marta J. Bogusławska voice
Łucja Chyrzyńska flutes **
Adam Eljasiński clarinets
Łukasz Nędza saxophones **
Nadia Mikołajczyk percussion *
Paweł Janas accordion
Marta Piórkowska violin
Aleksandra Demowska-Madejska viola
Dorota Malmor viola*
Antoni Majewski cello *
Mateusz Loska double bass
Wojciech Błażejczyk electric guitar
Lilianna Krych conductor
* Akademia PRO
** guest
Production:
production: Marta Piórkowska and Aleksandra Demowska-Madejska
visual identity: Aleksandra Ołdak
sound engineering: Kosma Standera
programme concept: Hashtag Ensemble Creative Group
Concert co-produced with the Warsaw Branch of the Association of Polish Musician Artists
Hashtag Lab Contemporary Music Space is co-funded by the City of Warsaw.
The media patron of the Hashtag Lab Contemporary Music Space is POLMIC.PL., Dwójka Polskie Radio and Gazeta Wyborcza
If you’d like to know more about the artists/works:
Aled Smith Screaming Flesh
The screaming body remembers the present from a distant future in which forests have survived only as dream-worlds that the Earth is no longer able to sustain. What remains consists of shadows and imitations: swarms of insects devouring themselves, circling in endless loops. Nothing grows. What has already been lost cannot be saved. And what endures are wounds that never close.
About the composer:
Aled Smith (b. 1990) is a British-Irish composer and sound artist. His artistic investigations focus on the use of timbre and instrumentation to create colour. His works distort and combine perspectives of processed objects alongside analogue electronics and amplification techniques. He creates visual, spatial and sonic works through decontextualisation and disintegration. His music has been commissioned and performed by Rage Trombones, Aleksandra Demowska-Madejska, Concept Store Quartet, E‑Mex Ensemble, TAK Ensemble, Jason Alder, Gośka Isphording, Duo Alto, Miłos Drogowski, MCME, Fidan Aghayeva-Edler and others.
Smith’s work has been presented at numerous festivals worldwide: SYNTHETIS, Towards Sound Festival, the WHAT MATTERS exhibition, Kalv Festivalen, Transmediale Festival, Audio Art Festival, impuls festival, Darmstadt festival, CEME festival, KCMD festival, TENSO Days, Alba Music Festival, Seven Gates Festival and many more. His works have been performed in many prestigious concert halls around the world, including Royal Liverpool Philharmonic Hall, Southbank Centre, MUMUTH, Llangollen International Eisteddfod Pavilion, Royal Northern College of Music, Levontin 7 and Grypari Cultural Centre.
Smith is a scholar of Junge Akademie (2021) at the Akademie der Künste in Berlin. In 2017 he received the Gold Medal for composition from the Royal Northern College of Music for the piano trio “Dämmerung”. His work “ex” was selected as winner of a Score Follower open call in 2020. In 2013 he won the Royal Philharmonic Society’s “Mini-commission” competition and received third prize at the British Harpsichord Society International Competition. He has received numerous distinctions in competitions and open calls for scores. Smith holds a doctorate from the Royal Northern College of Music (2018) and a Master of Music in composition (2014, with distinction) from the same institution. He holds a Bachelor of Music (BMus Hons) from Liverpool Hope University, which he completed with First Class Honours (2012), and is an Associate Fellow of the Higher Education Academy (2017). His principal teachers were Adam Gorb, Emily Howard, Gary Carpenter and Stephen Pratt, and he has also received tuition from Chaya Czernowin, Zygmunt Krauze, Johannes Kreidler, Clara Iannotta, Marco Stroppa, Toshio Hosokawa, Brian Ferneyhough, Liza Lim, Mark Andre, Pierluigi Billone, Franck Bedrossian, Raphael Cendo, Dmitri Kourliandski and others. He has participated in the Synthetis International Composition Courses (2018, 2019 and 2022), impuls Festival (2019 and 2021), Kalv Festival (2021), MCME Academy (2021), Delian Academy (2019), CEME composition course (2019) and DME/Kyiv Days of Contemporary Music (2018). He also composes for film and theatre; his most recent project is: “Entuzjastki, siłyczki, bojowniczki. Kobiety Mazowsza 1863–1918” (2023) for the Museum of Independence in Warsaw. He currently collaborates with the Music Gardens Foundation as an adviser for the Synthetis Composition Course and is making a documentary film about the organisation (2024), its history and significance in Polish art music.
He is an enthusiastic craftsman and inventor, often constructing electronic devices and instruments. He is also currently developing several musical projects under various pseudonyms.
Jeanne Artemis Ashes on my tongue
For me, music is storytelling through emotional response to the things that surround us — the good and the bad. The catastrophes that people bring upon the natural environment and upon other people are a constant theme in my work. For instance, my piece Scherben (2015) for soprano and cello expresses loss:
“Hands reaching through the ashes, for the fragments,
that could no longer be put back together.”
In my piece titled Ashes on my tongue, written for Hashtag Ensemble, I continued this line of work and juxtaposed hopelessness with hope, giving expression to longing and love for our Mother Nature. The touch of various materials — such as the earth’s crust, soil, dust, rain — in their fragility but also in their strength — was presented not as an image, but rather as the sensation of fingertips touching them and the emotional response that evoked.
“Ashes On My Tongue” was created in response to the war against Ukraine. It is painful, however, that the piece remains current — rather than becoming a memory, as the composer had hoped. Through this work we send our warm thoughts to our friends in Ukraine.
The piece was written for Hashtag Ensemble in 2022 as part of the “Virtual Partner Residency” collaboration and grant from the Goethe-Institut in Berlin.
About the composer:
Jeanne Artemis
Jeanne Artemis is a composer and electronic sound artist based in Berlin. Her work focuses on creating spaces of solace and compassion in the face of the invisible suffering of individuals and communities. The individual sonic worlds she creates in this way seek contact with those who experience darkness.
From an early age she drew inspiration from European modernism, the legacy of non-European cultures and innovative forms of underground music. Consistently expanding the boundaries of art across genres, she has gained recognition and become an inspiration to other creators. She has received fellowships from the Goethe-Institut, the Berlin Senate for Culture and Europe, Musikfonds e.V., Neustart Kultur and the German Music Council. Her profile appeared in “Neue Zeitschrift für Musik” (issue 2/2021). Jeanne Artemis’s music has been performed worldwide — including in Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Greece, Iceland, Iran, Italy, Mexico, Poland, Sweden, the United Kingdom and the USA.
Katarzyna Krzewińska green&blue dreamin
The premise of the work was to combine the sounds of the natural world with the sounds of the contemporary city, and to create a commentary on the rush of daily life and our deep need for closer contact with nature.
The electronics layer and the sounds of the musical installation were created entirely from field recordings (sounds of nature and the city), giving the audio layer an organic character. These are sounds that surround us every day — often unnoticed, overlooked, undiscovered, and sometimes unwanted.
The objects of the sound installation symbolise our need for closeness with nature (a branch, flowers, water), as well as our dependence on technology, rush and consumerism (a phone, a clock, coins). Musicians interact with these objects and draw sounds from them, which becomes an element of the performance.
About the composer:
Katarzyna Krzewińska is a composer and sound artist working in instrumental and electroacoustic music, theatre music and sound installations. She holds a scholarship from the Minister of Culture and National Heritage. For several years she has been engaged with the theme of field recordings, creating compositions that use gathered sound materials. In 2023 she launches the international project “Renewable Music”, through which she develops her interests in this area. That same year she is invited to the artist residency “composer.pl”, during which she spends two weeks working creatively in Iceland. The result of that residency was a collaboration with the NOSPR Academy, for which she created three short orchestral forms in 2024. She is currently working on her artistic project “Usłysz Miasto” (“Hear the City”), which she is realising as part of the Kraków City Creative Scholarship 2024. In addition, she is a composer-in-residence in the “Composer Residencies” programme organised by the Association of Polish Chamber Musicians and the Authors’ Association ZAiKS.
Wojciech Błażejczyk Aether [2020] for ensemble, electromagnetic waves and live electronics is a work based on sounds emitted by electromagnetic waves surrounding the contemporary person. Their sources are radio waves, mobile phones, Wi-Fi networks, computers, transformers, electronic devices, and even microwave ovens. They surround us constantly — there is no escaping them. We cannot see this radiation, but let us imagine what would happen if we could hear it. It turns out that electromagnetic waves can be recorded and converted into sound. For this purpose I used the SOMA Laboratory Ether device, walking the streets of Warsaw, through shopping centres, offices, the metro and so on, listening to the electromagnetic landscape of my surroundings. These recordings are used in the electronics layer of the work, alongside transformations of the live instrumental sounds. The work was written for Hashtag Ensemble.
About the composer:
Wojciech Błażejczyk (b. 1981) — composer, guitarist, sound designer. He graduated in composition from the Fryderyk Chopin University of Music in Warsaw in the class of Prof. Zygmunt Krauze, in sound engineering at UMFC in the class of Prof. Andrzej Lupa, and from the Faculty of Journalism and Political Science at the University of Warsaw. He is an assistant professor at the Faculty of Composition, Conducting and Music Theory at UMFC, and director of the Studio of Electronic and Computer Music. His works have been performed at many festivals in Poland and abroad, including New Music Concerts (Toronto), Warszawska Jesień, Polish Modern: New Directions in Polish Music Since 1945 (New York), Visegard Portraits, Musica Moderna, Musica Electronica Nova, Musica Polonica Nova, Poznańska Wiosna Muzyczna, Warszawskie Spotkania Muzyczne, AudioArt, Afekt Festival, by ensembles such as MusikFabrik, the Polish Radio Orchestra, Lucilin, Filharmonia Gorzowska, New Music Concerts Ensemble, Orkiestra Wratislavia, Radomska Orkiestra Kameralna, Kwadrofonik, Sinfonia Iuventus, Hashtag Ensemble. In the 2014/15 season he was composer-in-residence at the Academic Choir of Prof. Jan Szyrecki at the West Pomeranian University of Technology in Szczecin, within the IMIT programme. He composes both acoustic and electroacoustic music. He has composed music for 18 theatre productions, 12 documentary and short films, the computer game Hard Reset, and 2 audiobooks.
He is the recipient of numerous prizes in composition competitions, including third prize at the 1st International Composition Competition K. Penderecki Arboretum, first prize at the 52nd Tadeusz Baird Young Composers’ Competition (2011), and second prize at the 51st Tadeusz Baird Young Composers’ Competition (2010). His work Warsaw Music reached the final of the European Broadcasting Union EBU Palm Ars Acustica 2016 competition. In 2013 he participated in the IRCAM Forum Workshops in Paris; in 2017 he took part in the Composer Collider programme with the ensemble MusikFabrik. He has released four monographic albums: Muzyka strun (Chopin University Press, 2022), General Theory of Relativity (2021, KAIROS), Trash Music (Requiem Records, 2018) and Loopowizacje (2013, For Tune), as well as a series of albums of improvised music (with Hashtag Ensemble and The Intuition Orchestra).
Wojciech Błażejczyk is also an active guitarist. He performs new and improvised music on electric guitar and using electronics, as well as objectophones — instruments he has built himself (everyday objects whose sound is processed live). He has performed at festivals including Warszawska Jesień, Sacrum Profanum, Musica Polonica Nova, Musica Electronica Nova, AdLibitum, Musica Moderna, Audio Art, Ankunft: Neue Musik, Olympus Jazz Festival, Visegard Portraits, Meridien, and Poznańska Wiosna. He performs with the new music ensemble Hashtag Ensemble. He also performs improvised music (he has appeared with, among others, Kawalerowie Błotni, Electronishes Gluck, Adam Pierończyk, Agata Zubel, Krzysztof Knittel, Joëlle Léandre). He co-leads the improvising trio Sonofrenia and the ensemble Niemy Movie, which performs live music to silent films.
As a sound engineer he specialises in recording and sound projection at new music concerts and creating sound design for films. He has led workshops in electroacoustic music at the Synthetis International Composition Course in Radziejowice. He also runs workshops for children related to electroacoustic music and the use of objects in music.
Aleksandra Kaca Coal for flute, clarinets, violin, cello and electronics
In 2018 I saw the exhibition “Pollock and the New York School” at the Complesso del Vittoriano in Rome. Among the dynamic works of Jackson Pollock, my attention was caught by a black-and-white painting by Franz Kline. It was Mahoning. The striking interaction between the broad black lines on a contrasting ground proved to be an interesting musical idea.
About the composer:
Aleksandra Kaca
In her work she focuses primarily on timbre, reaching for unusual instrument combinations such as harp and piano in Smugi cienia (The Shadow Line) or soprano and baritone saxophone with electronics in Argument snu (The Argument of Sleep). She is the winner of first prize at the 56th Tadeusz Baird Young Composers’ Competition and a beneficiary of the “Muzyka Naszych Czasów” programme, within which selected works were recorded by DUX and scores published by the Polish Music Publishers. In 2020 she undertook an artistic residency in Iceland (organised by Agata Zubel and Michał Moc).
Her compositions have been performed in the USA, Norway, Denmark, Spain, France, Israel, Germany and Poland — at festivals including Warszawska Jesień, Sacrum Profanum, WarszeMuzik, Mixtur (Barcelona), ManiFeste (Paris), Pulsar Festival (Copenhagen), as well as at the National Philharmonic, Nowy Teatr and the Krzysztof Penderecki European Centre for Music. Her music has been presented by ensembles and artists including Ensemble intercontemporain, the National Polish Radio Symphony Orchestra (NOSPR), Hashtag Ensemble, Esbjerg Ensemble and Kebyart.
From 2019 to 2021 she served as manager of Hashtag Ensemble. She worked on events including the Kwartesencja Festival (Royal String Quartet) and the Kwadrofonik Festival. On behalf of the National Centre for Culture she coordinated, among other things, a concert by Leszek Możdżer at the Copernicus Science Centre Planetarium and Sławek Jaskułke’s project “Europa 67/21” (a concert on Polish Radio and album release). Since 2022 she has been Vice-Chair of the Serious Music Section of ZAiKS.
She holds degrees in Italian studies from the University of Warsaw and in composition and postgraduate studies in music management from the Fryderyk Chopin University of Music in Warsaw. She also studied composition at the Royal Academy of Music in Aarhus in the class of Simon Steen-Andersen and Niels Rønsholdt, and cultural production, journalism and multimedia at LUMSA University in Rome.
Selected works: seems for harp and electronics (2024), Neve for electric string quartet and electronics (2023), Spaces (a cycle of electroacoustic miniatures, 2022), Envers for ensemble and electronics (2021), abisal for saxophone quartet (2021), Inner for flute, alto recorder, live electronics and video (2020), rilievo for orchestra and electronics (2020), Coal for flute, bass clarinet, violin, cello, sampler and live electronics (2020), Common Ground for ensemble and electronics (2018), Argument snu for saxophones and electronics (2017), Volière II for clarinet, cello and double bass (2017), Flarlægur for violin and viola (2016), Mémoire de l’ombre for cello (2015), Smugi cienia for harp, piano and cello (2014).