Laibach
Laibach's Sound of Music

Musical performance / Commissioned work

Dates
20.9.2018

Location
Schloßbergbühne Kasematten
Graz

Production specifics
Commissioned and produced by steirischer herbst

Laibach, the controversial Slovenian music and performance group, is known for its sophisticated subversion of totalitarian aesthetics and its ability to discern its traces and ideologies in seemingly innocent contexts. This time its inspiration is The Sound of Music, the 1959 stage musical and 1965 Hollywood film, hugely popular all over the world as a symbol of Austria to this day. Its story is twofold: one dramatic arc centers upon a young Catholic girl who, around 1938, becomes a governess and inspires her seven charges to sing, eventually marrying their father, a widowed Austrian naval officer; but the grand narrative is really about Austria, a small country, proud and free that (in this version of the story) is faithful to its Alpine identity and resists the pressures of a cosmopolitan, modernizing German Nazism. The history of World War II is thus rewritten as one of national self-determination in idyllic images of children and their nanny singing on mountaintops, and these images are somehow themselves dangerously post-fascist. That, according to the philosopher Slavoj Žižek, is the source of the film’s appeal: it satisfies both the surface desire to oppose fascism and the deep desire to embrace its core values. Drawing out these perverse contradictions as only they can, Laibach performs songs from this iconic film along with new material as part of a preview of its new album. This specially-commissioned musical performance—complete with an orchestra and a children’s choir—takes place at Kasematten on top of the Schloßberg, in a setting reminiscent of the open-air stage of Salzburger Festspiele, prominently featured in the film.

Artistic troupe: Laibach, featuring guest vocalists Boris Benko and Marina Mårtensson
Collaborators: Edelweiss Children Choir, Do-Re-Mi String Sextet with Primož Hladnik (compositions, arrangements, keyboards), Peter Mlakar (sermon), Komposter (visuals, films), Valnoir (poster design)
Technical team: Matej Gobec (sound), Tomaž Ambruš (light), Tomislav Gangl (projections), Sašo Pušnik (monitor, stage), Gregor Musa (production manager)

Mediathek

Retrospective
Retrospective
Retrospective