Nun, es wird nicht mehr geh’n is a quietly arresting work that places Magnus Granberg at the forefront of contemporary, post-Feldman chamber composition. Written for and performed by Skogen, Granberg’s long-running collaborative ensemble, the album develops over extended durations, favoring a distinctive blend of improvisation and composed materials. Drawing inspiration from literary and musical ancestors - including the haunting lyricism of Olivier Messiaen and the structural clarity of Morton Feldman - Granberg establishes an environment of painstaking restraint. The music unfolds as a series of overlapping pools of melodic and harmonic fragments, each chosen and played by the ensemble according to flexible guidelines rather than strict notation. Prepared piano, violin, cello, percussion, and winds collectively sustain a fragile equilibrium. Instrumental voices drift in and out of focus, at times converging in translucent harmonies, at times dispersing in solo gestures or whispered textures. Granberg’s processes privilege an intuitive, conversational mode of music making; the result is a record that is immersive without excess, contemplative without stasis.
Skogen, founded by Granberg in 2005, brings together performers from various backgrounds in improvisation and composition. Their approach on this album is both rigorously exploratory and gently communal, allowing the music to breathe and evolve with each gesture. Recorded in Stockholm, Nun, es wird nicht mehr geh’n extends the ensemble’s tradition of meditative minimalism and spectral lyricism, offering a listening experience that asks for patience but rewards with intricately woven sonic narratives. This release exemplifies Granberg’s capacity to transform subtle differences - in timbre, rhythm, and motivic contour - into profound musical statements. The interplay between individual choice and collective texture results in a music both humble and quietly transcendent, reaffirming that moments of stillness and fragile emergence can be among the most powerful in contemporary chamber art.