BENJAMIN ABEL MEIRHAEGHE
MADRIGALEN
ft. Jesse Kanda
21 JANUARI 2022 DESINGEL
What inspired you to get into the arts/performance and did you have any influential role models (if so, who?)
“At an early age, I was touched by Salvador Dali and Gala. I was also very interested in puppetry and built scenographics in the garage. When I was 15 years old I got to know contemporary performance makers like Ivo Dimchev, Florentina Holzinger, Vincent Riebeek, Castellucci, Anohni, Farinelli, etc. These makers had an important influence on my development as an artist.”
What is your creative process and what are the most important things you keep in mind when beginning a new project? Are there any recurring themes/issues you like to address within your work?
“When I have an idea, I start to discuss the concept with writer Louise van den Eede. She is an important researcher in my work. Together we write a substantive hold, a document that I can use during the rehearsals to guide me.
I like the idea of 'origin', but at the same time, I am remarkably curious about the idea of 'future', about evolutions and even revolutions to come. Without wishing to oppose the preservation of the existing repertoire, I find it a great challenge to combine classical fragments with new symbols, sounds in a radically unique scenography. I make mysterious and contemporary rituals that can reconnect with the life I know, with real emotions, with our experiences and the political thinking of today.”
You recently released the dreamy/other-worldly album ‘Spectacles’, what was the inspiration behind it?
“I had the desire to create a theatrical music show, a bombastic spectacle and a sectarian love ritual. We made this show in a period I suffered in love. The album is irresistibly linked to performance. Our style is operatic dada-blues-punk-pop songs. We focus on diverse atmospheres ranging from dark beats, unprecedented vocal heights, horny sax parts and strange operatic allures. Armed with star-dancer Hanako Hayakawa, a strange monolith made by visual artist Elissa Lacoste, a poppy campfire and a lot of smoke, I and my compagnon de route Laurens Mariën want to merge the theatre-and-concert hall. It is therefore with the support of both music and theatre that this project came about during the epidemic. We made an unique combination of co-producers: Ancienne Belgique, Vooruit, Stuk, de Studio, Pilar, Muziektheater Transparant and detheatermaker. Jasper Segers produced the record, Lander Gyselinck, David Numwami, Mattias de Craene acted as recording musicians, Louise van den Eede gave dramaturgical advice.”