Victoria Borisova-Ollas
*21.12.1969

News

  • Victoria Borisova-Ollas
    Victoria Borisova-Ollas wins Christ Johnson Prize
    Victoria Borisova-Ollas wins Christ Johnson Prize
    On 28 November, Victoria Borisova-Ollas will receive Sweden’s most important composition award, th [...]
  • Victoria Borisova-Ollas
    Première of Borisova-Ollas' Angelus
    Première of Borisova-Ollas' Angelus
    On 24 June Victoria Borisova-Ollas' work for orchestra Angelus will recieve its UK première in Glas [...]
  • Victoria Borisova-Ollas
    Borisova-Ollas/Faingersh: Hamlet
    Borisova-Ollas/Faingersh: Hamlet
    Victoria Borisova-Ollas’ and Elias Faingersh’s Hamlet – a drama for trombone and orchestra – [...]
  • Victoria Borisova-Ollas
    Borisova-Ollas wins Swedish Award
    Borisova-Ollas wins Swedish Award
    Victoria Borisova-Ollas has once again received a prestigious Swedish Publishers Award. [...]
  • Victoria Borisova-Ollas
    Wunderbare Leiden: World première of Victoria Borisova-Ollas' new work in Düsseldorf
    Wunderbare Leiden: World première of Victoria Borisova-Ollas' new work in Düsseldorf
    Victoria Borisova-Ollas’ new work Wunderbare Leiden will be premièred in Düsseldorf on 8 Oct by [...]
 

Victoria Borisova-Ollas
In a World Unspoken | for saxophone quartet and organ - Work Introduction

Stockholm-based award-winning composer Victoria Borisova-Ollas was inspired in this piece by verses from The Soldier by the English poet Humbert Wolfe (1885-1940).  The first four lines read:

Down some cold field in a world unspoken

the young men are walking together, slim and tall,

and though they laugh to one another, silence is not broken;

there is no sound however clear they call.

Borisova-Ollas sees these verses as a kind of silent film, in which the figures of the past sweep before the eyes of the observers, seem to speak to their companions, shout or laugh, the watcher unable to hear the slightest hint of what they are saying.

Musically, she realises this unspoken world by making individual sounds and motifs audible, sometimes one at a time, sometimes in pairs or groups. The individual words or fragments of sentences run past each other like separate conversations, as if one might have read the lips of the figures in this apparently silent world and deciphered their meaning.