| 1 CD |
€ 14.95
|
Preorder |
| Label Antarctica |
UPC 0608917738025 |
Catalogue number AR 080 |
Release date 06 February 2026 |
Ex Nihilo brings together a diverse palette of music into one continuous flow. Ligeti’s Musica Ricercata forms the spine of the program, interwoven with 20th-century works that resonate with it and new interludes by Brecht Valckenaers. Together, they trace a lineage of invention — exploring how composers reimagine their musical language and the piano itself ex nihilo, “from nothing.”
Brecht Valckenaers (b. 2000, Leuven) is a versatile pianist and composer who combines his love for classical and contemporary repertoire with his own compositions and improvisations.
He studied for eight years with Nikolaas Kende at the Royal Conservatoire of Antwerp and is currently continuing his studies with Claudio Martínez Mehner at the Hochschule für Musik Basel and Eliso Virsaladze at the Scuola di Musica di Fiesole.
Brecht has won prizes at several competitions, including the Steinway Piano Competition, Cantabile Piano Competition, Breughel Piano Competition, Concours de Piano Andrée Charlier, and the EPTA Piano Competition. In 2025, he received the Third Prize and the Prize for the Best Performance of a Dutch Work at the YPF European Piano Competition in Amsterdam.
He has appeared as a soloist with orchestra and has performed in venues such as Bozar, Flagey, deSingel, Palais des Beaux-Arts de Charleroi, Muziekgebouw aan ’t IJ, and Bimhuis Amsterdam. His compositions — marked by strong rhythmic inventiveness — have been broadcast on national radio and received enthusiastic responses on YouTube. After a celebrated appearance at Festival 20·21 in 2024 with his project Ex Nihilo, Brecht is delighted to continue his collaboration with the festival as Artist in Residence for the coming editions.
Driven by a desire to keep exploring and pushing his musical boundaries, Brecht approaches music as a language to be experienced in all its forms: reading and reciting through the performance of classical and contemporary repertoire, speaking through improvisation, and writing through composition.