This year taught us that the most unforgettable art doesn’t come from tighter control. It comes from trust. Trust in yourself, trust in your craft, and trust in the people standing next to you.
At the beginning of the year, that lesson hit us like a spark in a dark room at Floor on Fire. Dancers improvising in real time. Musicians improvising in real time. And then we took the leap of inviting new collaborators into the unknown with us: Luna, Ingo, and Markus stepping into the fire, with barely any time and a whole lot of heart.
What happened onstage wasn’t “planned.” It was built live.
A magical exchange where everyone was listening so deeply that the performance started to feel like a living creature, changing shape with every breath, every step, every note. Improvisation wasn’t chaos, it was courage held together by craft, and the result was something no rehearsal could ever manufacture.
Then we carried that same lesson into our own new show development at Landesbühnen, inviting Reinaldo and Centre Films to help us expand the world of the Prologue with visuals and narrative. And again, the pattern repeated: the moment we stopped trying to do everything alone, the work grew into something bigger than any one person’s imagination.
Our takeaway:
A “unique experience” isn’t just higher production. It’s deeper partnership. It’s creating a space where everyone is allowed to be alive, responsive, and human, not just perfect. It’s the bravery to say: “I don’t know exactly what this will become… but I trust us to find it together.”
What others can learn from that:
Know your fundamentals so well you can let go. Invite people in early. Share authorship. Build environments where risks are safe and mistakes are part of the magic. Because the audience can feel when something is real, and when it’s real, they don’t just watch. They lean in.
Amazing things can happen when musicians and other artists come together. I look forward to what comes next for you.
Merry Christmas.
Merry christmas my friend. Thanks for stopping by!
Not being a musician, but someone who likes music a LOT, I agree regarding the improve on stage. How cool that can be. And indeed, it'll add something in our mind, an extra appreciation of what we hear (and see). Errors are all ok, especially when the flow keeps going. NJOY Xmas.
This resonates — this topic is under-discussed
This. the second-order effects of this topic are worth watching