There is a famous painting by Saša Šantl that hangs on the wall of the Slovenian Philharmonic. It is a formal, dignified capture of our musical forefathers. For a long time, that was my mental image of "The Composer"—stately, silent, and framed in gold.
But history looks a little different when it’s being made in 2025.
The View from Above
To celebrate the 80th anniversary of the DSS (Society of Slovene Composers), we didn’t sit for a silent oil portrait. Instead, we gathered outside for a modern photoshoot—complete with a drone buzzing overhead like a giant mechanical insect.
There is something inherently funny about a group of composers, people who usually work in the quiet solitude of their own heads, trying to coordinate for a drone shot.
The "Composer Jokes" & Rare Moments
The best part of the day wasn't the camera itself; it was the rare chance to stand on the grass and talk. As composers, we are often "ships passing in the night," busy with our own commissions and premieres.
The photoshoot became a rare bridge. Between shots, the air was filled with:
• Catching up: Hearing about projects from colleagues I haven't seen in years.
• Composer Jokes: The kind of nerdy, technical humor that only another person who obsesses over a "fine line" in a score would understand.
• A Shared Mission: Acknowledging that while our styles are vastly different, we are all part of this 80-year-old living organism called the DSS.
A New Kind of Honor
As the drone soared up to capture us all from a bird's-eye view, I couldn't help but smile. It was a stark contrast to Šantl’s painting, but the feeling was the same: belonging. One of my pieces was performed as part of this anniversary season, but standing there, laughing with my peers, I realized that the music is only half the story. The other half is the community. We aren't just names on a program; we are a living, breathing, joking collective of creators.
What an honor to be in the frame—even if the "painter" this time was a remote-controlled drone!