What is behind?, 2023 – for piano, electronics and LED mask

Performer: Jenifer Hymer
Recording: 18.11.2023

“What is Behind?” is a piece that explores how we understand truth through sound, sight, and emotion. It reflects on the ways social media and societal narratives shape our perception of reality.

The music blends live performance with recorded sounds from a prepared piano, creating a rich and varied listening experience. The title invites us to question what we believe and how these influences shape our views. How do social media and society shape what we think is real, and how can we find our own path through this complex world?

Call of the Void, 2022 – a part of A Space Journey – Perspectives on the Unknown

Komposition: Goran Lazarevic
Regie: Lucia Wunsch
Video: Tam Thi Pham
Wissenschaft: Denis Wittor
Kostüm: Magdalena Kriete
Schauspiel: Johanna Link 

The piece is a part of the A SPACE JOURNEY is a multimedia music theater at the interface of music and astrophysics, dealing with the universe as a mirror of human questions. Eight teams, consisting of the composer, director and staff of the Hamburg Observatory, process different perspectives on the unknown in the universe into eight compositions. The starting point of their pieces are events such as dark matter, time travel, the evolution of first matter after the Big Bang, or communication with alien life forms. The eight pieces combine to form stations on a journey through the universe. In doing so, they make use of the new audio and video technologies at the Forum, which has expanded the Forum into a multimedia stage as part of the Innovative University funding program.



1.5m, 2021 – for dance, lights, and music

it is a part of ne(x)t_generation 8.5 | Streaming festival of electronic university studios | 26.06.2021
Concept, Music, Light-program: Tam Thi Pham
Dancers: Angela-Mara Florant and Natalia Golubts

Watch the full stream: https://youtu.be/dlDM0gg9T7c?t=4466

Urban Perspective, 2021 – for acoustic electronics

Click on the image to listen to music!

Photo by Helge Mundt

Installation: 1. Juni–4. September 2022
The piece is part of the sound and video installation “How to Live in the Echo of Other Places,” which brings subjective memories of distant locations to life, both visually and acoustically, within the urban space. Designed specifically for this environment, it utilizes spatialized sound. Together with 10 composers, and the work of the project leader Annika Kahrs was performing at Schuppen 29 in Hamburg’s former free Harbor, which marks the endpoint of an imaginary line between the old town and HafenCity. This project is being presented as part of the 8th Triennial of Photography Hamburg 2022, organized by Imagine the City.
*This version of the piece has been adapted to a stereo format for the website.

Contrasts, 2020 – for accordion and electronics

Performer: Goran Lazarevic
Recording: 18.10.2020

The composition explores the sensation of standing under both cold and hot water simultaneously. The accordion represents the human body, with its sounds reflecting the tension and release experienced in contrasting environments. In addition to the live performance, a Max MSP program was used to trigger samples based on frequency inputs, creating a dynamic interaction between the electronic elements and the performer.

Dark Alleys trailer, 2019 – for performer and electronics

Performer: Tam Thi Pham
The piece Dark Alleys  is inspired by the ritual practices of the Vietnamese people. Almost every Vietnamese family conducts worship rituals twice a month, on the 1st and 15th days according to the lunar calendar. These rituals honor deceased ancestors or various deities, including Caishen (the god of wealth or fortune), the earth’s guardian spirit, the god of doors, and the kitchen god, typically at the end of the lunar year.

July is a particularly significant month, known as “ghost month,” when spirits and ghosts—including those of deceased ancestors—are believed to emerge from the underworld. For me, Dark Alleys represents a space where the living and the dead can sense and communicate with each other. It was later used in the concert Parallel worlds – the final concert of the master program.

Multidimensional, 2019

I composed a part of the piece “Multidimensional” for the Dance festival 2019 in Vietnam.

Choreographer: Huy Tran.

Clouds, 2019 – electronics

Performer: Tam Thi Pham
Improvisation work, using the contact mics and electronics

Improvisation, 2019 – EMS Synthi AKS

Performer: Tam Thi Pham

To bury your head in the sand – for organ, electronics and fix visual

the piece was composed for Orgel-Multimedial concert in St. Johannis church in 2019, featuring the beautiful organ there. The piece ponders upon the unmindful and shirking relationship between individuals and society on issues of environment. It is open suggestion for audience to think about responsibility and our attitude about what’s happening around us.
Composer: Tam Thi Pham
Organ performances: Tam Thi Pham và Sunkyung Noh

Music/performance/visual by Tam Thi Pham

This piece was inspired by the political situation in Vietnam and my view of the people who hold political power in society.The basis of the video material is a recording of a live performance I did back in Hanoi. The material was transformed, edited and enhanced with the music I composed specifically for it. I processed the recordings of crowds of people, traditional Vietnamese instrument and the cello to represent the cultural melting pot todays societies are becoming. The usage of English prefixes as sound material relates to the need to always look for shortcuts and reaching the goal as quickly as possible, sometimes irrespective of the price or the bad consequences of a wrong guess.  

Undulation, 2018 – for đàn bầu solo

Performer: Tam Thi Pham
I created it after moving to Hamburg, when I was deeply nostalgic for Vietnam. The piece is inspired by memories of riding a motorbike on rough roads in a place I knew well. Since the composition is personal, I incorporated toy horses, reflecting my zodiac sign, which is the horse.

Performer: Tam Thi Pham

Touch, 2017 – solo performer

it was inspired by a moment of helplessness when I saw a dog locked in a cage on Long Bien Bridge in Hanoi. That brief encounter made me reflect on the small, fragile lives around us. I imagined myself in the dog’s position, leading to a year-long exploration of this idea. I bought a cage and spent countless hours inside it, discovering a powerful connection between the image of the caged dog and the status of women in my society.

In Vietnam, societal rules, norms, and traditions often function as a cage, especially for women. The pressure to conform to traditional expectations, dictated by society and men, is immense, and few women manage to break free from it. As a result, most women accept their restricted roles and low status.

I performed this piece in an art space—a combination of gallery, library, and performance venue—using my voice and various objects to create sound. My primary instruments were my voice, duct tape, the cage itself, and a contact microphone

Performer: Tam Thi Pham

Verwirrung, 2016 – for objects and electronics

Performer: Tam Thi Pham
It was inspired by the noise in Hanoi.