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Musical Nature

ICE MUSIC Isungset plays at the Ice Music Festival Norway. Brr! EMILE HOLBA

Do you play an instrument? Have you ever made one? Terje Isungset can answer yes to both questions. He’s a drummer. And he makes instruments out of something pretty cool: ice!

IN THE IGLOO Musicians will play inside this unique concert space. It’s made of ice and snow.

JONATHAN NACKSTRAND—AFP/GETTY IMAGES

He doesn’t use just any frozen stuff. “You can buy perfect ice from factories around the world,” Isungset told TIME for Kids. “But it will not have any sound.” He gets his ice from the wild. “It’s nature that decides the sound of the instrument,” he says.

Isungset got the idea for ice music more than 20 years ago. “I was asked to do a concert in a frozen waterfall,” he says. This got him thinking. Could he make instruments out of ice?

ICE SCULPTOR Terje Isungset uses ice from local lakes to make musical instruments. A chain saw helps.

JONATHAN NACKSTRAND—AFP/GETTY IMAGES

“There were no people to ask how to do this. There were no books to read about it, and there was nothing on the Internet,” he says. “So I had to create everything by myself. It was a lot of trial and error.”

Finally, in 2006, Isungset helped start the Ice Music Festival Norway. It’s in Europe. The 18th of these festivals is scheduled to take place from February 1 to 4.

Showtime

AUDIENCE PARTICIPATION At the end of the festival, the audience helps give the ice instruments back to nature.

JONATHAN NACKSTRAND—AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Almost everything at the Ice Music Festival is frozen. “As you can imagine, there are a lot of logistics logistics STOCKTREK—GETTY IMAGES the details that go into making something happen (noun) Working out the logistics for the rocket launch was a team effort. involved in doing an ice concert,” Isungset says. “We come to a place, we harvest the ice, and we build the venue venue WESTEND61—GETTY IMAGES a place where an event is held (noun) The park was the perfect venue for a picnic. out of snow and ice.”

Instruments include ice chimes, drums, and horns. If it were cold outside, wouldn’t your lips stick to an ice horn?

PLAY IT COOL Would your lips stick to this ice horn? To prevent that, Isungset attaches leather to the mouthpiece.

TAKASHI NAGASAWA

“Many people ask that question,” Isungset says. “If the horn were made out of metal, they would get stuck completely. [With an ice horn,] I might get frostbite on my lips.” His solution is to place a small piece of leather on the horn’s mouthpiece.

Some of Isungset’s instruments are based on familiar ones. Others he dreams up. “For the festival, I have a goal of trying to invent a new instrument every year,” he says.

When the show is over, Isungset says, “We invite the audience to give the ice instruments back to nature.”