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Struggle for Pleasure
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"Struggle for Pleasure" is a musical piece released in 1983 by Belgian composer Wim Mertens. It is the theme music used by the Belgian phone operator Proximus. It was featured in the Peter Greenaway movie The Belly of an Architect. Energy 52's track "Café Del Mar" features a main melody based on "Struggle for Pleasure".[1] This music was chosen for '90s television spot of Merit Cup. It was also covered by Belgian dance music group Minimalistix in 2000 and reached dance charts across Europe.
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[edit]Struggle for Pleasure
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Background
Wim Mertens
Wim Mertens was born on 14 May 1953 in Neerpelt, Belgium, where early exposure to music through his family fostered an interest in composition and performance.[6] His formative influences included classical training from a young age, shaping his approach to sound and structure. Mertens pursued higher education in the social sciences, graduating in political and social sciences from the K.U. Leuven in 1975, followed by studies in musicology at Ghent University (R.U. Gent). He also received instruction in music theory and piano at the Royal Conservatories of Ghent and Brussels, as well as initial training at the Conservatory of Brussels.[7] In the late 1970s, Mertens launched his professional career as a producer for Belgian Radio and Television (BRT, now VRT), where he organized broadcasts and recordings of contemporary artists, including Philip Glass and Michael Nyman. This role immersed him in the evolving landscape of experimental music, prompting a shift toward composition in minimalist and post-minimalist idioms characterized by repetition and layered textures. By 1980, he debuted as a recording artist with For Amusement Only, an electronic work designed for pinball machines, marking his entry into independent production.[7][8] A pivotal early release, At Home – Not at Home (1981), exemplified Mertens' emerging style through hypnotic, repetitive structures performed by his ensemble Soft Verdict, blending acoustic and electronic elements. This album highlighted his focus on non-narrative forms inspired by American minimalism, as explored in his Ghent thesis on composers like Steve Reich.[9][10] By 2025, Mertens had released over 70 albums, establishing himself as a prolific figure in contemporary music with works spanning solo piano improvisations, vocal explorations as a countertenor, and ensemble pieces that emphasize rhythmic cycles and harmonic subtlety. His output, primarily through labels like Les Disques du Crépuscule and his own Usura Music, reflects a sustained commitment to intimate, introspective soundscapes without reliance on traditional orchestration.[11][8] Mertens' minimalist aesthetic would later inform pieces like Struggle for Pleasure.Creative context
"Struggle for Pleasure" was composed in April and October 1982 while Wim Mertens was in the South of France, with specific locations including the villages of Tourtour and Salernes in the Var department of Provence; these places directly inspired the names of two tracks on the album.[2] This period marked a continuation of Mertens' explorations in minimalism, building on his prior album Vergessen (1982), which introduced his writings for ensemble.[12] The album's title encapsulates an oxymoronic theme, juxtaposing the exertion and repetition inherent in "struggle" against the release and romanticism of "pleasure," reflecting Mertens' fascination with emotional contrasts in contemporary life. Influenced by the minimalist movement, particularly the repetitive structures of Steve Reich and Philip Glass—composers whose concerts Mertens had produced earlier in his career—Mertens distinguished his approach by integrating subtle Belgian folk inflections and innovative vocal techniques, even in primarily instrumental contexts.[13][14] The recording took place in 1982 under the engineering of Marc François, who captured the work's intimate ensemble sound, prioritizing close-knit interactions among a small group of musicians over expansive orchestral forces. This setup allowed for a focused expression of the piece's delicate tensions and lyrical qualities.[15]Composition
Development process
Wim Mertens developed "Struggle for Pleasure" through an iterative composition approach, beginning with piano sketches that evolved organically via intuitive improvisation at the keyboard. In a 2013 interview, he explained that for instrumental works like this piece, an inner vocal element guided his hands on the keyboard, translating vocal phrasing into percussive piano layers without predetermined systems.[16] This hands-on method allowed him to layer repetitive motifs, gradually building hypnotic tension characteristic of his early minimalist style.[5] Composed principally in Salernes in the South of France during April and October 1982, the track integrates seamlessly into the album's concept as its emotional core and title piece.[4] Positioned as the second track, it is bookended by the location-inspired openings "Tourtour" and "Salernes," framing its introspective intensity within a broader sense of place and transience.[2] Mertens faced the challenge of balancing stark minimal repetition with dynamic shifts to convey the duality of tension and release, employing ascending patterns for a sense of striving and consonant resolutions for catharsis, all realized through ensemble textures with limited electronic elements like bass synthesizer.[17] This restraint heightened the piece's hypnotic drive, blending serene romanticism with frenetic energy in a compact form.[17] Clocking in at approximately 3:53 minutes, "Struggle for Pleasure" unfolds in distinct phases: an initial buildup via overlaid motifs that accumulate intensity, followed by a climactic release through harmonic easing, distinguishing its architecture from the album's surrounding vignettes.[2]Instrumentation
The original recording of Struggle for Pleasure, released in 1983 under the Soft Verdict moniker, featured a compact chamber ensemble assembled by Wim Mertens, emphasizing a minimalist aesthetic through a blend of acoustic and select electric elements.[18] The core performers included Wim Mertens himself on electric and acoustic piano as well as voice; Dirk Descheemaeker and John Ruocco on clarinet; and Luk Schollaert on soprano saxophone. These musicians formed the primary group during the 1982 recording sessions, engineered by Marc François.[19] For the title track, the instrumentation consisted of piano by Wim Mertens and Hans François, soprano saxophone by Luk Schollaert, and bass synthesizer by Pieter Vereertbrugghen.[2] Additional contributors rounded out the ensemble with specialized roles across the album: Marc Grauwels and Marilyn Maingart on piccolo; Hans François on electric and acoustic piano; Anne Van Den Troost on harp; and Pieter Vereertbrugghen on percussion.[18][19] This lineup, totaling ten musicians across the album's tracks, supported Mertens' vision of intimate, layered textures without large-scale orchestration.[18] In the arrangements, the clarinets and piccolo handled melodic lines and trills, while the soprano saxophone added complementary wind elements; the pianos and harp provided the harmonic foundation; and the percussion offered minimal, subtle rhythmic support to maintain the work's unadorned minimalism.[19] All aspects of the music were composed, arranged, and produced by Mertens, with engineering by Marc François, prioritizing acoustic intimacy and natural resonance over extensive electronic amplification or effects.[18]Release and recordings
Original album
Struggle for Pleasure was released in December 1983 as a 6-track EP on the Belgian label Les Disques Du Crépuscule under the project name Soft Verdict, with rights later managed by Usura Music.[19] The total runtime of the original album is 19:44.[20] The track listing is as follows:- Tourtour (2:30)
- Struggle for Pleasure (3:53)
- Salernes (2:59)
- Close Cover (3:15)
- Bresque (2:33)
- Gentlemen of Leisure (4:34)[20]
