Archive for May, 2009

Ne(x)tworks

nextworks_4-07

Left to Right: Cornelius Dufallo, Stephen Gosling, Joan La Barbara, Yves Dharamraj (seated), Kenji Bunch, Ariana Kim, Shelley Burgon, Miguel Frasconi,Chris McIntyre

7pm – Fredric Rzewski’s Les Mouton de Panurge
A rare complete reading of this seminal work from 1969 that audaciously combines pure Minimalist additive/subtractive technique with bold inderterminacy.

9pm – Music for and by Ne(x)tworks
Michael Schumacher - isorhythmic variations 
Anthony Coleman - Seven at the Golden Shovel
Joan La Barbara - Scatter 
Kenji Bunch – selections from Woman in the Dunes
Miguel Frasconi – new work


Ne(x)tworks is a collaborative ensemble of musicians creating and interpreting work that features a dynamic relationship between composition and improvisation. In performance and recordings, the group locates pathways into various types of notation systems and interfaces, striving for a meaningful dialogue with the past, present, and future of creative music. 

more…


TILT Brass presents New York Noise

TILT plays music by four legendary Downtown composers

lotilt_roulette
Nick Didkovsky – Stink Up! (2003) [World Premiere]

full ensemble

Lois V. Vierk – Jagged Mesa (1990)
2 trp, 2 tnr trb, 2 bs trb

Rhys Chatham – Waterloo No.2 (1986)

3 trp, 2 trb, solo perc

Elliot Sharp – Coriolis Effect (1998/2003)

full ensemble

 

PERSONNEL
Trumpet – Shane Endsley, Russ Johnson

Josh Frank

French Horn – Mike Atkinson, Ann Ellsworth, Mark Taylor

Trombone – Joe Fiedler, Chris McIntyre

Bass Trombone – Jacob Garchik, Dave Nelson

Tuba – Ron Caswell

Percussion - Garrett Brown

Conductor - Greg Evans

 www.tiltbrass.org

TILT Brass’ New York Noise series presents compositions and improvising strategies developed within the singular musical culture of Downtown NYC during the past 30 years.  By the late 70′s, “Downtown Music” referred to several strains of activity in New York such as minimalist tendencies in the classic SoHo Scene, the post-punk severity of No Wave bands, and the improvisational abandon of the Loft Jazz scene. As the 80′s progressed, a natural blending of these performance practices gave rise to a sort of Post-Modern hybridity still highly influential on the “new music” community today.

The musicians of TILT are direct descendants of these historical “local” traditions, continuing to evolve and mutate inherited aesthetic DNA, often along side important legacy artists.  When possible, the group works directly with composers to adapt older works and/or create new ones for its innovative instrumentation(s), striving to expose and reinvigorate this important musical legacy.

New York-based TILT Brass is a collective of creative brass and percussion artists that has presented concerts throughout the city since 2003. Many of the musicians who participate in TILT projects are leaders in their field, such as trumpeters Russ Johnson and Nate Wooley, trombonists Joe Fiedler and Curtis Hasselbring, horn player John Clark, and percussionist Kevin Norton. The group’s repertoire features over a dozen works custom designed for its two projects, the 10-piece Creative Brass Band and 6-piece SIXtet. The latter, with duos of trumpet, trombone, and tuba, features Johnson, Wooley, Hasselbring and TILT Director Chris McIntyre on trombone, and Joe Exely and John Altieri on tuba. 

>This ever-evolving list of idiosyncratic pieces being created for both ensembles includes works by important voices in the avant jazz and experimental concert music fields, including Anthony Coleman, John King, Chris Jonas, Taylor Ho Bynum, and group members Norton and McIntyre, among others. Coleman’s work Set Into Motion, premiered by the Brass Band in 2005, was released on the composer’s acclaimed Tzadik CD Pushy Blueness in August ’06. In addition to original works, TILT presents many pieces from the experimental tradition. Programs have featured historical compositions such as a Varése graphic score from the late 50′s and selections from James Tenney’s Postal Pieces, epochal works from the 70′s by Fredric Rzewski (Les Mounton de Panurge) and early John Adams (Light Over Water), and contemporary works by Elliott Sharp and Lois V. Vierk (June ’09).

Over its 6 year history, a number of vital New York venues have presented TILT Brass projects such as the Whitney Museum, BAM Café, Joe’s Pub, Issue Project Room, and Tonic. In December ’06, TILT SIXtet joined forces with Chris McIntyre’s group Lotet (collectively known as LoTILT) at Roulette Intermedium to premiere his folio score Metaxis.The Creative Brass Band presented two nights of original repertoire at The Stone in June ’07. Entitled ALL TILT, these important events included the premiere of new works by Curtis Hasselbring and Nate Wooley,composer/performer members of TILT, and by multi-instrumentist Charles Waters and cornetist Taylor Ho Bynum. Recent SIXtet performances include a Febuary ’08 set during Issue Project Room’s Horn Week (featuring Santa Fe-based saxophonist and composer Chris Jonas) and an October ’08 presentation on Composer Collaborative’s Serial Underground at Cornelia Street Café.


Matthew Welch and Daniel Wohl: Composer Portraits by Transit

Ulrikke for cello and percussion (2008)—Matthew Welch

 

Big Hands (2009)—Daniel Wohl

 

The Secret Labyrinth of Ts’ui Pen (2008)—Matthew Welch

 

Suite Primaire (2008)–Daniel Wohl 

 

Symphony of Drones #2 (2002)–Matthew Welch

 

Plus ou Moins (2007)  for Bass Clarinet, Cello, Piano, percussion and electronics — Daniel Wohl

The music of Matthew Welch (b.1976) stems from a remarkably multi-faceted foundation. Matthew holds two university degrees in Experimental Music Composition, a BFA from Simon Fraser University (1999), and an MA form Wesleyan University (2001), studying with noted composers such as Barry Truax, Rodney Sharman, Alvin Lucier and Anthony Braxton. His compositions range from traditional-like bagpipe tunes to electronic pieces, improvisation strategies and fully notated works for solo instruments, chamber ensembles and orchestra. He has also taken part in a number of compositional collaborations with Indonesian Gamelan composer-performers in Bali and Java, performed in free improvisation contexts with numerable New York City improvisors, and played with art rockers in the Brooklyn underground.

Background

As a virtuoso of the Highland Bagpipe, he studied traditional music with Gold Medalist masters such as Colin MacLellan, Jack Lee, Angus MacLellan and Andrew Wright. Matthew also was a member of the four – time World Champion Simon Fraser University Pipe Band, winning with them in 1999 and 2001. As an ambassador for the instrument, Matthew has premiered a number of new compositions written for bagpipes by contemporary composers. This involvement with a more diverse musical context has led him into an expansion of his instrumental array to include alternative bagpipe configurations, accordion and various saxophones. Indonesian Gamelan percussion music, both Javanese and more recently, Balinese, have been another focus of Matthew’s, which he has pursued throughout his academic career, with the New York Indonesian Consulate gamelans, and in Bali. Matthew appears on Anthony Braxton’s 10 [Solo Bagpipe] Compositions, 2000, and two compact discs of his own music, Ceol Nua (Leo 336, 2002) highlighting orchestral and chamber works and Hag at the Churn (Newsonic 33, 2003), a collection of electronic concoctions. The eclectic breadth of his interests in Celtic music, gamelan, minimalism, improvisation and rock also converge in compositional amalgams for his New York based ensemble, Blarvuster. A recording of his most recent compositions, Dream Tigers, was released on John Zorn’s Tzadik Records’ Composer Series in March of 2005.

 

 

 

transit

TRANSIT is the fresh face of new music. The New York-based collective is systematically dismantling the status quo in new music. For too long, composers and performers have been isolated from each other geographically and stylistically into categories that have less and less relevance in our quickly globalizing world. Taking their cues from the slapdash diversity of New York City, the artists ofTRANSIT seek to create bridges between and among the various schools and styles of music being written and performed today. Their goal is not to achieve an “international style” or to promote homogeneity in the music world. Rather, they rejoice in the mixed up results and new perspectives that undeniably occur when musicians are exposed to new influences. Similarly, they reject the rigid boundary that frequently separates the worlds of composition and performance. Their core members include both exciting young composers and explosive performers, as well as those who excel in both worlds. In a world stricken with conflict, TRANSIT seeks to reinvigorate the vital discussion between music and humanity by shaking up the way that music flows into the social consciousness.

 
www.transitnewmusic.com

For Daniel Wohl:

Daniel Wohl (1980) is a Paris born composer based in Brooklyn who writes for a variety of instruments that range from computers and slide whistles to orchestras, chamber ensembles and string quartets. He works with groups such as the California E.A.R Unit, the Calder Quartet, Cygnus, New York Youth Symphony, the St Luke’s Chamber Ensemble, as well as the American Symphony Orchestra, to create weird music from the heart. His pieces have been performed at venues such as Carnegie Hall, Symphony Space, the Dia Beacon, MASS MoCA, Chelsea Art Museum and Disney Hall’s Redcat, amongst others.
www.danielwohlmusic.com


(CANCELLED) David Grubbs with Michael Evans and Patrick McCarthy and in conversation with Branden W Joseph

mirabelle-lagache-live-da

photo by mirabelle lagache

DAVID GRUBBS WITH MICHAEL EVANS AND PATRICK McCARTHY

JUNE 3 

David Grubbs will present two pieces: “Hybrid Song Box” and “Onrushing Cloud.”  “Hybrid Song Box” is Grubbs’s soundtrack music for Angela Bulloch’s sculptural installation “Hybrid Song Box.4,” which was included in the Guggenheim Museum’s recent exhibition Theanyspacewhatever.  For tonight’s performance, Grubbs will be joined by Michael Evans (drums, electronics) and Patrick McCarthy (electric guitar), who performed “Hybrid Song Box” during the Guggenheim’s 24-hour event that marked the close of Theanyspacewhatever.  “Hybrid Song Box” is a 30-minute piece that alternates between a section that in successive iterations is increasingly scuffed or degraded and a section that throbs, purrs, and gives off a slow stroboscopic effect.  This latter section is the soundtrack at its most Bulloch-like.  “Onrushing Cloud” developed from his recent performance and recording with Andrea Belfi and Stefano Pilia. 
 

DAVID GRUBBS has released ten full-length solo albums and appeared on more than 100 commercially-released recordings. In 2000, his album The Spectrum Between was named “Album of the Year” in the London Sunday Times. He was a founding member of the groups Gastr del Sol, Bastro, Squirrel Bait, and the Wingdale Community Singers, and has participated in the Red Krayola since 1993.  His ongoing collaborations include projects with Susan Howe, Anthony McCall, and Angela Bulloch.  He is a 2005-6 grant recipient in Music/Sound from the Foundation for Contemporary Arts. 

Grubbs is Assistant Professor in the Conservatory of Music, Brooklyn College, CUNY, and director of their graduate programs in Performance and Interactive Media Arts (PIMA). He has been called one of two “Best Teachers for an Indie-Rocker to Admire” in the Village Voice and “le plus Français des Américains” in Libération.

Branden W. Joseph received his Ph.D. from Harvard University in 1999.  His first book, Random Order: Robert Rauschenberg and the Neo-Avant-Garde, examined all aspects of the artist’s development from 1951 to 1971 — including painting, sculpture, “Combines,” and performance — from a theoretical perspective drawing from Jacques Derrida, Gilles Deleuze, and Georges Bataille.  Joseph’s further work on Rauschenberg has appeared in journals from October magazine to the Journal of Art History(Stockholm), as well as in the Robert Rauschenberg: Combinesretrospective catalogue (LACMA, 2005).  Joseph’s area of specialization is post-War American and European art, focusing particularly on those individuals and practices that cross medium and disciplinary boundaries between visual art, music, and film.  Present in the book on Rauschenberg, these concerns have been explored further in the books: Anthony McCall: The Solid Light Films and Related Works (Northwestern/Steidl, 2005) andBeyond the Dream Syndicate: Tony Conrad and the Arts after Cage (Zone Books, 2008).  Joseph’s writings have also appeared in Artforum, Bookforum, Art Journal, OctoberCritical InquiryTexte zur Kunst, and Les Cahiers du Musée national d’art moderne, as well as in such catalogues asCTRL [SPACE]: Rhetorics of Surveillance from Bentham to Big Brother(MIT Press, 2002), X-Screen: Film Installations and Actions in the 1960s and 1970s (Walther König, 2003), and Angela Bulloch: Prime Numbers(Walther König, 2006).  Joseph is also a founding editor of Grey Room, a scholarly and theoretical journal of architecture, art, media, and politics published quarterly by MIT Press since the fall of 2000.  To date Grey Room has featured work by such prominent historians and theorists as Yve-Alain Bois, Judith Butler, Georges Canguilhem, Hubert Damisch, Friedrich Kittler, Chantal Mouffe, Antonio Negri, Paolo Virno, Paul Virilio, and Samuel Weber.


Deflag Haemorrhage/Haien Kontra + Pink Reason

DEFLAG HAEMORRHAGE/HAIEN KONTRA

First North American tour coinciding with their new release:
“Humiliated” CD Tochnit Aleph (Berlin)

And a reissue of their first work
“Luxury” CD Tochnit Aleph (Berlin)

“Defusing preconceptions of what a live event should be and degrading its components – the sound, the performance, the audience – without imposing aesthetic or moral limits: this is the reason for being of Deflag Haemorrhage/Haien Kontra, the project born in 2001 from the minds of two of the most
unpredictable and ‘conceptual’ contemporary sonic activists: Mattin and Goldie. Ferocity and immobility, instruments abused and unused, musicians zombiefied in their ‘stage persona’ and in general the sense of psychosis, of necessary superfluousness that gushes from every gesture, from each
decision taken by this anglo-basco duo make their live event an experience that is all but impossible to relate to, at least until they’ve stripped you of the costuming of dominant culture.

 

Goldie is one of the most original noise musician/performers on the European scene. His double album “ABJECTOR”[sic] is a violent and considered examination of the fragmentation of language, the de-composition of instrumental research and the painful suffering that accompanies it. Far from any current or cultural influence, Goldie’s work places itself in a unique conceptual universe, and its cruel voice warbles a mix of agony and ecstasy. Netmage Festival, Italy 2009″

“The most abject music ever made against the reproduction of stereotypes. When noise becomes impotence, when impotence becomes a weapon. Noise and improvisation never done before, including elements of performance and conceptual art. Overdose of meaning, sucked into vacuum of dissolution. You never know where your are. 

DEFLAG HAEMORRHAGE/HAIEN KONTRA formed in 2001 in Hackney, East London. Noumenal power improv where anything can happen. The improvisation is no longer happening just with musicians and their instruments but on the head of the spectator. Frustration as psychological danger. We all are spectators: appearance of dissolution mirroring the averageness of our lives. Something must be done.” Mattin 2009
DEFLAG HAEMORRHAGE/HAIEN KONTRA collaborated with some of the most radical and legendary musicians in the avant-garde such as Eddie Prevost (AMM) and Philip Best (Consumer Electronics, ex-Whitehouse).

DEFLAG HAEMORRHAGE/HAIEN KONTRA performed in European festivals such as Netmage (Bologna),  Abject Music (Berlin), MEM (Bilbao) and  TheErrorIsMedia (London). They recently depleted a residency at Worm (Rotterdam).

Mattin is performing at No Fun Fest this year and he just finished the Whitney Independent Study Program. Among his projects include: Sakada (with Eddie Prevost) and the avant-punk group Billy Bao . Mattin has collaborated with musicians such us Junko, Radu Malfatti, Matthew Bower & Drunkdriver. He has toured Europe, Japan, China, Australia, New Zealand and North America. He has over 50 releases in different labels around the world and with Anthony Iles he has edited the forthcoming book Noise & Capitalism.


Tony Oursler’s “Synesthesia”

oursler_syn_conrad_xl1
DARMSTADT “Classics of the Avant Garde” begins its month-long Institute at ISSUE Project Room with a special edit of Tony Oursler’s video project, Synesthesia, with editor in attendance to discuss the work.

Tony Oursler‘s Synesthesia project is an oral history of New York’s downtown music, performance and art scenes.  For the DARMSTADT music series, Oursler‘s editor creates a special  version, focusing on experimental composers.  Interviewees include Genesis P-Orridge, Glenn Branca, Laurie Anderson, Tony Conrad, David Byrne, and Arto Lindsay. These works were originally included as one element of Ourslerand Mike Kelley’s multimedia installation The Poetics Project. These conversations reveal fascinating insights and anecdotes from some of the most influential figures in the experimental rock and art underground of the 1970s and ’80s, from pre-punk innovators to post-punk icons, from industrial and avant-garde music to noise bands and “no wave.”

This program is made possible by the Experimental Television Center (supported by the New York State Council on the Arts)
etc1    nysca_logo21

James Blackshaw + Koen Holtkamp

jamesguitar1_1_large

Biography: 

Initially inspired by the guitarists of the 60’s Takoma label to teach himself fingerpicking, James Blackshaw writes long-form pieces primarily for solo 12-string guitar that are heavily influenced by minimalist composers and European classical music and which use drones, overtones and repeating patterns alongside a strong inclination for melody to create instrumental music that is both intelligent, hypnotic and emotionally charged. 

Born in 1981, Blackshaw has so far released six solo studio albums, one live recording and has also appeared on numerous compilations in the last five years. “O True Believers” (2006, Important Records/Bo’weavil Recordings), “The Cloud of Unknowing” (2007, Tompkins Square) and “Litany of Echoes” (2008, Tompkins Square) have received huge critical acclaim from printed and online publications including Pitchfork, Billboard, The Wire, The Observer, The Times, Uncut, The New York Times, Rolling Stone Magazine, Magnet and Acoustic Guitar Magazine. “The Cloud of Unknowing” was also listed as one of the 50 best albums of 2007 by The Wire (no. 24) and Pitchfork (no. 34). 

He has toured extensively in Europe, US and Japan and currently resides in Hastings, England. 

Selected Press: 

“… A veritable solo symphony that’s as schooled in uncommon beauty as it is in complex 20th century composition… Blackshaw writes high drama into instrumental music with subtlety and charm, speaking on sentiments and stories without requiring a single lyric… Blackshaw seems fully settled, engaging his pieces and ideas with the unflinching belief of Tony Conrad in 1964 or Steve Reich in 1965… The Cloud of Unknowing carves out a new, peerless space altogether– one that puts Blackshaw at the top of his class.” – Grayson Currin, Pitchforkmedia.com 

“In the tradition of “American Primitive” guitarists within which he’s often grouped, James Blackshaw cuts rather an odd figure. Neither American, nor primitive, nor as Litany of Echoes begins, even playing the guitar, the English musician is all about upending the expectations we might have from his instrument. Whereas kindred spirits like John Fahey and Robbie Basho looked East for their Raga-inspired guitar diversions, Blackshaw instead sounds more East-Coast: his long-distance guitar tunes recalling NY minimalism, or Sonic Youth, as arranged for chamber orchestra. Mesmerising stuff, and proof that less is often more.” – John Robinson, Uncut Magazine 

“There’s an indecent ease to James Blackshaw’s guitar playing. His fingerpicking mantras are as melodic as a music box, gliding through dizzying tempos like clockwork… Such is the silky control he exherts over his instrument, Blackshaw often sounds more like a court harpist than a backwoods strummer.” – Derek Walmsey, The Wire 

“The hypnotic arpeggios at the heart of James Blackshaw’s acoustic guitar playing reflect strong influences from outside the precincts of folk music: minimalist composers like Steve Reich and Terry Riley, and some of their precursors, like Erik Satie. Mr. Blackshaw, a British autodidact still in his mid-20s, fingerpicks his 12-string Guild with an immersive focus befitting such heady allusions. At its best, his sumptuous new album, Litany of Echoes, conveys a stark and ancient feeling, like something handed down through the ages….” – Nate Chinen, The New York Times 

“Twenty-seven-year-old Brit James Blackshaw has lately emerged as a major force in the world of instrumental guitar, his epic, austere compositions and unpretentious 12-string technique perching him somewhere between John Fahey and Robbie Basho… Downright beautiful stuff.” – Jonathon Cohen, Billboard Magazine 

James Blackshaw“The most gem-like overlooked album this year is neither hairy nor scary; rubber-necking into the great unknown isn’t high in its priorities. But it is preternaturally beautiful. O True Believers by 24-year-old guitarist James Blackshaw features 10 fingers and 12 strings and, frankly, urinates all over whatever will be the Mercury Prize’s token folk nominee next year. Blackshaw is British, but virtually no one has heard of him outside the US folk underground; he deserves ticker-tape parades. His style derives from the Takoma school founded by John Fahey, but that is all detail. Blackshaw’s got it all: skills to hyperventilate for, and instinctual loveliness in spades.” – Kitty Empire, The Observer 

“One of the best and most original instrumentalists in the new, acoustic renaissance” – David Fricke, Rolling Stone Magazine


Share – featured guest Carolyn Teo

share_ipr_web10

what is share?

SHARE is first and foremost a platform to explore expression, in a variety of artforms. Through its weekly open jam sessions, SHARE.nyc engages its participants and spectators in a continually changing dialog on art and culture. As such, SHARE represents an ongoing exploration of collaborative performance as cultural exchange. It mines the relationship of artistic practice to cultural identity, remapping a multiplicity of cultural discourses. The act of creating artistic content in a multicultural collaborative context is a fascinating and natural extension of the SHARE concept.

Share is an open jam, not just for digirati, but for all new culture lovers. Participants bring their portable equipment, plug into our system, improvise on each others’ signal and perform live audio and video. We furnish the amplification and projection. Share happens every Sunday in New York City at the Issue Project Room (through December), from 8 to Midnight.

open jams and walk-in sets

audio jam: Prepared and spontaneous music from eight plus simultaneous performers. This is the time and place to perform a piece of music you’ve written and hear it on a large sound system, improvise spontaneously with other participants, get feedback on your latest project or try out that new max patch/software setup. Bring your noise maker of choice and an XLR, quarter-inch or RCA cable to join.

video jam: multi-user live video synthesis. Generating an immersive visual environment, in the SHARE tradition, in which multiple participants are able to jointly compose the video output. Try out and learn about new VJ wetware. As with the audio, walk-in sets are encouraged. Bring your clips or camera or laptop/amiga and VGA, S-Video, or RCA cables to join

8pm, free —

Tonight’s featured guest:

Carolyn Teo is an artist from Sydney, Australia, who works across media in photography, video, sound, textiles, performance and d.i.y electronics.

Carolyn graduated from Sydney College of the Arts, after having done a stint in Canada as an exchange student at the Emily Carr University of Art + Design. It was here that she discovered her love for sound and electronics, which further developed her character Wun Thong. Carolyn is currently living in Montréal, involving herself in the arts community there by collaborating and performing with local artists.

Using elements of chance and improvisation, Wun Thong hypnotizes his audience with his visual aesthetic, mystical balls and exotic birdcalls.

So who is Wun Thong? Where did he come from this archetypal old Chinese man, mixed between cultures (and perhaps genders)?

Wun Thong literally plays his laptop, mixing in sounds from the Australian bush, found objects and electronics, taking us on a haunting yet whimsical journey through sound.
http://www.carolynteo.com
http://www.carolynteo.com/?cat=25


Share @ Issue Project Room
The (OA) Can Factory
232 3rd Street, 3rd Floor
Brooklyn, NY 11215
http://www.share.dj/share/event_info.php?eventID=579

direction/map:
http://issueprojectroom.org/contact
http://is.gd/ljow

SHARE is always 100% FREE!! (no admission!)

Show up early!!! and stay late!!


Share – Featured guests NoisyTownGroove (Zlabinger/Ligeti/Pabst) & lampe (mdmferdinand & hanzell)

share_ipr_web10

what is share?

SHARE is first and foremost a platform to explore expression, in a variety of artforms. Through its weekly open jam sessions, SHARE.nyc engages its participants and spectators in a continually changing dialog on art and culture. As such, SHARE represents an ongoing exploration of collaborative performance as cultural exchange. It mines the relationship of artistic practice to cultural identity, remapping a multiplicity of cultural discourses. The act of creating artistic content in a multicultural collaborative context is a fascinating and natural extension of the SHARE concept.

Share is an open jam, not just for digirati, but for all new culture lovers. Participants bring their portable equipment, plug into our system, improvise on each others’ signal and perform live audio and video. We furnish the amplification and projection. Share happens every Sunday in New York City at the Issue Project Room (through December), from 8 to Midnight.

open jams and walk-in sets

audio jam: Prepared and spontaneous music from eight plus simultaneous performers. This is the time and place to perform a piece of music you’ve written and hear it on a large sound system, improvise spontaneously with other participants, get feedback on your latest project or try out that new max patch/software setup. Bring your noise maker of choice and an XLR, quarter-inch or RCA cable to join.

video jam: multi-user live video synthesis. Generating an immersive visual environment, in the SHARE tradition, in which multiple participants are able to jointly compose the video output. Try out and learn about new VJ wetware. As with the audio, walk-in sets are encouraged. Bring your clips or camera or laptop/amiga and VGA, S-Video, or RCA cables to join

8pm, free —

Openjam will take place before/after the featured set!

This week’s featured sets are:

NoisyTownGroove (Zlabinger/Ligeti/Pabst)

NTG is a collective based in New York City and Vienna. We are recording, performing and cultivate
our music in Europe and the USA. Maybe somebody will say:” no matter! For us it is a big influence to have a base in both cities. The energy of New York City is the fuel of our music, it is the Groove of emergency. Vienna is the reflection of our deepness, of our melancholy and of our sensibility in social and musical abilities. The music of townGroove is free improvised. We use the full range of dynamic expression and we have no fear to scratch different styles in all genres. The only important thing is to be authentic in every situation. daniel pabst

Bass: Tom Zlabinger – NYC
Drums: Lukas Ligeti – NYC
Electric Guitar: Daniel Pabst – Vienna

&

lampe (mdmferdinand & hanzell)

http://www.myspace.com/loslampos
or
http://www.clubforum.at/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=32&Itemid=50

and in future: http://www.decentertainment.org

Share @Issue Project Room
The (OA) Can Factory
232 3rd Street, 3rd Floor
Brooklyn, NY 11215
http://www.share.dj/share/event_info.php?eventID=579

direction/map:
http://issueprojectroom.org/contact
http://is.gd/ljow

SHARE is always 100% FREE!! (no admission!)

Show up early!!! and stay late!!


Exact Change 20th Anniversary

posteremail

With Joan La Barbara, Loren Connors, Alan Licht, Till by Turning, Alex Waterman, Barbara Epler, James Hoff, Kenneth Goldsmith, Damon Krukowski and Naomi Yang responding to and reading the work of Joseph Cornell, Franz Kafka, Morton Feldman, Stefan Thermerson, Leonora Carrington, Unica Zurn and John Cage.

Exact Change publishes books of experimental literature with an emphasis on Surrealism, Dada, Pataphysics, and other nineteenth and twentieth century avant-garde art movements.

The press was founded in 1989 by Damon Krukowski and Naomi Yang, known outside publishing as musicians from the bands Damon & Naomi, and Galaxie 500.

Exact Change authors include Guillaume Apollinaire, Louis Aragon, Antonin Artaud, John Cage, Leonora Carrington, Giorgio de Chirico, Joseph Cornell, Salvador Dalí, Morton Feldman, Alice James, Alfred Jarry, Franz Kafka, Lautréamont, Chris Marker, Gérard de Nerval, Fernando Pessoa, Raymond Roussel, Philippe Soupault, Gertrude Stein, Stefan Themerson, Denton Welch, and Unica Zürn.

Many Exact Change titles were originally published by larger houses, especially in the 1960s, but had more recently been left out of print; some were previously published in the U.K. but not in North America; others are new publications initiated by Exact Change. But in all cases these are books that we believe should be kept available always. We think of our list as a looking-glass version of the Penguin Classics or the Library of America, drawn from works that are equally important but have in general been neglected in the U.S.

Exact Change books are distributed to the trade by D.A.P., and direct via the website www.exactchange.com.

Joan La Barbara’s  career as a composer/performer/soundartist explores the human voice as a multi-faceted instrument expanding traditional boundaries in developing a unique vocabulary of experimental and extended vocal techniques: multiphonics, circular singing, ululation and glottal clicks that have become her “signature sounds”.  Creating works for multiple voices, chamber ensembles, music theater, orchestra and interactive technology, her awards in the U.S. and Europe include the 2008 Letter of Distinction from the American Music Center; 2004 Guggenheim Fellowship in Music Composition; DAAD Artist-in-Residency in Berlin and 7 National Endowment for the Arts fellowships: Music Composition, Opera/Music Theatre, Inter-Arts, Recording (2), Solo Recitalist and Visual Arts; ISCM International Jury Award; Akustische International Competition Award; Aaron Copland Fund for Music; Foundation for Contemporary Arts; Collaboration Award of NY Coalition of Professional Women in the Arts and Media; Meet The Composer and ASCAP Awards. Numerous commissions for concert, theatre and radioworks, including: “in the dreamtime” and “Klangbild Köln” for WestDeutscher Rundfunk, Cologne; “Dragons on the Wall”, a music score commissioned by Mary Flagler Cary Trust and “Calligraphy II/Shadows” for voice and Chinese instruments, both for Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company; choral work “to hear the wind roar” for Gregg Smith Singers, I Cantori and the Center for Contemporary Arts/Santa Fe,; “Events in the Elsewhere” from “The Misfortune of the Immortals”, funded by Meet the Composer/Lila Wallace; “Awakenings” for chamber ensemble, from the University of Iowa Center for New Music; “l’albero dalle foglie azzurre” (tree of blue leaves) for solo oboe and tape, commissioned by The Saint Louis Symphony, and “A Trail of Indeterminate Light” for cellist who sings. “73 Poems”, her collaborative work with text artist Kenneth Goldsmith, was included in “The American Century Part II:  SoundWorks” at The Whitney Museum of American Art. “Messa di Voce”, an interactive media work, in collaboration with Jaap Blonk, Golan Levin and Zachary Lieberman, premiered at Ars Electronica in Linz, Austria on September 7, 2003 and was awarded Honorary Mention in the 2004 Prix Ars Electronica.  Live Music for Dance commissions include “Landscape over Zero” (2004-05 for Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company), “Fleeting Thoughts” (2005-06 for Jane Comfort & Company), and  “Desert Myths/Isle of Dunes”(premiered at NJPAC April 29, 2006 featuring Ne(x)tworks and Nai-Ni Chen Dance Company). “Atmos” for flute and sonic atmosphere, commissioned by Meet The Composer/NYSFM, premiered March 2008 at Symphony Space, performed by Margaret Lancaster; recording will be released on New World Records in 2009. In 2007-08, La Barbara received a NYSCA Music Composition award to compose a new spoken word opera, “An American Rendition”, in collaboration with choreographer/theater artist Jane Comfort, which premiered September 2008 at Duke Theatre, NYC. La Barbara is currently composing a new opera. Joan La Barbara will be responding to Joseph Cornell’s Dreams.

Guitarist Loren Connors was born in New Haven, Connecticut in 1949. Best known as a composer and improviser, Connors has issued over 50 guitar records on his own imprints (Daggett, St. Joan, Black Label) since the late 1970s and over two dozen on other labels across the globe. He has recorded under the names Guitar Roberts, Loren Mattei, Loren MazzaCane Connors and other variations. Connors’ singular adpation of the blues is a distinct personal vision combining the Delta bottleneck sound and the ancestral blues voice (appearing as distortion, baying hounds or multi-tracked guitar), with hauntingly unexpected sounds. Outside of Connors’ three decades of solo work, he has collaborated with Suzanne Langille, Jim O’Rourke, Darin Gray, Alan Licht, Christina Carter, Keiji Haino, San Agustin, Jandek and many others, as well as leading the group Haunted House. He lives in Brooklyn, NY. Loren Connors will be responding to Franz Kafka’s Blue Octave Notebook.

Over the past two decades, guitarist Alan Licht has worked with a veritable whoʼs who of the experimental world, from free jazz legends (Rashied Ali, Derek Bailey) and electronica wizards (Fennesz, Jim OʼRourke) to turntable masters (DJ Spooky, Christian Marclay) and veteran Downtown New York composers (John Zorn, Rhys Chatham). Licht is also renown in the indie rock scene as a bandleader (Run On, Love Child) and supporting player to cult legends like Tom Verlaine, Arthur Lee, Arto Lindsay, and Jandek. He has released five albums of compositions for tape and solo guitar, and his sound and video installations have been exhibited in the U.S. and Europe. Licht has collaborated on film and video performances with Charles Atlas and Andrew Lampert. He has written extensively about the arts for the WIRE, Modern Painters, Art Review,
Film Coment, Sight & Sound, Premiere, Purple, Village Voice, New York Sun, Time Out New York, and other publications. His book, Sound Art: Beyond Music, Between Media, the first extensive survey of the genre in English, was published by Rizzoli in fall 2007.  Alan Licht will be responding to Album Exact Change.

Alex Waterman is a founding member of the Plus Minus Ensemble, based in Brussels and London, specializing in avant-garde and experimental music. In New York he performs with the Either/Or Ensemble. Alex has worked with musicians such as Robert Ashley, Richard Barrett, Helmut Lachenmann, Keith Rowe, Marina Rosenfeld, Anthony Coleman, Elliot Sharp, Ned Rothenberg, Gerry Hemingway, David Watson, Chris Mann, Alison Knowles, Thomas Meadowcroft, and Michael Finnissy. He has performed as guest musician with numerous ensembles, including Trio Event (Berlin), Champs d’Action-Antwerp, Q-O2-Brussels, and Magpie Music and Dance Company. Waterman has made music for numerous European ballet and modern dance companies including Freiburg Ballett/Pretty Ugly, Scapino Ballet, Nederland Dans Theater III, and others. As a curator he has organized events at Les Bains:Connective in Brussels, OT301 in Amsterdam, Miguel Abreu Gallery and The Kitchen. His duo projects with the dancer Michael Schumacher have toured in Switzerland, Italy, Holland, the Opera of Monaco and most recently in all 5 boroughs of New York in a Joyce Theater production in association with the City Parks Foundation in July of 2008.  In 2007 Alex curated two exhibitions in New York, one on experimental music and poetics: Agapê (June 2-July 28th, 2007) at Miguel Abreu Gallery; and the other on graphic notation, Between Thought and Sound: Graphic Notation in Contemporary Music (September 7-October 20, 2007) at The Kitchen in Chelsea. Alex is presently working on his PhD in musicology at NYU as well as writing a book about the composer Robert Ashley with the designer and writer Will Holder. Alex participated in Dexter Sinister’s residency at the Armory for the 2008 Whitney Biennial writing a new work based upon Herman Melville’s Bartleby the Scrivener. Alex Waterman and Beatrice Gibson’s film, A Necessary Music, narrated by Robert Ashley and with original music by Waterman, premiered at the Whitney Museum ISP show and will be shown in galleries and museums in the US and Europe this fall.  Alex Waterman will be responding to Stephan Themerson’s Cardinal Polatuo.

Till by Turning is the collective effort of Amy Cimini, Erica Dicker, Emily ManzoSarah Biber, and Katherine Young. Working as performers, educators, improvisers, scholars, composers, and song-writers — Till by Turning performs new chamber music by established and emerging artists and develops creative educational programs. Til by Turning will be responding to Morton Feldman’s Give my Regards to Eighth Street.

Barbara Epler grew up in Evanston, Illinois, and she started working at New Directions in 1984, after graduating from college.  She became the Editor-in-Chief in 1996, a Director in 2000, and in 2009 the Publisher.  Still independent, New Directions was started in 1936 by James Laughlin, and was recently described by Richard Eder in The New York Times as “long struggling and long astonishing” (though she sometimes remembers that as “long suffering…”). Laughlin was the first in the USA to publish Nabokov, Borges, Lorca, Montale, Celine, Dylan Thomas, Neruda, Mishima, Tennessee Williams, Sartre and many other now classic world authors; he also built a poetry list around the then avant-garde poets Ezra Pound, William Carlos Williams, H.D., Paz, Oppen, Olson, and Duncan, and continued with Creeley, Levertov, Snyder, Ferlinghetti, and Corso, who all embody an experimental tradition which is carried on these days by Michael Palmer, Susan Howe, Nathaniel Mackey, Forrest Gander, Kamau Brathwaite, and many others. Laughlin accepted Pound’s notion that truly new writing could take 20 years to catch on, which allows for a great deal of editorial latitude, and Epler focuses on finding new fiction, and New Directions has been lucky to be the first American publisher of new great writers like W.G. Sebald, Roberto Bolano, Laszlo Krasznahorkhai, Cesar Aira, and Victor Pelevin. She has also been a contributing editor for Grand Street magazine and a judge for the PEN/Nelson Algren Fiction Award, the N.Y.U. Emerging Writers Award, and the PEN Translation Fund Awards. Barbara Epler will be reading from Leonora Carrington’s The Hearing Trumpet.

Kenneth Goldsmith’s writing has been called “some of the m
ost exhaustive and beautiful collage work yet produced in poetry” by Publishers Weekly. Goldsmith is the author of ten books of poetry, founding editor of the online archive UbuWeb (ubu.com), and the editor of I’ll Be Your Mirror: The Selected Andy Warhol Interviews, which was the basis for an opera, “Trans-Warhol,” that premiered in Geneva in March of 2007. An hour-long documentary on his work, “sucking on words: Kenneth Goldsmith” premiered at the British Library in 2007. Kenneth Goldsmith is the host of a weekly radio show on New York City’s WFMU. He teaches writing at The University of Pennsylvania, where he is a senior editor of PennSound, an online poetry archive. He has been awarded the The Anschutz Distinguished Fellow Professorship in American Studies at Princeton University for 2009-10 and received the Qwartz Electronic Music Award in Paris in 2009.  A book of critical essays, “Uncreative Writing,” is forthcoming from Columbia University Press.  Kenneth Goldsmith will be reading selections of John Cage’s Compositions in Retrospect.

James Hoff is an artist living in New York City. He is the co-founder and editor of Primary Information, a non-profit publisher devoted to printing artists’ books and multiples by artists both young and old. He was the co-editor of 0 To 9: The Complete Magazine 1967 – 1969 (Ugly Duckling Presse) and the editor of Aram Saroyan’s Complete Minimal Poems (Ugly Duckling Presse), winner of the William Carlos Williams Book of the Year Award. With Primary Information he has edited publications and multiples by John Cage, the Art Workers’ Coalition, DISBAND, Robert Filliou, Al Hansen, Dick Higgins, Allan Kaprow, Dieter Roth, Seth Siegelaub, and Emmett Williams, among many others. He is the recent author of Topten (No Input Books) and co-author of Endless Nameless (No Input Books).  Primary Information was formed in 2006 by Miriam Katzeff and James Hoff to foster intergenerational dialogue through the publication of artists’ books and writing by artists—emerging, mid-career, and established. Our period of focus is from the early sixties to the present, with an emphasis on the conceptual practice begun in the mid Sixties and the strategy of using publications as an extension of this practice. Primary Information has recently released a CD anthologizing the late 70s/early 80s feminist music and performance collective DISBAND. Upcoming publications include an anthology of Dan Graham’s writings on music, a facsimile edition of Avalanche Magazine, and source book/anthology of the feminist magazine Eau de Cologne. For more information, please see www.primaryinformation.org. James Hoff will be reading from Unica Zurn’s Dark Spring.