Posts Tagged ‘harp’

Share – free audio & video jam

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.

open jams and walk-in sets — Bring your equipment/instruments/gear etc. to join the jam!

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 —

Share @ Issue Project Room @ The (OA) Can Factory
232 3rd Street, 3rd Floor
Brooklyn, NY 11215

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

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

Show up early!!! and stay late!!

http://share.dj/share
http://facebook.com/sharenyc
http://issueprojectroom.or


Man Forever + Elliott Sharp, Frank Vigroux, Zeena Parkins and Hélène Breschand

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Elliott Sharp is a composer, multi-instrumentalist, and producer and central figure in the avant-garde music scene in New York City for over thirty years. He leads the projects Carbon and Orchestra Carbon, Tectonics, and Terraplane and has pioneered ways of applying fractal geometry, chaos theory, and genetic metaphors to musical composition and interaction. His collaborators have included Ensemble Modern;  Qawwali singer Nusrat Fateh Ali Khan; Radio-Symphony of Frankfurt; pop singer Debbie Harry, computer artist Perry Hoberman;  blues legends Hubert Sumlin and Pops Staples;  jazz greats Jack deJohnette, Sonny Sharrock, Oliver Lake, and Billy Hart; turntable innovator Christian Marclay; and Bachir Attar, leader of the Master Musicians Of Jahjouka from Morocco. Sharp’s work was featured in the 2008 New Music Stockholm festival with the premiere of “Sidebands”  and at the Hessischer Rundfunk Klangbiennale in May 2007 with the premiere of his orchestral work “On Corlear’s Hook”.   He is now woorking on a commissioned opera for the Bavarian Opera in Munich.  The documentary film about Sharp’s work by Bert Shapiro, “Doing The Don’t”, has just been released on DVD and screened at international film festivals

Franck Vigroux works in the fields of electronic music, new media, composition and improvisation. He leads many bands and projects such as Push the triangle, Supersonic Riverside Blues. He has played or recorded with musicians such as Bruno Chevillon, Elliott Sharp, Marc Ducret, Ben Miller, Helene Breschand, Joey Baron, Michel Blanc, Stephane Payen,Andrea Parkins, Matthew Bourne, Edward Perraud, writer Kenji Siratori, video artists Scorpene Horrible, Philippe Fontes, Mariano Equizzi. In 2009 he won the prize Villa Medicis Hors les Murs for an artist residency in New York. Franck Vigroux is also the founder of d’Autres Cordes a record label dedicated to aventurous music. He has played in hundreds of festivals and clubs in Europe and Asia, as a guitarist or turntablist and conducted improvisers orchestras worldwide ( Nagoya, Barcelona, Leeds,etc…), he has been commissioned by Ars Nova ensemble instrumental and Radio France . He also presents audiovisual installations such as Recolte and O. Recent works for theater “septembres” by philippe malone, music for films “the nishiazabu affair” by mariano equizzi, “dust” 30mn, directed by franck vigroux in 2007, “recolte” video suite, 2009, by franck vigroux

Zeena Parkins Multi-instrumentalist, composer, improvisor, well-known as a pioneer of the electric harp she describes her harp as a “sound machine of limitless capacity”. Zeena’s unique vision is one that seeks to both meld and highlight opposites. She has broken musical boundaries to create a highly personal and stunning body of work. Or, to quote the WDC Period “Music that makes you hike up your britches and howl like a coyote”.

Made possible with the support of the Cultural Services of the French Embassy, FAJE, Chamber Music of America, the Doris Duke Charitable Foundation, the Florence Gould Foundation, SACEM, and CulturesFrance.

drummer1-articleLarge

MAN FOREVER is the solo endeavor of ONEIDA drummer Kid Millions. The self-titled debut–two monolithic, hypnotic improvisations for arrays of drums in just intonation– is due out in an edition of 300 LPs featuring hand-pulled screens on recycled record jackets from Jagjaguwar vinyl imprint St. Ives. The touring quintet of Kid Millions, YEAH YEAH YEAHS drummer Brian Chase, Oneida cohort and KNYFE HYTS drummer Shahin Motia, drummer Allison Busch of AWESOME COLOR, and SIGHTINGS bassist Richard Hoffman, will be augmented by local percussionists in each city.

“Kid Millions, who, as drummer, is unsurpassed in his generation, finds an opportunity with slippery polyrhythmical approaches here, as if to say that the human drummer is the thing that is most controversial in the age of the click track, so there’s no pulse, no melodic home, no melody at all, really, just the thunderous ebbing and flowing of multiple rolls and fills, to replace the massaged rhythmic pulse of the Pro Tools era. It’s a provocation, yes, and a welcome one. And with the provocation comes a fair amount of dizzy joy, and a ritualized release of dammed-up energy.” – Rick Moody, therumpus.net

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/06/23/arts/music/23drummer.html

With accompanying live 16mm film performance by Mighty Robot AV Squad!!!


Suzanne Thorpe + Zeena Parkins

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Extreme Terrains by Suzanne Thorpe

Extreme Terrains is a multi-channel work that present’s its audience with opportunities to listen to instinct and interact with the piece on a visceral level, asking listeners to trust what they feel as much as what they hear.  

Featuring 

Alex Chechile on Higher Ground (Oscillators)
http://alexchechile.com/
The body and the brain produce measurable information during the act of musical creation. Chechile uses this information is one part of a significantly connected recursive relationship between the musician and the music.

Joro Boro on the Horizon (Balkan Beats)
http://www.joro-boro.org/about.htm
He plays and promotes Etnoteck (or EthnoMesh1) – the dirty and uninhibited side of globalization force-fed back into a party without borders, a three-day Gypsy wedding in a post-national state where noise, libido and extasy detonate the market mono-culture.

Jawwaad Taylor on the Midway (Trumpet/Words) 
He combines his freestyle rapping skills with the sensibilities of Cecil Taylor and Anthony Braxton.  A free-improvising trumpet player, Jawwaad has worked for several years to craft creative music that kept the authenticity of its sources and maintained the spontaneity of free improvisation. 

Suzanne Thorpe on Low Valleys (Flute/Electronics)
www.suzannethorpe.com
Suzanne Thorpe is a musician, composer, educator and arts-activist who strives for instances of intimacy and understanding through a network of sonic signals. As an electro-acoustic flutist and sound artist, Thorpe works within the peripheral consciousness, exposing coexisting perspectives and concurrent realities via composition, performance and installation. Thorpe performs both acoustically and electronically, extending her instrument with an ever-evolving set-up of analogue and real-time software components.  She plays on the tightrope of feedback systems and composes for multi-channel installations.


Betsey Biggs + Shelley Burgon

1Betsey Biggs is a composer and interdisciplinary artist whose work in music, sound, video and installation has been called “psychologically complex” by the New Yorker. Her work aims to expose the beautiful in the mundane, to actively engage the audience, and to transform the city into a creative interface through psychogeographic practice. Recent projects include a theatrical work with flutist and performer Margaret Lancaster, an outdoor mixer powered by people’s shadows and a series of downloadable soundtracks meant for walkers to engage with their surroundings. Betsey recently received her Ph.D. at Princeton University, writing about public sound art, and will begin a postdoctoral fellowship at Brown University in the fall of 2009.
Biggs will be performing Ton Yam I (For Brian Wilson), a live improvisation deconstructing and reshaping fragments of the Beach Boy’s God Only Knows into a sea of floating harmonies, feedback, and glitch: destruction and reconstruction.
http://silvertone.princeton.edu/~bb/
http://betseybiggs.typepad.com/

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Shelley Burgon (harp & computer) is a member of the performing/composer chamber ensemble Ne(x)tworks and the band Stars Like Fleas. She has spent the last seven years improvising as a soloist and with many legendary people associated with the New York downtown avante-garde. She has been hailed by the New York Times as being a “mesmerizing” interpreter of modern music. Shelley has performed her music and the music of contemporary composers for series such as the the MATA Festival, Issue Project Rooms Points in a Circle, free103point9 Wave Farm and Summer Winds, and the Vision Festival among others. In May 2009 she was honored to premiere a new piece for the Merce Cunningham Hudson Valley Project at the Dia:Beacon. She is currently collaborating on an electronic music project with songwriter/vocalist Paul Duncan. Shelley received a BA in Music from SFSU and an MFA in Electronic Music from Mills College. She can be heard as a collaborator and guest on many labels including Hometapes, Skirl, Tzadik and Ipecac.

Harpist Shelley Burgon will perform “Mirrored Ceiling,” a new composition by Stephan Moore for harp and multi-channel audio, in which the harp is fed through a network of shifting delays to create shimmering, meditative sonic patterns.

www.myspace.com/shelleyburgon

www.myspace.com/starslikefleas

www.nextworksmusic.net

www.myspace.com/nacnudluap


Shelley Burgon + Michael Wilhelmi

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Shelley Burgon (harp & computer) is a member of the collaborative chamber ensemble Ne(x)tworks and the band Stars Like Fleas. She has spent the last six years improvising as a soloist and with many legendary people associated with the New York downtown avante-garde music scene. Currently, she is spending her time composing and songwriting. She received a BA in Jazz Studies from SFSU and and MFA in Electronic Music from Mills College. She can be heard on many labels including Hometapes, Ipecac and Tzadik. 

www.myspace.com/shelleyburgon

www.myspace.com/starslikefleas

www.nextworksmusic.net


michael wilhelmi

Berlin Based Pianist, Michael Wilhelmi presents new works for interactive electronics and Piano.

http://www.michaelwilhelmi.de/


Zeena Parkins & Ikue Mori’s “Phantom Orchard” + Phantom Limb & Wooley

An Evening of Phantoms

zeena parkins and ikue mori

Ikue Mori

Ikue Mori moved from her native city of Tokyo to New York in 1977. She started playing drums and soon formed the seminal NO WAVE band DNA, with fellow noise pioneers Arto Lindsay and Tim Wright. DNA enjoyed legendary cult status, while creating a new brand of radical rhythms and dissonant sounds; forever altering the face of rock music.

In the mid 80’s Ikue started in employ drum machines in the unlikely context of improvised music. While limited to the standard technology provided by the drum machine, she has never the less forged her own highly sensitive signature style.
Through out in 90’s She has subsequently collaborated with numerous improvisors throughout the US, Europe, and Asia, while continuing to produce and record her own music.
1998, She was invited to perform with Ensemble Modern as the soloist along with Zeena Parkins, and composer Fred Frith, also “One hundred Aspects of the Moon” commissioned by Roulette/Mary Flagler Cary Charitable Trust.
Ikue won the Distinctive Award for Prix Ars Electronics Digital Music category in 99.

In 2000 Ikue started using the laptop computer to expand on her already signature sound, thus broadening her scope of musical expression. 2000 commissioned by the KITCHEN ensemble, wrote and premired the piece “Aphorism”
also awarded Civitella Ranieri Foundation Fellowship.
2003 commissioned by RELACHE Ensemble to write a piece for film In the Street and premired in Philadelphia. Started working with visual played by the music since 2004. In 2005 Awarded Alphert/Ucross Residency.
Recived the grant from Foundation for Contemporary Arts in 2006. Tate Modern commissioned the live sound track for Maya Deren’s silent films and premired in 2007.
In 2008 Celebrated 30th music year, presented 5 on-going projects at Japan Society in NYC. 
Current working groups include MEPHISTA with Sylvie Courvoisier and Susie Ibarra, projects with Kim Gordon, duo project PHANTOM ORCHARD with Zeena Parkins, various projects with John Zorn. and John Zorn’s Electric Masada.

www.ikuemori.com

Phantom Limb & Wooley
(Jaime Fennelly – electronics & harmonium; Chris Forsyth – guitar; Nate Wooley – trumpet)
Multi-instrumentalist & artist Jaime Fennelly maintains a practice of musical performance & composition which borders on near ritual praxis in its approach and conception.  He is a founding member (along with Chris Forsyth and Fritz Welch) of the iconoclastic group Peeesseye.  Jaime is also a member of the elusive and rarely spotted quartet Phantom Limb & Bison, the intermittent pranksters Manpack Variant and the noise/akshuntist cover band peeinmyfacewithsurgery.   His music has been released by Digitalis Records, QBICO, Archive Recordings, 8mm, Misanthropic Agenda, Chocolate Monk, Unframed Recordings, Utech, Deep Fried Tapes, Locust Music and Evolving Ear.  Currently he is working on a series of photographs documenting his own slow unraveling whilst living on a remote island off the state of Washington.
Chris Forsyth’s music eludes easy categorization.  He is a founding member (along with Jaime Fennelly and Fritz Welch) of the iconoclastic group Peeesseye, a transcontinental amalgam of minimalist rock, noise, folk, drone, psych, improv, sound poetry, and absurdity that has produced seven CDs, one 7-inch, over 145 concerts in Europe and the US, and untold blown minds since forming in 2002.  He also performs solo on both electric and acoustic 6- and 12-string guitars, leads the free rock trio Soft History with drummer Ryan Sawyer and bassist Peter Kerlin, and is a member of the elusive and rarely spotted experimental group Phantom Limb & Bison.  Other notable collaborators have included reductionist/blues guitarist Tetuzi Akiyama, Bay Area composer/performer Ernesto Diaz-Infante, trumpeter Nate Wooley, and choreographers Miguel Gutierrez and RoseAnne Spradlin, plus others too numerous too mention.  His first solo CD Live Journal at the Mice Machine VIP Dance Floor was recently released on the Incunabulum label.  He is the caretaker of Evolving Ear and lives in Brooklyn, NY, USA.
Nate Wooley grew up in a fishing and lumber town in Oregon. He began playing trumpet professionally at age 13 with his father’s big band, but quickly began adding “outside” influences to his knowledge of jazz. After a brief and painful stint in Denver, Nate moved to Jersey City where he is in demand as a collaborator with such diverse improvisors/composers as Tony Malaby, Steve Beresford, Paul Lytton, Anthony Braxton, Wolf Eyes, Akron/Family, and David Grubbs. His own solo trumpet work has been described as “exquisitely hostile” by Massimo Ricci of Touching Extremes Magazine (Italy).