Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Lizz King: New LP/CD on Ehse Records

Lizz King: New LP/CD on Ehse Records

www.ehserecords.com
www.diymummy.com


artist: Lizz King
album: All Songs Go To Heaven
release: 2010 Ehse Records
release date: February 16th, 2010 -- a belated Valentine

Ehse Records is proud to be releasing the new LP and CD by Baltimore's favorite West Virginia transplant: Lizz King.

A crucial part of the Wham City collective, for the last few years King has been performing critically acclaimed concerts with the likes of everyone from Dan Deacon to Daniel Johnston. Her style mixes weird weird pop with big big soul, and the new album features some of the catchiest, quirkiest, and yet most sultry songwriting Baltimore has ever heard.

Lizz King will be touring the USA throughout Winter 2009 - 2010.


"The quality of music on this bill was outstanding, far and away one of the strongest I’ve seen in years. As I walked towards the Ottobar, a few minutes after Lizz King’s set time, I was hopeful that she had not come on. The place was dead silent. But as I walked through the door, I could see the reason. King was on stage and delivering a captivating performance that had the room so silent you could hear the floorboards creak. Nobody even tossed away beer bottles. This was going to be something special… Lizz King is a pixie and an angel. It’s a shame that in this day, in order to get noticed, you have to have a strong gimmick in addition to a gorgeous, timeless voice. For all the Winestones that get attention, a deserving gem like King is swept under the rug. Let’s remedy that, shall we? King’s music is some of the most barebones, heart-wide-open stuff I’ve heard… in a good and completely disarming way; she goes from banjo to ukulele to what I think was an electric tenor banjo, alternating playing some groovy, delicious computerized beats track as the musical foundation of some of her songs. Her voice is warm, like Billie Holiday and the best voices of old found on gramophone records or streaming through the vacuum-tube radios, and haunting like Fiona Apple and the other female vocal prodigies of the present. The whole picture is distinct, something I imagine sounds not unlike an electrified, breaking music box mating with the aforementioned gramophone jazz records and a healthy dose of desolate country and blues twang and instrumentation likely inspired by her time in West Virginia. She is a unique sound that is nothing short of refreshing."

- Aural States


Best of Baltimore 2007: Best Songwriter
"Wham City might be best known for giddy, hyperactive noisemakers such as Dan Deacon and the Santa Dads. But the collective's best-kept secret, Lizz King, defies her crew's prevailing aesthetic with bluesy vamps wherein she wraps her throaty voice around a single instrument, usually guitar or keyboard, and the occasional minimal drum-machine pattern. Sure, a little bit of that old Wham City absurdity lurks in song titles like 'Booty Queen' and the maniacal cackling that abruptly concludes 'Bigger Better Faster Stronger'. But the Lizz King whom we fell for is the gal who sings torch songs like 'Kissin Part' with banjo accompaniment."

- City Paper


"When the folks at Wham City, named 'Best Creative Hive' by the City Paper in 2006, were forced to stop holding shows last September, the bands who lived there-- Dan Deacon, members of Videohippos, Lizz King, Santa Dads, to name a few-- diffused only to regroup at other burgeoning fire hazards with crappy ventilation to continue to inspire the blood out of everyone around them."

- Pitchfork


"Sounds like: A haunting blend of rustic country and synthetic punk. King’s satirical lyrics linger against minimal keyboard beats and basic guitar chords.
Influences: King borrows electro-bops from her Wham City constituents, but her sultry scowl is reminiscent of R&B powerhouse Big Mama Thornton."

- Venus Zine


"In a stuffy, odd house called Lemon Hill in a crappy area of Baltimore, a girl with just her banjo sat cross-legged on the floor and sang us all to sleep with absolutely beautiful lullabies. Her voice was smooth and soulful, and I snapped her photograph with a yellow glow from the only streetlight shining outside the windows. Her name is Lizz King."

- The Walrus

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Chicago Loves Peeping Tom

"On its superb debut album, File Under: Bebop (Umlaut), this clever French-Swedish trio transforms classic tunes by the likes of Charlie Parker, Thelonious Monk, and Bud Powell into delivery systems for loosey-goosey free jazz. Alto saxophonist Pierre-Antoine Badaroux, bassist Joel Grip, and drummer Antonin Gerbal clearly love and understand the hijacked standards, and in each performance PEEPING TOM refer back to abstracted bits of their source material. Their buoyant, spontaneous improvisations are somehow both craggy and lithe, hurtling surefootedly along knotty paths—even at its most chaotic the music is as elegant as it is explosive." —Peter Margasak, The Chicago Reader

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

Peeping Tom: On Tour!

Peeping Tom
on tour now!



Pierre-Antoine Badaroux sax
Antonin Gerbal drums
Joel Grip double bass

Furiously contemporary free-bop trio release debut CD on Umlaut Records and goes on a cross-Atlantic tour.

French-Swedish trio Peeping Tom just recently gave release concerts in Paris and Dala-Floda with master musicians Axel Dörner and Alan Silva as guests. Their CD, "File Under: Bebop" (Lunar Caustic Series - Umlaut Records), is designed by legendary free jazz drummer and contemporary artist Sven-Åke Johansson, and has already had recieved warm greetings from the press in France, Sweden and USA.

In February 2010, BBC 3 will make a live recording at the Vortex in London of Peeping Tom with Evan Parker as guest.

After the opening concert at the Umlaut Festival in Berlin, October 8-11, Peeping Tom head out on a twenty-day tour in the Nordic countries as well as USA, giving concerts at festivals and clubs in cities Oslo, Stockholm, Helsinki, Chicago, Washington DC, New York to name a few. In Chicago, radio station WNUFR will make a radio documentation of Peeping Tom's visit there.

The members of Peeping Tom are nestled up in the new scenes of improvised and contemporary music in Europe, and with Umlaut Records - based in Paris, Stockholm and Berlin - they take part of a worldwide community of creative artists. Ongoing projects, separately or as a group, include collaborations with musicians like Evan Parker, Fred Lonberg-Holm, Sven-Åke Johansson, Katt Hernandez, Barre Phillps, Eve Risser, and Raymond Strid to name a few.

Peeping Tom peeps back in time, deeply inspired by the energies of be-boppers like C. Parker, B. Powell and D. Gillespie. And by giving an up-to-date attention to their compositions, Peeping Tom tear jazz down to its bare bones and re-furnish it with the new blossom of free-bop.


TOUR SCHEDULE

Date/Time Venue/City
• 21-Oct/20:00 Brötz/Göteborg
• 22-Oct/20:00 Skyddstasjonen/Trondheim
• 23-Oct/20:00 Biermannsgården/Oslo
• 25-Oct/17:00 Färgfabriken/Östersund
• 26-Oct/19.30 Hotel Hellsten/Stockholm
• 27-Oct/20:00 Club Liberte/Helsinki
• 28-Oct/21:00 Vastavirta/Tampere
• 29-Oct/21:00 Elastic/Chicago
• 30-Oct/22:00 Heaven Gallery/Chicago
• 31-Oct/16:00 Kresge Theater/Pittsburgh
• 1-Nov/20:00 Katt's/Philadelphia
• 2-Nov/20:00 Outpost 186/Cambridge
• 4-Nov/20:00 Bossa/Washington DC
• 5-Nov/20:00 Windup Space/Baltimore
• 6-Nov/18.00 Downtown Music Gallery/New York City
• 7-Nov/21.00 Douglas Street Music Collective/Brooklyn NY

contact

Umlaut Records
+46 70 33 55 685 (Sweden)
+33 6 43 82 74 99 (France)
joel@umlautre
cords.com
www.umlautrecords.com

New Reviews of Needle Gun's 'Afternoon Computer Umbrage' LP

Dusted:
Needle Gun takes the free/spazz-noise rock to the harsh lands.


Foxy Digitalis:
It isn't typical critic/PR hyperbole to say that "Afternoon Computer Umbrage" is a free-wheeling, scattershot, psych-noise free-for-all. That's seriously the best and most appropriate description I could muster after having my synapses fried by this electrified trash heap of mind-rotting noise perversions. Okay, now THAT was hyperbole. As one stands in the crossfire generated from Needle Gun's guitar, electronics, drums and vocals melee, they begin to realize the grotesquely punkish beauty being vomited from the amplifier.

Thursday, September 17, 2009

SEVENTH ANNUAL CURATORS’ INCUBATOR PROGRAM EXHIBITION

SEVENTH ANNUAL CURATORS’ INCUBATOR PROGRAM EXHIBITION

PRESS RELEASE: FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

For more information contact:
Cathy Byrd, Executive Director at 410.962.8565 or map@mdartplace.org

Maryland Art Place Announces:
SEVENTH ANNUAL CURATORS’ INCUBATOR PROGRAM EXHIBITION
September 15 - October 24, 2009

Featured Curators:
Shelly Blake-Plock: Art of the Set-Up: Sound Objects as Artifacts
Artists: Peter Blasser. Alessandro Bosetti. Andy Hayleck. Bonnie Jones. Melissa Moore. Mike Muniak.

Rachel Sitkin: In Our Nature: Artists Reflect on the Manmade Landscape
Artists: Kim Beck. Laura Cooperman. Michelle Hagewood. Alex Lukas. Igor Pasternak.

Margaret Winslow: Soft Space: Architecture in Contemporary Art
Artists: Ronald Longsdorf. Janell Olah. Stephen Ruszkowki.

Featured Events:
Thurs Sept 24: Opening Event
5pm Rush Hour: Art Beats Traffic
6pm Gallery Talk and Sound Art Performance: Shelly Blake-Plock, John Berndt and Art of the Set-Up artists

Thurs Oct 8
5pm Rush Hour: Art Beats Traffic
6pm Gallery Talk: Margaret Winslow, Soft Space artists, and George Holback of Cho, Benn, Holback + Associates

Thurs Oct 22
5pm Rush Hour: Art Beats Traffic
6pm Gallery Talk: Rachel Sitkin and In Our Nature artists

Sat October 24
2pm to 5pm: Curating 101 presented by Cathy Byrd, MAP Executive Director

This Fall, MAP offers a communal platform for three inventive projects, including our first-ever sound art exhibition—The Art of the Set Up: Sound Objects as Artifacts, curated by Shelly Blake-Plock. Rachel Sitkin conceived In Our Nature: Artists Reflect on the Altered Landscape to feature artists who mine the outfall of urban development. Margaret Winslow’s ideas materialize in Soft Space: Architecture in Contemporary Art, a set of drawings and installations that explore physical and psychological nuances in the built environment.

Each year, MAP’s Curators’ Incubator Program renews the opportunity for Maryland Art Place to become a working laboratory for aesthetic experiments. Curators’ Incubator provides a creative space for the region’s aspiring curators to develop and present their concepts. MAP guides the curatorial process, beginning with an open call that encourages proposals and ending in the presentation of selected projects. MAP’s Program Advisory Committee took on the review and selection of our 2009 curators and MAP staff facilitated the production of the exhibition and companion catalogue.

OF NOTE: Programs for our Seventh Annual Curators’ Incubator will be presented on scheduled Thursdays at 5:00 pm this fall for RUSH HOUR: Art Beats Traffic. RUSH HOUR is an invitation to those who work and live in the downtown neighborhood to visit MAP at the end of the workday.

# # #

Maryland Art Place is a not-for-profit contemporary art center located in Baltimore’s Inner Harbor, at 8 Market Place, Suite 100. Gallery hours: 11am to 5pm, Tuesday through Saturday. For further information, please visit mdartplace.org or call 410.962.8565. All programs and exhibitions are free and open to the public.

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Elliott Sharp at the Red Room: September 23rd


Elliott Sharp is coming to the Red Room.


Wednesday, September 23rd, $6

Elliott Sharp (composer/multi-instrumentalist/producer). Jorge Martins will be opening.

"Having worked in the avant-garde and experimental music scene in New York City since the late 1970s, Sharp has released over eighty-five recordings ranging from blues, jazz, and orchestral music to noise, no wave rock, and techno music. He pioneered the use of a lap top computer in live performance with his Virtual Stance project of the 1980s and more recently has used algorithm and fibonacci numbers in experimental composition. He has cited literature as an inspiration for his music and often favors improvisation. He is an inveterate performer, playing mainly guitar, saxophone and bass clarinet. Sharp has led many ensembles over the years, including the blues-oriented Terraplane and Orchestra Carbon. - courtesy of the democratizing force of Wikipedia.

The Red Room
at Normals Books and Records
425 E. 31st Street Baltimore
Doors open at 8:00 (for this show)

NPR calls High Zero Festival "premier showcase".

Here's the first of two concert night reviews of High Zero by NPR:
High Zero Festival is the premier showcase for spontaneous sound.

A full set by Margarida Garcia, bass; Hans Grusel, electronics; Paul Neidhardt, percussion, friction; Morten Olsen, drums; and Raed Yassin, bass is available via the NPR site.

Wednesday, September 9, 2009

NPR Music Mixes Up High Zero

NPR Music has put together a fun piece featuring a series of great videos of High Zero artists:
When you strip away the blues, swing, and polyrhythms, what's left of jazz? Improvisation, for one, but probably not resulting in what one would call "jazz." Some call it "free improvisation," others "non-idiomatic." In any case, it's sound that seeks new sound.

For the past 11 years, the High Zero Festival in Baltimore, Md., has done just that ... with a twist.

Here's a highlight:

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

High Zero Opening Party: TONIGHT

High Zero Opening Party
September 8th, 2009
@ Load of Fun 120 W North Ave. Baltimore

7:30 PM - $6 admission

The High Zero festival kicks off with a party at the site of High Zero's gallery installation show, INEQUALITIES, and will feature varied performances by the installation artists. Tickets available only at the door.
"INEQUALITIES"
High Zero Sound Installations
August 28th - September 14th, 2009
@ Load of Fun 120 W North Ave. Baltimore

Since 2001, High Zero Festival has included a gallery show of installations, primarily to do with sound and other elements related to the broad experimental music and thought culture of which High Zero is a part. This year, High Zero Foundation presents INEQUALITIES, a gallery show at the Load of Fun curated with works of four very interesting local artists. Special thanks are due to Ric Royer and Sherwin Mark, and to the artists. The gallery does not have regular hours but is often accessible during the day, and is accessible during all Load of Fun events. See loadoffun.net for a schedule.

Please visit the INEQUALITIES page for further details.

The following artists will present work in the show:
Walter Carpenter
Owen Gardner
Jesse Haas
Ayako Katoaka
Jimmy Joe Roche

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

2009 High Zero Festival Schedule Announced!


Major Concerts at The Theatre Project
Doors open 7:30 PM, Performances start 8:30 PM sharp.

Detailed set listings:

Thursday Night, September 10th
[buy tickets]

Solo
Christofer Varner: trombone

Group One
Tom Boram: prepared piano, tap shoes
Miya Masaoka: koto, electronics
Melissa Moore: electronics, turntable

Group Two
Nick Becker: moog, electric guitar
Max Eilbacher: sax, violin, electronics
Hans Grüsel: electronics
Twig Harper: electronics

Group Three
Samuel Burt: clarinets, electronics
Will Redman: drums
Raed Yassin: bass

Group Four
Martin Blažíček: projection
Michael Evans: drums
Melissa Moore: electronics, turntable
Morten Olsen: drums, supercollider 3


Friday Night, September 11th
[buy tickets]

Solo
Morten Olsen: drums, supercollider 3

Group One
Dave Ballou: trumpet
Killick: harpeggione
Stewart Mostofsky: electronics
Kate Porter: cello

Group Two
Tom Boram: prepared piano, tap shoes
Chris Cooper: guitar
Michael Evans: drums
Andrea Neumann: inner piano

Group Three
Jorge Martins: guitar, wild wave
Miya Masaoka: koto, electronics

Group Four
Shelly Blake-Plock: guitar
Samuel Burt: clarinets, electronics
Hans Grüsel: electronics
Stewart Mostofsky: electronics
Christofer Varner: trombone


Saturday Matinee (Day), September 12th -- SPECIAL EVENT!!!
[buy tickets]

1. Programmed by Snacks

Featuring:
Nick Becker: moog, electric guitar
Samuel Burt: clarinets, electronics
Max Eilbacher: sax, violin, electronics
Michael Evans: drums
Jorge Martins: guitar, wild wave
Ava Mendoza: electric guitar
Christofer Varner: trombone

2. Programmed by Will Redman

Featuring:
Dave Ballou: trumpet
Rose Burt: reeds
Margarida Garcia: bass
Melissa Moore: electronics, turntable
Kenta Nagai: fretless guitar, shamisen
Paul Neidhardt: percussion, friction
Raed Yassin: bass


Saturday Night, September 12th
[buy tickets]

Solo
Andrea Neumann: inner piano

Group One
Martin Blažíček: projection
Rose Burt: reeds
Killick: harpeggione
Miya Masaoka: koto, electronics
Kenta Nagai: fretless guitar, shamisen

Group Two
Chris Cooper: guitar
Nick Becker: moog, electric guitar
Stewart Mostofsky: electronics

Group Three
Margarida Garcia: bass
Hans Grüsel: electronics
Paul Neidhardt: percussion, friction
Morten Olsen: drums, supercollider 3
Raed Yassin: bass

Group Four
Shelly Blake-Plock: guitar
Chris Cooper: guitar
Michael Evans: drums
Twig Harper: electronics
Ava Mendoza: electric guitar


Sunday Night, September 13th
[buy tickets]

Solo
Twig Harper: electronics

Group One
Martin Blažíček: projection
Paul Neidhardt: percussion, friction
Andrea Neumann: inner piano
Christofer Varner: trombone

Group Two
Margarida Garcia: bass
Jorge Martins: guitar, wild wave
Kate Porter: cello

Group Three
Dave Ballou: trumpet
Max Eilbacher: sax, violin, electronics
Killick: harpeggione
Ava Mendoza: electric guitar

Group Four
Shelly Blake-Plock: guitar
Rose Burt: reeds
Kenta Nagai: fretless guitar, shamisen
Kate Porter: cello
Will Redman: drums

For more info see www.highzero.org.

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

2009 High Zero Festival of Experimental Improvised Music

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
JULY 22ND, 2009
BALTIMORE, MD

What: High Zero Festival of Experimental Improvised Music
When: September 10th - 13th, 2009
Where: Theatre Project 45 W. Preston Street, Baltimore, MD 21201-5717
General Contact: info@redroom.org
Press Inquiries: blakeplock@gmail.com
Tele: press: 410-493-0912 / general: 443-414-5414
Website: www.highzero.org
Twitter Hashtag: #HZF2009
PR Updates: http://diymummy.blogspot.com


11th Annual High Zero Festival to bring global experimental culture to Baltimore
“A fertile laboratory of musical possibility without equal.” - Signal to Noise

“An utterly confounding yet utopian vision of musical possibilities” - Wire Magazine

Baltimore’s High Zero Festival—one of the longest running and most successful festivals of experimental improvised music in the country and what City Paper called “one of Baltimore’s great cultural treasures” is entering its eleventh year.

The High Zero Festival -- called by Baltimore Magazine the city’s “Best Music Festival” -- gathers avant-garde musicians and artists each year from around the world for a series of concerts featuring startlingly new ad hoc collaborations, virtually taking over the city that Rolling Stone cites as having the “Best Music Scene” in the USA.

Attendance of the High Zero Festival in previous years has been exceptionally high for this non-commercial music, with the festival frequently selling out. A weekend pick in the New York Times and regularly covered by major European and U.S. magazines, the festival is an outgrowth of the vital weekly Red Room performance series at Normals Books and Records, which since 1996 has presented roughly 800 concerts of experimental music in Baltimore, making it one of the longest running series of its kind in the country.
“Some of the most intense new music being made anywhere, on everything from oboes and one-of-a-kind instruments to the human body itself… unforgettable performances.” - The Washington Post

“So highly singular that it corresponds to nothing that has been heard before.” - Maryland Public Television

The eleventh annual High Zero Festival of Experimental Improvised Music will take place at Theatre Project in Baltimore, MD this September 10th - 13th, 2009. The press is invited to inquire regarding interviews and special announcements.


2009 Festival Musicians:

From afar:

Martin Blažíček (projection)
Prague

Chris Cooper (guitar)
Massachusetts

Michael Evans (drums)
NYC

Margarida Garcia (bass)
NYC

Hans Grüsel (electronics)
San Francisco

Killick (harpeggione)
Athens, GA

Miya Masaoka (koto, electronics)
NYC

Ava Mendoza (electric guitar)
San Francisco

Kenta Nagai (fretless guitar, shamisen)
NYC

Andrea Neumann (inner piano)
Berlin

Morten Olson (drums / supercollider 3)
Norway

Christofer Varner (trombone)
Munich, Germany

Raed Yassin (bass)
Amsterdam, Netherlands


From Baltimore:

Dave Ballou (trumpet)

Nick Becker (moog/electric guitar)

Shelly Blake-Plock (guitar)

Tom Boram (electronics, voice)

Rose Burt (reeds)

Samuel Burt (clarinets, electronics)

Max Eilbacher (sax, vln, electronics)

Twig Harper (electronics)

Jorge Martins (guitar, wild wave)

Melissa Moore (electronics)

Stewart Mostofsky (electronics)

Paul Neidhardt (percussion, friction)

Kate Porter (cello)

Will Redman (drums)


For more information contact:
High Zero Foundation, Inc.
General Contact: info@redroom.org
Press Inquiries: blakeplock@gmail.com
Tele: press: 410-493-0912 / general: 443-414-5414
Website: www.highzero.org
Twitter Hashtag: #HZF2009
PR Updates: http://diymummy.blogspot.com

Documentation of the 2008 High Zero Festival can now be found at: http://www.highzero.org/2008_documentation/

###

Monday, July 13, 2009

Peeping Tom: Touring Autumn 2009

Peeping Tom

Pierre-Antoine Badaroux - Saxophone
Joel Grip - Double Bass
Antonin Gerbal - percussion

This french-swedish trio peeps back in time, deeply inspired by the energies of be-boppers like C. Parker, B. Powell and D. Gillespie. And by giving an up-to-date attention to their compositions, Peeping Tom tear jazz down to its bare bones and re-furnish it with the new blossom of be-bop.

***

Here's the Peeping Tom tour, as it looks now:

0ctober 29th, 8pm
Elastic, Chicago

October 31st, 8pm
Kresge Theater, Pittsburgh

November 1st, 8pm
Sci*Fi @ Gojjo, Philadelphia

November 4th, 8pm
Pyramid Atlantic, Sonic Circuits, DC

November 5th, 8pm
The Windup Space, Baltimore

November 6th
Downtown Music Gallery, NYC

November 7th, 8pm
Douglas Street Music Collective, NYC

For more info check out Peeping Tom's page at Umlaut Records and check out tracks on MySpace.

Sunday, May 31, 2009

Ehse Records releases: new SEJAYNO LP 'QUANTUS'

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

SEJAYNO bring you QUANTUS, their third official album, which finds the trio delving further into the nebulous realms of INDUSTRY NOISE POP. Much of what you have come to love about Sejayno is still present: ancient-futurism, odd tunings, elegant theosophical ramble poetry, the gonzo, the stoned serene. However, with QUANTUS Sejayno have brazenly added new 21st century stylistics: slammed pop tunes derived from neo-conservative country music, Beck, new age retreat centers, and most glaringly, corporate globalism. QUANTUS begins Sejayno’s foray into REVERSE TIME MARKETING, which is an appropriation of corporate identities, logos, sigils, and techniques used by multinational brands. Their hit single, “ALIEN EYES” is a perfect example of Sejayno’s rebranding of SCION as it applies to SCI-AN-YO and the Priory of Sion, a French illuminati group from the Rennaisance period. To find out more about REVERSE TIME MARKETING, check out Sejayno on YouTube.

Sejayno is: Peter B, Carson Garhart, Severiano Martinez

Track List:

Opening Prayer
Internation Harvester I
Symposium
Assateague
Incantation Heterodyne
Monoteeth
International Harvester II
Alien Eyes
Alien Miles
The Spirit of the Mulberry

LP available. $15 USD, postage paid.

CD-R's with high resolution files available at Ehse Records for $7.

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

John Berndt "Ecstatic Thought Experiments" opens big at Emily Harvey, Soho, NYC

Congratulations to John Berndt and the Emily Harvey Foundation Gallery on the very successful opening of "Ecstatic Thought Experiments, 1989 - 2009".

Opening night saw over 500 people fill the gallery for music and art!

The show continues throughout this week with more music on Friday and Saturday.

Friday April 24th, 7PM-9PM, $6
A night of music by John Berndt and THUS, his 17-year long project with Neil Feather to invent a new idiom of music on original experimental instruments, with special guests.

John Berndt — solo acoustic and electronic saxophone
THUS (John Berndt and Neil Feather) — original music on original instruments
THUS with Michael Evans (drums) and special guests


Saturday April 25th, 7PM-9PM, $6
A night of solo and orchestral music featuring SECOND NATURE, a 15-person ensemble of virtuoso improvisers directed by Berndt, dedicated to the development of a new free improvisation musical ethic and aesthetic for the large group.

John Berndt — new electronic music compositions
Second Nature — improvised music, orchestral scale

Emily Harvey Foundation Gallery
537 Broadway at Spring Street - 2nd floor
New York, NY 10012
www.emilyharveyfoundation.org

Wednesday, April 15, 2009

John Berndt exhibition is Editors' Pick

John Berndt "Ecstatic Thought Experiments, 1989 - 2009" at The Emily Harvey Foundation is an EDITORS' PICK on Artcards NYC for Friday, April 17, 2009.

Monday, April 13, 2009

April 15 - April 30, John Berndt, Ecstatic Thought Experiments, 1989 - 2009


Official announcement from Emily Harvey Gallery:
April 15 - April 30, John Berndt, Ecstatic Thought Experiments, 1989 - 2009

Opening Reception and free concert: April 17, 7 - 10 pm
Performance Nights: April 24 & 25, 7 to 9 pm ($6 admission for each night)

This April, the Emily Harvey Foundation presents the first major retrospective of works by John Berndt (b. 1967). Berndt's vital and idiosyncratic cultural activity over the last thirty years has touched nearly every aspect of experimental culture. Best known to the public as a prolific musician, composer and improviser and as a key organizer in the scene around the international High Zero festival, Berndt's work from the very beginning also involved the creation of coherent novelties in a broader range of media, including personal behavior, film, visual art, text, installation and a variety of non-musical performance genres. Driven by his unique philosophy and collaborations, his panoramic sensibility is the subject of the show.

Hours: Tues - Sat. 2 - 6 pm

A series of performances by the artist, film-maker, writer, musician and second wave Neoist John Berndt, to coincide with his first retrospective exhibition. Berndt will be improvising with Elliot Sharp, Lukas Legetti, and Peter Zummo & Katt Hernandez amongst others. Events take place between 17 - 25 April. from Wire Magazine


More coverage in Networked Music Review.

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

John Berndt NYC Experimental Concert Series

John Berndt NYC Experimental Concert Series

Three nights of music in Soho as part of the first retrospective gallery exhibition of works by the improviser, experimental composer, film-maker, writer, and installation artist John Berndt.

All taking place at:
Emily Harvey Foundation Gallery
537 Broadway at Spring Street - 2nd floor
New York, NY 10012
www.emilyharveyfoundation.org


Friday April 17th, 7PM-10PM, free
Opening reception and free concert. three very different collaborations between John Berndt and four legendary experimental improvisers.

John Berndt and Elliot Sharp — string delirium
John Berndt and Lukas Legetti — polymetric kaleidoscope syncopation
John Berndt, Peter Zummo, and Katt Hernandez — paradoxical dispersal music


Friday April 24th, 7PM-9PM, $6
A night of music by John Berndt and THUS, his 17-year long project with Neil Feather to invent a new idiom of music on original experimental instruments, with special guests.

John Berndt — solo acoustic and electronic saxophone
THUS (John Berndt and Neil Feather) — original music on original instruments
THUS with Michael Evans (drums) and special guests


Saturday April 25th, 7PM-9PM, $6
A night of solo and orchestral music featuring SECOND NATURE, a 15-person ensemble of virtuoso improvisers directed by Berndt, dedicated to the development of a new free improvisation musical ethic and aesthetic for the large group.

John Berndt — new electronic music compositions
Second Nature — improvised music, orchestral scale


About John Berndt

One of the more active experimental music performers on the East Coast for the past decade, John Berndt began his musical career by composing wildly abstract electro-acoustic and conceptual tape music in 1978 at the tender age of 11. His first compositions in this mode premiered on the radio at age 14, and by his late teens, he was active in an international cultural scene that included some of the most radical cultural activists of the 80's and 90's. From the beginning his work was singular, ranging over the disjoint subcultures of sound art, improvised music, industrial, musical instrument design, and language experimentation. His solo CDs are available on Stereosupremo (Italy), HereSee (Baltimore), Abstract On Black (Pittsburgh) and he has many published recordings of collaborations.

Berndt began as a composer with a distinctly "inhuman" style and severe set of conceptual preoccupations, but in an unusual development process expanded his sensibility in a variety of contradictory directions, such that his work today is so aesthetically varied as to seem the work of a number of unrelated artists. In 1991 Berndt had heard saxophonist Jack Wright, who became his saxophone teacher, and as a result began to focus on developing his abilities in spontaneous instrumental performance to a high degree. His rigorously strange aesthetic then broadened to incorporate lessons from a variety of clashing modalities: jazz, Indian and African music, and extreme modernist instrumental technique. In this transformation, he was also highly influenced by another collaborator and teacher, the philosopher Henry Flynt, whose critique of the western computational mind-set greatly enabled Berndt's own critical path.

Berndt has always had a wide range of intensive ensemble projects, many of which are only now receiving attention outside of Baltimore. Since 1992, his duo THUS with Neil Feather has produced an entirely unique idiom of "very strange" music on an orchestra of original instruments they invent. As a part of THAT NOTHING IS KNOWN, a quartet with Jack Wright, Michael Zerang, and Bob Marsh, Berndt participated in some of the most inspired "fast" free improvised music of the 90's. Today, he performs regularly with his groups DEATH IN THE MAZE (a post-reductionist chamber improvisation ensemble), GEODESIC GNOME (a super-group performing Berndt's "Impossible" conceptual compositions), directs SECOND NATURE (Baltimore's 16 performer free improvisation orchestra) and recently participated in EXPLODING GARDENS (a post-jazz composers collective with Katt Hernandez, Gordon Beeferman, and Will Redman). He is also a hired gun performer occasionally with the well known electronic group MATMOS.

Thursday, March 19, 2009

Ehse Records set to release new LP by Baltimore’s Needle Gun

Ehse Records set to release new LP by Baltimore’s Needle Gun

Hailing from Baltimore, MD, Needle Gun is an avant-free-noise-punkish outfit equal parts Jack Patterson, Max Eilbacher, Gram Hummell, and Mike Allison.

The group has been playing since the summer of 2006 and has released several platters on local and DIY labels. The latest release -- an energetic, noisy, and challenging full-length LP on Ehse Records (Harrius, Snacks, Little Howlin’ Wolf, Blaster Al Ackerman) -- was recorded at Diamond Eyes Studio and was produced by Twig Harper of Nautical Almanac.

Tuesday, February 24, 2009

Harrius' 'Proud Flesh' NOW AVAILABLE from Ehse Records

Harrius' 'Proud Flesh' Soundtrack now available in LP format from Ehse Records.

"Some amazing tweaking of the idea of the Western film and, by extension, America itself." -- Arthur Magazine

Jenny Graf Sheppard and Chiara Giovando release the soundtrack for their experimental Western featuring a 70-year old female gunslinger seeking redemption.

"...discrete passages that vary between ominous guitar drone, suggesting rumbling thunder, drizzled with piano melody; solemn monastic chant; cryptic tape manipulation; and H0 scale clatter. This is just in the record's first 10 minutes." -- City Paper

Retrospective of Works by John Berndt at Emily Harvey Foundation, Soho NYC


Ecstatic Thought Experiments, 1989 – 2009
A Retrospective of Auditory, Visual, Tactile and Language Works by John Berndt

Wednesday April 15th – Thursday April 30th
Open Tuesday – Saturday, 2PM – 6PM

Opening reception and free concert: Friday April 17th, 7PM-10PM
Performance Nights: Friday April 24th and Saturday April 25th, 7PM-9PM
($6 admission for each night)

Emily Harvey Foundation (Gallery)
537 Broadway at Spring Street - 2nd floor
New York, NY 10012
www.emilyharveyfoundation.org

The Emily Harvey Foundation presents the first major retrospective of works by John Berndt (b. 1967). Best known as a prolific musician, composer, and improviser as well as a key organizer in the scene surrounding the international High Zero festival, from the very beginning Berndt’s work also has involved the creation of coherent novelties in a broader range of media, including personal behavior, film, visual art, text, installation and a variety of non-musical performance genres. This panoramic sensibility is the subject of the show.

As a teenager in the mid-80s, Berndt became the youngest member of the international Neoist movement, contributing as a core member to the development of its philosophy adopting falsehoods, mythologies, mind games, and hoaxes. In the early 90’s, Berndt became a student of Henry Flynt, the visionary philosopher and original author of “Concept Art”. This relationship, which has recently deepened into collaboration, had a huge effect on the clarification of Berndt’s thought, and led to an increased emphasis on writing sincere philosophy, and framing his varied activities as manifestations of a unified, radical sensibility of consciousness. At the same time, Berndt became a student of world-renowned avant-garde saxophonist Jack Wright and of experimental instrument inventor Neil Feather. Through these relationships, he dramatically broadened his approach, developing extended technical ability on a variety of instruments, and developing novel approaches to sound production becoming an advocate of non-idiomatic, freely improvised music and performing in hundreds of freely improvised concerts and on many recordings, including collaborations with leading figures.

In Ecstatic Thought Experiments, 1989 – 2009, the Emily Harvey Foundation brings together the dimensions of Berndt’s work over a twenty year period, ranging from micro- to macro- experiences. A large installation submerges visitors in a uniquely disorienting visual space. A small book, made especially for the exhibit, contains descriptions of impossible objects. Novel optical illusions give the visitor new experiences. A dance solo continues fluidly forever without repeating. Original instruments expose new aesthetics and performance possibilities. Theoretical texts frame lived experience in ways that are destabilizing to faith in conventional knowledge.

The exhibit is also enriched by three nights of concerts, covering a broad range of Berndt’s solo and collaborative projects, starting with an opening concert on Friday April 17th, and continuing with two nights on April 24th and 25th.

Monday, February 23, 2009

Blast from the Past: Review of Harrius' 'Enter the Cotton Ring' (2007) from KFJC FM


Harrius - “Enter The Cotton Ring ” - [Ehse]

Jenny Graf Sheppard (Metalux) and Chiara Giovando are the mistressminds behind Harrius. This is a bizarre dream of a record, indeed “Ringer’s Glove” sort of reminded me of the sleep sequences from the outstanding film, “The Manuscript Found At Saragoss.” Something about the succubus sounds and the tick-tock plunking percussion re-conjured up images of drinking from a skull. Indeed the music here is allegedly from an unsound soundtrack to a “psychedelic Western recently shot in the Badlands” (and that’s straight out of the horse’s web site). The title track is a sort of ladies lost in the canyon free-fall-folk ditty. “The Wedding Ring” has many bands, chopped and wobbly bands of sound. “L’OK” feels like a small slice of Fursaxa heaven. “Ebolatime” has a low rumble guitar and more voice-acting song could be a cross between Obuh records and Mauve Sideshow… but really this is willfully weirdly its own brand of wonder! “Proud Flesh” works a deep subconscious rupture…like a blood vessel mic’d up to volcano level? Lastly “Uppera” is another oddly divine number, like angels pacing back and forth in some scrambled universe. And then a very faint looked groove at the end! This is a fantastic twisted, yet intricately so, release! Do not miss!

- Thurston Hunger

Sunday, February 22, 2009

Harrius' 'Proud Flesh' Movie Trailer


It is 1886 in South Dakota, and Harrius, a 70-year old wounded wanderer, seeks redemption. Through her encounters with a parched landscape and beings both physical and metaphysical (including a virtual labyrinth of mounds, geisha dancers and her pious lace-maker double, Alma), Proud Flesh is no mere re-visioning of the American Western. It is a meditation on the iconography and gestures contained within the genre itself. -- Jenny Graf Sheppard / IMDb

Thursday, February 19, 2009

Harrius' 'Proud Flesh' reviewed in Arthur / Feb 09



Harrius' 'Proud Flesh' reviewed in Arthur.

It’s a beautiful thing, made from a private, internal symbolic system and some amazing tweaking of the idea of the Western film and, by extension, America itself.

Harrius' 'Proud Flesh' reviewed in City Paper / Jan 09

City Paper review of Harrius' 'Proud Flesh' Soundtrack

Knowing that the score's creator, Harrius (Jenny Graf Sheppard and Chiara Giovando), is the main duo behind the movie helps explain why this record makes so much sense, why it feels so, well, cinematic, functioning as its own taut, affecting narrative. It starts in quick successions of beeps/squeaks, like a computer rendered chew toy. It gives way to a brief, lovely verse of traditional vocal folk , which is abruptly cut off by a percussive blast (gunshot, perhaps). Those vocals return throughout the 35 minute composition, breaking up discrete passages that vary between ominous guitar drone, suggesting rumbling thunder, drizzled with piano melody; solemn monastic chant; cryptic tape manipulation; and H0 scale clatter. This is just in the record's first 10 minutes.

Monday, February 9, 2009

Harrius: 'Proud Flesh' -- New LP Release on Ehse Records



Harrius -- the musical duo comprised of artists Jenny Gräf Sheppard (of Metalux) and Chiara Giovando -- has recorded a sound program for the film 'Proud Flesh', also directed and produced by the pair. It will be released on February 24, 2009 by Baltimore’s Ehse Records (www.ehserecords.com ).

“'Proud Flesh' is the sound program to a movie of the same name by Chiara Giovando and Jenny Graf Sheppard. The film was shot largely in the South Dakota Badlands and stars the artists' mothers. An introspective study of the balance between wilderness and civilization within individuals and groups, it is comprised of a set of personal symbols, textural, behavioral, topographic, and through the casting of friends and family members who make up the cast, both archetypal in a way that is drawn from direct human relationships. Like the film, the sound that adjoins it is a gauzy world of private experiences interwoven into a taut narrative, something far more alien and beautiful than you're used to hearing on a record. There are references to American-ness; there are unexpected and intuitive structural leaps; there is the strong sense of something awry and rebalanced by the anxiety which results from it; there is a sense of vast and difficult terrain, through the sheer variety of sounds of styles of ordering them. But it's all finely wrought with lacemakers’ hands, and the result is something stunning that I don't quite have a handle on, and for the sake of a respect for wonder, I'll keep it that way.”
-Ian Nagoski, Baltimore

“Consider it 'Persona' by way of Alejandro Jodorowsky and Sergio Corbucci, scored to hybridized folk music that bleeds into disorienting drones.” - City Paper