1. Sound Escapes

    Title: Sound Escapes
    Location: Space / Mare street
    Start Time: 18:30
    Date: 2009-07-24

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    Co-curated by Irene Revell (Electra) and Angus Carlyle (LCC)

    Sound Escapes is an exhibition to mark the culmination of a radical interdisciplinary
    research project that brought artists together with acousticians, engineers and social
    scientists from institutions across the UK in an endeavour to move beyond the notions
    of negative noise towards the idea of positive soundscapes.

    Alongside a public interpretation of the central research strands of the project, the
    exhibition includes artists who work with soundscapes across a wide range of practices
    and whose work is in conversation with the scientific and sociological questions posed
    in the research. Significantly, the works have emerged from a listening process that
    challenges what counts as positive; work that understands the auditory world in a more
    inquisitive way, indeed an interrogation of what even counts as sound.


  2. Marcus Coates

    Title: Marcus Coates
    Location: The Coronet Theatre - SE1 6TJ
    Start Time: 19:00
    Date: 2009-06-05

    Nomad and Qu Junktions present ‘A Ritual for Elephant & Castle’ featuring Marcus Coates performing live with Chrome Hoof, Wildbirds & Peacedrums and a 20-piece live drum circle, plus very special guests and DJs.

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    The Coronet Theatre
    Elephant & Castle
    London SE1 6TJ

    Friday June 5, 2009
    7pm—12am, tickets £6 ADV

    The highly anticipated collusion of artist / shapeshifter Marcus Coates and the thunder, rock and disco of the mighty Chrome Hoof is a fanciful and fantastic proposition. Add to this cauldron the energy of Wildbirds & Peacedrums and it is an explosive evening of possibilities and happenings.
    Marcus Coates is both shaman and showman, entering other worlds to find extraordinary answers for modern life. Coates’ collaboration with a band as dazzling and powerful as the mighty Chrome Hoof is a new but not unsurprising development for Coates…

    for more info and tickets
    http://www.nomad.org.uk
    http://www.ticketweb.co.uk


  3. Kitsuné Maison Party

    Title: Kitsuné Maison Party
    Location: Scala - Penton Rd
    Start Time: 20:00
    Date: 2009-06-20

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    KITSUNE MAISON PARTY
    Saturday 20th June | Scala ,KIngs Cross | 8pm - 4.30am

    Main Rm
    AUTOKRATZ - live
    CHEW LIPS - live
    DELPHIC - live
    INFLAGRANTI - live
    WE HAVE BAND - live
    YOUNG AND LOST CLUB

    Rm 2
    AEROPLANE
    BENI
    GILDAS & MASAYA
    STREETLIFE DJ’s

    Foyer
    LAST FM Dj Team


  4. Talk Show ICA

    Title: Talk Show ICA
    Location: ICA
    Description: Talk Show: A month-long season of artworks and live events addressing that central feature of human life - the act of speech
    Start Time: 19:00
    Date: 2009-05-19

    This event brings together live performances by four figures who experiment with sound poetry and musical structure, tracing a lineage from Dada and Fluxus. Poet Ann-James Chaton and guitarist Andy Moor have collaborated frequently, most recently on an album which tells the story of a journalist through his articles and broadcasts. The Australian sound poet Chris Mann moved to New York in the 1980s, and is known for performances which involve the reading of dense texts at great speed. They are joined by the composer, musician and curator Alex Waterman, whose work explores experimental music and its relationship to language.

    Received an email from Will Holder describing the event a bit longer:

    We’re into the third week of Talk show at the ICA, and I thought I’d write to tell you about what should be one of my favourite evenings on the programme: I DO understand that you might be less familiar with these names than others, but nevertheless:

    Alex Waterman
    Chris Mann
    Anne-James Chaton + Andy Moor

    Alex is a musician and writer, and my collaborator on a few publications, and as you may know we’re working together on Robert Ashley’s biography. Alex will perform a solo (”Night Driver”).
    Chris is an Australian friend of ours from NY, who Ashley dedicated “Yes, but is it Edible” to (published in F.R.DAVID “Stuff and Nonsense”). Chris just described tomorrow night as “animated Beckett” and “wanting, but unable to be phone sex”.
    Ann-James performed at my first celebration of Marcel Duchamp’s birthday, after I first saw him (with Alex) at The Ex’s 25th birthday in Amsterdam. The Ex was a punk band who’ve got older and are now easily called ‘improvisers’. Andy Moor is their guitarist. Together Ann-James and Andy will perform “Le journaliste”.

    Tuesday May 19th, at 7pm.
    Free
    (Booking required. Please call the Box Office on 020 7930 3647. Tickets must be collected 30 minutes before the event starts, or they will be released.)

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  5. FLOWER CORSANO DUO ARRINGTON DE DIONYSO HELHESTEN ZUN ZUN EGUI CHORA


    Title:
    FLOWER CORSANO DUO ARRINGTON DE DIONYSO HELHESTEN ZUN ZUN EGUI CHORA
    Location: Barden’s Boudoir 38-44 Stoke Newington Road, Dalston, N16 7XJ
    Description: FLOWER CORSANO DUO is - as the name suggests - the mega-pairing of loose-limbed free-drum wunderkind Chris Corsano and incendiary guitarist and Vibracatherdal Orchestra linchpin Mick Flower. With Mick rocking the Shaahi Baaja (or Japan banjo), the result is an incredible mix of wide-eyed hardcore, ecstatic noise, Eastern drone and sweat and bone. They have two releases out to date - ‘The Radiant Mirror’ album for Textile, along with a limited 7″ on No-Fi’s ‘The Undisputed Dimension’ series.
    www.myspace.com/flowercorsanoduo

    ARRINGTON DE DIONYSO is probably best known for his work fronting K Records’ infectious swamp-stomp trio Old Time Relijun. But Arrington is also a distinctive solo musician in his own right, performing with bass clarinet, jew’s harp and his own voice, with its unique multiphonic tone, inspired by Tuvan throatsinging and the ecclesiastics of Albert Ayler. Pushing the envelopse between musicality and pure energy, between shamanic ecstacy and lunacy, he enwraps rooms with resonant sound. Arrington’s second solo LP ‘I See Beyond The Black Sun’ is out now.
    www.myspace.com/arringtondedionyso

    HELHESTEN are a three-headed sonic blitz, featuring the talents of Hannah Ellul, Ben Knight and Greg Thomas. Two of them live in Deptford and one of them lives in the Essex countryside and you can hear the sunshine and the tower blocks in their music. Employing clarinet, beat-up guitar, effected-voice and a variety of percussion, Helhesten craft an aching flux of soaring sounds. Whether the band are in the throes of a frenzied onslaught or an equally ravaged accumulating pastoral jam, they never escape the tranced-out web, which pulls them together as much as it holds them apart. A plit 12″ with Chops is out now on Upset The Rhythm.
    www.myspace.com/wearehelhesten

    ZUN ZUN EGUI hail from Bristol, but are from everywhere. They make a hypnotic blare-out sound that is full of joyful noise. This is “tropicalism” with an influence of subterranean-shaped rock edges and quick edits, Japanese progressive epicness and a heavy dose of Fela Kuti inspired eternal groove. Political, inspirational and danceable.
    www.myspace.com/zunzunegui

    CHORA represent a fresh triangulation of the northern free music family. Now residing in Peckham they have begun to perform predominantly as a duo where Ben Morris and Rob Lye follow the rise and fall of their kaleidoscopic drone mantras that move through skeletal extended percussive techniques, wormhole found-sound manipulation, kitchen sink gamelan, and elephantine vocal swoops. Expect new releases soon on Chocolate Monk, and an LP on French label Sergent Massacre.
    www.myspace.com/chora

    Start Time: 20:00
    Date: 2009-02-20


  6. Stereo Total

    Title: Stereo Total
    Location: Bar Rumba, 36 Shaftesbury Avenue London WC1
    Description: For the uninitiated, Berlin duo Stereo Total (that’s pronounced ”toe-TAHL”, as opposed to the North American “toadle”) is comprised of a French female singer and a German keyboard whiz, who sing cute synth-pop in French. And in German. And English. And Japanese. And Spanish. And, erm, Turkish. Sounds a bit out there for some people’s liking, but hey, we already have a bunch of Icelanders who sing in their own warped form of Esperanto over bowed guitars, and they have a cult following. So compared to that, why not have some rather catchy Turkish pop music around as well?
    Start Time: 22:00
    Date: 2009-01-31


  7. Open Music Archive and Felix’s Machines

    Title: Open Music Archive and Felix’s Machines
    Location: Gasworks SE11 5RH
    Description: Eileen Simpson and Ben White (Open Music Archive) will play a DJ set featuring out-of-copyright clips, blips and loops sampled from 19th Century music boxes, player pianos and other automated music machines.
    Start Time: 20:00
    Date: 2008-12-19

    Eileen Simpson and Ben White (Open Music Archive) will play a DJ set featuring out-of-copyright clips, blips and loops sampled from 19th Century music boxes, player pianos and other automated music machines.

    This is followed by the performance of a new composition made in collaboration with Felix Thorn, and assembled from samples of out-of-copyright material for the player piano.

    This event is part of the current exhibition Felix’s Machines, a series of extraordinary mechanical instruments put together by the artist and musician Felix Thorn. When connected to a computer, Felix’s Machines translate Thorn’s compositions into mechanical actions performed by customised drums and piano parts and animated by solenoids, springs and motors.

    Free Gift: On the night, Open Music Archive and Felix Thorn will give away a copyleft licensed CD featuring the new composition and digital source files.

    This events is free. Doors will open at 7.45pm, the gallery will be closed between 6 and 7.45pm to set up.


  8. Small But Perfectly Formed

    Title: Small But Perfectly Formed
    Location: London, Clerkenwell
    Description: improvised music

    Clive Bell (shakuhachi)
    Bechir Saade (ney)
    -
    Daichi Yoshikawa (electronics)
    Paul Abbott (shee, computer)
    David Papapostolou (cello)
    -
    Ute Kanngiesser (cello)

    SAINT MARK’S CHURCH
    Myddelton Square, Clerkenwell
    London, EC1R 1XX

    It’s a lovely church. We chose this venue for it’s unique acoustic.

    Entrance: £5/£4

    2 minutes walk from Angel tube.
    Bus: 30, 73, 205, 214, 394, 476

    More info on the musicians on: http://smabpf.blogspot.com/

    Start Time: 19:30:00
    Date: 2008-11-27


  9. Forever

    Forever
    21 November 2008 - 1 February 2009
    John Madejski Garden
    Admission free

    A large video wall will generate infinite variations of digital animations responding to the rhythm of a single soundtrack. Each music video will be different, presenting a unique reaction to the track. The bespoke generative design system at the heart of Forever will spawn countless reactive music videos, everyday, forever.

    Title: Forever
    Location: V&A John Madejski Garden
    Description: This winter the V&A John Madejski Garden will come alive with the latest digital commission by Universal Everything , a multidisciplinary design studio founded by creative director Matt Pyke in 2004.
    Start Time: 8pm
    Date: 2008-11-21


  10. Audio Forensic

    Title: Audio Forensic
    Location: IMT Gallery- Image Music and Text
    Description: Comprising of ambitious works by nine artists who employ sound as the principle media of their practice, Audio Forensics demonstrates the breadth of engagement with sound in the arts, and how it can be re-evaluated in the context of an increasingly noisy world. The artists exhibiting are Libero Colimberti, Jan Hendrickse, Simone Izzi, Nitin Lachhani, Luc Messinezis, Maria Papadomanolaki, Vytis Puronas, Mark Shorey and Mark Wright.

    I M T
    UNIT 2/210 CAMBRIDGE HEATH ROAD
    LONDON E2 9NQ UK

    Audio Forensics is an exhibition and symposium presenting the final work of the first MA Sound Arts graduates of London College of Communication. The groundbreaking work in the exhibition demonstrates the high level of critical debate in sonic disciplines fostered by the university’s Department of Sound Art and Design since 1998. The exhibition is co-curated by ELECTRA and IMT
    Start Time: 18:00
    Date: 2008-11-27

    Sound art encompasses a wide range of forms and concerns and has its
    precedence across many creative fields, yet, as these artists demonstrate, the
    acknowledgment of sound’s significance in the arts is becoming of greater
    importance as technologies develop, and as the public become ever more
    aware of the interactions between sound, space and artistic practice.

    Some of the works make one aware of interactions with sound that are often
    overlooked, such as the effect of sonic frequencies on the body in Shorey’s
    work. Puronas’s audiovisual installation immerses the visitor in questions
    of reality, hyper-reality and the authenticity of digital technology, whilst Izzi
    turns installation against the audience as an analogy of the psychological
    pressures of contemporary society. Others, such as Messinezis’s collection
    of sonic curiosities, in an audio equivalent to the Wunderkammer, or
    Lachhani’s extraordinary 3D sculptures of sound waves, translate sound
    into contexts more familiar in the visual arts presenting experiences that are
    at once recognisable and alien.

    Other work in the exhibition explores and re-evaluates major disciplines in
    sound art, whether through Hendrickse’s compositional use of air currents
    to play both musical and non-musical instruments, or Colimberti’s
    subversion of the use of music and the sound effect in film. Likewise
    Papadomanolaki and Wright explore the field recording as a discipline
    through which to narrate place, the space outside the gallery and the Abbeys
    of the north of England respectively, demonstrating the capacity of sound to
    evoke absent environments in very tangible ways.

    As a whole the exhibition provides an extraordinarily comprehensive enquiry
    into how sound, and its manipulation, influences our experience and
    understanding of our environment.

    On Sunday 30th November there will be a symposium in which keynote
    speakers Ben Borthwick, Assistant Curator at Tate Modern, and Steven
    Connor, professor of Modern Literature and Theory at Birkbeck, will address
    issues of sonic practice raised by the exhibition. This event will also give
    visitors the opportunity to talk to the artists personally about their work.

    Audio Forensics is an exhibition and symposium presenting the final work of
    the first MA Sound Arts graduates of London College of Communication. The
    groundbreaking work in the exhibition demonstrates the high level of critical
    debate in sonic disciplines fostered by the university’s Department of Sound
    Art and Design since 1998. The exhibition is co-curated by ELECTRA and
    IMT.