Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Room40. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Room40. Afficher tous les articles

vendredi 30 juillet 2010

For the Australians



Room40
guest programmer Lawrence English

Presents: Pimmon | Ai Yamamoto | Chris Abrahams

Lawrence English is a media artist, composer and curator based in Australia. Working across an eclectic array of aesthetic investigations, English’s work prompts questions about field, perception and memory. Outside of his recording and art commissions, Lawrence English curates a number of ongoing sound and media programs including ‘Mono’ at the Institute Of Modern Art, Brisbane and ‘Syncretism’ at the Judith Wright Centre of Contemporary Arts, Brisbane. He produces the annual Room40 festival, ‘Open Frame’ (in Australia and London) and co-produces a number of other festivals including ‘Sound Polaroids’, ‘Liquid Architecture’ and ‘Frankly!’.

Paul Gough, otherwise known as Pimmon, is a Sydney-based electronic composer who has performed internationally, including Europe and the United States. Ai Yamamoto is a Japanese born, Melbourne-based experimental sound artist, and a favourite performer on the Australian scene with her often accompanying visuals. Chris Abrahams was born in New Zealand but grew up and performs in Australia. Abrahams is best known for his piano and jazz work and has collaborated with many bands, including The Necks.

Event Information
Saturday, 31st July
7.30 pm – 12.00 am
Book Now | room40 | Lawrence English | 31.7.10
Entry also available on the door from 8 pm

samedi 13 juin 2009

Greg Davis - Borronium (Room40, 2004)


1 Borronium (12:33)

Extrait d'une performance live à l'harmonium et au laptop...

Fabrique is ROOM40's long standing music program at Brisbane Powerhouse. In October 2004, Fabrique played host to kick ass solo performances from John Chantler and Greg Davis. Borronium is a hypnotic edit of Davis's amazingly powerful harmonium and laptop set which features processing care of his self constructed MAXMSP patches. A dazzling journey through layered singularity.
Room40

sold out visit Greg Davis & Room40

try

mercredi 21 janvier 2009

Airport Symphony (Room40, 2007)



1-1 David Grubbs - Chimney Swifts (6:15)
1-2 Richard Chartier - Retrieval Path (11:26)
1-3 Francisco López - Untitled #203 (12:51)
1-4 Camilla Hannan - Double Glazed (4:54)
1-5 Taylor Deupree - Fear Of Flying (6:12)
1-6 Christophe Charles - Airport Symphony, A Brief Life (9:38)
1-7 Dale Lloyd - Airs For Beacons / Signals For Ports (5:22)
1-8 Marc Behrens - 3 Winged Zones (10:17)
1-9 Toshiya Tsunoda - Peak To Peak (5:00)

2-1 Tim Hecker - Blue Ember Breeze (6:03)
2-2 Stephan Mathieu - Lux-Scn (23:45)
2-3 Christian Fennesz - Verona (4:43)
2-4 Burkhard Beins - Tarmac Berlin Edit (8:40)
2-5 Jason Kahn - Transit (3:31)
2-6 Ulrich Krieger - Noise Pollination (8:20)
2-7 Keiichi Sugimoto - Tum (4:18)
2-8 Christopher Willits - Plane (6:40)
2-9 Joel Stern - Terminal Dreamer (5:37)

Disque compilé par Lawrence English pour Room40, commandé dans le cadre d'un festival de musique et en collaboration avec l'aéroport de Brisbane. Le matériel de base est constitué de field recordings enregistrés par Lawrence English et retravaillé par tout le gotha de la scène électronique....

This wonderful Lawrence English-curated compilation documents a number of works commissioned by the Queensland Music Festival in conjunction with Brisbane Airport, calling on the compositional talents of all the leading lights in contemporary electronic music, including Tim Hecker, Fennesz, Taylor Deupree, Richard Chartier, Francisco Lopez, Marc Behrens and Toshiya Tsunoda, to name but a few. The music here all comes from the starting point of field recordings made by Lawrence English, capturing the sonic landscape of airports and air travel. Key to the success of this compilation is a distinct lack of external audio elements used in the compositions: the preservation of the source material strongly instils a sense of location, albeit in most cases displaced from any humdrum reality. The final piece on the second disc illustrates this perfectly: Joel Stern's 'Terminal Dreamer' reconfigures a potentially very dreary waiting space into a kind of vibrant botanical garden, bustling with life and interruptions from the natural world, the composer imposing a number of location recordings from other sources onto the airport's own auditory identity. There are plenty of more abstract works however, with the likes of Richard Chartier and Francisco Lopez conjuring microsound narratives typical of their respective back catalogues: Chartier focuses on the highest frequencies while Lopez nurtures the noisier signals out of the original recordings. Oddly, Lopez is no stranger to airport-themed music. He and Marc Behrens have previously collaborated on a similar project (A Szellam Alma) based on sounds from Frankfurt Airport, and it's no surprise that these artists are responsible for two of the finest contributions to this set: Behrens does an especially splendid job of weaving an enigmatic sound tapestry, producing ten minutes of inventive, unclassifiable acousmatic music. The second disc thrives on similarly detailed works by Jason Khan, Burkhard Beins and Christopher Willits, leaving some of the bigger names to stick to their own, rather more familiar agendas. Tim Hecker does precisely what you'd expect him to do, opting for luscious, harmonious drones and a bit of jetstream noise texture. Stephan Mathieu also retreads familiar territory with an epic twenty-four minute piece focussing on drifting waves and tonal elongations. It's all quite mesmerising and surprisingly melodic stuff. It comes as a most welcome surprise then that the biggest name here, Christian Fennesz, delivers something that has more in common with mid-twentieth century tape compositions than his own signature sound designs, resulting in a subtle, finely detailed concrète piece. It'd be hard to overstate how impressively diverse and creatively fruitful this double-disc set is, and certainly anyone with even the remotest interest in field recording or contemporary electroacoustic music should consider this required listening.
Boomkat

buy

try disc 1
try disc 2

samedi 20 décembre 2008

Steinbrüchel - Basis (Room40, 2007)

1 Interlude 1 (5:25)
2 These 1 (17:20)
3 Interlude 2 (5:17)
4 These 2 (8:40)
5 Interlude 3 (5:06)
6 Falter (20:00)
7 Interlude 4 (5:06)

Cet album de Steinbrüchel est un travail de remixes, les Interlude 1 à 4 sont des samples de guitare tirés de l'album Happiness Will Befall de Lawrence English, les These sont des samples de guitare tirés du Theory of Machines de Ben Frost tandis que Falter est un sample de piano de Bernd Schurer, issu d'une installation réalisée pour Lerraum en novembre 2005. Steinbrüchel en retravaillant ces morceaux réussit à en tirer de nouvelles atmosphères et à leur donner encore plus de profondeur harmonique...

This latest from Ralph Steinbruchel is a remix project of sorts, in which the Swiss microsound composer creates a number of works from recordings by other artists, namely Lawrence English, Ben Frost and Bernd Schurer. It's a mark of Steinbruchel's skill and sure hand that he's able to impose his own voice onto the source material, with guitar recordings (from both English and Frost, taken from their Happiness Will Befall and Theory of Machines albums, respectively) and piano recordings (taken from a Bernd Schurer 5.1 surround installation) all somehow morphing into that distinctively warm tangle of digital tones. Those already familiar with Steinbruchel's work will, to some extent, know what to expect from this release, although the presence of instrumental material provides a greater depth than in previous outings. 'These 2' serves as an especially successful example of this: you can't actually make out Ben Frost's guitar as such, though there's a harmonic richness that transcends the more staunchly digital compositions in Steinbruchel's catalogue. The Schurer piece, 'Falter' even lets a little air into the thick tonal jumble, resulting in a more spacious sound. This gives a three dimensional, roomy feel to the music, breathing new life into the potentially very dry world of lowercase laptop music. All in all, Basis gets the balance of the new and the familiar just right, making for one of the most satisfying room40 releases for some time. Highly recommended.
Boomkat

buy

try