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GRAVITATIONAL
PULL
Dispatches
from the Spirit of Gravity / Edition 66 / March 08
·
Happenings:
BEMASS
/ T-TOE / IN SAND
The
Three & Ten, 10 Steine St, BN2 1TE
8.30-11pm,
£4/£3 concs.
An
international electro-acoustic extravaganza with custom interactive visuals.
This is going to be weird as sh*t and funny as f*ck.
Bemass
Are a new three-piece improv project, comprising Magnus Alexanderson
(Sweden; guitar & processing), Sten Sandell (Sweden; voice &
processing) and Bela Emerson (UK; cello & processing) [rescheduled from
last November].
MAGNUS ALEXANDERSON - Guitar and processing
A composer of electro-acoustic music, member of Decision Dream &
audiovisual project MASH (www.i-mash.net),
Magnus has upcoming collaborations with Gary Smith & Chris Cutler.
BELA EMERSON - Cello and electronics
An innovative performer of electric cello & electronics, in addition to
a thriving solo career, Bela collaborates with Stomp, Ryan Teague, Drei, and
many other.
www.cellobela.com
& www.myspace.com/belaemerson
STEN SANDELL - Voice and processing
Stenis a composer and musician using piano, voice, elektronics &
harmonium. He is also a member of the groups: Sten Sandell Trio, GUSH, Low
Dynamic Orchestra, with musicians/composers Paal Nilssen-Love (Norway),
Sverrir Gudjonsson (Iceland), Johan Berthling (Sweden) and Evan Parker (UK).
www.sami.se/art/sandell/index.htm
& efi.group.shef.ac.uk
T-toe
"The heart
of a D'n'B raver, youth of a marching band and classical training, and the
greatest lost pop melodies have all brewed together to form T-toe, your
friendly local, electro-Breakcore/Dubstep-Trombonist! (Yes, ANOTHER one!).
Expertly produced but with his tongue firmly in cheek (when not down the
trombone), T-toe has been solidifying his reputation as a future force to be
reckoned with thanks to some amazing support slots with the likes of Plaid,
Radioactive Man and Si Begg and many other memorable gigs in 2007."
In Sand
With influences drawn from jazz, rock, classical and improvised music
put through the mill of electronic glitch this international quintet
celebrate the release of their first album "WHATEVER".
RICHARD
PADLEY - electric guitar
At the age of 15 Richard was thrown out of his first punk band for inventing
chords that no-one else could play. In 1988 he formed the People with
Instruments collective (expanded to a big band in 1990) with Matthew Grey.
He played radiation guitar noise for the alt.pop outfit The Now Band, as
well as composing for films and teaching guitar in a local school.
THOR MAGNUSSON - laptop
Co-founder of the Ixi software collective, the musician, writer and
programmer Thor Magnusson develops installations and programmes for events
around the world such as Barcelona's SONOR festival and the famous STEIM
studios in Amsterdam. He develops programmes to sample and respond, adding
the evocative organic energies of field recordings such as the processed
sound of fire and ice from his native Iceland.
SATOKO FUKUDA - violin
Satoko is a young classical concert violinist from Japan. She has performed
in many major UK venues such as the Barbican, Wigmore, Queen Elizabeth and
Royal Albert Halls. She has performed and broadcast live in Ireland,
Germany, Bulgaria, Switzerland, Italy, Israel, USA and Japan and has studied
with Natasha Boyarskaya at the Yehudi Menuhin School and with Itzhak
Rashkovsky at the Royal College of Music.
DANNY KINGSKILL - cello
"An atmospheric player with a beautiful big tone" - Penguin Guide
to Jazz on CD
Danny is an orchestral player, choirmaster, music therapist, composer,
musical director and actor. He is also an inventive and irreverent
improviser who can be heard on several albums, including 2 by Arc "a
fantastic band who have assimilated much from contemporary classical music
and have developed a sharp, intuitive common aesthetic" Resonance.
GUS GARSIDE - double bass
Gus has worked in a variety of musical settings - jazz, pop, cabaret, dance,
theatre and improvised music. He has played with many of the leading
musicians in the improvised music world and collaborated across art forms
with writers, film-makers and, in particularly, dancers. Appearing on
several albums including "Out of Amber" (with Arc)
"Indispensable for its profound beauty" Improv Jazz, France and
Pentimento (with Jon Lloyd and Dave Fowler) "quite simply one of the
most consistently interesting and enjoyable albums that has come my way for
a long time" The Wire.
Hosted
by our very own electro-comedian Lee Hume
live interactive visuals by _minimalVector
For
details of future Spirit of Gravity events, go to www.spiritofgravity.com/.
We
have video and audio on the Spirit of Gravity mp3 blog
from all our recent shows at spiritofgravity-brighton.blogspot.com/
There
are other videos on the Spirit of Gravity MySpace
page at www.myspace.com/thespiritofgravity
Now
there are also downloads available of some complete Spirit of Gravity sets
at www.archive.org/details/the-spirit-of-gravity
·
Greetings:
This
month we have another exciting show lined up for you, shipped in especially
from Sweden just for us the two gentlemen that make two thirds of Bemass
(the other third being Bela Emerson) inspiring
us to an evening of
electro-acoustic excess.
If
you think improv is about Jazz then this should
put you right - Bela’s Cello is rich with the
roar of Balkan trains and Turkish mystery, Magnus Alexanderson
the “anti-social” post-rock guitarist with speed-metal freakout
Desire Dream, and Sten Sandall
providing mind altering vocals and electronics.
Then
we also have T-Toe grasping a trombone and a box of sweltering electronic
tics. On one hand its funny ‘cos
it’s a trombone, on the other hand, ‘cos
it’s a trombone its actually pretty serious.
And
rounding things off we have In Sand who combine a mastery of seriously
modern composition with free improv and
electronics.
Please
come early ‘cos we have a lot to get through
and all these artists deserve your undivided attention – bear in mind
someone will have to go on first!
Other
things:
Our
Tuesday night late night brothers Instrumentality have been chucked out of
the Fortune of War as part of the seafront modernisation process. To be
replaced by a night playing 30 year old funk records (Ed: are you sure about
that?.....)
We’ll
wish them the best of luck in their search for a new home, hopefully not on
a Tuesday.
Archives
of old shows: Dan Powell has been uploading more shows to www.archive.org/details/the-spirit-of-gravity,
and also some of the collective members are coming up on the Wrong music
archive of shows. www.wrongmusic.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=35&Itemid=1
Also
have a look in the Wrong-Lab for more interesting things.
·
Reviewings:
Spirit
of Gravity
at the Three and Ten, Brighton,
Tuesday 26th February
This
Sound Bureaucracy
The
old masters return with another set of semi improvised electro-poetica.
Nick Rilke was on fine form, hooded and
rambling, revisiting an old favourite “Bad Rap” and also what’s sure
to become a new favourite “Round here it was all fields”, which was a
largely fictitious history of The Spirit of Gravity. Tony Rimbaud was on
good form too, loops of squeaks and rumbles some booming slow beats and
clacking quick ones, never pausing, ranging from unsettling drones to
euphoria.
For
the visuals _minimalVector had bought down “An
80’s Polish video mixer wired wrong” to use alongside the laptop. The
result gave us big blocks of rounded abstract shapes that ebbed and flowed
with the music.
Video
of “Bad Rap” on the Sogblog.
Ry-Om
played at the Spirit of Gravity a while ago (spiritofgravity-brighton.blogspot.com/2006_03_01_archive.html)
and it was a pleasure to welcome back their laptop and guitar soundscapes.
They
spent some time pre-loading the laptops with guitar sounds after the soundcheck
so we only got a couple of glimpses of them during the set. It started with
a metronome guitar click that built into a pointillistic
rhythm of tiny guitar sounds, eventually this was
washed away but a quite beautiful enveloping wave of thrums that filled your
head with a velvety loveliness, which then again evolved into a more
rhythmic piece to end.
For
this _minimalVector put away the video mixer and
had some pulsing blue and brown spots that went all stroboscopic spotting
when things got more exciting.
Similarly
back with a new approach (the meister conductor
computer has gone, along with the red and yellow baseball caps -
replaced by cloth caps) were Halal
Kebab Hut. Because of the visual nature of what they do there were no _minimalvector
visuals. HKH started with a poem spoken in non-unison by the six members
stood around at the back, the results were a little like the Cabaret
Voltaire nonsense poems, but with real words, the juxtapositions producing
laughter from the back. This was followed by “Situationist”
which involved blowing up and letting down long balloons, the sort used by
clowns to make animals. Then squeaking them and hitting each other over the
head. I guess you had to be there, A section was
played on the Sound Projector (CHECK!) on Radio Reverb (97.2fm and www.radioreverb.com/,
Tuesday nights 11pm) and Clive Craske felt
compelled to describe it too.
Then
they did “Dot Dash Dong” and old piece I’d seen at SoG
and Wrong Music, followed by a keyboard piece, and something that involved
Kazoos, conducting and lots of standing up and sitting down.
I
have some video on the website, but I think it’ll still be pretty
mystifying.
Yours
as ever
El
Maestro Con Queso
Editor.
Gravitational
Pull
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