Kevin Beasley at the Guggenheim, June 26th

Keavin Beasley performance
Guggenheim Museum
8pm, Friday June 26th, 2015

Kevin Beasley’s commission by the Guggenheim’s Young Collectors Council on the occasion of Storylines: Contemporary Art at the Guggenheim, Strange Fruit (Pair I) and (Pair II) (2015) incorporate the sounds of the museum into sculptures made from sneakers, foam, resin, and other materials. For this performance, he uses the sounds recorded by these objects to build environmental and experimental compositions.

$15, $10 members, $5 students
http://www.guggenheim.org/new-york/calendar-and-events/2015/06/26/an-evening-with-kevin-beasley/4792

Sergei Tcherepnin performance at Murray Guy, June 24th

Sergei Tchrepnin will perform ‘Garden of Tongues’ (2014) at the opening of:

THE SECRET LIFE co-curated with Leidy Churchman: Karl Blossfeldt, Vern Blosum, Alejandro Cesarco, Leidy Churchman, Sara Cwynar, Mark Dion, Nicole Eisenman, Rochelle Goldberg, Dmitri Hertz, David Horvitz, Xylor Jane, Joachim Koester, Elka Krajewska, Kate Levant, Ann Lislegaard, Win McCarthy, Corey McCorkle, Benny Merris, Charlotte Prodger, Anna Rosen, Thomas Schütte, Sergei Tcherepnin, James Welling

Wednesday, June 24th, 6-8pm
Murray Guy Gallery

H {N)Y P N(Y} OSIS — Philippe Parreno

Philippe Parreno’s H {N)Y P N(Y} OSIS
June 11 – August 2nd, 2015
Park Avenue Armory

Within the monumental interior of the Wade Thompson Drill Hall, he will construct a scripted space where a series of events fold and unfold onto the space itself, creating an architecture of attention on a scale of operatic proportions. This dramatic composition fuses the spectral presence of sound—both recorded and performed live by Mikhail Rudy— with film, light, collaborations, apparitions, and memory to guide and manipulate the viewer’s experience and perception. This sensory journey through both remastered existing works and new projects reveals strata that while present, were previously invisible, and metamorphoses the building into a quasi-living, perpetually evolving organism.

http://www.armoryonpark.org/programs_events/detail/philippe_parreno

June 23rd, 2015 – C. Spencer Yeh: SOLO VOICE I-X at Artist Space

C. Spencer Yeh: SOLO VOICE I-X
Performance June 23rd, 8pm

“It’s building on the record as a document, using it as a springboard for further exploration– playing against an organized and recorded artifact of my voice as another element, whether held conceptually, in memory, or concretely as source material. With the use of electronics, which gets increasingly complicated in my set-up, I find I am still holding onto qualities of working with voice that are interesting to me.

One, using amplification as a microscope, and having the electronics only enhance what is there naturally to begin with. That is, having the sounds still sound like the sounds, and not masked by effects boxes. This is particularly important as I had moved from ‘outward’ vocal sounds to increasingly ‘inward’ smaller sounds.

Two, using time-based electronics like samplers and loopers that can play with the duration of a looped phrase. I’ve been exploring the limit at which a phrase could no longer register as language– where vocalizations’ legibility disappears and becomes texture rather than communication. So oftentimes I’ll perform with a loop in mind multiple times before I hit sample to repeat; to mimic a repetitive machine before the actual machine does that task.”
C Spencer Yeh

SOUNDCLOUD Primary Information: https://soundcloud.com/primaryinformation/solovoice-excerpts-vii-iii-v2 EVENT: http://issueprojectroom.org/event/c-spencer-yeh-solo-voice-i-x

Tiny Mix Tapes review of Sabisha Friedberg’s “Hant Variance”

Review of the Hant Variance on Tiny Mix Tapes:
Sabisha Friedberg’s debut for Issue Project Room’s new label, Distributed Objects, was recorded in conjunction with professor/musician/artist Peter Edwards at the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute’s EMPAC, and rather than pretending to depict “the spatial” as an (intangible) abstraction, it reveals how the distribution of sound in a particular space (e.g., EMPAC’s Studio 2) can affect not only our perception of that same sound, but also our perception of that same space. …
http://www.tinymixtapes.com/music-review/sabisha-friedberg-peter-edwards-hant-variance

Sabisha Friedberg: The Hant Variance

Sabisha Friedberg: The Hant Variance
Artists Space Books & Talks: 55 Walker St., NYC 10013
Tuesday, June 16th, 2015

Sabisha Friedberg presents a live mix of the third and final movement of The Hant Variance as a quadraphonic experiential piece. Originally recorded with Peter Edwards in a custom-tuned environment at the Experimental Media and Performing Arts Center (EMPAC), advanced multi-channel recording techniques were used to capture a precise configuration of spatialized sound sources. This finale, the most symphonic in it construction and melancholic in its tonality, is the resolution to the first two movements, released by ISSUE Project Room as a double LP, The Hant Variance, in February 2015.

$30 ticket includes free entry with purchase of 2xLP The Hant Variance, records will be delivered at the event.

Born in Johannesburg South Africa,Sabisha Friedberg’s composition, performance and installation work draws on the phenomenological and phantasmagorical, exploring perceptual delineation of space through sound, and low-end experiential thresholds. She has performed and presented installations widely in Western and Eastern Europe, Russia, Japan, and the US, and recently received commissions through residencies at ISSUE Project Room, EMPAC, and The Clocktower Gallery. In 2013 she presented the solo exhibition “Levitation” at Audio Visual Arts and in 2014 presented the solo exhibition/installation Strange Cloak: Sub-Flight Infinity at EMPAC. Friedberg received her MFA from Bard College following undergraduate studies at San Francisco Art Institute.

http://issueprojectroom.org/event/sabisha-friedberg-hant-variance

Atonal avant-garde performances at the Whitney Museum June 17-28

ANYWHERE IN TIME:
A CONLON NANCARROW FESTIVAL

June 17–28

Since his death in 1997, the music of Conlon Nancarrow, which borrowed both from boogie-woogie and the atonal avant-garde, has grown in influence and infamy. This landmark festival will include a retrospective of Nancarrow’s complete Studies for Player Piano and performances by Alarm Will Sound, Steve Coleman, and others, as well as a dance performance presented by the Merce Cunningham Trust.


EVENT SCHEDULE

Player piano on view
Wednesday, June 17
Thursday, June 18
Monday, June 22
Wednesday, June 24
Thursday, June 25
Throughout the day
Free with Museum admission

Screening: Virtuoso of the Player Piano
Wednesday, June 17
Monday, June 22
4 pm
Tickets required

Steve Coleman and Five Elements
Thursday, June 18
8 pm
Tickets required

Crises
Friday, June 19
2 and 7 pm
Saturday, June 20
2 and 4 pm
Tickets required

Percussion Day: Narcarrow Deconstructed
Sunday, June 21
1 pm
Public demonstration, free with Museum admission

Percussion Day: Chris Froh in Concert
Sunday, June 21
4 pm
Tickets required

Henry Kaiser and Lukas Ligeti
Thursday, June 25
7:30 pm
Tickets required

Alarm Will Sound
Friday, June 26
Saturday, June 27
8 pm
Tickets required

Alarm Will Sound: Narcarrow Deconstructed
Saturday, June 27
1 pm
Tickets required

Alarm Will Sound: Study #36
Saturday, June 27
2:45 pm
Free with Museum admission

Complete Studies for Player Piano: A Marathon Concert Event
Sunday, June 28
11 am–7 pm
Tickets required; standby entry available day-of

http://whitney.org/Exhibitions/ConlonNancarrow

EXHIBITION: S/N Signal to Noise, May 22 – June 13, 2015. The Kitchen, NYC

S/N explores the complex dynamics of sound, in particular its tendency to exceed, disrupt, or evade attempts at its capture. S/N, an abbreviation for signal-to-noise ratio, refers to the balance between a desired communication and the unwanted background noises emanating from the materials and environments it traverses. The writers, musicians, and artists included in the exhibition take up the material complexities of sound, understanding the aural as a site of potential interference. Moving through language and into noise, S/N examines the possible breaking points of communication as it extends in, through, and beyond the intelligible. Curated by Alex Fleming, Anya Komar, and Blair Murphy, Helena Rubinstein Curatorial Fellows of the Whitney Museum of American Art Independent Study Program.

Whitney ISP Curators exhibition at The Kitchen, May 22-June13, 2015.

Public Programs

Galina Ustvolskaya’s Piano Sonata no. 6 performed by Cheryl Seltzer of Continuum Ensemble
The Kitchen theater, Friday, May 22, 6pm, Free.

Seating is limited and will be first come, first served.
Composed in 1988, Piano Sonata no. 6 is one of Galina Ustvolskaya’s most challenging compositions. The score consists largely of tone clusters and demands the performer aggressively strike the instrument, thereby speaking to the turbulence and violence at the end of the Soviet era.

Ultra-red: Introduction to Collective Listening
The Kitchen, Saturday, May 23, 12pm, Free.

Sound collective Ultra-red will lead a sound walk and workshop based on its work Protocols for the Wojnarowicz Object, or What Is the Sound of Building Up and Tearing Down? (2012). Participants will gather at The Kitchen at 12pm for a short introduction, followed by a sound walk down the west side of Manhattan. After the sound walk, participants will return to The Kitchen for a discussion of their experiences during the walk.

SCRAAATCH: SCRAAATCH no. 9
The Kitchen, Friday, June 5, 4pm, Free.

SCRAAATCH performs SCRAAATCH no. 9, part of a series of collaborative performance works. Combining live sound processing and performative notation, the duo develops an intricate physical and aural choreography, exploring the difficulties of mediated communication and exchange.

Avital Ronell, Vanessa Place, Kyoo Lee: Last—Words?
Whitney Museum of American Art, Saturday, June 6, 6:30pm, Free.

What does it mean to speak of one’s own death? And how does one hear what is spoken? Avital Ronell, professor of German, Comparative Literature, and English at NYU, will address the death penalty and the recorded speech of executed prisoners. Artist and criminal defense attorney Vanessa Place will perform Botched Execution (2015), an extension of her Last Words (2014–ongoing). Included in the exhibition, Last Words is a recording of the artist’s voice reading the last statements of inmates executed in Texas since 1982. Kyoo Lee, philosopher, theorist, and professor at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY, will respond and moderate the conversation.

Jay Sanders & Charles Bernstein in Conversation
The Kitchen, Thursday, June 11, 6pm, Free.

Whitney Museum curator Jay Sanders and poet Charles Bernstein will discuss their work in, on, and around sound, performance, installation, dance, poetry, theater, poetics, curating, editing, essay writing, and teaching. They will also reflect on their previous collaboration curating the 2001 exhibition Poetry Plastique at the Marianne Boesky Gallery.

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