Sound & Time: Sacred Music after a God — Aug 27, 8pm

Sound & Time: Sacred Music after a God, a music event and culminating performance of the duo’s residency. The performance uses modular and analog electronic audio, temporally programmed candles, experimental incense, and video synthesis to create zones for communication with mystery. The result is a short order cult; a vigil to the transitory reality of the power of immanence.

Started by Nathan Cearley and Erica Bradbury, the LDP duo focuses on the development of long-form works that emerge from a negotiation and play between conceptual, frequency, and spectral territories and their alterations as they are engaged in time. LDP’s compositions take many forms, mirroring strategies found in drone, noise, and other forms of experimental electronic music; they employ empty and spatially porous zones, sequenced patterns of rhythmic noise, random and pseudo-random processes, improvised keyboard work, chance, and mistake.

There is a suggested donation of $8 for Long Distance Poison’s event.
http://clocktower.org/event/sound-time-sacred-music-after-a-god

Pioneer Works
159 PIONEER ST. IN RED HOOK, BROOKLYN
THURSDAY, AUGUST 27, 2015 –8:00PM10:00PM

: Octophonic Cassette CONcerts: :: : MoMA PS1 Print Shop : : :: Aug 9: 4p-9p : ::

Octophonic Cassette CONcerts
CONducted by:
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Jonas Asher / Roe Enney / Daren Ho / Daniel Neumann / Aki Onda
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poem electroniCon: an eight speaker homage to Conrad Schnitzler by DJ Olive
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MoMA PS1 Print Shop
22-01 Jackson Ave, Long Island City NY
www.con-mythology.com
www.allgold.info
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Conrad Schnitzler’s Cassette CONcerts compositions made for an octophonic sound system will be conducted by and performed by Jonas Asher, Roe Enney, Daren Ho, Daniel Neumann & Aki Onda in an state of the art sound environment at the Print Shop as part of the monthly Generations Unlimited series at ALLGOLD. There will also be a performance of “poem electroniCon” an 8 speaker homage to Conrad Schnitzler created by DJ Olive
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Tonight – Karaoke with a Message

Another Protest Song: Karaoke with a Message (Interference Archive)

Wednesday, August 5, 2015
Doors open 7pm
at Silent Barn
603 Bushwick Ave. Brooklyn

As part of the Interference Archive’s if a song could be freedom… exhibition, Angel Nevarez & Valerie Tevere will host an evening of protest karaoke with their project Another Protest Song: Karaoke with a Message at Silent Barn.

Another Protest Song: Karaoke with a Message (2008 – ongoing) looks to the karaoke songbook as potential for political enunciation through song. Karaoke is communal, social, musical. With protest karaoke, our song choices may speak of present political struggles and histories, rather than music consumed primarily as products of popular cultural.

**All money collected at the door (beyond paying Silent Barn) will go directly towards printing the if a song could be freedom… booklet/exhibition catalog. This booklet will be included with the 7″ record we are pressing as part of the exhibition (for more info, and to pre-order record, click HERE!)

Join us and sing your favorite songs of protest!

http://interferencearchive.org/another-protest-song-karaoke-with-a-message/?mc_cid=56d5702164&mc_eid=db66173f1a

Robert Aiki Aubrey Lowe & Ariel Kalma – Aug 8

Robert Aiki Aubrey Lowe & Ariel Kalma
August 8th, Artists Space
8pm

French-born Ariel Kalma’s boundary-blurring electronic music spans free-jazz and spoken word trips to his infinite modular synthesizer and analogue drum machine meditations, often laden with wistful sax melodies. A pioneer in the field of modularly synthesized electronic music, Kalma finds an ideal collaborator in Robert Aiki Aubrey Lowe, who has gained renown for hypnotic modular and voice improvisations as Lichens. The two electronic synth voyagers came together recently at the invitation of Matt Werth, an intergenerational collaboration that yielded the duo’s recent LP, We Know Each Other Somehow, (2015) on the RVNG label’s FRKWYS imprint. Traveling along parallel paths until now, together these artists summon another world, merging the collective voice with their own.

Born in France but rarely in one place for long, Ariel Kalma’s 1970s migrations took flight through the decade’s furthest spaces of musical and spiritual invention. As a hired horn for well-known French groups, the young musician toured as far as India in 1972, where he would later return to immerse himself in sacred music traditions. Kalma loyally worked with dual ReVox set-up— two tape machines “chained” together to form a primitive delay unit. Over looped saxophone melodies, Kalma would mix in all shades of polyphonic color, synthesizing fragments of poetry with ambient space or setting modal flute melodies to rippling drum machine patterns and starlit field recordings. The results collapse distinctions between “electro-acoustic”, “biomusicology” and “ambient” categorization.

In France during the mid-1970s, Kalma was staffed as a technician at Pierre Henry’s legendary Institut National Audiovisuel, Groupe de Recherches Musicales (INA GRM) studios – the same music concréte laboratory that spawned masterpieces by members Luc Ferrari, Iannis Xenakis, and Bernard Parmegiani. Like his predecessors and colleagues at INA GRM, Kalma’s relationship to sound was both formal and non-hierarchical. To Kalma, all music existed as universal patterns, in perfect harmony with the people, places and environments it was created.

Robert Aiki Aubrey Lowe (b. 1975) is an artist and composer who works with his voice in the realm of spontaneous music most often under the moniker of Lichens. Creating patch pieces with modular synthesizer and tonal vocal work has been a focus of live performances and recordings recently. The quality of sound achieved through the marriage of synthesis and the voice have allowed for a heightened physicality in the way of ecstatic music both in live and recorded settings. The sensitivity of analogue modular systems echoes the organic nature of vocal expression, which in this case is meant to put forth a trancelike state to usher in a mode of deeper listening. His works on paper tend towards human relations to the natural/magical world and the repetition of motifs.

Artists Space Books & Talks: 55 Walker St., NYC 10013
http://issueprojectroom.org/event/robert-aiki-aubrey-lowe-ariel-kalma