Monday, January 31, 2011

Grant Cutler-Luckiest Man



Grant Cutler (Gorgeous Lords, 2012) is offering up some bounty from his exploits as a Twin Cities musician and producer via his site Luckiest Man. Along with his own mesmerizing new age drone recordings, you can stream or download an extant gem from dystopic instrumental grungers Brutal Becomings and a couple of collaborative epiphanies he and I captured one afternoon last summer. Bear witness to a dynamic productive force unleashed!


...so fucking much


Brutal Becomings cassette tape remix


an afternoon with Jon Davis


Marimba for sleep study

NPR Music-Deceptive Cadence



Serialist composer and electronic music pioneer Milton Babbitt passed away Saturday, leaving in his wake a legacy of innovation and achievement. On the occasion of his death, NPR Music is premiering Deceptive Cadence, a recently completed documentary about the composer's life and music.

From NPR Music:

"The American composer and teacher Milton Babbitt died Saturday, Jan. 29 at age 94. For years, New York-based journalist and filmmaker Robert Hilferty had been constructing a documentary on Babbitt. It was a quirky, loving look at a man regarded by many as a composer of "difficult" music. Hilferty left the film unfinished when he died in 2009. Composer and former Babbitt student Laura Karpman has now completed Hilferty's film. And she has graciously placed its premiere on NPR Music."

Listen Up @ the Cedar Cultural Center February 13th



Sponsored by the Jerome Foundation and Rock Star Supply Co. in cahoots with the Cedar Cultural Center's ongoing 416 Club Commissions, Listen Up is a community awareness opportunity doubling as an experimental music concert. Held in the name of helping Saint Paul public schools and emerging Twin Cities artists at the same time, the concert features Holly Muñoz, founder of Draw Fire Records, and Skoal Kodiak's Markus Lunkenheimer performing "an experimental project that uses interactive technology and abandons song structure completely." Clustercuss will set things off, followed by yours truly, Ghostband. Foster teen dreams and local weirdness simultaneously!

Baths, Braids and Star Slinger @ 7th Street Entry on February 24th



On Thursday, February 24th prodigious Anticon producer Baths will grace Minneapolis with an appearance at 7th Street Entry. In customary Anticonian fashion, Will Wiesenfeld deconstructs the head-bobbing hip hop paradigm reappropriating with humane subjectivity it's initial expressive premise. Honoring 4-track sages like Odd Nosdam and Dosh while nurturing the arena ambitions of Animal Collective or Department of Eagles, Baths has hit the contemporary aesthetic bullseye. Here's hoping his live show duly represents his dexterity as a producer. Expect good things from endearing operatic popists Braids and Dillaesque UK banger Star Slinger as well.





Har Mar Superstar/Marijuana Deathsquads-Spaceland Residency



During the month of February, those of you fortunate enough to be in Los Angeles, California will have the opportunity to enjoy the finest post-concern electrotribalist shitstorm Minneapolis has to offer as Marijunana Deathsquads take the stage (along with Har Mar Superstar) every Friday at Spaceland. Having turned a Building Better Bombs aside into a full-time job, mad scientist Ryan Olson (see also Gayngs, Mel Gibson & the Pants, Digitata) & Co. have assembled a menacing musical Frankenstein all their own. Joined by superlative Twin Cities talent like Slapping Purses, Little Dog on Top of a Big Dog, P.O.S., Mike Mictlan and Skoal Kodiak, these dudes will terrorize you in the best way possible. Be there!

2/4 HAR MAR SUPERSTAR / GIANT DRAG / MARIJUANA DEATHSQUADS/ LITTLE DOG ON TOP OF A BIG DOG
2/11 HAR MAR SUPERSTAR / SHANNON AND THE CLAMS / MARIJUANA DEATHSQUADS / POPE ANYTHING
2/18 HAR MAR SUPERSTAR / P.O.S. AND MIKE MICTLAN OF DOOMTREE / MARIJUANA DEATHSQUADS / SKOAL KODIAK
2/25 HAR MAR SUPERSTAR / SAMANTHA RONSON (LIVE BAND) / MARIJUANA DEATHSQUADS / SLAPPING PURSES

Saturday, January 29, 2011

White Rainbow-Dr Pizza's Spectral Retreat and Event Center



Adam Forkner, aka White Rainbow further explores the salutary properties of vintage drones and echo-laden guitars with Dr Pizza's Spectral Retreat and Event Center (2011, self-released). Carrying the cuddly minimalist torch of Terry Riley alight with the urbane electromancy of Brian Eno, Forkner has been blazing his own trail in psychedelic medicine for over a decade. All those in need of spectral convalescence will find their health restored if not improved by the good doctor's bona fide blend of tones and drones. You can find this and other treatments offered here at a sliding scale/pay what you can rate. Satisfaction guaranteed!

Daytrotter-Fort Wilson Riot


Fort Wilson Riot

Dosh @ the Turf Club 1/28/11 Recap















Friday, January 28, 2011

Clark-Phrenic Mix



Check out Clark's MPC DJ mix which aired last Friday on Tom Ravenscroft's BBC 6 Music show. This seemless string of danceable ditties is purportedly the first in a series of MPC DJ mixes from said megaproducer. Straight crackin'.

Clark - Phrenic Mix by throttleclark

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

5 Awesome Albums I Found at the Library


Bjork, Voltaic: Songs from the Volta Tour Performed Live at Olympic Studios (2009, Nonesuch)


Actress, Splazsch (2010, Honest Jon's)


Luke Vibert, Chicago, Detroit, Redruth (2207, Planet Mu)


DJ/Rupture& Matt Shadetek, Solar Life Raft (2009, The Agriculture)


Atlas Sound, Logos (2009, Kranky)

Spark Festival 2010 Documentation



Spark Festival 2010 was held Spetember 28th to October 3rd of last year at the University of Minnesota campus, 1419 and the Love Power Building. Among numerous outstanding performers were Fred Frith, Mikkel Meyer, Klaxon Gueule and Furt. The people at Spark were so kind as to document most of the festival performances in 1080 HD video and hi-fi audio. After months of hard work editing the media, they have made the documentation available. Enjoy!

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

School of Seven Bells & Mystery Palace @ 7th Street Entry 1/24/11 Recap

















An Interview with Lukas Ligeti



On Saturday, January 15th, I had the pleasure of attending Burkina Electric's performance at the Southern Theater. The band is comprised of Austrian-born, Brooklyn-based composer Lukas Ligeti, German electronic musician Kurt "Pyrolator" Dahlke, singer Maï Lingani, guitarist Wende K. Blass and singer/dancers Zoko Zoko and “Vicky” Idrissa Kafando. The last four musicians all hail from Burkina Faso in West Africa. Live, Burkina Electric combines West African strains of Afropop and griot vocalisations with club-informed electronic sequencing. There is also a great deal of dancing. I had the opportunity to speak with Ligeti about the group, his musical pursuits and his artistic and social vision. Here's what he had to say.

Did you start on drums?

I had a few piano lessons as a child, but soon gave up. When I started making music again, I began with drums, and I regretfully haven't practiced the piano in many years. I'd like to play the piano more, but I don't have one at home. I'd like to get one, actually.

When did you start playing drums?

When I was 18. I wanted to play something that was easy to start with, where you could make mistakes and it wouldn't be so obvious. I started in music really really late, but you don't really have to start early. At 22, I started practicing drum set systematically.

You mentioned wanting to get back into piano. Do you find that your education with piano helps playing the Marimba Lumina?

Sure. It's modeled after a marimba and it's a mallet instrument, so it does have that keyboard paradigm or template. In Burkina Electric, I sometimes use it as a keyboard/synthesizer, but in my solos I don't use it in a mallety way. I was not trained in mallets at all. Playing Marimba Lumina, I am now becoming a little bit of a mallet player. Something I'd really like to do is play the vibraphone, and I think playing the piano a little bit and playing the Marimba Lumina does give me a bit of an advantage. The technique with sticks coming from the drums and the technique with keyboards coming from the piano makes it easier to play mallet instruments, sure.

Is the Marimba Lumina running into a laptop?

Yes. In this case, we have both the Marimba Lumina and the, both Buchla instruments, running into one laptop. We use Ableton Live in our concerts and we have sequences programmed into Live, but we alter them using our midi controllers, both sonically and rhythmically.

What is the Lightning?

The Lightning (played by Pyrolator) is also built by Don Buchla, and regarding software, it’s quite similar to the Marimba Lumina. Hardware-wise, and as far as the playing techniques, the two are quite different. The Lightning consists of two wands that communicate with a central unit using infrared. The idea is that you have space which you can divide into eight regions. To each one of these regions you can assign various gestures. There's a vocabulary of gestures, and you can assign various midi commands to these gestures.

The Marimba Lumina works with magnetic fields. Every one of the keys contains an active coil and each of the mallets contains a passive coil; when they come together, a magnetic field results. There are four frequencies of magnetic field that can be set up so that it can be programmed differently for each of the four mallets. They're both sensitive and sophisticated midi controllers.



You started working with Pyrolator before the inception of Burkina Electric?

Yes. I started working with Kurt in '94. Shortly after getting into music, I became exposed to African music. So, in that sense, I can almost say I'm an African musician. From some of my earliest compositional attempts, I used African concepts in my music. In '94, I was sent to Côte d’Ivoire by the Goethe Institut, which is unusual as I’m not German. They contacted me and I actually hung up on them, because I thought they were playing a joke. Then they called me back. I wanted to use electronics on that trip, but I just had started getting into electronic music. In high school, I was very into electronics and built my own computer and things like that. When I started getting into music that whole thing fell by the wayside. After getting into music for a couple of years, I thought it would be nice to reunite those two things. So, I wanted to try to do that, but I felt I had no experience. So, I wanted to take someone with more experience with me to Côte d’Ivoire. The Goethe Institute said ok as long it was someone from Germany. I didn't know anyone from Germany, so they recommended Pyrolator. That's how we met.

When did you meet the others in the group?

Maï and Wende we met two years later in '96. The two dancers we
met later in Burkina Faso.

What brought you to Burkina Faso?

I started a group named Beta Foly in Côte d’Ivoire together with Pyrolator and local musicians. It was a very experimental, intercultural ensemble, very crazy. I often went to the Côte d’Ivoire for residencies; the members of the group were from all over West Africa but lived in Abidjan. Some of the members, including Maï and Wende, were from Burkina Faso, and eventually Maï moved back there, and later, Wende did, too. Beta Foly came to Burkina Faso for concerts, where we hooked up with Maï again. Burkina Faso is very poor and Côte d’Ivoire is comparatively rich, and people often go from Burkina Faso to Côte d’Ivoire to make money, so everyone in Burkina Electric has spent time in the Côte d’Ivoire. One of the dancers, Zoko Zoko, is more unusual: he was born in the Côte d’Ivoire and moved to Burkina Faso.

Music and ceremony seem to occupy an important position in African culture and musicians an important status, or is that a romanticized idea?

That's a myth. Musicians there occupy a very difficult position in society. In the Mandé cultures, where there are griots, families of musicians and storytellers, they have a very clear place in society. That does not mean they are rich or very well respected, but they are a very integral part of society. In most other regions, that is not the case. Musicians are as marginalized as they are here in the States. Another thing is that, if you are a musician who wants to do something that's very unusual, you will find very little support form local society. You might also find very little support from institutions outside of Africa, which promote African art that presents a certain image of Africa for Westerners. There are African musicians who really fall into the cracks between all these different worlds, who maybe don't have a traditional role in society and are not palatable to the Western image of Africa. So there is a lot of undiscovered talent in Africa.



How did you first become interested in African music?

I was introduced to Ugandan music from a seminar with the great Austrian ethnomusicologist Gerhard Kubik at the University of Vienna around '87. At first, I was interested from a musicological standpoint, but I was not exposed to West African music, which is what most people start with. I initially heard more about music from East and Central Africa. West African music came years later for me, when I started spending time in Côte d’Ivoire.

How does African music influence your drumming?

In many ways. Based on Ugandan music, I developed a motion-pattern-based drumset technique that allows me to play very long, polymetric patterns. And another way, for example, is that I’ve had to play on lots of old, run-down drum sets in Africa, and because of this, I learned to focus more on the movement of my playing rather than the sound.

Could you talk more about what you mean by movement and how does it relate to both music and dance?

In most African languages there is no separate word for playing music and dancing. To me, music and dance are just a reversal of cause and effect. Playing instruments requires movement, and it produces sound; in turn, the sound produces dance. It's like two sides of the same coin.



What is the musician or artist's place in society?

Musicians relate to their community differently than other people. I think artists in general develop visions for where society and mankind is going, while politicians are more concerned with the day-to-day administrative aspects. But it's really up to artists to develop concepts and ideas for politicians to realize. Of course, the significance of the composer has changed over time. They used to work as court musicians in the old days, for example. More recently composers find themselves in academic settings. It's hard to say if creative music has lost its ground in society or whether it had any ground to begin with. Beethoven's later string quartets were by no means popular.

Now, there is also the problem of idiom. With atonality, the common idiom of Western concert music was gradually deconstructed and there was no common language with which musicians could address other musicians or their audiences. There's also the question of whether you can do something socially relevant without being popular. The avant garde is the r & d of music, developing the ideas  without getting much credit or money while pop musicians get the credit and make the money, often using concepts experimental musicians had developed long before.

What are your personal goals as an artist?

I'm interested in cultural exchange and would mainly like to make people think in unconventional ways or inspire them to try something new and unusual and to think outside the box. Not only about music. I would definitely like to make Westerners think differently about Africa and vice versa. I would also like to make Africans think differently about their own music and the same for Westerners. There are prejudices and naïve impressions on either end. Musicians generate concepts, food for thought.

What would your utopia be like?

I am very concerned with justice and democracy and am very anti-bureaucracy. What is my utopia? That’s an overwhelming question. Are we talking about a state 20 years from now or something completely conceptual? In America or elsewhere? I still believe in America. We have democracy, at least supposedly. Unfortunately, the main problem with democracy is the people, because their will has to be respected, and the will of the people is not always good. Remember, Hitler was elected. On the other hand, what better system do we have than democracy, despite its pitfalls? Imagine if we could do away with money. Capitalism is human, however. In America, as well as Africa, there is a one to one, money equals power equation. In Europe, with social democracy, there are intermediate mechanisms which slightly uncouple power from money. In America and Africa, the relationship is more linear. Of course, every place has its advantages and disadvantages.

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Tuesday Series @ Madame January 25th



The Tuesday Series is back in business this month with a new home and a community arts grant! Good news for all who cherish innovative music and artistic community in the Twin Cities.
_______________________________________

LISA McGRATH
built-instruments/electronics

ISA GAGARIN
built-instruments/electronics/voice

GLOWING RASPS
Markus Lunkenheimer & Matt Wacker
built-instruments/electronics

_______________________________________

Tuesday, January 25th, 2011
8pm
$3 - 5

Madame of the Arts
3401 Chicago Ave S
Mpls, MN
(enter at side door in mural)

School of Seven Bells & Mystery Palace @ 7th Street Entry January 24th



School of Seven Bells perform tomorrow night at the 7th Street Entry with Mystery Palace. This is a perfect pairing of groups who pack intricate sequencing and ethereal vocals into tightly crafted pop postcards, albeit from completely different vacations. Doors are at seven bells for this event sponsored by 89.3 The Current.

International Contemporary Ensemble @ the Southern Theater January 24th





Tomorrow evening at the Southern Theater, members of the International Contemporary Ensemble will perform electroacoustic works by composer Nathan Davis. The program features compositions for wind instruments, such as flute or bass clarinet, magnified through microphones in a way that "draws out the fine details of sound that exist all around us, making music that magnifies the essential characteristics of instruments and the fragile athleticism of playing them." The program also includes the world premiere of Davis' The Bright and Hollow Sky. Go here for tickets. See below for information about the composer and a program listing.

Nathan Davis (b. 1973) has crafted a cycle of beautiful new works for a small combination of instruments that transform into an architecture of color, texture, rhythm and breath. Using microphones as microscopes, he draws out the fine details of sound that exist all around us, making music that magnifies the essential characteristics of instruments and the fragile athleticism of playing them. ICE returns to the Southern Theater in Minneapolis for this special ICElab performance.

Nathan Davis:
Like Sweet Bells Jangled (2009) for clarinet, percussion, and electronics
PneApnea (2007) for flute and electronics
Dowser (2007) for bass clarinet and electronics
On speaking a hundred names (2010) for solo bassoon and electronics
WORLD PREMIERE
The Bright and Hollow Sky (2008)

Liminal Phase and Kill The Vultures @ Nick & Eddie 1/22/11 Recap

Liminal Phase






Kill The Vultures










Saturday, January 22, 2011

Mux Mool-Drum EP 2



Just when you thought it was over...

Mux Mool - Drum EP 2 by Moodgadget


From Mux Mool:

I made the first Drum EP in 2007. At that time I wasn't sure if I was going to continue making beats at all. I had only released one song, and despite how well "Lost and Found" had done, I just wasn't sure if this was the path I was going on. A good friend of mine, Medium Zach from Big Quarters suggested I challenge myself to make one beat every day for a week. I took him up on his challenge and did just that. 7 lo fi hip hop beats.

In 2010 I found myself in a similar funk, only this time I was traveling quite a bit. I decided that I wanted to challenge myself again. This time, I couldn't really do 7 songs in 7 days, and I wanted to improve in quality from the songs on the first Drum EP, but stay true to the nature of beat-making challenges. So, this EP is all songs I made while on a plane.

You can download (donation only) Mux Mool's Drum EP 2 here!

Lazerbeak, Marijuana Deathsquads, Double Bird @ the Turf Club tonight!



Here's a last minute reminder about a another great show happening at the Turf Club. Tonight, Doomtree producer Lazerbeak flexes his muscles solo, along with Los Angeles bound Marijuana Deathsquads and Double Bird. More beats than a cardiologist's office. Check it!