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Posted

I see what you're saying, EP.

I haven't heard that Taylor rec in YEARS, probably sold it with a bunch of other Hat LPs about five years ago. Wish I'd kept more of them!

I am a "big fan" of Jerome Cooper, but was never sure he worked with Cecil that well. But again, it's been a while.

Posted

I just got an email that informs me of Jandek's Boston concert featuring Greg Kelley!

I would pay to see that.

:tup

Boston ICA and the critique of pure reason present

JANDEK

with:

Jorrit Dijkstra (alto sax, lyricon)

Greg Kelley (trumpet)

Eli Keszler (percussion)

The representative from Corwood Industries will play bass guitar for this performance.

Friday, June 8, 2007. 7pm.

Barbara Lee Family Foundation Theater, Boston ICA

Tickets on sale to ICA members on 4/17. Tickets on sale to general public on 4/30. Price: $22 (ICA members/students/seniors), $27 (general public). Tickets will be available at icaboston.org, by phone at (617) 478-3103 or at the box office during museum hours. Membership information is available online or by calling 617-478-3102.

All ages. General admission. At the request of the artist, no audio or video recording, and no photography.

The Institute of Contemporary Art, located at 100 Northern Avenue, is open Tuesday and Wednesday, 10 am - 5 pm; Thursday and Friday, 10 am -

9 pm; and Saturday and Sunday, 10 am - 5 pm. Admission is $12, or $10 for students and seniors; FREE members and children 17 and under, after 5 pm on Target Free Thursday Nights, and for families (adults accompanied by children 12 and under) on the last Saturday of each month. For more information, call 617-478-3100 or visit icaboston.org.

For more information on the critique of pure reason, visit http://www.thecritique.org.

Posted

FYI - Black Ark has been re-issued.

Is the listing up anywhere?

http://www.boweavilrecordings.com/Weavil_24.html

Apparently the PayPal link is not working at the moment. I wrote to them and I got a reply saying that if you can send payment via PayPal using "orders@boweavilrecordings.com" (minus the quotes). One small correction. They are taking pre-orders right now. The CDs/LPs should ship in early May.

Posted

Ok... Help me make up my mind. There are two shows happening tonight that I really want to see. Should I go to this one???...

april 14th (sat)

VOLTAGE SPOOKS (keith rowe / rick reed / michael haleta)

+ a panel discussion with Rowe, Jon Abbey (Erstwhile Records) and Brian

Olewnick (current Rowe biographer)

@ Slought Foundation

<http://slought.org> website

4017 Walnut Street

Philadelphia, PA

<http://www.google.com/maps?q=4017+Walnut+St,+Philadelphia,+PA+19104&i...

&z=15&om=1&iwloc=addr> directions

discussion 7:00 pm

concert 8:00 pm

$10

VOLTAGE SPOOKS

keith rowe electronics

rick reed electronics

michael haleta electronics

The Voltage Spooks is a newly formed, all-star trio of improv luminary,

Keith Rowe, Texas-based sound artist, Rick Reed, and electro acoustic

composer, Michael Haleta.

Keith Rowe (born March 16, 1940 in Plymouth, England) is an English free

improvisation guitarist. Rowe is a founding member of AMM in the mid-1960s

(a group from which he quit in 2004) and a founding member of M.I.M.E.O.

After years of obscurity, Rowe has achieved a level of relative notoriety,

and since the late 1990s has kept up a busy recording and touring schedule.

He is seen as a godfather of electroacoustic improvisation, and many of his

recent recordings have been released by Erstwhile Records. Rowe began his

career playing jazz in the early 1960's--notably with Mike Westbrook. His

early influences were guitarists like Wes Montgomery, Charlie Christian and

Barney Kessel. Eventually, however, Rowe grew tired of what he considered

the form's limitations, and gradually expanded into free jazz and free

improvisation, eventually abandoning conventional guitar technique. "How

could I abandon the technique? Lay the guitar flat!" Rowe thus developed

various prepared guitar techniques: placing the guitar flat on a table and

manipulating the strings, body and pickups in unorthodox ways enabled him to

produce sounds that have been described as dark, brooding, compelling,

expansive and alien. He has been known to employ objects such as a library

card, rubber eraser, springs, hand-held electric fans, alligator clips, and

common office supplies in playing the guitar. A January, 1997 feature in

Guitar Player magazine described a Rowe performance as "resemble a surgeon

operating on a patient." Rowe sometimes incorporates live radio broadcasts

into his performances, including shortwave radio and number stations (the

guitar's pickups will also pick up radio signals, and broadcast them through

the amplifier) AMM percussionist Eddie Prévost reports that Rowe has "an

uncanny touch on the wireless switch", able to find radio broadcasts which

seem to blend ideally with, or offer startling commentary on, the music. On

AMMMusic, towards the end of the cacophonous "Ailantus Glandolusa," a

speaker announces via radio that "We cannot preserve the normal music."

Rick Reed (b. 1957) is an entirely self-taught composer/visual artist who

has been working in the Austin music underground for the past 25 years.

Using old battered electronic devices like sine wave generators, short wave

radios and a vintage EMS analogue synthesizer, Reed has performed solo and

with various electronic/noise groups including Frequency Curtain, Abrasion

Ensemble, FTC and many others. The Spring 2006 issue of Signal To Noise

Magazine said of his most recent CD release, Dark Skies at Noon, that "(Reed

works) a complex weave of sounds plucked from the dawn of electronic

music-or maybe stolen from some future fading memory of it's passing". Since

the early 90s, Reed has released several LPs and CDs on labels such as

Ecstatic Peace, Beta-Lactam Ring, Pale Disc Japan and Elevator Bath. Among

other projects, he's been the host of Commercial Suicide, a long running

'other worldly' music radio program heard on a local station, KOOP FM . He

is also the musical director of an experimental music concert series called

Toneburst, which is dedicated to promoting unheard,or underexposed musicians

from the Austin new music community. Since 2004, he has worked closely with

New York filmmaker Ken Jacobs on three soundtracks for his Nervous Magic

Lantern displays, one of which, entitled "Capitalism:Child Labor", had it's

world premiere at this year's Rotterdam Film Festival. Reed has 3 new

releases due out later this year, a new CD on Spectral House, a Ken Jacobs

DVD project and a picture disc LP on Elevator Bath.

Michael Haleta (b. 1978) is a multidisciplinary artist based in New Jersey.

A classically trained cellist turn electro acoustic composer interested in

individual sounds and bits rather than complete things. (BG) Has released

audio for: Alienation, Raw Special Effects (RSE), Carpark and Hoss records.

Michael and his wife Dawn run the small edition label/shop, Raw Special

Effects (RSE) which is scheduled to release material by EVOL, Peter Rehberg

and others within the upcoming year.

Or this show????

Saturday, April 14 | 8pm

Brötzmann-Pliakas-Wertmüller

with

Peter Brötzmann, saxophones et clarinettes

Marino Pliakas, guitare basse

Michael Wertmüller, batterie

Community Education Center

3500 Lancaster Avenue

$10 General Admission

Event Description:

"Pliakas and Wertmuller were equally assertive at filling every last bit of space in the thick canvas of sound and matched Brötzmann’s fire with accompaniment worthy of an Ozzfest booking." -JazzTimes

Peter Brötzmann (tenor saxophone, tarogato, a-clarinet) studied at the Art Academy of Wuppertal before beginning his music career in German swing and be-bop bands. Subsequent pivatol associations in the early 1960s with the Fluxus movement (including Nam June Paik), bassist Peter Kowald, and Americans-in-Paris Don Cherry and Steve Lacy encouraged Brötzmann's (b.1941) unorthodox approach, often described as "sonic terror." A founder of European Free Jazz movement, his work includes collaborations and recordings with Last Exit (with Bill Laswell, Sonny Sharrock and Ronald Shannon Jackson), Evan Parker, Misha Mengelberg, and Borah Bergman. Recent projects include Die Like a Dog (with William Parker, Hamid Drake and Toshinori Kondo), his homage to Albert Ayler, and a Chicago-based Octet/Tentet featuring Ken Vandermark.

Wertmueller and Broetzmann toured for years as a duo and in various contexts, such as Broetzmann's Chicago Tentett. Together they have recorded with bassist William Parker. Wertmueller and Pliakas perform together on various occasions with Caspar Broetzmann, Stephan Wittwer, John Cale, Jaki Liebezeit, Holger Csukay, K.K. Null, Olaf Rupp, Marian Gold and others; and in cooperation with Pliakas' avant trio STEAMBOAT.

One more thing to consider - I've seen Brotzmann before and I've never seen Rowe.

Posted

Yeah, I'm leaning towards that for the same reasons. I just found out about the Rowe show this morning and I had been getting pumped up to see Brotzmann.

If I could just split myself in two.....

  • 3 weeks later...
Posted (edited)

Thought people might find this worthwhile:

http://youtube.com/watch?v=m8PIuKXCz88

The opening voice is Pauline Oliveros; background music by Jim McAuley; after that sequence there's an unedited solo bass performance by Okkyung Lee, who's a pretty fine exponent of the scorched-earth school of bass improv. This is material from a forthcoming documentary on free improvisation by Steve Elkins.

Edited by Nate Dorward
Posted

hey, just saw this...

Yeah, I'm leaning towards that for the same reasons. I just found out about the Rowe show this morning and I had been getting pumped up to see Brotzmann.

If I could just split myself in two.....

what did you decide on? I was part of that pre-show discussion, I thought it went OK considering.

and Nate, that's Okkyung Lee, not Okkung.

Guest Chaney
Posted

Hi Tim (Perkis),

Can you share any information on Noisy People? Soon to be available on DVD?

Thank you.

Tony

Yes, soon to be available, although I can give you no date! -- This is an

unfunded labor of love, fit in among all the other requirements of my life,

and as a consequence, taking a while.

I'll let you know when it's available, and thanks for your interest --

best

Tim

NOISY PEOPLE is out now and it's wonderful. :tup

  • 4 weeks later...
Posted (edited)

I'm a bit baffled by the upcoming Atavistic Unheard Music Series Brotzmann release. Out of the unavailable Brotz they could choose to reissue this is what they are focusing on? It's nice that Machine Gun will be available domestically, but there are many albums of his that are far more "unheard" than Machine Gun.

MGalp262mini250.jpg

The Complete Machine Gun Sessions

"For this reissue, we have resequenced the CD as the original LP, self-produced and released on Brötzmann's own BRO label in 1968, followed by the two extant alternate takes. For comparison, UMS has included the live version, recorded two months earlier at the Frankfurt Jazz Festival, which adds Gerd Dudek to the ensemble." - John Corbett / Chicago, May, 2007

I am excited about the Sun Ra reissues. I've heard Strange Strings and Night of the Purple Moon, but it will be nice to own real copies. Also, the Purple Moon bonus tracks should be interesting: "To show something of the origins of Ra's keyboard playing in this period, we have added three incredible home recordings, made in 1964, on which Ra pummels a lightly amplified Wurlitzer electric piano, and on the first of them he adds the startling sound of Celeste."

Edited by John B
Posted

Jesus... one alternate is already on Fuck de Boere, and the rest is on the (as I understand it) in-print FMP CD. I've clamored on and on and on before about how bullshit some of that UMS stuff is, but this may even beat out Starship Beer...

I love Peter's music, and that's a fine LP, but I've got a stack of live Brotzmann group live material that hasn't seen the light of day in any proper form. Most of it sounds excellent, and yet Atavistic isn't doing anything like collecting this stuff and putting it out. A 5CD unissued tracks/concerts compilation would be really something - say, covering 1966-1976? Corbs undoubtedly has the German radio contacts, no?

Posted

I assume you all are aware that Potlatch has another June sale going on now... ordered five more, as if I need them... and gave all the ones I have a spin again - will do a little write-up and add some samples soon on my blog, in case you're interested!

The Lazro/Zingaro duo, "Hauts plateaux", is about to go OOP - act quick, it might be the best of them all! It's fantastic, to say the least!

Also that site here: www.discplus.ch, in fact does deliver the OOP hatOLOGY discs I mentioned in that post on my blog - I got "Rara Avis" and "Root of the Problem" yesterday (along with 10 or 12 other hatO discs, all for that tiny sweet price)!

Posted

I'm a bit baffled by the upcoming Atavistic Unheard Music Series Brotzmann release. Out of the unavailable Brotz they could choose to reissue this is what they are focusing on? It's nice that Machine Gun will be available domestically, but there are many albums of his that are far more "unheard" than Machine Gun.

MGalp262mini250.jpg

The Complete Machine Gun Sessions

"For this reissue, we have resequenced the CD as the original LP, self-produced and released on Brötzmann's own BRO label in 1968, followed by the two extant alternate takes. For comparison, UMS has included the live version, recorded two months earlier at the Frankfurt Jazz Festival, which adds Gerd Dudek to the ensemble." - John Corbett / Chicago, May, 2007

I am excited about the Sun Ra reissues. I've heard Strange Strings and Night of the Purple Moon, but it will be nice to own real copies. Also, the Purple Moon bonus tracks should be interesting: "To show something of the origins of Ra's keyboard playing in this period, we have added three incredible home recordings, made in 1964, on which Ra pummels a lightly amplified Wurlitzer electric piano, and on the first of them he adds the startling sound of Celeste."

Is that a 'new' cover for machine Gun? The original cover is way more badass. It looks like UMS is becoming the new place for Sun Ra reissues. Does that mean that Evidence has officially stopped reissuing Sun Ra albums?

Posted

Thought people might find this worthwhile:

http://youtube.com/watch?v=m8PIuKXCz88

The opening voice is Pauline Oliveros; background music by Jim McAuley; after that sequence there's an unedited solo bass performance by Okkyung Lee, who's a pretty fine exponent of the scorched-earth school of bass improv. This is material from a forthcoming documentary on free improvisation by Steve Elkins.

Who is Steve Elkins? I'd be interested in screening this at Filmforum as part of a series of such films.

Posted

My "Rara Avis" and "Root of the Problem" hatOLOGY discs have already arrived. Gave the Clusone a spin and love it as much as I did last time (had it on CDR, copied from a library that had a copy).

About the Potlatch sale, check out this post @ my blog with short reviews and look for the next post in an hour or so with some samples from these 8 discs! (crappy 128 kbs samples - I want people to buy the actual discs!)

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