Electro Anthro Visceral Intensity, The Amersham Arms

Will new interfaces for music-making make new music?

share this article

It's always nice when musical events of an overtly academic bent are taken away from the academy: when high-falutin' or exploratory music is made to stand on its own. All right, this show demonstrating new technical innovations by musicians affiliated with the Goldsmiths College Computer Music courses hadn't come that far, being some couple of hundred yards along the road from the college, but the Amersham Arms backroom is more used to rock gigs and raves. Dark, rough and ready with a hefty sound system and no seating, the first act starting well after 9pm, it signalled immediately that this was not going to be music to be studied in over-reverent fashion.

Perversely it started without any computers involved at all. Joanne Cannon's initial performance was a flurry of bassoon improv, her hands flying over the instrument with wit and funkiness as she demonstrated the full catalogue of its sonic capabilities from clicks and hisses to bovine bellow. But this was just setting out her stall, demonstrating the coordinates of improvisation, before she set it aside and picked up an entirely more involved contraption (pictured right)The Serpentine Bassoon. This beast, as well as its coiled woodwind tubes, was covered tin switches, panels and a joystick, wired into a laptop, and produced the most mind-boggling array of echoes, feedback, fragmentations and other processings. Being primed, though, by her demonstration of what she could do with acoustic instrument, this seemed bizarrely natural, and of all the things we were to see, this was the one that made computer music feel like something compatible with the human body.

Then it all got more macho. Ryan Jordan throws all-night noise events, and his set was an all out assault. Starting with cracks and pops that sounded threatening, like massively magnified logs crackling on a fire, it built up to a barrage of sound with an industrial strobe light pointed directly in the audience's faces pulsing to match its rhythms and intensity. The only option with this assault was to close one's eyes, which – in the manner of Brion Gysin's 'Brain Machine' – caused geometrical hallucinations. Quite akin to the music of Astral Social club, it became an ecstatic and literally transporting experience, removing us from the room, and was over all too soon.

Continued overleaf

DMTThe trio DMT (pictured left) were equally visceral. Consisting of a drummer, a man with sensors attached to his arms tensing, writing and flexing alarmingly to generate roaring tones, and a chap with several mobile phones and an iPad kicking out a whole set of abstract sounds, they kicked up an ugly voodoo groove that slipped in and out of coherence. It was compelling listening, but visually puzzling as it was extremely hard to unpick who (apart from the drummer) was making what sound; their movements gave the impression that the guys were intensely into what they were doing, but with so few visual links to the sound, it seemed a rather onanistic take on the act of performance.

Something more akin to a groove came in on the next two acts. Dr Matt Yee-King (pictured below right), teacher at Goldsmiths, made a kind of deconstruction of the noisiest kinds of 90s techno, using a superannuated sequencer and some sort of software synthesiser. Patterns leapt in and out of the mix, sometimes in sync and sometimes not, always raw around the edges but full of aggro funk. PhD student Tom Richards came next with a vast table full of electronic devices of his own building; his music also sounded raw and also grooved, albeit in a kind of clockwork, click-clack sort of way. Both of these acts were noisy, though, and in common with the two which preceded them, both built to frenzied climaxes and sudden juddering halts.

Matt Yee KingFinally Shelley Parker broke the insistence on reaching for the climactic, instead working with steady layers of accumlation. Her take on noise was gloomy and gothic, dreamy and disturbing, somehow evocative of foggy, empty shipyards at night, easy to get drawn into but then easy to get lost in. Then it was back to the climactic again with Yee-King's colleague Dr Mick Grierson – who didn't so much build to a peak with his audio-visual set, as launch straight into one, long, terrifying peak experience. He screamed out loud as he poked and prodded at his laptop, and the speakers screamed too, while the intricate circular patterns he generated on screen tore around and around like a particularly violent flash of inspiration. Freed from the seminar room this was electronic music very much in the wild and baring its teeth; perhaps a little more light and shade might have let us consider the variety of technical invention on offer, and this was hardly the way to persuade the uninitiated casual observer that these are the performance techniques of the future, but as a gripping, cathartic, brain-rinsing night out, it'd take quite some beating.

Watch Dr Mick Grierson's performance


Comments

Add comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.

Plain text

  • No HTML tags allowed.
  • Lines and paragraphs break automatically.
  • Web page addresses and email addresses turn into links automatically.
It was sometimes in sync and sometimes not, always raw around the edges but full of aggro funk

rating

3

explore topics

share this article

the future of arts journalism

You can stop theartsdesk.com closing!

We urgently need financing to survive. Our fundraising drive has thus far raised £33,000 but we need to reach £100,000 or we will be forced to close. Please contribute here: https://gofund.me/c3f6033d

And if you can forward this information to anyone who might assist, we’d be grateful.

Subscribe to theartsdesk.com

Thank you for continuing to read our work on theartsdesk.com. For unlimited access to every article in its entirety, including our archive of more than 15,000 pieces, we're asking for £5 per month or £40 per year. We feel it's a very good deal, and hope you do too.

To take a subscription now simply click here.

And if you're looking for that extra gift for a friend or family member, why not treat them to a theartsdesk.com gift subscription?

more new music

A new Renaissance at this Moroccan festival of global sounds
The very opposite of past it, this immersive offering is perfectly timed
Hardcore, ambient and everything in between
A major hurdle in the UK star's career path proves to be no barrier
Electronic music perennial returns with an hour of deep techno illbience
What happened after the heart of Buzzcocks struck out on his own
Fourth album from unique singer-songwriter is patchy but contains gold
After the death of Mimi Parker, the duo’s other half embraces all aspects of his music
Experimental rock titan on never retiring, meeting his idols and Swans’ new album
Psychedelic soft rock of staggering ambition that so, so nearly hits the brief
Nineties veterans play it safe with their latest album