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03 September 2005 by nathaniel

Halim and Pauline

Pauline Oliveros jamming in johannesburg

Well, I started my festival day by attending a workshop called The Expanded Instrument System, with electronic music pioneer Pauline Oliveros. For a frame of reference? She’s worked with the likes of David Tudor, Philip Glass, and John Cage in her time, and one of her favorite compositions involved 10 water bottle players, and 5 apple box players, in the sixties. Pauline was experimenting with loops, reverbs and delay well before most working musicians were born. At this workshop she told us a bit about her philosphies and styles, and used some software she’s been developing (shareware!) in Max/MSP.

And the coolest part? She’s extremely maternal and playful. When asked about musicians who dislike their sounds being changed so much, she simply responded, “Well, that’s ok. You either wanna play with me or you don’t. There’s room for more sandboxes.” When asked about non-musicans and how they work with her sounds, she said, “Well, after a while, people start to listen,” implying that when people listen, it’s the first step towards collaboration, play, making music and they can even “begin to improvise” their performance, represented sonically.

Halim El-Dabh was the big headline later that night; and what a sweetheart this guy is! He literally offered to compose music for the party if my wife and I wanted to marry again, and I spent about 30 mins just chatting away to him about his days as a farmer, and how had become an “international composer” overnight after playing with some wire recordings (and before that, he was neither international, nor a composer). The experimental to which I’m referring is circa 1944 (he playe dit alongside some recent work last night), and Halim is widely considered to be the first Electronic Composer (certainly the first African one, coming from Egypt).

Last night, Halim was collaborating with the likes of Blake Tyson, Pops Mohamed and some gymnasts on trampoline. But the real highlight was George Lewis doing some trippy trombone (pictured below, left – thanks Kaganof!). Man that was the highlight of the whole evening. Beautiful ambience that I never knew a trombone could produce.

And most of these dudes are cheeky, funny buggers ;)

Posted in art, art and tech, music, pop culture, south african art, technology, theory ·

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02 September 2005 by nathaniel

unyazi beginnings

james webb and james sey performing utopia travelogues @ tokyo star melville

I personally kicked off the festival a day early, by catching the preview of James Webb and James Sey’s (above, left to right) ‘The Utopia Travelogues ***,’ which premiered at the trendy Tokyo Star in Melville. I have to say that it was beautiful; I understand the complaints by some that the text was a bit pretentious, but I took it to be extremely ironic (and was close enough to catch the smirks on the James’ faces). Intended for radio (and so best if you sit in a corner by yourself, and close your eyes), the music was experimental enough to create amazing visuals, but accessible enough that even a sonic luddite such as myself enjoyed it. I saw the last in their series when it was here a few months ago, and this is, by far, superior. It’s on again as part of the festival on Sunday evening (programs available online), so check it then.

To me, the two highlights of yesterday’s festival, then, were the improvisational collaboration between JoaÃÉo Orecchia and Carlo Mombeli, and the kinetic-sculpture-installation-performance thing by Maxime Rioux. The former was a loop masters experimental noise jazz electroacoustic yumminess, while the latter used about 30 sculptures of speakers attached to noise and musical instruments on springs, and triggered by electrical impulses to the analogue devices.

not quite a still of -part of- unyazi 2005 by maxime rioux
not quite a still of -part of- unyazi 2005 by maxime rioux

Man, it was hot. More….

Posted in art, art and tech, music, poetry, pop culture, south african art, technology ·

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01 September 2005 by kaganof

shameless self-promotion

Posted in kaganof, pop culture, south african art ·

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30 August 2005 by nathaniel

the zulu lightning round

circa rhizome and their net.art news, but I wrote it:

Click to launch siteClick to launch site Drawing on the success of the Johannesburg Biennales of the nineties, local chemist/ composer, Dimitri Voudouris, decided that it was time to bring attention to South African electronic musicians by connecting them with other internationally-renowned talents. Hoping to promote experimentation and interdisciplinary collaboration, he initiated the Unyazi Festival, so–named for the Zulu word for ‘lightning’ (there is no non-anglo word for ‘electricity,’ in South Africa–an absence with spiritual connotations). Unyazi will be the first festival of electronic music and sonic art in Africa. Local highlights include interactive pieces from Toni Olivier’s Studio for Interactive Sound, a collaboration between loop masters Carlo Mombelli and Joao Orecchia, and more experimental trips by the likes of James Webb, Chris Wood, Pops Mohammed, and Brendon Bussy. Pioneering performers include American-Egyptian Professor Halim El-Dabh–who began his tape work in North Africa in the ’40s–and Pauline Oliveros, an American philosopher and composer who works with a concept she calls ‘Deep Listening.’ The festival will feature a broad slate of workshops, multimedia theatre, interesting music, and film, all of which students and teachers can attend free. The storm is coming. The lightning round begins September 1st. – Nathaniel Stern

http://www.newmusicsa.org.za/unyazi2005.html

Posted in art, art and tech, music, poetry, pop culture, south african art, technology ·

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29 August 2005 by nathaniel

new videos online

Since I’ve been talking about my excitement around working in linear video again, I thought I’d put some of it online. They’re both listed from the video works page on this site.

a song for the is the one I made for Kaganof’s upcoming Festival in Rotterdam (spent the weekend on it; the poem had been written for years). It’s a video poem about relationships and listening, and there’s even a very lo-res version of the piece available for download (5.5MB)! eat is an older installation I made for Abrie Fourie’s gallery in Pretoria, about identity construction through mass consumerism – and the download is even lower res (2.5MB). Enjoy!

Posted in art, art and tech, me, poetry, pop culture, south african art ·

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26 August 2005 by nathaniel

24-hour residency!

Christian Nerf is taking some of the crit from Art South Africa and artthrob to heart. This time, his 24-hour residency is over a shorter span of time (eight hours per day for three days), and has a lot more people in a smaller space. The big difference, tho, is that short, specific tasks are given to the artists all day long, in order to insure collaboration, and work further towards complete “exhibit-able” art objects (I find this very amusing, in that the 24-hour residency concept’s strength is just that: its concept… it seems, however, that objects are still more than desired. Buh-dum-cha ;).

Anyhow, the new 24-hour residency project started yesterday, and artists can do between one and three days, as they see fit; I’ll be giving it my all from 9 – 5 today, and will let you know how it goes….

Posted in art, pop culture, south african art, theory ·
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nathaniel’s books

Interactive Art and Embodiment book cover
Interactive Art and Embodiment: the implicit body as performance

from Amazon.com

Buy Interactive Art for $30 directly from the publisher

Ecological Aesthetics book cover
Ecological Aesthetics: artful tactics for humans, nature, and politics

from Amazon.com

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