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www.thearches.co.uk 12/01/10 FOR IMMEDIATE USE THE ARCHES UNVEIL NEW FESTIVAL ‘SOUND THOUGHT’ Thu 3rd – Sat 5th Feb 2011 The Arches, 253 Argyle Street, Glasgow, G2 8DL Thurs-Fri: from 10am & Sat: from 12 noon Festival Pass: £20/£15 & Day Pass: £8/£6 Tickets from the Arches Box Office on 0141 565 1000 or from www.thearches.co.uk Sound Thought, which has been running since 2007, is the annual music composition, performance and research conference run by music postgraduates at the University of Glasgow. This year, the festival comes to the Arches from Thu 3rd – Sat 5th Feb 2011 and has broadened to include compositions and performance proposals from other institutions as well as both academic and non-academic work. A co-production between the University of Glasgow’s postgraduate music course and The Arches, Sound Thought 2011 is a three day music-focused multi-arts conference/festival, combining workshops, paper presentations and round table discussion with a diverse programme of compositions, provocations and interdisciplinary performance. The festival includes diverse and ground-breaking work from celebrated composers, visual artists, dancers, contemporary theatre practitioners and filmmakers. The festival features everything from Leona Lewis dueting with a toilet, to piercing the silence of the library, the most exciting new string quartet in the country and an installation using lasers to ‘play’ mushrooms. Artists include post graduate music students, Alex Rigg, Roz Masson, Yann Seznec, Iain Campbell and ARCHES BOX OFFICE: ARCHES PRESS OFFICE: publication) 253 ARGYLE ST, GLASGOW | 0141 565 1000 | www.thearches.co.uk Sharon McHendry | 0141 565 1007 | [email protected] (not for www.thearches.co.uk 12/01/10 FOR IMMEDIATE USE Kathryn McCain amongst others. This festival will fuse disparate audiences, artists and disciplines in a celebration of work which has innovative, provocative use of sound at its core. A full programme with more information including times and dates will be available soon in print and also on the Arches website at www.thearches.co.uk. In the meantime, here’s more information on some of the artists and industry professionals performing and presenting work at the festival: Just confirmed - Belle and Sebastian's manager John Williamson will be hosting a special workshop on working within and without the music industry. Richard McMaster and Tom Marshallsay present Oct 160, a psychoacoustic experiment involving stethoscopes, speakers, and a group of hearts that are beating in unison. Reversing the accepted dialogue between the performance of music and the listener, Oct 160 uses the biological body clocks of the audience to create an entirely different listening experience, in which your own reaction to variables outwith your body dictate how the piece will play. Jan Hendrickse and Rosalind Masson present Tape Piece, a large scale visual and sound installation piece created before the audience, uniting process and product. Using adhesive tape as a static cultural presence, artists Jan Hendrickse and Rosalind Masson explore the relationship between physical action, space and sound through movement and live processing and sampling. Music For Flute by Thomas Arthur which is four minutes of music for unaccompanied flute. Out Of the Dark by Berlin-based artist Leila Peacock (The Cannibal’s Cookbook, Dinner) explores the by turns isolating, uncomfortable and exhilarating effect of being surrounded by strangers in total darkness. By severing the greediest of all the senses - sight - this fascinating performance lecture, delivered in pitch black, uses voices, sound and silence to find out what happens to our ears when the tyranny of our eyes is denied. Leila Peacock’s Sing. Speak. Sigh. Scream. Filmed using state of the art medical technology at Gartnavel General, an artist’s voicebox is filmed as he recites a riddle. Inspired by Samuel Beckett’s dramatic works, the artist is put under considerable physical distress as we visually witness this intimate bodily organ - previously always to be heard, never to be seen - in action. Composer, performer and co-founder of the Monosynth Orchestra Sean Williams looks at the dynamic possibilities of electronic music before computers started getting in the way in Testing 1, 2. Inspired by the practices of John Cage, Pierre Schaeffer and other ARCHES BOX OFFICE: ARCHES PRESS OFFICE: publication) 253 ARGYLE ST, GLASGOW | 0141 565 1000 | www.thearches.co.uk Sharon McHendry | 0141 565 1007 | [email protected] (not for www.thearches.co.uk 12/01/10 FOR IMMEDIATE USE 1940s musicians, this solo piece transforms the sterile laboratory elements of early electronic equipment and the modern notion of DJing to create a vivid new world of sound. Amplified String Quartet and Electronics by Adam Campbell and Jodi Cave (Fur Hood) is a piece in which the music is informed simply by the physical properties of the performance space. Like much of the duo’s collaborative work, the score is stripped bare of technique and what might be called ‘musicality’, leaving a compelling dialogue between ensemble and architecture. In Movement for Viola, Cello and Double Bass, composer and PhD student Euan Fulton, intrigued by abrupt juxtapositions of highly dissimilar sections of music, examines the discrepancy between the composer’s use of form and structure on a small and large scale, leading to the ultimate question: What lends such music its sense of coherence? Inspired by the 1.3 second long Napalm Death track You Suffer, But Why? - and Xana Marwick’s teenage reaction to it - the audience design, direct and perform their own 1.3 second play on the theme of Western suffering in the playful, personal and inescapably thought-provoking one-on-one experience You Suffer, But Why? Uniting mathematics and music, David Thomas Duncan uses L-systems to determine the harmonic, rhythmic and structural patterns of this work in String Quartet. With harmonic material inspired by a symmetrical pitch series treated as rotational arrays - a technique most famously associated with the late music of Stravinsky - the result is a texture filled with subtle gradations of colour. Můstek is an ongoing collaboration between Scottish/Greek composer/improvisers Lauren Sarah Hayes and Christos Michalakos. The Edinburgh-based creative duo use prepared piano, percussion and found objects plucked, strummed, hit and then sliced, layered and reassembled to create altogether new sonic forms, repurposing John Cage for the digital era. Christopher Hoddinott’s The Piece Unnamed disposes with titles in an attempt to allow the listener to make their own assumptions. Severing the music’s perception from the intention of the composer, the audience’s imagination shapes their experience of this electroacoustic sound diffusion performance. Jenny Soep and Gavin Fort’s Drawing/Sounding or Call and Response V Audio/Visual Fusion looks at whether music can be drawn. Can a drawing be musical Renowned visual artist Jenny Soep specialises in documenting live music performances using different mediums and technologies, including iPad, iPod, mobile phone, Wacom tablet and good old-fashioned paper and watercolours. Together with sound engineer and ‘audio wizard’ Gavin Fort, she explores the possibilities in this stimulating new experiment. ARCHES BOX OFFICE: ARCHES PRESS OFFICE: publication) 253 ARGYLE ST, GLASGOW | 0141 565 1000 | www.thearches.co.uk Sharon McHendry | 0141 565 1007 | [email protected] (not for www.thearches.co.uk 12/01/10 FOR IMMEDIATE USE Treadmill Poets is a live performance from Oceanallover’s Alex Rigg, in which Guy Veal and Jamie Hall mix live samples and music into spoken word which is read and replayed using hamster wheel technology. Rigg’s previous enigmatic live art piece Feather Mammy was performed at the Edinburgh Fringe festival in 2009 to critical acclaim. The Secret Sounds of Spores features a mushroom contained in a bell jar which silently drops thousands of tiny spores, visible to the naked eye via a laser beam. Using digital technology, artist Yann Seznec and mycologist Patrick Hickey analyse the spores’ light patterns in real time to create a stunning new composition revealing the depth, beauty and inherent artistry of fungi. The physical properties of sound are translated into a visible media before the eyes - and ears - of the audience through a kinetic sculpture made from ‘Father of Acoustics’ Ernst Chladni’s cymatic plates in Cymatic Sculpture by Calum Scott. Using sheet metal, salt, a bow and vibrations of varying frequencies, Glasgow-based sound artist Calum Scott uses sound as a catalyst for visual art to stunning effect. Mexican artist Carla Novi explores the bewildered instant in which an individual arrives to a new place for the first time in Arrivals. A voice gradually guides the audience from the real to the surreal and back to the real, creating a pause in time, generating an effect similar to meditation. This sound installation explores the fraction of a second in which the body and mind is disorientated by an unfamiliar space. Styrocymatic by Todd Braylor Pleasants is a Cymatics-inspired D.I.Y sculptural installation, in which reclaimed styrofoam packaging is transformed into audio speakers using water. As the audience experiences both the visual patterns on the water and the audible frequencies of the undulating speakers, conceptual artist Todd Braylor Pleasants attempts to bridge the gap between seeing and hearing. An Unpleasant Vagueness uses two skeleton cassette mechanisms, one recording, another playing; both, inevitably, victim of their own death drive. In a thought-provoking sound installation, Canadian artist Katie McCain uses outdated technologies to examine our yearning for the past and what it represents, (provoking) the concepts of nostalgia, luddism and existential crisis. In Love for the Dead Bag, composer Paul Henry (Knocking Theatre) slips between the roles of performer, technician, audience member, confused bystander and barman as he attempts to bend the conventional frame of performance in this refreshing, original work. Using live electronics, lights and props, he forces the audience’s attention back to themselves to highlight the real main ingredient of any live performance: people. ARCHES BOX OFFICE: ARCHES PRESS OFFICE: publication) 253 ARGYLE ST, GLASGOW | 0141 565 1000 | www.thearches.co.uk Sharon McHendry | 0141 565 1007 | [email protected] (not for www.thearches.co.uk 12/01/10 FOR IMMEDIATE USE With over 12 years experience exploring the creative possibilities of technology, Substratum is the first installment in a series of collaborations between internationally acclaimed artists Alison Clifford and Graeme Truslove. Combining audio (Truslove) and visuals (Clifford) to explore the space between abstract sound and image, computer algorithims, sampling and digital montage processes are used to create an entirely immersive experience. The first time, ever I saw your > POSTFACE is the installed recording of a process of making analogues of itself overwhelmed by investigation of capture, repetition and stoppage. Iain Campbell is composer/superimposer and performer/clown. He is interested in sound and consumption and considers audience to be a problem. ‘Dear Library, Fuck you and fuck the library’. Inspired by a date sheet found torn from a book and attacked with a felt tip pen, Ben Knight’s ‘Dear Library…’ is part of an ongoing collection of everyday detritus, marking a sporadic and anonymous correspondence within the community. - ENDS For more information, images or interviews for Sound Thought 2011, please contact Sharon McHendry at the Arches (contacts in footer). ARCHES BOX OFFICE: ARCHES PRESS OFFICE: publication) 253 ARGYLE ST, GLASGOW | 0141 565 1000 | www.thearches.co.uk Sharon McHendry | 0141 565 1007 | [email protected] (not for