As I stumble to navigate through the busy traffic and local customs, ‘Which part/side of the road am I supposed to walk on?’, I ask Ibrahim Owais, founder of Recordat and one-part of Radio Alhara, the communal radio station from Palestine. ‘There are no rules,’ he laughs, and we walk and weave on further until Gouraud turns into Armenia Street. As soon as we make a turn leaving the bustling Armenia street lined with loud bars, into the Geitawi residential neighborhood, there’s a darkness I’m not used to (Beirut has gone off-grid since the power plant failed to procure oil, private back-up generators and solar panels make up for the essentials), and I’m feeling the comfort of being accompanied by my travel companions, the Recordat tour crew. Owais has brought with him Elvin Brandhi a frequenter of the Beirut underground scene, 3Phaz from Cairo, Iranian photographer and radio DJ Niloofar Asghary, and soon to join the traveling band is Berlin based experimental sound artist and dj Sara Persico originally from Naples. We are headed to Riwaq Beirut where Owais is music selector for the night.
Moers Festival is Surviving a Pandemic – What it takes to stay resilient under the New Normal
This article is intended to offer a ‘How to’ guide for devotees in music and festivals, everyone including organizers, artists, and audience, on how to survive a pandemic. An interview was conducted to hear from some notable players in the scene surrounding a notable German music festival, the newly appointed CEO of the Moers Festival Jeanne-Marie Varain, and Matt Mottel of Talibam! who played a key role in this year’s festival.
I visited the Moers Festival’s 50th anniversary edition in May 2021 who made the brave decision to host live music with an audience, already in January, amid the height of pessimism towards an extended lockdown, when various scenarios were speculated on the strict limitations that may be in place.
Making a Scene DIY: Multiversal and beyond (Part Two)
The duo playing in the dimly lit room, was Constanza Piña a Chilean techno experimentalist and techno-feminism activist, and čirnŭ a musician from Bergen, Norway. The duo’s heavy thick drone-y industrial sounds filled and trembled the air in the room.
After the duo’s performance, some in the audience gathered around the table to examine the duo’s equipment. “This is a radio, and this (pointing to a thick large sheet metal wired with a mic) is a pick-up. It collects feedbacks and the sound is circulating,” čirnŭ explained.
The heavy sheet of metal gave the impression of an ecological statement, not because it was recycled material, but because of the function. Circulating and recycling sound, involving the environment of the entire room until it rumbled to every corner.
Amazed by the variety of gear the duo had wired up, I asked čirnŭ if ‘there was any gear in the past that he got and never used, or had regretted buying?’ His answer was superb. “Never!”he shook his head with a big grin, a grin that told more than any words.
Making a Scene DIY: Multiversal and beyond (Part One)
Whilst I was pondering over the relationship between music and latest technology (Read the post here), wondering why we all yearn to be more than our natural abilities allow, why we want to be so more, so whole, so perfect, I ran into a performance by a drummer who played a dynamic and lyrical free […]
Sensory Tech and Robot Kinetic Music: Man vs the Machine – Eli Keszler // Mouse on Mars Dimensional People Ensemble – Concert Report
(Topics: Eli Keszler, Mouse on Mars Dimensional People Ensemble, Jan St.Werner, Moritz Simon Geist, Rashad Becker, Greg Fox, Sensory Percussions, Squarepusher+Z Machine-Music For Robots, Bram Stadhouders, Actress+Young Paint)
It was during a music festival that I met Siddhi, who was working on her PhD researching sensory technology for artificial limbs. We were both foreigners staying at the same guest house, similar in age and both music lovers we naturally became friends. She was passionate for music and also a sax player herself, but a telling of hard wired scientist showed, thru normal small talks such as, ‘So what’d ya do?’. She told me about her field, which began by explaining countless unfamiliar technologies that are already invented and utilized, and that her lab specifically, was inventing ‘Artificial skin that have senses’. …3D printing a sensor onto bio artificially grown skin??? I had no idea, that robotic limbs were already invented, let alone the force to move it with your mind… Yes, ‘The Force’ is an applied science now. Isn’t that a dream come true. SF is just S.
“So, you think about it, and it moves? Impossible.”
Party Report: Lorenzo Senni – Polymorphism 27 x PRESTO!? at Berghain 2018.11.16
I’d been looking forward to this Berghain night curated by Lorenzo Senni, because when I first listened to his music last year at the Helsinki Flow Festival, it was a musical surprise. Although his set was to despair, completely overlapped during Aphex Twin’s performance, the audience who decided to show up for Senni was enthusiastic to get a taste of this innovator’s sounds.
When Senni started playing oddly familiar arpeggios from his computer, the crowd seemed confused, but at the same time ravingly turned on. After say ten minutes into his set, people started madly dancing. It really didn’t make sense to be able to dance to this kind of music, no one’s appearance sold Second Summer of Love (it’s 2017 after all and most of us were too young), I had no clue what this music was doing or where it was going, and yet we found ourselves dancing. I was completely captivated and couldn’t leave.
For a short listen, his music sounds like epic trance riffs. The old school sparkly synth sounds of 90s rave and happy hardcore. But then, you notice that the composition of his tracks are something completely different. First of all there is no 4/4 kick. There is a build up, which leads to not an anticipated drop, but to an unexpected unusual metric modulation or some sort of polyrhythmic weirdly danceable experimental turn out, and more tension. To say it bluntly, he takes the idiotic crass consumerism of breaks and drops out of trance music, but still leaving the magical dirty vulgarness of it that we are so drawn to. Euphoria. Aggression. Melancholy. Betraying the anticipation of the buildup gives the rave anthems a new meaning, and revokes an energetic aggresion. It’s a reinvention, and an artistically and emotionally tactic composition.