Author: Spirit of Gravity

Thursday 6th February at the Rossi Bar: Leifert / The Organ Grinders Monkey / Paul Morgan and Gus Garside

Leifert
Avant-garde electronic duo

Leifert is an avant-garde electronic duo shaped in Mediterranean Europe, based in the UK. Raised by punk attitude, we are creating shifted wall of sound using variety of tools, exploring and playing with wide range of fields – psychology, mindperception, multiculturality, fashion – through melodies and sound design.

Music video: www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ij850ZQLURk
Facebook page: www.facebook.com/leifertmusik
Live video: www.facebook.com/leifertmusik/videos/253875528643577/

The Organ Grinders Monkey
Guitar and technology twisted pop

The Organ Grinder’s Monkey is a musical collaboration between man and machine, an unholy alliance whose aim is to combine indie-rocking guitars with glitchy lo-fi electro beats and a dash of retro 8-bit synth.
The duo consists of Ben Garnett: a human who sings and plays guitar, and Bill Murray: the laptop computer who provides the rhythmical backdrop for his organic counterpart.
togm.bandcamp.com/

Paul Khimasia Morgan and Gus Garside
Electroacoustic shifting soundscapes

Paul Khimasia Morgan is an improviser, currently working with acoustic guitar body, objects and electronics. He has a live cinema soundtrack project in partnership with Steve Beresford & Blanca Regina, and performs and releases material in duo with Daniel Spicer. Paul’s latest album, “peoplegrowold” is released by Confront.
Gus Garside plays improvised music, free jazz & contemporary music as a double bass player, sometimes using electronics. He is a member of the Brighton Safehouse collective. Recent albums are “Puddling” with The Static Memories (Linear Obsessional, 2018) and two albums on Discus Music (2018 & 2019) with the Ron Caines/Martin Archer Axis.
Together they create shifting soundscapes.

Thursday 6th February 2020 | 8pm – 10.30pm | £5
Downstairs @ The Rossi Bar
8 Queens Road, Brighton, BN1 3WA

Next radio broadcast on ResonanceExtra FM: Sunday 26th January 8.00 to 10.00pm

Gravity Waves and the Spirit World is back for 2020 with another selection of tracks from the orbit of the Spirit of Gravity Collective, including a remix of the most popular downloads from the Spirit of Gravity BandCamp label by Dan Powell:

Dan Powell – Sogman’s Hitmix / Othermen – For All Time (Res Extra Version) / Emma Papper – Reflctions02 / Dan Powell – emerging from the valley into a rainshower / Olivia Louvel – Mes Taches de Rousseur / Nil by Nose & Noventa Nada – SANS FAUTE CETTE FOIS / Barker – Models of wellbeing / Fane – The Temple of Unknowing

The November edition of the Spirit of Gravity Radio show is available on the ResonanceFM Mixcloud page: www.mixcloud.com/resonanceextra/gravity-waves-and-the-spirit-world-november-2019_mixdown/

Featuring: Chr15m + Fenris – Yeh (see the Clan Analogue site for details) / Barker – Die-Hards Of The Darwinian Order / Ugly Animal – Tunnelling / Spaghetti Blacc – an entity without machina / Elefante Branco – Do Ato de Dançar Dormindo / Claire M Singer – Eilean / Scott McLaughlin – Harmonics of real metals
Plus a special mix of tracks from 2 recent albums on the Spirit of Gravity label: The Book of Melancholia by Mi Cosa De Resistance & The Melancholic Ladies Orchestra and Halftone by Andrew Greaves

9th January at the Rossi Bar: Kina:Suttsu & E-da Kazuhisa / Hardworking families / Monty Oxymoron

Kina:Suttsu and E-Da Kazuhisa

The return of the duo who were a big hit last year, unlike anyone else, Acoustic and electronic instruments, percussion.

Hardworking Families

Hand reared electronic devices. All organic.

Monty Oxymoron

The Damned keyboard player brings his solo keyboard and effects set back to the UK

Thursday 9th January 2020 | 8pm – 10.30pm | £5
Downstairs @ The Rossi Bar
8 Queens Road, Brighton, BN1 3WA

Romney rattle and the slightest twist

December 2019

The Rose Hill

Antipattern

Antipattern was on first. Al Strachan was late arriving due to the inevitable train problems, off the train down to the Rose Hill, set up, plug in, quick line check and start playing. So also inevitably it was a slightly atypical Antipattern set, which isn’t to say it wasn’t a corker. Al started by feeding his cornet into some kind of gate or delay effect that chopped it up, and then ground it into a delay built machine drone. Some throaty gurgle looping followed that with what sounded like the hydrophone bubbling away (I was listening from the front door for most of his set, so I’m not actually sure) into someone tap dancing at the far end of a train tunnel. He finally plays a muted part on the cornet over drizzling rain, he plays it again through an Octaver that shreds it down into the depths then into some shrill upper register work and then it’s back into abstraction, before we get into some shimmery space sounds with burbling cornet slurred over the top. Then it’s into some serious planetary fly-bys and a full stop.


Ron Caines and I’m Dr Buoyant

So continuing our cunning plan of amalgamating the best of the free improvisers of Brighton with electronics we had Ron Caines and I’m Dr Buoyant, Ron on Alto and Soprano saxes, Tony Rimbaud on various electronic devices and effects. They basically started where Alistair left off, definitely a Blade Runner feel, and Ron in fairly mellow mood. Even his flurries of notes were laid back, Tony capturing them on the fly and giving them back to us in slowly decaying delays over distant launch pads. Eventually Ron does let rip a torrid flurry of notes bouncing back from all sides over a heartbeat pulse and ball bearing bounce rhythm, Tony torturing them into harsh reflections before it subsides again. This time Tony grabs a little motif and loops that and Ron bounces some haunting lines against it until it all disappears in a drone. The next section is more spacious, Ron operating in the lower registers against a fairly minimal modulating whine. Smoking at a street corner under drone surveillance, Ron fights against it, avoiding the Ax Gang from Kung Fu Hustle, who bustle past angrily before they all get swallowed up by reverb. The final section sees a slowly unfolding dis-chordal line forced into submission by some fairly burly playing from Ron. It retreats to give him space to play against himself in endless delays to the end.


Toshimaru Nakamura / Sam Andreae / David Birchall / Otto Willberg

My previous experience of Toshimaru Nakamura had been his solo set at Fort Process 2016, a loud, fierce thing of extreme frequencies and sudden, careering changes that rattled the corrugated iron building he was in so hard that it was almost as if the rivets were about to ping and the whole thing would spring up into flat sheets. So I was intrigued to see how this was going to work: playing at The Rose Hill, playing with a set of largely acoustic UK free improvisers. He was set up on the stage to the right with his own set of speakers at head height, next to him Otto Willberg on double bass, Sam Andreae on saxophone and David Birchall on guitar. So this was a display of subtlety, squeaks, small changes, the no-input mixing desk squeaking or whistling, creaking of the bow forced against the strings of the double bass, the sax tracking Toshi, a thrum of something under the guitar strings being twanged. Toshi working at his mixer nudging a knob a fraction of a degree, the sax rattling its keys, a flurry of notes trip off the guitar. A sudden squall of mixer noise. A burr of bowed double bass. Moments of near quiet, slight trails, a ping of guitar string above the bridge, a squall of (quiet) feedback. Some more double bass. Everything coalesces as if composed, everyone playing elbowing some room for the odd sounds, and a build into some kind of sustained crescendo, Toshi and Dave Birchall trading chunks of noise, the sax laying down some lengthier lines, the bass burbling away underneath, then slapping and rattling away. There is a part of me that would still have loved to have seen this full volume at the Green Door Store, but as it was, it was a real opportunity to see a unique performance up really close and appreciate the subtlety.