Author: Spirit of Gravity

New release on the Spirit of Gravity BandCamp label: Remember Glaciers

Glacially evolving ambient music and memories of glaciers are the inspirations behind Remember Glaciers. This project of Jim Purbrick shares the memories of the last people to remember visiting glaciers, as improvised live streamed performances.

This performance recording, entitled ‘Ice Core (Rhône Glacier 2009 and 2024)’ uses fragments of Duncan Porter’s memories of two trips to the glacier, recovered from the past like bubbles of air trapped in ice cores. Glacially slow ambient soundscapes echo and fade, using generative techniques and granular processing.

Stream or download (£7) here: spiritofgravity.bandcamp.com/album/2025-07-13-ice-core-rhoneglacier-2009-and-2024

New release on the Spirit of Gravity BandCamp label – OGUNURO by GUN BOILER

The latest Spirit of Gravity Bandcamp label release is OGUNURO by GUN BOILER.

GUN BOILER represents the darkest sides of humanity; our shadow selves personified.

In this live selection of auditory panic attacks, GUN BOILER delivers an incendiary and unrelenting visceral experience – encapsulating vicious nocturnal disturbances driven by frantic and unhinged psychological warfare.

This release is an entirely live and unedited recording of pulverising performances at Spirit of Gravity (December 2023) and More Kicks Than Friends (March 2024).

‘This Gun Boiler is nuts!!! Some great sounds over the drums.’ – Cosey Fanni Tutti

Stream or download (£4) here: https://spiritofgravity.bandcamp.com/album/ogunoru

All proceeds will go to Mind in Brighton and Hove, which provides a range of advice and information, advocacy and support services to empower anyone experiencing a mental health issue to live a full life and play a full part in society.

It was a travelling show

August 2025
The Rossi Bar

Beginning the evening we had Simon Heartfield, starting with a booming super slow two chord bass riff, behind it build 3 separate arpeggios slowly way down in the mix some drums drift into play, and possibly some more arpeggios all tick-tocking away, weaving round each other, then there’s a puff of air and they mostly evaporate leaving just a couple, and the bass riff and drums and then the nick comes in dancehall style. This feels like a new song, with a syncopating synth riff, glassy cowbell and one of those lines that could be a voice or a synth leading the melody. There’s a short section where the beats go 4×4, but then it’s back to skipping along. Then everything falls away to a squelching and a new beat builds around that, ticking hi hats, white noise snare, the synth starts to ping very occasionally a kick booms. We get some more interweaving synth lines with emergent melodic appeal, and the drums syncopate up again, and we get some weirdly detuned synths, that break everything down and then when it comes back in weirdly fit. As it shifts into the next track the beat takes on that distorted 606 sound on the bass drum that’s all tone, it hits a groove for a while – there’s an offbeat, some work on the beat, rattling the cymbals and a delayed pinging piano line precedes a slow unfolding line that could be from Autobahn. An actual vocal sample, and ooh, that back to the fours on the kick, and some big buzz on a bass every once in a while. Steel pans bounce around the field of sound, followed by that pinging piano again. A filtered voice redolent of that long ago set by Mr Hopkinson’s Computer sings against the human sample, and it breaks down to just those two, before the next piece starts, a pretty broken beat, a stab here, hi-hat there, one note pings in, a horn. Building. A rattlingly fast hi-hat brings it all together and the beat rises to completion. And as it does, we get a breakdown… a little riff on sounds like a CZ organ is part of the puzzle. Another bouncing psychedelic passage with various short notes scattering about from different sounds sources, then a worrying, persistent one note bass line comes in banging away on the 16s, well just enough not to grab your ears, over this there is a riff that’s slow – the notes are fast but occasional – that gives even more interest. Then on to the next track, a bassline that’s all at the end of the bar, an indistinct vocal pad. The drums glitching up a bit for this one. A bit of a boing added into the bass, claps slap us. It’s a really detailed set of what I can only describe as ambient dancehall. It’s not really that, but points the mind in the right direction. Hmmm a little bit of a speed up at the end. Nice.


In the middle slot and coming from a very different place we had electroacoustic duo Partial Wave Child, flute processed through a laptop (I’m guessing MaxMSP judging by the way the flute seems to fall through the shifting effects chains). They start with flute thrumming long notes shifted two ways into low drones and spiralling curlicues of fluttering notes, it shifts into weird overblown notes and shimmering tones. There’s a nice flute line that gets filtered into shifting reverbs that thrum or stretch the flute into new shapes. a sound possibly derived from the flute gives a looping two note line that underpins things for a while, then something cello like is conjured up that ripples of flute lines cascade off. The flute layers up into loops or long delays, clean flute lines floating over the top. Breathy clusters give the loops some urgency as the layers shift into unease.  I zone out as the counterpointing flute lines – whistle, flutter squawk – work away against each other and the bass-y cello sounds. As befitting the beautiful august day it’s an oasis of a sunny interlude in a thick wood of chewy electronics.  Some proper bass issues from the speakers resonant and rich the loops shift against each other temporally and tonally, stretching, making new correspondences. The flute starts on longer notes, longer lines, the effects pitching them up into slow shrieks and having extracted those finding new beauties within them. Whirring breaths across the flute brings sweeping, shifting tones meandering across the background steadily deepening as we head to an end of shhshhing wind and abstraction, notes with all the flute extracted.


And finally we have Digital Roses, vocals and laptops, keyboards and effects. Theres a little bit of a sneaky start: a short song, just brief ramps of wispy bass and an introduction to the voice.  The second starts with string synths and a bell before dropping away to just a couple of lines of that delicious singing and we’re into “Under the sea”, one side of their excellent single. The bass drones slide in, breathe, and expand, the voice is looped, a bassline circling with higher lyrical lines over it. A ballad at the Spirit of Gravity? It winds out with fat basses and the refrain “that’s where you’ll find me”. The second track drops the bass even further, the subs getting to work. A chanted backing line from somewhere, the voice back straight in. a slow off beat hi-hat introduces rhythm, then clatters out while the bass whirls up and something starts grinding and it ends surprising us. Arpeggios introduce the next song, bass swoops and winds around that, machine whirrs slide around that, building a slurring twist, the arpeggio drops to bring a bass pulse in. Then kick drum heartbeats, buzzing bass where the hi-hats used to be. With that buzz comes the voice again, like being in a queue outside an old rave, while the person next to you is the surprising singer. At this stage I think the vocal effects have started playing so there is some improvising going on with those, but we don’t notice. Toy piano chopsticks temp notes start the next one with a two note breath organ line that hits the resonant frequency of the room, that fades and the voice brings it back like a harmonium, think Nico but a voice as expressive as hers was neutral, still stark but clear and bright. They keep it simple for this one, mesmerising, a slow evolution of the harmonium drones, towards the end there’s a little bit of processing on the voice. The penultimate track starts with big piano and string synths that give way to a bass synth and mid-tempo drums, it builds drops for the chorus, veers off for as creepy interlude and back to the beat. Hard rave buzzes disturb the background and we get some monster bass feedback through one of the delays. And then to finish an epic dub version of “Waterfall” the flip of the single. It starts with organ, whispered vocals, bass and flurry of sparkling arpeggios before dropping to bass and voice. Lo-fi beats murk in, and it builds sizzling buzzes, the swirl of synth and another drop to noises and voice before building slowly again. Every run through adding disturbing layers, the ecstatic swirl of the synths tumble down into loops of scattered vocals and a monster sub bass drone that incrementally forms itself into something like the bassline, the voice comes back in full, the bass just pulsing away, off noises scurry about the walls and it ends.



Thursday 7th August at the Rossi Bar: Digital Roses / Simon Heartfield / Partial Wave Child

Digital Roses: Trippy electronica, earth shattering vocals
Simon Heartfield: Analogue spatial post-techno
Partial Wave Child: “Above Fire Below the Lake”

Digital Roses conjure a world of haunted memories and shimmering noise, where wistful, soulful vocals weave through Nordic noir electronica and synthesised incantations. Based in London, this queer duo crafts sonic performances that blur the boundaries between sound art, audiovisual ritual, and experimental pop. Also they have produced multimedia Quasi Operas, like their sold-out debut Noise Petals and Narrative in Time and Space at Wandsworth Fringe, summoning dancers, poets, and projections into a multisensory rite.
open.spotify.com/artist/2McSflrAYGtqwXUwjOX8KA

New Simon Heartfield live set based on tracks performed at Glasgow’s Attack/Release, Oxford O2 Academy and Portsmouth’s Syncing Not Swimming events with Kayla Painter, Sulk Rooms, Halina Rice and Bunkr. Expect deep spatial textured post-techno sounds using Elektron Analog Four, Digitakt and Model Cycles
linktr.ee/simonheartfield

Above Fire Below the Lake* is an improvised electroacoustic performance for augmented flute by Partial Wave Child. Jockel Liess and Geoixos use a purpose-built software environment to extend the flute’s capabilities, creating a seamless tapestry of live-processed, manipulated, and sampled sounds.
The performance explores a wide range of flute techniques, from breath tones to high pitch partials, blending them with live sampled electronic textures. Guided by a score outlining 12 modal areas, this piece is an indeterminate journey through a dynamic musical terrain, weaving rhythms and tonalities fluidily into an ever-evolving soundscape. Take a moment to exist alongside this piece of performance art that fuses musical concepts in seeming opposition, transforming the space into one of unpredictable beauty and tension.
www.jockelliess.org/

Live visuals by Meljoann

The Rossi Bar is a small grade II building, and they are restricted with how they can improve access for anyone with mobility issues. The live music venue is located in the basement, which can only be accessed by a short spiral staircase. More accessibility information and images of the venue are in this document:
spiritofgravity.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/The-Spirit-of-Gravity-at-The-Rossi-Bar-for-audience-members.pdf

“The Spirit of Gravity: making experimental music a threat again – since 2001”

Thursday 7th August 2025 | 8pm – 10.30pm | £5 (cash only)
Downstairs @ The Rossi Bar
8 Queens Road, Brighton, BN1 3WA

Next radio broadcast on ResonanceExtra FM: Sunday 27th July – 8.00 to 10.00pm

Gravity Waves and the Spirit World

Sunday 27th July 2025 from 8.00 to 10.00pm on ResonanceExtra FM, DAB radio or online at extra.resonance.fm/

Today’s show features tracks from the Alien Alarms album “Dystopias Dismantled”, and also a couple of tracks from “2025: Capture the Moment” that we missed last month

Alien Alarms – (Hostile to) The Spirit of Gravity (I’m Dr Buoyant mix) / McCloud – I’ve Got a Message for you / Government Alpha & Awkward Geisha – Evergreen (Government Alpha Re-Fix) / Alien Alarms – Moloch (Ned Rush Side Salad) / Alien Alarms – Everything Everywhere All At Once (Ninit Edit) / Alien Alarms – A Leap (The Fellow Passenger edit) /Alien Alarms – No Rwanda (Kieron Mahon remix) / Alien Alarms – Alone (Spheress remix) / Screaming Alice – Hedging & Ditching / Rackets – Set Theory / Secret Nuclear – Distant Square

The June 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-the-missing-capture-the-moment-omnistitions-3-transmissions/
This month’s show features tracks from two local compilations, PatchworksThe Missing” and The Spirit of Gravity’s “Capture The Moment”, plus the third transmission from the Omnistitional Cultures Research Unit (OCRU).

Thursday 3rd July at the Rossi Bar: Robyn Rocket & People You May Have Heard Of / Warped Love Group / Lewis Clay

Robyn Rocket & People You May Have Heard Of: For one night only: Space Trumpeter Robyn Rocket is joined by Karl Waugh & R. Dyer
Warped Love Group: Experiments in spontaneity: analogue drum machine and synth
Lewis Clay: Natural computer music with broken visuals

Live visuals by Meljoann

The Rossi Bar is a small grade II building, and they are restricted with how they can improve access for anyone with mobility issues. The live music venue is located in the basement, which can only be accessed by a short spiral staircase. More accessibility information and images of the venue are in this document:
spiritofgravity.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/The-Spirit-of-Gravity-at-The-Rossi-Bar-for-audience-members.pdf

“The Spirit of Gravity: making experimental music a threat again – since 2001”

Thursday 3rd July 2025 | 8pm – 10.30pm | £5 (cash only)
Downstairs @ The Rossi Bar
8 Queens Road, Brighton, BN1 3WA

As the evening light has faded

July 2025
The Rossi Bar

Lewis Clay starts his set with a lovely warm introductory wash of synth with little sparkling notes met with stabbing interjections of synths and a hint or two of kick and clatter. This is going to be a busy set, and sure enough it almost immediately drops it down to a burbling bass note that almost speaks to us, seems that it may set off a groove, then starts switching back and forth, there are some, elements of the bass are given some room to breathe and finally they take flight with a scattering beat, the whole thing flying spaciously around the room leaving us finding the rhythm, then losing it when we try and focus on it too clearly. Its best held in the periphery. There is a brutal handover to a vast squelching jungle (as in the sweaty green place full of wildlife), full of sound and menace, murky drums ricochet, unseen things scream, birds chirrup derangedly. There’s a bassline with little seeming repetition, its possibly a horribly distorted kick, synthetic monkeys yammer from the trees.  Then a couple of big snares hit and we’re into a clearing. This is a more orthodox post Aphex percussion festival groove, we can nod our heads or shuffle a bit. Notes come in, a sort of melody, the notes are off, microtonal, shifting, the beats suddenly filthy up, more murk, reverb, the notes speed up, the beat pares itself down, the ornamentation lost but keeping its kinetic aspects, the melodic line is gone, too, beeps and burbles intersperse with snare hits. A quick breather of bass twist, then an arrhythmic track of shudders and twists, tones and buzzes. It pares down gradually to the scattered synth stammers and staccatos. Again we’re off on a new beat exploration. This one is like 16th played first on one sound then another, building a pattern eventually, but still all the time its one sound at a time. Bass bass bass bass snare bell bell bell synth synth synth synth synth tom cymbal tom cymbal and so forth, the delays and reverbs kind of allow it to build into layers until a steady scream drowns it out. Then there’s a bit of broken speech, and then back into a full flowing rhythm complex. Washes spin around the coruscating drums then flourishes of tones and ornamentation, back into it again, then the tones return, detuned and arbitrary, spinning off into space, a chopping bass buzz inserts itself into the rhythm which seems to gather even more momentum and then it all breaks down the bass turns squelching, and the drums pick up into just too fast rattling, its like nightmare trance at 500bpm to finish. Here comes the hoover. So many ideas, it’s a demanding set and a storming start to the evening.


Which then calms down considerably for Warped Love Group, which by contrast is all about repetition and groove. And delay, it’s very much about delay. Starting with syncopating cowbell and some weird murky buzz, hi-hats drop then the first delay comes in winds up, down then out into infinity. Eventually a kick drops in super slow. The delay soups itself up into a melodic line, wanders around then drops to let the snare start. Heads nod. The delay drops out, the hi-hats double up. The kick comes back in but skips a bit more, everything else falls away and the kick develops a tonal quality. The delay goes into guitar feedback mode. The new snare sounds like a snapped spring reverb. The first bass line. Extended, almost a drone or dubstep grind whipping up and down. The delay is going haywire now – pitching all over the place. It all drops away again then the kick is put through its paces, wow – up down all over. Hi-hats on the 16, the delay drops down into sub bass territory. Some weird tuned hi tom (maybe) starts bonging. Synth squeaks slip in, then after a bit of a delirious spell, it all drops away to an 808 sounding kick this time. Hip Hop speeds, Boo-Yah Tribe, say. Off-beat toy piano. The rest of the rhythm slinks in. There’s been no actual bass for a while, the booming kick covering that itch. The delay still keeping that melody line going over what sounds like a didgeridoo supplying a bassline. Whip snares, and such a groove now. Drop to hi-hats this time, open trance off beat hats, but on the 8s, claps, the delay gets some gate action, the kick gets  hard again, but is still syncopated, pan drums, the beat is thick, several snares, the delay is whistling then beeping. Then it all stops.


And completing the evening of Three Very Different things we have Robyn Rocket And People You May Have Heard Of, Robyn with space trumpet, Arlen (R. Dyer) on various things I can’t really see including soprano sax, & Karl MV Waugh on guitar, all with lots of effects. Robyn Starts proceedings with some short notes from the trumpet into lots of delay, Arlen (it must be) warbles in some musical saw and we have a few notes from Karl pinged into a slow delay. We’re taking this super slow, the arc of the evening has been about reducing beats and we have none, now. The trumpet has a lovely melancholic tone as Robyn slips a line of long sonorities out of it, the guitar delay washes gently underneath, with twinkles and spangles from flexitones and other chiming percussions. Little breathy sounds signal things changing and we shift down even further. We’re in interstellar country here, drifting gently through the cosmos. There’s a little flourish as things layer up, building then washing away again, to a fragmented scatter. Scratchy noises skitter about a quick wind down of the delayed guitar, some long warbling trumpet, wind whistling through the room. There is a melodic line from Robin as we get more space noises from the known. Karl gets a nasty blast of something which causes a little merriment, but amazingly doesn’t distract anyone from the unfolding sounds being produced. There’s a further resetting with a flurry of improv scratchiness, that develops into a bit of a flurry of notes from Robyn that again winds down. We get some quiet scurrying electronics, there’s a set of organ chords that have got into the Looper setting everything on a path. Karl pings sets of notes into the ether. Karl gets a little backwards guitar into his Looper. The soprano makes its appearance walking over that, the trumpet just laying down background drones. The soprano gets into the looper too, several lines layered up. Robyn starts to get a bit more fire into the trumpet, Arlen follows with the sax. Some small bells indicate a wind down. A little loop of staccato trumpet winds us out, warbling guitar, sinuous soprano sax and spacey trumpet all tend it as it leaves, last out is the sax.