Author: Spirit of Gravity

… and it all started out so nice

July 2017
The Rose Hill

minimal impact

minimal impact

So, a little holiday from The Green Door Store, but we will be back there for this month. But it was a lovely trip out to The Rose Hill. Where Steve started with a remarkably bucolic start to a minimal impact set, with his Indian drone box and harmonium, slowly dredging up the trademark thickening that we’ve come to know and accept… weird wandering resonances, fuzzy tones warming imperceptibly, like a small guitar propped in a corner. About 5 minutes in its starting to sound like a normal, if slightly chilled, minimal impact set. Shortly thereafter the bass begins to kick in, heralding the start of proper density, the sound begins to properly thicken up, the sitar-y tones disappearing in the murk, as creepy judders, and hisses wash across the tonal base. By 10 minutes it’s properly intense, and just continues to build, peaking at about 18 minutes. At some point he starts spinning in 2 copies of “Metal Machine Music”, adding an unsettling note of familiarity, a little relaxation before the ending back with MMM overlaying the drone box.

To go with the holiday theme, Toby from the 55th Flotilla was kind enough to run the electrocreche for us this month, bringing in a fine array of properly mangled, way beyond merely bent, toys. Lovely.


Ræppen

Ræppen

Ræppen was next up, Tim becowled, with his Sami drum, looped some throat singing into a pedal, a fairly lengthy set of phrases, with some whistling and proper bass end notes. Over that the drum was rattled along with some more singing, before it faded out over some Brighton beach pebbles he’s been touring with for a few years, rattling and thumping on the stage floor. Again looped with sparse bells and chimes. Wind breaths add a chilling edge, before he brings in the throat singing as a top line this time -almost like an SH101 synth line wah-ing over the backing. Unhuman, and definitely uneasy stuff.


Far Rainbow

Far Rainbow

Third up we had Far Rainbow, Monster Bobby on noise making devices and Emily on drums and percussion, she has a great way around a drum kit, slipping between regular sticking and extended techniques and mousetraps. They start with the sound of the steppes again, wind and rattling bits and pieces, a bass pulse very slowly cycles underneath as Emily builds up work on the cymbals and it drops away to eeriness. An organ cycles in, it sounds Casio, with a slow vibrato, field recordings playback through cheap speakers, slowly rhythms emerge from the electronics, the drums comment on it without joining them, circling round the kit in the opposite direction. It hits peak treble before decaying to a tape loop of a diesel boat making little headway on the Norfolk Broads. It has a monstrous quality to it as it gurgles away the birds slowly coming to the fore as again Emily rattles distractingly on the kit. Slowly Bobby brings drones in and it cascades out in washes of pure reverb and drum, emptying down to gong and triangle.


Annie Kerr, Kev Moore and Gus Garside

Annie Kerr, Kev Moore and Gus Garside

And to round off the four acts of the evening we have Annie Kerr, Kev Moore and Gus Garside, on respectively violin & piano, electronic devices, double bass and words. Annie starts on violin, there is a general trebly hubbub of chirruping electronics, Gus and Annie sliding strings around, it’s slippery, elusive. Rather lovely. Sounds wash in and around, it falls out at one point to Gus bowing his bass endlessly with the side of the bow, strings resonating through his effects chain. Overtones and undertones sliding in and out, Kev and Annie conjure almost human voices to hum alongside it. And then Annie goes and picks out some notes on the piano at the side of the stage, small flourishes, space, more notes. Gus and Kev bring a tension under them as Annie gets stuck in leaning over the keyboard hammering a longer series of notes up and down the keyboard, then slowly falling away, picking out a few odd notes. The room is enthralled. From somewhere in the electronic murk it sounds like East Croydon announcements, Gus starts telling one of his stories, Annie punctuates his lines with hard notes. At the end of that Kev gets a feedback vocal tone going and this is matched by a high line from Annie, they circle each other before Gus brings in a lower bowed drone and Annie gets a bit more lyrical, slurring a single note for several minutes up and down the neck of the violin wringing some harshly melancholic tomes from it.


3rd August at the Green Door Store: Olivia Louvel / Dylan Nyoukis / Xylitommm / Spheress

Olivia Louvel
Live electronica based on her “Data Regina” album.

Presenting a new set from her project ‘Data Regina’ inspired by the reigns of Mary Queen of Scots and Elizabeth I. Olivia Louvel is a French-born, British composer, producer and artist whose work draws on voice, computer music and digital narrative.
“A multimedia suite by composer Olivia Louvel digs deep into the psychic warfare between two 16th century British Queens” The Wire
For more www.dataregina.com
‘Good Queen Bess’ vimeo.com/194082940
‘Infiltrate’ vimeo.com/194087426

Dylan Nyoukis
Low brow set of double tape loop gorf

Dylan has been a key figure of Brighton’s post-noise scene since before it was a noise scene, he is one of the organisers of the Colour Out Of Space festival which brings weird music, sound artists and noise makers from around the globe to Brighton and runs the Chocolate Monk label.
chocolatemonk.co.uk
Whatever kind of crazy stuff it is that you think you do, chances are Dylan stopped doing that some time ago.

Xylitommm
Xylitol and Ommm collaborate over low quality keyboards and many words.

soundcloud.com/ommm
xylitol.bandcamp.com/

Spheress
Brighton based explorer of hardware electronics.

www.youtube.com/channel/UC7nz9_xxmnrlHwECGLyFJkw
shatterarpeggios.bandcamp.com/album/mass-produced-music

Thursday 3rd August 2017 | 8pm – 10.30pm | £5
@ The Green Door Store
Undercroft, Brighton Train Station, BN1 4FQ Brighton

Next radio broadcast on ResonanceExtra FM: Friday 7th July 8.00 to 10.00pm

Gravity Waves and the Spirit World

The next edition of the Spirit of Gravity radio show will be broadcast on Friday 7th July from 8.00 to 10.00pm on ResonanceExtra FM.
https://extra.resonance.fm/

The Spirit World

Thomas Stone – Factors A
Sarah Angliss – Camberwell Beauty
Slow Listener – I went too far didn’t I? When I should have stopped “one Side”
The Organ Grinder’s Monkey – Pretty
Spheress – Punk technique
Nuclear Whale – Venal
Kuroneko – Evocation Of The Raven King
Shunyo – Melancholy
Olivia Louvel – The Chamber

Gravity Waves

The 2nd hour is given over to an Eliana Radigue special, presenting “Kyema”.

Resonance Extra is available on DAB to listeners in Central Brighton and online to the rest of the world (how to listen). You can also listen online at extra.resonance.fm and directly using this link. Resonance Extra is also available via Radioplayer and TuneIn.

6th July at the Rose Hill: Far Rainbow / Ræppen / Annie Kerr, Gus Garside and Kevin Moore

** PLEASE NOTE THE CHANGE OF VENUE – FOR ONE MONTH ONLY **

Far Rainbow
Drums and noise

Far Rainbow are an improvising duo using drums, sellotape, plastic bags, toothbrushes, motors, pencil sharpeners, electrical hum, and thunder storms. Their album, The Power of Degenerated Matter, was recently released by the Slightly Off Kilter label, following various cassettes and CD-Rs on Zero Wave and Linear Obsessional. Their music has been compared, by Paul Margree of the We Need No Swords blog, to “the free-spirited electronic kosmische musik that Hans-Joachim Roedelius and Dieter Moebius may have created in their Cluster heyday if they had King Tubby rather than Conny Plank producing it.”

Ræppen
Sami influenced Shamanic drones using voice and percussion

…mixed with modern music technology to create hypnotic soundscapes, Ræppen is the work of a Nomadic travelling Shaman who travels the planet playing ritualistic drones. Not much is known of the Shaman but when the ritual is performed the Shaman will use hypnotic rhythms to develop a trance like state to be at one with the spirit world.

Annie Kerr, Gus Garside and Kevin Moore
Improvising trio: double bass and violin with FX, electronics

Annie Kerr (Violin and electronics), Gus Garside (Double bass and electronics) & Kev Moore, (synths and electronics) are all members of and regular players at Brighton’s foremost free improv night ‘Safehouse’. Annie and Gus have a long history of playing their acoustic instruments through effects chains and all three have played together in various combinations with and without effects many times. It being improv, could go any way, but we are expecting scrapes, scratches, swoops, excessive delays and bassy rumbles.

PLUS special guest, get down early for minimal impact

Thursday 6th July 2017 | 8pm – 10.30pm | £5
@ The Rose Hill
70-71 ROSEHILL TERRACE, BRIGHTON, BN1 4JJ