Dale Frost: Displaced/fractured polyrhythms glitched loops and electronics
Sophie Sirota: Viola, electronics, loops and ambient soundscapes
Nanonic: Drones leads to distorted bass & beats
Dale Frost: Displaced beats, fractured polyrhythms, glitched loops and tightly interwoven electronics. All underpinned by an ideology of process-based rhythmic systems. He has previously played alongside Talvin Singh, Xylitol, Memorials and The Field. Recent collaborations include Gold Panda and Benefits.
musicbyfrost.bandcamp.com/merch
Sophie Sirota is an acoustic and electric violist, singer and composer. She has worked with a diverse range of artists as a session musician, arranger and composer, including 4-Hero, D’Influence, Gabrielle, Beth Orton, Ed Harcourt, Paul Weller, Robert Kirkby, Tindersticks and visual artists Jeremy Millar and Sadie Hennesey. She is a member of Coastal Electronauts and performs regularly at electronics events in East Kent and London, creating ambient soundscapes using looper and effects pedals. And has released her first (live) track on the Coastal Electronauts debut release Vol.1 available on bandcamp
coastalelectronauts.bandcamp.com/album/vol-1
Nanonic: Improvised soundscapes, distorted bass, heavy beats.
Tied to the mast and incapable of rational thought, Nanonic conjures a storm of drones, seething noise, and waves of distorted bass and beats.
nanonic.bandcamp.com
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 6th February 2025 | 8pm – 10.30pm | £5 (cash only)
Downstairs @ The Rossi Bar
8 Queens Road, Brighton, BN1 3WA

Purely because of the logistics of fitting his drums and electronics on the small stage we start the evening off with perennial favourite Dale Frost playing a largely new set. The first song starts with vision On chimes ping in counter rhythms before the punchy drums kick in around them, a complementary beat. A mesh. There’s a couple of nice isolated drum breaks just before the chimes come back in. The second song is much more staccato, backing track with partial rhythms, drums filling some more. The occasional proper sub bass. The jigsaw nearly complete. About halfway through the song a pad comes in that seems to add completeness, but it still feels oddly half time. The third comes on like some oddly time-signatured dub track – the “delayed” piano then de-coupling itself to emphasise the off kilter beat. Flurries of hi-hat, weird percussive squeaks. Then a super slow bass note/bass drum gives it some bottom and possibly bringing it briefly back into 4/4 before it all goes a bit loopy again and speeds right up. The fourth starts with a slurred synth that is then triggered by the drums. Big bubbly synths surround it before we get a rattly snare heralding another tricky rhythm. Theres some great bits in this one as things drop in to come back in including a particularly delirious section of the bubbly synth and rhythms all working around each other before the drums stop and the synth spirals off into the heavens. Dale seems to be priming the synths and pads before this final track starts, then it kicks off with a walking bass and hi-hat stalking drums. After a while there’s some steel pan melody driving it on. We get some breaks to emphasise the synthiness before it all lifts off into D’n’B flight, the bass stretching, steel pans lifting higher and higher, another drop then it’s back into flight again, the drums doubling up in intensity, more counter melodies, back briefly to the original version, a grounding. A slow plod into an organ-tastic breather and then back into full throttle for the end.




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