Archivio Sonoro: SoundArtMuseum en
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[post_excerpt] => Aaron Acosta is a graduate from the College of Santa Fe with a BA in Sound Design in Media in 2002. This is a Self Designed major that consists of studies in Theatre, Film, and Music. He enjoys designing soundscapes for theatre and film and he has many skills as far as theatre and film production. What he loves most is sound. Sound helps us interpret the world in a unique way with frequency, amplitude and time: he chooses to explore these realms. He is involved with electro acoustic composition as well as more traditional composition. He is currently working as Technical Director/ Resident Designer for Santa Fe Performing Arts. FESTIVALS. - Wave under 60, Vox Novus, New York, november 2004. - Traffic, Lunel (France) June 6th 2004, The Electrolune performance. - Traffic under 60, 60x60 concert, Vox Novus, New York, november 2003. - Reflection on "Eye of God", (2002) featured in 2003 Electric Rainbow Coalition Festival and Sixth Annual Santa Fe International Festival of Electro-Acoustic Music. - Traffic and Nebulous, performed at a special tape music reception on sept. 25 at the Santa Cruz Cayuga Vault for local audience and members of the Woodstockhausen Staff. Music copyright Aaron Acosta; all artwork + design herein is the copyright of Leona Graham: www.home.earthlink.net/~leonamae/leona.html R.G.: Aaron Acosta “frequency, amplitude and time” – archivio SAM n. 124/b,13 tracce, compl. 59’18” Lavoro musicale. Fasce elettroniche, che spesso risolvono in ritmo. Timbriche interessanti ma un po’ datate. Uso di strumenti e voci campionate, afferenti soprattutto al mondo della musica indiana (sitar, tablas, solfeggio sillabico), ma anche pianoforte acustico, zampogna, ecc. Lavoro piuttosto vario, lungo, vagamente noioso e non particolarmente innovativo, eppure non privo di un suo fascinaccio: in particolare nei momenti più estatici e “immobili” (vedi traccia 11).
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[post_content] => Track 14 del CD "Canoni Pitagorici"; T. T.: 49' 41"
[post_title] => Canone pitagorico 13
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[post_title] => Afternoon at the Portico Antico,Genoa
[post_excerpt] => Steve Piccolo -Born 1954 New Hampshire USA. School and college in New York (Bard College, New York University). Now lives in Milan, Italy. After studies in New York (Roswell Rudd, Charlie Haden) he began his professional career in the early 1970s playing standup bass in jazz groups. Toward the end of the Seventies he founded, together with John and Evan Lurie, Arto Lindsay and Tony Fier, the group The Lounge Lizards. For five years or so the group performed all over the world, including international festivals and important venues. Their first LP (now CD, Virgin), published in 1981, continues to sell quite a few copies each year. In parallel with his activity as a jazz instrumentalist, Steve worked in the world of pop music, writing songs and lyrics. After having published two LPs under his name (Domestic Exile, Adaptation) in the early eighties (US, France, Italy, still available in Italy from Materiali Sonori) he began working with songwriters and producers on an international level. He began to spend more time in Italy, working with producers like Giancarlo Bigazzi, Caterina Caselli, the La Bionda brothers, Claudio Fabi, Toto Savio. He wrote songs for artists like Raf, I Righiera, Umberto Tozzi, Alberto Fortis and many others. The song “Self Control” written by Bigazzi-Riefoli-Piccolo (1984) with lyrics by Steve sold many millions of copies, reaching number one on charts all over the world. During the second half of the eighties he lived almost exclusively in New York, writing songs and music for theater. His favorite production from the time was “Ambition” by the company “Love Theater” (Peter Halasc, ex Squat Theater, the company with which Steve worked in the early 1980s), seen at the La Mama theater in New York. In the 1990s he moved to Milan and published two CDs with the collaboration of Italian and American musicians: “Hilarity Workshop” (Underground Records, Bologna, 1997) and “Bitter Pill”(Cox 18 Music, Milan, 1999-2000). His songs were included in compilations published by Sony and EMI, and a number of compilations in the United States). Starting in 1995 he returned to frequent live concert activity, playing festivals and theaters in Italy and around Europe with different line-ups, including Italian musicians (jazzmen Giancarlo Locatelli and Filippo Monico), members of new ‘rock’ groups (Massimo Volume, Afterhours, Rosso Maltese) and renowned artists from New York (Elliott Sharp, Zeena Parkins). For the record company Mescal (dist. Polygram) he produced the CD “Da Qui” by the group “Massimo Volume”. Work with the group continued in 2001 with a concert tour in which Steve also performed on voice, bass and rhodes. Since 1999-2000 his research has focused on the major project The Expedition, a narrative-musical work with many different parts, specifically developed for each city or venue in which it is performed, using the sounds of that city. In the early versions there were as many as 12 musicians on stage, theater sets were utilized, but without video images. After the debut at CS Leoncavallo in Milan and the version prepared for the festival Brescia MusicArte (both in 1999), the show was broken down into modules for separate development. Live work continued in duo with Luca Gemma with “The Secret Diaries of Bruce Chatwin”, at the festival Frontiere in Milan in 1999. This show was later seen in festivals in Pisa and Livorno in summer 2000. DJ-composer Gak Sato (from Tokyo) joined the project in 2000, in the show “Songs about Danger”. For the first time video images were introduced in the concerts, by Armin Linke. This piece was presented at the festival Frontiere in Milan in 2000, and developed at CS Cox 18 Milan a few months later. The project then evolved into a new Expedition. The first results were heard in “Getting Ready for the Expedition” in Venice, for the concert series Off Risonanze, and in Catania at Mercati Generali. Two of the pieces developed for this show became part of the CD by Gak Sato, “Tangram”, published in 2001 by Temposphere Records. From 21 March (premiere at Radio Popolare in Milan) to 15 July 2001 the new version “Expedition/Dérive” was performed in museums, cultural centers and festivals (Milan, Sesto San Giovanni, Catania, Mestre, other cities). In summer 2001 the urban sounds archive assembled by Sato and Piccolo began to produce many new compositions. New videos were also added, working in collaboration with the visual artist Luca Pancrazzi. The work was presented in the context of the MilanoFilmFestival at Piccolo Teatro Studio in Milan, 22 Sept 2001, under the title “Effetto cinema: musica alla deriva”. The collaboration with Elliott Sharp has continued for many years now, including a performance at Teatro Fondamenta Nuova in Venice 26 November 2001, in a duo entitled “Songs from the Frozen Zone”. After a positive experience at the Milan Polytechnic in the summer of 2001, in which the students recorded the sounds of the city to construct a performance and an urban sound map, Piccolo-Sato-Gemma with special guest Elliott Sharp did a concert and workshop at the IUAV architecture institute in Venice on 30 November 2001. The concert “Expedition/Dérive” was included in the series “Suoni e Visioni” in Milan, 11 March 2002 at Teatro di Portaromana, in a complete version with set design, special guest Elliott Sharp and new videos by Janene Higgins, Armin Linke-Paola Di Bello and Luca Pancrazzi. Steve performed on guitar, bass and vocals in the tour for the CD Tangram by Gak Sato in 2001-2. Steve Piccolo and Gak Sato also work in the field of “sound art”, creating installations for galleries and museums. They collaborate with visual artists to realize the sound portions of more complex works. In 2002 the song Green City by Steve, arranged by Gak Sato, was published in over 250,000 copies of compilations in the US, England and Italy. Expedition/Dérive was also performed in the Central Station in Milan, 28 May 2002 (see press release in Italian). Steve and Gak prepared a sound installation and concert for the MilanoFilmFestival 2002, recording and processing the sounds of the square in front of the Piccolo Teatro (22 Sept 2002). Steve participated in the project of Auditorium Records and MMT “A Year for Cage”, a one-year series of initiatives on John Cage, with the first concert at Teatro OutOff in Milan 27 Sept 2002, later at Radio Popolare. This project has evolved into the group Full Metal Cage Collective. Steve co-wrote and sang the title track “Spontaneous” for the recent CD by DJ-composer Painé, for Temposphere Records Spring 2003. In May 2003 Spontaneous was in the German Top 30 club charts. Steve collaborates with the radio program Remix on Rai 3, by Istituto Barlumen. With the group DE-ABC (Steve Piccolo, Gak Sato, Luca Pancrazzi), design of an urban installation, seen in the Urban Furnishings Fair of Esterni and the Isola Art Project show, both in Milan (April 2003). Steve and Gak have composed, performed and recorded many soundtracks for films and videos, including recent projects (2003) with Gabriele Di Matteo and a video on the history of the Compasso d’Oro design award for ADI. The latest video sound works have been for Adrian Paci, Ivo Bonacorsi and A Constructed World. Participation in the Isola Art Project, an initiative of a group of artists and critics to save an abandoned factory surrounded by two parks in a cool neighborhood in Milan and make it into a contemporary art center, instead of the shopping center fashion promo speculation planned by the city. Steve and Gak have recorded a one-hour program for WPS1 Art Radio (NY), entitled "Expedition". Steve and Gak are back again on the faculty for 2004-5 (their third year) at Accademia Carrara of Bergamo, teaching a course on "sound design". Steve will also teach the Sound section of the university course on "new techniques of art". GAK SATO was born in Tokyo in 1969. In 1994 he created the band Diet Music in Tokyo. In 1999 he became Artistic Director of TEMPOSPHERE, the contemporary music label of Right Tempo Records in Milan. His debut album POST-ECHO (Temposphere, 1999) immediately led to contacts with other producers such as Amon Tobin, Kid Loco and United Future Organization for artistic collaborations. Gak has participated on various remix projects (Easy Tempo Experience) with the Easy Tempo label (which reissues and remixes Italian soundtracks of the 60s and 70s). Successes include remixes of compositions by some of the greatest Italian masters of film music such as Piero Umiliani, Armando Trovajoli, Piero Piccioni and Lesiman (Motore a Ioni, Mah Nà Mah Nà, Lady Magnolia, all composed by Umiliani, Masquerade by Trovajoli). In these projects he has worked alongside the likes of Rainer Truby, Kid Loco, DJ Vadim, Cinematic Orchestra, Raphael Sebbag (UFO), Beanfield and Galliano (Underhead). In 1999 Gak Sato released a new single featuring Hip Wagging-Foot Shuffling remixed by Amin Tobin (Ninja Tune) along with a version of the great Metti una sera a cena by Ennio Morricone performed together with Alessandro Alessandroni on vocals. In 2001 Gak released his second album TANGRAM (Temposphere). On this record he makes less use of samples, getting some of the best Italian jazz musicians involved in compositions that blend the techniques of contemporary production with the talent of great improvisers. The title track Tangram has been issued in a remix by the producer Yukihiro Fukutomi and features the trumpet artistry of Nargo (from Tokyo Ska Paradise Orchestra). The track Green City is Gak’s version of a song by Lounge Lizards co-founder Steve Piccolo, with guest vocals by Piccolo himself. This track has been featured on many compilations in the US and Europe. Gak Sato’s live performances include the Tangram Tour with Steve Piccolo and Pepe Ragonese joining him in a live trio with video (2002 in Portugal, London, Monte Carlo, Italy) and evenings together with turntable masters like Gilles Peterson, Rainer Trüby, Pizzicato Five, Kid Loco and many others. He also performs in Steve Piccolo’s Expedition concerts on programming, keyboards, theremin and percussion, and is co-producer of the new Expedition CD. He has worked with Steve Piccolo on sound art installations in collaboration with leading visual artists and photographers. Since 2002 he is professor of Techniques of Sound in Art at the Accademia Carrara fine arts academy of Bergamo. He is participating in the John Cage tribute “A Year from Cage”, a one-year series of events and performances organized by MMT and Auditorium. Recent collaborations include projects in New York and France, gallery performances, radio shows. Cfr. nn. Arch. 133.a, 190.2 Il Cd si compone di 5 tracks e si intitola "Urban Soundworks", recorded and produced by Gak Sato and Steve Piccolo
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[post_excerpt] => Naoko Takahashi was born in Nigata, Japan and lives and works in London. She studied MFA Fine Art in Media at Slade School of Fine Art, UCL, London and Fine Art at Chelsea College of Art & Design, London. Takahashi’s work incorporates video, sound, installation, text and live art. Awards and residencies include: Artist in Residence, Pavilion, Lancashire; Organiser’s Prize, Out Video, International Video-Art Festival in Public Spaces, Ekaterinburg, Russia; Artist in Residence, Vizura Aperta/Momiano, Momian, Croatia; Video and Performance Award, Vizura Aperta/Momiano, Momian, Croatia; Artist in Residence, Sharjah Art Museum, Sharjah, UAE. Recent exhibitions and live performances include: Framing the Frame on MM Wall, MM Centre, Ordinacija, Zagreb, Croatia; An Image In The Past, Gallerija CS, Ordinacija, Zagreb, Croatia; s_quashed, RAM – RadioArteMobile, Rome, Italy; Relocated, TIP2, Lazareti and Slade School of Fine Art, Dubrovnik-London, Croatia-UK; Surabaya Hackney, collaboration with Fabrizio Manco, 291 Gallery and Hoxton Hall, London; Singing In The Sun, Ladyfest, Vienna, Austria; Combing, Out Video, Ekaterinburg, Russia; TIP Radio, collaborative sound work, Zagreb, Croatia; and In & Out, Sharjah Art Musium, Sharjah, UAE. Naoko Takahashi has a forthcoming solo exhibition, Offline Chat, at 340 Old Street Gallery, London in May 2005.
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[post_title] => Death after life
[post_excerpt] => Jason Forrest used to make music under the moniker 'Donna Summer' (but now is just Jason Forrest). He has released records in the US, the UK, and Japan. He has been featured in periodicals such as Spin, Blender, German Rolling Stone, Muzik Express, The Wire, XLR8R, Urb, Crash, Muzik, Trax, The Village Voice, Style and The Family Tunes, Go Mag, Gonzo Circus, Grooves, De:Bug, and Vice. His music is a combination of many, many styles of music, all edited into a sort of new rock music. His live shows have garnered him a huge international audience, and involve much bad dancing, some blood, and a few shattered laptops. His latest album "The Unrelenting Songs Of The 1979 Post Disco Crash" was released in the US and EU by Sonig records of Koln Germany in April of 2004. It received overwhelming positive support internationally in many periodicals, newspapers and even the occasional TV program. He is hard at work on his new album, which will again be released by Sonig in August 2005, and an Ep for the late spring. A concert and video DVD is also in the works for later in 2005.
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[post_content] => The concept of multiples and doubles (the theme of this CD's) and the re-cycling of the works sometimes from many years ago is a process that began in the early nineties and co-incided with three artist colony sojourns. First at Mac dowell Colony, then at Yaddo Colony and last at the Headlands center. The reflective look over an entire oeuvre became a mechanism that accelerated. At first it consisted of the Cageian gloss of playing entire works with other works, either simoultaneously on top of each other or sequentially in parts or sections. Then with digital network musics and the home computer came the text-radio works, creating new sound designs, playing them with old often ambient analog tape works. Finally the process became quite complex using simulation and photo-real aural sound soundscape in creating sonic atmospheres and doubles of all kinds. This De Chirico-like aping of former material has became quite developed and culminates in the Wave Fugue.
[post_title] => Wave Fugue with Electronic Lost
[post_excerpt] => Rocco Di Pietro was born in Buffalo, New York in 1949. He studied composition and piano with Hans Hagen and Lukas Foss in Buffalo and at the Berkshire Music Center, Tanglewood. He studied in New York and Darmstadt with Bruno Maderna and was a freelance composer for twenty years before earning degrees from SUNY Buffalo and Vermont College. He became an interdisciplinary adjunct professor teaching in prisons and on many college campuses throughout New York, Ohio, and California. He toured California prisons as artist-in-residence and conducted four years of interviews in Chicago with Pierre Boulez. The resulting book, DIALOGUES WITH BOULEZ, was recently published by Scarecrow Press. He composed Prison Dirges I for the Kronos String Quartet. Di Pietro's music has been performed by many musicians in venues throughout the world. These include: Christiane Edinger, Christobal Halffter, Lukas Foss, Julius Eastman, Bruno Maderna, Frances Marie Uitti, Yvar Mikhasoff, Jan Williams, Anthony Miranda, Gunther Schuller, Dennis Russell Davies, the Buffalo Philharmonic Chamber Orchestra, The Brooklyn Philharmonic, the Bavarian Radio Orchestra, Pro Musica Chamber Orchestra, CETA Orchestra, Ojai Ensemble Sonor, St. Paul Chamber Orchestra, Columbus Wind Orchestra, Earlham String Orchestra, the Avant Collective, and the Madd Lab Orchestra. Venues include: The Kitchen, La Mama, Bang On A Can Festival, in New York, Contemporary Music Society of Seoul, South Korea and American Academy in Rome among others. Recent performances of LOST have been featured at Dartmouth College and Stanford University. Recently, his work has developed on several fronts. Sound text radio works have developed simultaneously with his teaching at Columbus State College of electronic music and other courses in the Humanities. These works have been broadcast on radio stations in Seattle, Chicago, Baltimore, Detroit, New York and in Europe, in Naples, Rome, Vienna, Prague, Budapest etc.
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[post_title] => Second Day
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[post_excerpt] => Aaron Acosta is a graduate from the College of Santa Fe with a BA in Sound Design in Media in 2002. This is a Self Designed major that consists of studies in Theatre, Film, and Music. He enjoys designing soundscapes for theatre and film and he has many skills as far as theatre and film production. What he loves most is sound. Sound helps us interpret the world in a unique way with frequency, amplitude and time: he chooses to explore these realms. He is involved with electro acoustic composition as well as more traditional composition. He is currently working as Technical Director/ Resident Designer for Santa Fe Performing Arts. FESTIVALS. - Wave under 60, Vox Novus, New York, november 2004. - Traffic, Lunel (France) June 6th 2004, The Electrolune performance. - Traffic under 60, 60x60 concert, Vox Novus, New York, november 2003. - Reflection on "Eye of God", (2002) featured in 2003 Electric Rainbow Coalition Festival and Sixth Annual Santa Fe International Festival of Electro-Acoustic Music. - Traffic and Nebulous, performed at a special tape music reception on sept. 25 at the Santa Cruz Cayuga Vault for local audience and members of the Woodstockhausen Staff. Music copyright Aaron Acosta; all artwork + design herein is the copyright of Leona Graham: www.home.earthlink.net/~leonamae/leona.html R.G.: Aaron Acosta “frequency, amplitude and time” – archivio SAM n. 124/b,13 tracce, compl. 59’18” Lavoro musicale. Fasce elettroniche, che spesso risolvono in ritmo. Timbriche interessanti ma un po’ datate. Uso di strumenti e voci campionate, afferenti soprattutto al mondo della musica indiana (sitar, tablas, solfeggio sillabico), ma anche pianoforte acustico, zampogna, ecc. Lavoro piuttosto vario, lungo, vagamente noioso e non particolarmente innovativo, eppure non privo di un suo fascinaccio: in particolare nei momenti più estatici e “immobili” (vedi traccia 11).
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Cyprian Li
Bagderdance
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