RESCHEDULED DATE DUE TO SNOW: Saturday, January 2nd, 8:00pm, i.e. Reader Book release party! LOF/t, 120 W. North Avenue.
I’m super excited about the new i.e. Reader which showcases several of the poets (myself humbly included) who have taken part in the completely indispensable i.e. Reading Series curated by Michael Ball. Narrowhouse has put together this amazing document. http://ieseries.wordpress.com/
++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Thursday, January 28th, 8:00pm, MIRKWOOD ESTATES, 701 E. 33rd Street. 7pm – 10pm – starts on time.
SHANA PALMER (CHILDE BRIDE) (BALTIMORE) Shana Palmer arrived in Baltimore, MD last May from Boston, MA where she received her Bachelor’s Degree in Painting at the Massachusetts College of Art. She is a multidisciplinary artist and self-taught musician. Her solo music project Childe Bride is going on its third year with releases in the US and UK. Her improvised music is described as mysterious tribal drone and sometimes noise folk. The consistency that exists is that the music is always narrative, taking the audience on a walk often through the world of shadows and forest at twilight. Since moving to Baltimore she has been involved in Baltimore’s High Zero Festival doing collaborations with Jenny Graf and film installation work in the 2010 Transmodern Festival. She is currently the other half of the debut band Secret Secrets where she juxtaposes her electronic music with Melissa Moore’s (a previous Los Solos performer) drumming styles. Secret Secrets is looking forward to an Ehse Records release in the future. http://www.myspace.com/thechildebride
C. RYDER COOLEY (NY) C. RYDER COOLEY is an interdisciplinary artist, musician and performer. Weaving together chimeric images with found props and forgotten objects, she creates cinematic performances and installation spaces. Ryder has participated in a wide range of public works, educational projects and international shows. Awarded Best Performance Artist of the NY Capital District in 2006 & 2007, selected works have been performed and installed at locations including: White Box and Exit Art galleries in NYC, Yerba Buena, Intersection for the Arts and Theater Artaud in San Francisco, Proctors Mainstage Theater in Schenectady NY, Pan American Art Projects in Miami FL, Watermill Center in Long Island NY, Gay Pride Festival in Bulgaria and public art projects in Indonesia, El Salvador, France and the Czech Republic.
For Los Solos Cooley will be performing, Animalia, Stories of Collapse, Calamity and Departure, a lyrical fairytale by C. Ryder Cooley, performed with Natalie Agee. http://www.carolynrydercooley.com/performance.html
BONNIE JONES: Foods, Toothaches
“Born in 1977 in South Korea, Bonnie Jones was raised by dairy farmers in New Jersey, and currently resides in Baltimore, MD. In sound performances Bonnie plays the circuit boards of digital delay pedals. Her primary sound collaborators are Joe Foster in Korea (as the duet “English”) and Andy Hayleck. She is also a member of the Performance Thanatology Research Society, a interdisciplinary performance group dedicated to the advancement of a higher histrionics brought on by imminent finalities. Bonnie has performed at the Kim Dae Hwan Museum, the Ontological-Hysteric Theater, the ErstQuake Festival, and the 14 Karat Cabaret. She is currently an MFA candidate at the Milton Avery Graduate School of the Arts, Bard College.” She’s obsessed with the microtonal and the microsyntactic, but she parties like a bear in a stream, is always ready with a joke and will roast you a chicken any day of the week. Whether its wearing fake teeth at the 14Karat Cabaret while Blaster Al Ackerman tosses red glitter about in a dental monologue, or masterminding elaborate, sophisticated events, Bonnie’s body of work is varied, exciting, and, best of all, just begun.
What do you do?
I make music with broken digital delay pedals and microphones. I make sound/text compositions. I sometimes perform these sound/text pieces. I write a little prose and a little poetry. Lately I’ve been practicing my variousness with seriousness.
How long have you done these things?
I’ve been inputting for 32 years and outputting at a low frequency for about 20 years and at a higher more accessible frequency for about 10 years.
Why do you do them? How does it make you feel?
I do these things because it makes me feel human and closer to other humans and helps me understand things – My things and other people’s things and non-human things. I feel pretty good about it on the whole. Sometimes though it’s better for things not to be understood. That’s also what I’m learning these days.
When was That Moment in your life that told you you would become what you are? What happened?
I’m not so sure yet what I am to become so that’s a hard question. There might instead be a series of self-defining moments – one after the other after the other in a rapid motion through time. Oh this is what it’s going to be like, oh this is what it is, oh this is another one. The last one I remember was when I realized I wanted to stop thinking about everything as a problem to be solved. First off – everything is not a problem and every problem doesn’t need to be solved.
How has your life changed or not changed to accommodate that moment’s effect on you?
To the last moment, I’m taking a lot more time experiencing things. People, sounds, foods, toothaches, closenesses and farnesses. I’m starting up an old machine that is latent in me called – experiential living. Also – I’m thinking about how if I want to make things that are very fast, complicated and layered — how they can really communicate this idea of slowing down and paying attention that I find to be so intriguing these days.
How has your work affected your life in return?
Every time I make something I wonder.
How does David Lee Roth make you feel?
Do you have anything you’d like to ask me?
I’m wondering how you do your hair? Or what your hair routine is like each morning/evening/every other day? Also I’m wondering what you’re working on these days.
Wash with a mixture of pearls and enchilada sauce, comb thrice with cat’s paw to increase shine, apply coagulated salve of baby tears beneath a fountain of cold running water and upon drying much prayer is necessitated so any curl will hold even after the sun has set. The trick is never changing the basic shape ever for years and always making sure it looks like David Lee Roth in the darkness but without the balding part and the shameful cutting of the locks once he reacheth fifty. Tender shampooing is always careful, on the condition that one does not transmit head lice to a family of four in Portsmouth, NM. Including dog. Some things cannot be helped, and the itching persists for years. Nature’s Gate opens the herbal way to a deep shine on my checkbook, ordered by the gallon and biotin its cousin and friend also soaking me for the long run. DO NOT BRUSH WHEN WET!! Do this every other or every third day as the weather and smell in the air dictates. Lately, I’ve been working on a remix of a song and it will be debuted at Mirkwood sometime this month of November 2009.
November 8, Cyclops Bookstore, North Avenue @Charles. DUO – Kate Porter (cello) & Russell Kotcher (violin). IN DREAMS – Jonathan Zorn (elec), Michael Bullock (bass, elec), Bonnie Jones (elec, mics). http://www.facebook.com/CyclopsBmore
November 18-22nd, University of Toronto, Jackman Humanities Institute. An evening of improvised music as part of the conference Sound Unbound: Explorations in the Aural Avante Garde. Trio w/ Chris Cogburn & Liz Tonne. Workshop with Chandan Nararyan & Chris Cogburn.
November 21st, 8:00pm, HeartBeat, Toronto, CA, 960 Queen St. West. In conjunction with Sound Unbound, Abient Edition Presents.
CHRIS COGBURN – percussion (Austin, TX)
BONNIE JONES – opened delay pedals (Baltimore, MD)
LIZ TONNE – voice (Boston, MA)
+
JODA CLÉMENT – harmonium, electronics
TOMASZ KRAKOWIAK – percussion
STEVE MCFARLAND – prepared turntables
PAU TORRES – synthesizer
+
BLACK SOUL (Montreal)
November 28th, 10:00pm, The Stone, Avenue C & 2nd Street, NYC. Performance with Samita Sinha.
An evening of live video performance from two exceptional solo artists.
LAUREN BENDER (Baltimore)
TRISHA BAGA (NYC)
LAUREN BENDER (BALTIMORE) Lauren Bender lives and works in Baltimore, where she is co-Director for Narrow House, a publisher of experimental and avant-garde writing: http://narrow-house.blogspot.com/. Recent performances include the Stoop Storytelling Series at Center Stage in Baltimore (2009), Big Pink at the Baltimore Museum of Art, as part of the Franz West retrospective To Build a House You Start With the Roof (2009), not BLUNDER but and Will: A Retrospective at Load of Fun in Baltimore (2009), and CorpOreo at the Billy Fischer Memorial Building and the DC Arts Center (2008). Recent publications include I’AM BORED with Kevin Thurston (Produce Press, 2008) and Whale Box (Publishing Genius Press, 2008). Sporadic postings can be found at http://times-infinity.blogspot.com/.
TRISHA BAGA (NYC) Trisha Baga is an amateur scientist based in New York. She is currently investigating the effects of particles of consciousness on particles of matter. Her lectures and demonstrations loosely focus on her research into the changing nature of light over the past 25 years, specifically through Madonna’s (the pop phenomenon) mediated documents on the process of self-illumination. View video clip
September 15-October 24, 2009, Opening, Thursday, September 24, Maryland Art Place, Baltimore, MD.
“The Art of the Set Up”
Curated by Shelly Blake-Plock
Seventh Annual Curators’ Incubator
Sept. 15 – Oct. 24, 2009
Thursday, September 24:
Gallery Talk 6 pm; Reception 7 pm
I’ll be creating an installation/demonstration of my music set up which uses the circuit boards of digital delay pedals. Artists include, Peter B, Melissa Moore, Alessandro Bosetti, Andy Hayleck, Mike Muniak. MAP Website for more details
September 25, 2009, Belladonna “Advancing Feminist Poetics & Activism” Conference, CUNY Graduate Center, NYC. Performance with Carla Harryman and more. Conference website & Schedule. Conference is free and open to the public!
The performances for the evening take place after the Plenary discussion around 6:30pm – I’ll be performing around 8:00pm.
You must be logged in to post a comment.