Last Night A DJ Saved My Life
Wednesday, March 3rd, 2004 at 7.30 pm
Center on Contemporary
Art, Seattle, WA
Kris Moon, Turn Your Laptop Into A Battle
Machine: Seattle-based Kris Moon has been djing
since 1993 (he currently shares the spotlight with a mechanical
bull at a secret downtown location), and will be leveraging
his long experience in the field to teach you how to ready
your own machine for a live performance using Ableton Live,
focusing on adjusting loops with envelopes, assigning keyboard
hotkeys and using only the laptop with no controllers. A
degree of familiarity with the basic operation of Ableton
Live (http://www.ableton.com)
would be helpful, but is not essential for this presentation.
|
Brian Thomas, Rethinking The Live
Music Experience: Despite being an avid
electronic music fan, local synthesizer addict Brian
Thomas found the live performances associated with
Electronica somewhat lackluster. His response: to
create a new way to perform electronic music. The
culmination of this effort is a new form of live experience
that incorporates all the elements of a modern music
performance: audio, video and lighting. Performance
itself has been added back into the experience, since
Brian will not be stuck behind a turntable or a laptop.
With the intricacy and fullness of the whole experience,
you may just forget that he is performing with all
these elements- LIVE! (http://www.7Laws.com)
|
|
Randy Jones, Live Audio+Visual Shows
Concepts And Technology, Local musician, programmer
and co-founder of Orac Records, Randy Jones, will discuss
the ideas and technology behind the live audio+visual shows
he has been doing since 2000. To make these shows possible,
he created some new objects for the Max/MSP programming
environment which later became part of Jitter, Cycling 74's
video and matrix processing toolkit. Randy will show us
what Jitter is about and talk about other works it has enabled,
as well as works predating it which got him into this
whole thing in the first place. (http://2uptech.com/)
|
|
Sean Horton, (aka Nordic Soul/Dreaming in Stereo),
founder of DECIBEL the first ever Northwest
Electronic Music Festival, which will be held here in Seattle
in September 04, will tell us all what to expect, and give
us a sneak preview of Decibels programming. Decibel
is a four-day, multiple venue festival designed to expose
the Northwest to both the international and regional electronic
music scenes. Running from 9/23/04 9/26/04 inclusive,
Decibel aims to educate as well as entertain through workshops,
seminars, open discussion, comfortable venues, excellent
sound, exciting performances, interesting visuals and a
diverse selection of quality electronic music. The festival
will focus on no predominant electronic music genre, but
instead will emphasize the similarities that unite all forms
of electronic music (synthesis, technology, dance, urban
post-industrial culture, digital art), and will feature
the work of talented local producers, label owners, DJs
and performers alongside the artists that have influenced
them from further afield. (http://www.decibelfestival.com/).
Pre-speakers: Martin McCavitt - From 7 pm to 7.30
pm, during setup, Virginia-based Martin McCavit, in Seattle
for two weeks (and performing at Ffejs Cognitive Dissidents,
Coffee Messiah, 3/9) will be creating a live performance
using interference patterns generated by two waveforms,
using the timeline in Digital Performer as a repository
of controller information. Performer skips to various locations
in the sequence time line, and the new location sends controller
info that changes the parameters of the self oscillating
plugin. Hell also be working with solenoids, which
respond to the amplitude peaks in the signal sent to them,
striking percussion instruments. Audio is also sent to speakers,
so the performance becomes a blending of loudspeaker and
acoustic instruments. http://www.soundclick.com/bands/2/birdsinthemeadowmusic.htm
Randy Jones will perform an audio + visual set after
the presentations.
More about our speakers and performers:
|
Marco Gavini has been pushing pixels for almost
6 years now at a variety of events in San Francisco and
Seattle.
Randy Jones is a musician and programmer. His work
focuses on computers as instruments for creating live sounds
and images, instruments through which the musical practice
of improvisation can be applied to the processing of non-verbal
idea systems. To realize his audio+visual work he uses Jitter,
the graphical programming environment he helped design and
code for Cycling '74. Jones has performed at Chicago's Transmissions
Festival, at the Media-Space Festival in Stuttgart and at
the Technicolor performance series in Berlin, in addition
to many shows in and around his home city of Seattle in
the Republic of Cascadia. Other projects have included visuals
for the Summer 2003 Radiohead US tour, a video piece "Lunarlanderlegs"
shown in the Sonar Festival in Barcelona in 2001, and a
permanent installation of music-responsive visuals for Seattle's
aro.space in 1998. In 2000 he collaborated with Radio Drum
virtuoso Dr. Andrew Schloss in composing and performing
"UNI," a structured audio+visual improvisation.
The duo performed "UNI" at the LEAPS festival
in Vancouver BC, at the Festival de Música Electroacústica
in Havana, at Stanford University and at the opening of
Seattle's Experience Music Project. Jones has also had a
long-time interest in dance music, and co-founded the Orac
Records label with Konstantin Gabbro to foster boundary-pushing
in dancefloor styles. http://2uptech.com/
Kris Moon has been djing since '93, spent 3 years
as electronic music director at KUGS, college radio in Bellingham,
2 years managing pro audio at the nefarious Guitar Center
in Seattle, a couple more as techno/electro buyer for Zion's
Gate. He currently plays top 40 hip hop at a bar with a
mechanical bull. http://robotrash.com/;
http://nwtekno.org/vb/showthread.php?threadid=68890&eventid=15216
Brian Thomas: Throughout the 90's Brian worked at
various music software companies, including Dr. T's Music
Software and The Blue Ribbon SoundWorks, the latter of which
was purchased by Microsoft in 1995. At Microsoft he was
a tester on a variety of music-related products, including
DirectMusic and the musical components of Windows versions
98 through 2000. In 2001 he left the company to work on
a variety of his own music and music technology projects.
He has been both addicted to synthesizers and involved in
the music technology scene for 18 years. You can listen
to over 10 hours of his Electronica music for free at http://www.7Laws.com.
|