World Festival
OFF THE PAGE
Info locale:
OFF THE PAGE The Playhouse Theatre Whitstable UK INFO: info@soundandmusic.org www.soundandmusic.org
Projects:
Off The Page
Date:
Friday 24 - Sunday 26 February 2012
Venue:
The Playhouse Theatre, Whitstable
Produced by:
Sound and Music and The Wire
Off The Page is the UK's only literary festival devoted to music criticism and audio culture. Taking place in the seaside town of Whitstable in Kent, this unique weekend-long event looks to expand the discourse surrounding contemporary sound and music by bringing together leading critics, authors, musicians and artists in a programme of talks, presentations and panel discussions.
Friday 24 February, 7pm - 11pm
Talk
Gavin Bryars: The Story of The Sinking Of The Titanic
Originally issued in 1975 on Brian Eno's Obscure label, and subsequently revived in versions that have incorporated electronica producer Aphex Twin and turntablist Philip Jeck, Gavin Bryars's 1969 composition The Sinking Of The Titanic is one of the most profound and enduring works in modern British music. In the mid-60s Bryars played double bass in the post-free jazz trio Joseph Holbroke, but it was as a composer of works that imbued a post-Cagean soundworld with a resonant emotionalism that he established his reputation. On the 100th anniversary of the sinking of the Titanic itself, Gavin Bryars will open the second edition of Off The Page with a talk that tells the story of a composition that commemorates one of the 20th century's defining events.
www.gavinbryars.com/work/composition/sinking-titanic
Short films programme
Everyone knows this is no.w.here
no.w.here is a London based artist run organisation dedicated to exploring the moving image in all its contemporary manifestations. For this hour long programme, no.w.here's James Holcombe selects a series of short films on marginal artists working across sound, image and music, including historical figures such as Len Lye, Harry Smith and Joseph Cornell, and contemporary artists like Sam Rebello, Lucy Parker and Neil Henderson. The programme will pivot on a screening of Turd Class, a portrait of Hugh Metcalfe - underground performance artist, DIY film maker and 'dubious musician'.
www.no-w-here.org.uk
plus other events TBA
Saturday 25 February, 10am - 10.30pm
Talk
Dave Tompkins: Sustained Decay: The Beat who Cheated Death
In this illustrated talk, hiphop scholar Dave Tompkins, author of the acclaimed history of the vocoder How To Wreck A Nice Beach, presents a cultural and political history of the 80s hiphop sub-genre known as Miami Bass. In recent years, Bass music has boomed around the world, shaking rumps all the way from the favelas of Rio to the tower blocks of East London, but the ground zero of Bass (aka Booty) remains Florida's state capital during the era of Reaganomics, when producers fed the kick of an 808 drum machine through a car-load of sub woofers to produce a low end pressure system that perfectly mirrored the extreme vibration of life in the Sunshine State. Mixing weird science with wildstyle semiotics, pop culture analysis with urban archaeology, the talk will recast Bass as the sound of a city perpetually on the brink of going Boom!
howtowreckanicebeach.com
Artist discussion
An Audience with Evan Parker
One of a small group of musicians who in London in the 1960s pioneered the art of free improvisation, saxophonist Evan Parker is a towering figure in British music. Over four decades he has stayed true to the restless spirit of genuine experimental practice, collaborating with a huge variety of artists and musicians in multiple contexts, from Noise groups to big bands and electroacoustic ensembles, in the process acquiring an international status as an instrumental virtuoso, inspirational group leader and catalytic label runner. For this event, Parker has selected five pieces of music by artists who have impacted on his own life and work, which he will discuss with journalist and curator John Kieffer.
evanparker.com
Panel debate
Collateral Damage: Music in a Digital Economy
In recent years, the internet and a raft of new technologies have transformed the ways in which we produce, perceive and consume music. And as the reality of music's new digital economy starts to bite, musicians and labels are having to rethink both philosophy and practice, addressing the issue of how they create and disseminate work - while some decry the free movement of music across file sharing networks and the collapse of traditional record industry models, others look to exploit the new possibilities offered by crowd sourcing and social networking. For this panel discussion chaired by The Wire's Publisher and Editor-in-Chief Tony Herrington, Vicki Bennett (People Like Us), Chris Cutler (ReR Records) and Robin Rimbaud (Scanner) discuss possible responses to the challenges posed by music's changing eco-system
www.peoplelikeus.org
www.rermegacorp.com
www.scannerdot.com
Talk
Simon Reynolds: Toopological Space - The Flow-motion Studies of David Toop
While many musicians have written criticism or conceptualised their work, few have operated on both sides off the theory/practice divide so extensively and provocatively as David Toop. Since the 1970s he has been recording and performing both solo and in various collaborations, writing music journalism, and authoring books such as the classic Ocean Of Sound. Toop has also been involved in curation (as with the series of landmark compilations he assembled for Virgin in the 90s) and organisation (as co-founder of the London Musicians Collective and co-editor of Collusion magazine). In this 'intellectual profile', Simon Reynolds (author of Energy Flash, Rip It Up And Start Again and Retromania) surveys Toop's career, teasing out the philosophical and political implications of his work and attending to its prophetic aspects.
blissout.blogspot.com
Panel debate
The Attack of the Radiophonic Women: How Synthesizers Cracked Music's Glass Ceiling
From the vantage point of the 21st century, some of the most future-proof electronic music composers of the 1950s and 60s have turned out to be women. From the BBC Radiophonic Workshop's Delia Darbyshire and Daphne Oram, to Pauline Oliveros in San Francisco and Eliane Radigue in Paris, post-war female composers embraced the liberating technologies of analogue synthesis and computer composition as the means to bypass the male-dominated world of new music, in the process creating some of the period's most idiosyncratic and influential sounds. For this discussion chaired by The Wire's Deputy Editor Anne Hilde Neset, film maker and visual artist Aura Satz, sound artist Felicity Ford and label runner Jonny Trunk ponder the strange phenomenon and continuing popularity of electronic music's radiophonic women.
www.iamanagram.com/index1.html
thedomesticsoundscape.com/wordpress
www.trunkrecords.com/intro.shtml
Film screening
Eliane Radigue: Virtuoso Listening
Now in her eighties, Eliane Radigue is a justly celebrated figure in electronic music. Her work has roots in Europe's post-war avant garde and she has been linked with the pioneers of American minimalism such as Terry Riley, La Monte Young and Steve Reich, but her monumental meditative compositions have taken a singular path, transporting the listener into new realms of sound. Anaïs Prosaïc's Virtuoso Listening is a new hour long documentary created in collaboration with the composer. The film is receiving its world premiere at Off The Page and will be introduced by its director.
Eliane Radigue: Virtuoso Listening is produced by Stephane Jourdain / La Huit and supported by CNC, PROCIREP, SACEM.
Other events at Off The Page include a new talk by Kodwo Eshun, an afternoon children's sound workshop lead by musician and educator Louisa Martin, and other events TBA
Sunday 26 February, 11am - 4.30pm
Roundtable discussion
Critical Mass: Music Theory in the Information Age
The advent of the blogosphere, social networking and e-books have capsized the traditional dynamics of cultural criticism. Today, anyone who wants to disseminate information or express a judgment on music has free access to the technology that will allow them to share concepts and philosophies on a global scale. But has this new theory-babble expanded the discourse around contemporary sound and music or shut it down, democratised debate or created a climate defined by wooly thinking and subjective axe-grinding? In this public roundtable discussion, a number of the critics appearing at Off The Page will talk through the changing role of music journalism in an age of information overload. Has the proliferation of online culture and instant publishing created an opening for specialist music critics to re-emerge as expert filters, or has it rendered their theory redundant?
Artist discussion
An Audience with Linder Sterling
Since emerging in the late 1970s as a key figure in Manchester's punk and post-punk scenes, Linder Sterling has transformed herself as an artist numerous times. From early photo-collages, such as her iconic cover for The Buzzcocks' "Orgasm Addict", via her role as singer in Ludus to the recent stagings of a series of epic and spectacular performance pieces at Tate Britain and elsewhere, her visual art and mixed media work has synthesised feminist ideology and an irreverent aesthetic sensibility into a subversive critique of consumer society. For this event, Linder talks to The Wire's Publisher and Editor-in-Chief Tony Herrington about the relationship of sound and music to her visual and performance art, illustrating the discussion with audio and video clips.
channel.tate.org.uk/media/34401686001
Talk
No Regrets: The Enigma of Scott Walker
No Regrets is a new collection of essays on Scott Walker edited by The Wire's Editor-at-Large, and author of Electric Eden, Rob Young. Featuring contributions from Ian Penman, Nina Power and others, the book examines the life, music and times of a performer who has traversed four decades of pop history, from the 60s heyday of The Walker Brothers' blue-eyed soul to the operatic intensity and conceptual depths of his recent albums Tilt and Drive. For Off The Page Rob Young will give an illustrated talk that synthesizes No Regrets’ multiple texts to delve ever further into the reclusive cult of Scott.
Performance lecture
The Bohman Brothers and Patrizia Paolini
For more than two decades Adam and Jonathan Bohman have been inhabiting a uniquely messy soundworld, one which contains traces of Fluxus hi-jinks, musique concrète and sound poetry but which ultimately is far stranger and more arcane than the sum of its many parts. Over the years, the brothers have come to be celebrated as the leading exponents of a very English form of domestic kitchen sink absurdism. For Off The Page's closing event, they are joined by Patrizia Paolini, self-styled "writer, performer, cabaret artist, stand-up comedian, poet, cook, pin-up, female Sean Penn and experimental musician", for a vocal performance exploring music writing in its many forms.
lukas.home.xs4all.nl/pagina/bohmans.htm
plus a second afternoon children's sound workshop lead by musician and educator Louisa Martin
Relax, drink and browse
Off The Page is a social event as much as it is a literary festival, and throughout the weekend the Playhouse Theatre's lounge bar will become its hub, a place for audience members to mingle, meet and talk with artists, musicians, authors and critics. Also in the bar, interval music will be provided by Off The Page's resident disc jockey Jonny Trunk, while The Wire bookshop will be open for the duration, stocked with a selection of specialist music and art titles.
Activities for children and families
Whitstable is a great place for a family weekend away, and Sound and Music will be running free creative activities for young people and families during the Off The Page weekend. If you will be bringing children, let us know their ages when you book your tickets.
(all details correct at time of writing, December 2011)
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