Echoes of Dissent (Vol. 5)

19 October, 2024 - 20 October, 2024
Ateliers Claus Brussels

Echoes of Dissent (Vol. 5): X-Ray Hex Tet
ZAT 19 OKT - 20u00
ZON 20 OKT - 14u00

 

Saturday 19/10
20:00 (concert 1)
22:00 (dj-set) Edward George  

Sunday 20/10
14:00 "rotation 1”:  listening session +/- simultaneous extra live working into/out from concert 1 (sounds/words)
18:00: break/food  
20:00 “rotation 2" (concert 2)  

For the occassion, a Reader has been compiled which will be available at the venue.

 

Wat zou het kunnen betekenen om politiek te bedrijven door muziek uit te voeren? Hoe zou muzikale improvisatie - als een proces van collectief zoeken naar geluiden en naar de reacties die daaraan verbonden zijn, in plaats van ze te bedenken, voor te bereiden en te produceren - ons besef van de wereld kunnen herconfigureren? Hoe kunnen we muziek ervaren en begrijpen, niet simpelweg als datgene wat zich aandient in de context van geluidsfenomenen, georganiseerd in tijd en verruild voor geld binnen het postindustriële kapitalisme, maar ook als een esthetisch-poëtisch-politieke vorm van onderzoek, een manier van waarnemen, een manier van leren en delen - binnen en buiten de vibraties van geluid of de tekens van taal?

Deze en andere vragen zullen gedurende twee dagen worden onderzocht door middel van de praktijk van X- Ray Hex Tet - een voortdurende samenwerking tussen:

Billy Steiger - celeste en viool
Crystabel Riley - drums
Edward George - woorden en muziek
Pat Thomas - piano en elektronica
Paul Abbott - drums en synthetische geluiden
Seymour Wright - altsaxofoon (actueel en potentieel)

Zes muzikanten met verschillende achtergronden die werken in de marge van wat (voor velen) aanvaardbaar is in termen van muziek, genre, techniek, interpretatie, geschiedenis en 'traditie'; een reeks subjectiviteiten, energieën en filosofieën die, in dialoog met elkaar, de rijkdom en frictie van onderzoek wagen en aftasten, en plezier (en schat) vinden in het zoeken naar het verborgene en mysterieuze op de rand van muziek en betekenis.

X-Ray Hex Tet

Pat Thomas is a UK-based pianist who has been performing and recording in a stunning range of contexts. Active for over 30 years, he has collaborated with Derek Bailey, Eugene Chadbourne, Rhys Chatham, Lol Coxhill, Wadada Leo Smith and many others, and is part of the groups اسم [Ism] and أحمد [Ahmed] and more. He studied classical piano but has always been interested in approaching music from a variety of different vantage points. Different traditions, from dub to improvisation and jungle, come together in the sound world of Pat Thomas. His research, both in his music and his occasional writing, is dedicated, among other things, to rethinking the history of jazz, in light of the underrecognised contribution of West African Islam.

Seymour Wright is a saxophonist from the UK who has released several solo albums and collaborated with groups such as أحمد [Ahmed], @xcrswx, GUO, XT and lll人. The various practices he has engaged in throughout his life – improvisational performances, writing about music, teaching – are all linked by his curiosity and desire to learn. He grew up the son of a concert organiser and spent much of his childhood immersed in music and other art forms, but developed his music practice as part of a weekly improvised music workshop led by AMM percussionist Eddie Prévost. From there, he also grew a dissertation that used the AMM collective's practice as a case study to explore how people develop creative practice together, as a situated and collective form of learning. 

Edward George is a London-based writer, broadcaster and photographer. A founding member of Black Audio Film Collective, he wrote and presented, among others, the seminal essay film Last Angel of History (1996), which helped pave the way for contemporary thinking around Afro-futurism. George was part of the multimedia duo Flow Motion and the electronic music project Hallucinator. His ongoing radio series The Strangeness of Dub and The Strangeness of Jazz intertwine a broad musical selection with different geographical musical histories, African/Afro-diasporic knowledge and critical theory from queer and black studies. His work includes Dub Housing, a project exploring how dub music articulates a different consciousness of people and place, time and geography, history and architecture, race and metropolis.

Paul Abbott is a London-based musician, drummer and writer. He explores music as ecology, in which the interaction of sounds, signs and the physical body allows real and imaginary music to grow. His work often focuses on creating practical and fictional structures to enable improvisation and experimental musical play. Recent and ongoing collaborations include: XT with Seymour Wright; RP Boo Trio with XT; The Creaking Breeze Ensemble with Nathaniel Mackey; yPLO with Micheal Speers. Abbott recently finalised his PhD at the University of Edinburgh, entitled Playing no solo imagination: synthesising the rhythmic emergence of sound and sign through embodied drum kit performance and creative writing. He is currently conducting research at the Royal Conservatory/Academy of Fine Arts Antwerp. He was also co-founder and co-editor of Cesura//Acceso, journal for music, politics and poetics.

Crystabel Riley toured Japan and Europe in the late 2000s with drums, electronics and make-up in the power-noise trio Maria and the Mirrors. This was the beginning of her interest in shapes and patterns on skins - both human and drum. An interest in dimensional patterns on (and of) different surfaces, aesthetic, biological and historical, has continued to develop by exploring the idea of ‘care and uncare’ of different skin surfaces. Crystabel has long collaborated with Sue Lynch, who welcomed her into the Horse Improvised Music Club and later played in the London Improvisers Orchestra. She is currently working, among others, on the multi-format duo project @xcrswx with Seymour Wright.

Billy Steiger has been causing a furore on the London improvisation scene for several years. This Irish violinist's non-idiomatic approach can be experienced in projects such as Frîdd Newydd, a solo recording of his ‘magical-realist violin music’ accompanied by drawings and photographs of his trip to an imaginary village in Wales. As a visual artist and musician, his practice evolves as a kind of writing by ear. He is inspired by the work of Clarice Lispector, mainly her book Água Viva, which always seems to be in suspension between interior and exterior and impression and expression. His music resonates in some ways with her work, which engages less with the cerebral or knowable realm of words, than with the unknowable moment of experience. He has played with David Toop, Daniel Blumberg and O YAMA O, among others.

 

In the context of the research project Echoes of Dissent (KASK & Conservatory / School of Arts Gent). In collaboration with Courtisane, Auguste Orts and In Vitro, with the support of VGC (Vlaamse Gemeenschapscommissie) and Q-O2.