02.02.2022 Views

Volume 27 Issue 4 - February 2022

Gould's Wall -- Philip Akin's "breadcrumb trail; orchestras buying into hope; silver linings to the music theatre lockdown blues; Charlotte Siegel's watershed moments; Deep Wireless at 20; and guess who is Back in Focus. All this and more, now online for your reading pleasure.

Gould's Wall -- Philip Akin's "breadcrumb trail; orchestras buying into hope; silver linings to the music theatre lockdown blues; Charlotte Siegel's watershed moments; Deep Wireless at 20; and guess who is Back in Focus. All this and more, now online for your reading pleasure.

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS
  • No tags were found...

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

of the participants. One such recent collective work was Power Play<br />

created for the 2021 version of Deep Wireless by Anna Friz, Christine<br />

Duncan, Richard Windeyer and Richard Lee with contributions from<br />

Gregory Whitehead. It can be seen on NAISAtube as part of the<br />

20th anniversary collection.<br />

Transmission art<br />

Over time, both the field of radio art and Deep Wireless’ objectives<br />

have evolved and changed. Copeland explained: “In the early<br />

days, public radio was certainly a destination or influence, but also<br />

community radio in North America became an outlet, with NAISA<br />

hosting a radio program on CKLN. With the beginning of Internet<br />

broadcasting and CKLN closing down, we shifted to a podcast<br />

format and also have an online radio station that streams 24/7 on<br />

our website.” As things moved to digital platforms, transmission art,<br />

as it was called, became a more prominent way for artists to engage.<br />

(Transmission art uses the conventions of broadcast technology to<br />

create artwork incorporating the transmitters as a sound source. It is<br />

even possible to work with the transmitter like a theremin, with body<br />

movement affecting the nature of the sound.)<br />

In this year’s festival, the installation by James Bailey is a good<br />

example of transmission art. Several transmitters will be placed onto<br />

the strings of an upright piano, creating a type of prepared piano.<br />

The difference in this case is that the physical activity of the string<br />

vibrating on the transmitter itself is picked up and broadcast to a<br />

radio. Bailey’s piece –The Piano Travels – places multiple transmitters<br />

on a series of piano strings so that the frequency of each string will be<br />

broadcast to its dedicated transmitter without any microphone being<br />

needed. “It will be like a piano radio,” Copeland said.<br />

Other events at this year’s Deep Wireless Festival include the presentation<br />

of British composer Trevor Wishart’s The Garden of Earthly<br />

Delights - A Comic Opera, an hour-long radiophonic journey through<br />

the landscapes of the human predicament presented online and<br />

in-person on <strong>February</strong> 13. Wishart’s piece will be presented in a<br />

new binaural audio version adapted from the 8-channel surround<br />

version. As well, two opportunities to experience an electromagnetic<br />

composition workshop given by Dan Tapper will happen on<br />

<strong>February</strong> 20 and <strong>27</strong>.<br />

This year’s Deep Wireless Festival coincides with the opening of<br />

the newly purchased NAISA North Media Arts Centre in South River,<br />

Ontario, an artist-owned dedicated space for the multiple projects that<br />

NAISA produces. This facility, Copeland hopes, will help usher in a<br />

new era for this ambitious arts organization, one of the few in Canada<br />

dedicated to the ever-expanding field of sound art. A full listing of<br />

festival events can be found on the NAISA website:<br />

naisa.ca/festivals/deep-wireless.<br />

Deep Wireless Ensemble: Jessica Thompson, Brandon Labelle, François<br />

Girourd and Lisa Pijuan-Nomura, performing Thompson’s Citizenband, 2009.<br />

Rhubarb is back at Buddies<br />

Buddies in Bad Times Theatre has<br />

recently announced a return to mainstage<br />

programming at Buddies, with<br />

the return of Canada’s longest-running<br />

new works festival, Rhubarb, back for<br />

its 43rd year from <strong>February</strong> 4 to 13. In<br />

this year’s version, curated by festival<br />

director Clayton Lee, participating artists<br />

will respond to a large-scale installation,<br />

titled Calculus of an infinite rot, part 1,<br />

being created by designer and architect<br />

Andrea Shin Ling. Ling’s award-winning<br />

work, as described in this year’s Rhubarb<br />

Andrea Shin Ling<br />

announcement, “explores how biological<br />

and digital processes can intersect in design”. In her conceptual<br />

prompt to this year’s participating artists, she asks, “What does it<br />

mean after a year such as this, to regenerate one’s practice? What<br />

have we left to deteriorate, and what do we use as fodder and fuel for<br />

new creation?”<br />

The festival’s <strong>2022</strong> programming includes, among many others,<br />

work by generational duo Lara Kramer and Ruby Caldwell Kramer,<br />

an impromptu sonic performance by New York-based Jesús Hilario-<br />

Reyes and a performance lecture by Sarah Garton Stanley. The Buddies<br />

website will be updated regularly to reflect changes and developments.<br />

21/22<br />

NMC Spring <strong>2022</strong><br />

Live Concert Dates<br />

Crossing Over<br />

Concert Season<br />

Announcement<br />

Welcome back to live music. NMC is thrilled to embark upon<br />

a bold new era of channeling the limitless power of music to<br />

traverse all boundaries: between musical traditions, between<br />

humans and technology, even between music and memory.<br />

Save on ticket prices and reserve your season subscription now<br />

by visiting newmusicconcerts.com or calling 416-961-9594.<br />

50 th Anniversary Commissioning Series<br />

Featuring a new work by John Oswald<br />

<strong>February</strong> 17, 2021 Broadcast Online<br />

Seth Parker Woods In Concert<br />

March 10, <strong>2022</strong> @ Harbourfront Theatre<br />

Imagined Sounds<br />

Curated by Keiko Devaux<br />

April 10, <strong>2022</strong> @ Steamwhistle Brewery<br />

SWARA SUTRAS<br />

A Toronto Śabdagatitāra<br />

April 30, <strong>2022</strong> @ The Music Gallery<br />

thewholenote.com <strong>February</strong> <strong>2022</strong> | 25

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!