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Monday, June 9, 2014

The Kandinsky Effect in DC - June 18, 2014 for 'Alive at Five' at BioWall Plaza, Silver Spring, MD - FREE SHOW

Silver Spring's BioWall Plaza

Comes 'Alive at Five'

with a FREE concert by jazz/electronic trio

The Kandinsky Effect

- direct from Paris & NYC!! -

Wednesday June 18, 2014


Cutting Edge Music & Architecture at United Therapeutics' Campus in Downtown Silver Spring




The Kandinsky Effect at United Therapeutics' BioWall Plaza
Wednesday June 18th, 2014, 5pm-7pm
(Rain Date: June 19th, 12-1:30pm)
Corner of Cameron St. & Spring St. (1040 Spring St.,) Silver Spring, MD 20910

FREE
ALL-AGES WELCOME
a Music Lab production
presented by Cuneiform Records & Sonic Circuits

On Wednesday, June 18th, one of the most exciting young jazz/electronica groups on the international 'post-jazz' scene - The Kandinsky Effect - will perform live at a FREE outdoor concert held at United Therapeutics' BioWall Plaza, a new urban space in downtown Silver Spring. The Kandinsky Effect's members are based in New York City and Paris, France; this will be the transatlantic trio's first-ever Washington D.C. area appearance. The trio use sax, bass, drums and electronics to merge acoustic and electronic sounds, creating music that is both energized and entrancing, danceable and compelling. Igloo Magazine called them "..full of creativity, individuality, expressivity and outside of the box thinking," and noted that their music "will appeal to fans of Aphex Twin and Boards of Canada, but also to fans of Squarepusher’s older work and of course to jazz aficionados...." Fans of music as wide ranging as indie and progressive rock can also find something to enjoy in this energetic and dynamic group.

The concert starts at 5 pm Wednesday June 18 and ends by 7 pm; rain date is the next day, Thursday June 19, from 12-1:30pm. BioWall Plaza is walking distance from the Red Line/Silver Spring Metro, and near metered street parking and county parking garages. Food is available for sale at nearby restaurants and food trucks.

We invite you to join us at this event, which promises to be an enchanting way to end your mid-week work (or vacation!) day. Enjoy Silver Spring as you've never done before: hearing an international ensemble's metro-DC premiere in an intimate and beautiful outdoor setting. BioWall Plaza is part of a new headquarters complex, notable for its striking contemporary architecture and “green” design, being built by biotech company United Therapeutics on downtown Silver Spring’s northern edge.

Cutting-edge music - and architecture - is thriving on the edge of downtown Silver Spring MD. Several Silver Spring-based music companies are helping drive DC's status as a mecca for innovative, experimental music. This year - 2014 - marks avant garde record label Cuneiform Records' 30th anniversary in downtown Silver Spring, and as part of its anniversary celebrations, it joins forces with concert presenter Sonic Circuits (coordinators of an experimental music festival in DC and a music series at Pyramid Atlantic) as Music Lab to invite the public to experience adventurous music and architecture first-hand.

"Transatlantic sax-bass-drums trio...adept at mixing creative jazz and electronics...
Ghostly washes of sound echo and float...otherworldly ambient treatment... 4/5 stars"
-All Music Guide

"...drawing its inspiration from contemporary dance and electronic musics, as well as from jazz... an egalitarian mix of acoustic and electronic sounds. The Kandinsky Effect manages this tricky combination with confidence, crafting music that stimulates the brain and the dancing shoes simultaneously."
-All About Jazz


www.thekandinskyeffect.com - www.cuneiformrecords.com - www.dc-soniccircuits.org

________________________________________________________________

The Kandinsky Effect - Synesthesia



Genre: Jazz / Electronica / Post-Jazz
Format: CD / Digital Download

"Johnny Utah" (mp3 download)

KANDINSKY EFFCT BAND BIO / PRESS RELEASE:
Conceived on Paris's cosmopolitan jazz scene, forged on the road in America, and informed by international currents in electronic music, The Kandinsky Effect is a jazz power trio for the 21st century. The trans-Atlantic band, based in New York City and Paris, makes its Cuneiform debut with Synesthesia, a roller-coaster ride of an album marked by fierce grooves, subtle electronic textures, intricate metrical shifts, and a commitment to empathic group interplay.

Featuring Warren Walker on saxophone and electronics, bassist Gaƫl Petrina, and drummer Caleb Dolister, The Kandinsky Effect explores a distinctive swath of sonic territory, inspired by similarly electronica-laced ensembles like Kneebody and Jaga Jazzist. With a long history as a cutting edge format, the saxophone, bass and drums trio is usually employed by horn players looking to explore harmonically unfettered improvisation. The Kandinsky Effect finds a different kind of freedom in the lack of a chordal instrument.

Steeped in improvisation and various post-bop vocabularies, the trio has honed a sound described by the Los Angeles Times as “bracing, electronically tweaked jazz.” It’s an approach that erases distinction between front line and rhythm section, as all three musicians constantly direct the music’s flow, changing arrangements and musical movements on the fly by employing several dozen hand cues and other methods. As the group states, "Our music doesn’t have to be harmonically complex to be interesting. The effects are almost a separate instrument. We think of ways to shape the effects around the tune. It’s never ending. Every gig is different and an experiment. The risk is what makes it happen."

Active since 2007, the group has toured extensively, hitting clubs and festivals all across the USA, Canada and Europe, including the Reykjavik Jazz Festival in Iceland, and the Angel City Jazz Fest in Los Angeles. The Kandinsky Effect released an eponymous debut album on SNP Records in 2010 that earned enthusiastic reviews. Their second album, Synesthesia, was released by Cuneiform Records in 2013. Recorded in Iceland, and featuring 11 tracks that were simultaneously rhythmically gorgeous, groove-laden, compositionally interesting and immediately accessible, Synesthesia received international acclaim.
"Few trends in popular music have made such an indelible impression on modern jazz as ‘90s innovations in drum-n-bass. The fragmented, lightning-paced beats of Squarepusher and Aphex Twin have been gleefully appropriated by today’s generation of percussionists and...effects pedals have made it possible...to create...electronic soundscapes once the signature of analog synthesizers. Paris/New York trio The Kandinsky Effect takes this approach, firmly grounding their electronic and rhythmic ideas in solid musicianship..... There is a fundamental expectation that a jazz record will be a document of a performance, as opposed to a sonic construction unto itself. The Kandinsky Effect does an amazing job of creating something that satisfies a listener’s expectations for both."
- The New York City Jazz Record





"Kandinsky Effect then continued its set of bracing, electronically tweaked jazz reminiscent of the bent funk-rock of the influential genre-mashing Seattle band Critters Buggin. Jazz review: Angel City Jazz Festival at the Ford Amphitheatre."
- Chris Barton, "Culture Monster Blog", Los Angeles Times, October 2, 2011

"Busy but subtle, drummer Caleb Dollister was the star of the Euro-jazz trio The Kandinsky Effect. While saxist Warren Walker jaked his knees behind simple lines, and electric bassist Gael Petrina plucked a driving groove, the real improv was going on kitside via Dollister's lighthanded sticks. ...tangy touches of electronic FX -- an easy group to like in a festival setting."
- Greg Burke, "Live reviews: Precious moments from Angel City Jazz Fest 2011, Sept. 24-Oct. 2," Metal Jazz, Oct. 6, 2011

ARTIST WEBSITES
www.thekandinskyeffect.com - www.facebook.com/TheKandinskyEffect
@www.cuneiformrecords.com

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SONIC CIRCUITS, headquartered in downtown Silver Spring, is a Washington, DC area presenter for experimental music. Its goal is to expose audiences to cutting edge contemporary music that defies genres, and offer artists new platforms to present their music and opportunities to network and collaborate with artists from around the world. Since 2001, Sonic Circuits has organized an annual festival that brings world-class avant-garde musicians like Fennesz, Richard Pinhas & Merzbow, Magma and Faust to DC, spotlights the local music scene, and attracts local, national and international audiences. The Sonic Circuits Festival has been held in a wide range of venue, including the Atlas Center for Performing Arts (2013, 2012), the French Embassy (2010), Warehouse Next Door (2009) and many more. As part of its 2011 Festival, Sonic Circuits presented a free outdoor performance of Terry Riley’s “In C” by a 22-piece ensemble (including Janel Leppin on cello), conducted by Anthony Pirog, at Silver Spring’s Civic Center/Veterans Plaza. In addition to the festival, Sonic Circuits programs a year-round series of experimental music concerts at Pyramid Atlantic in downtown Silver Spring. Sonic Circuits is presented in part by Improv Arts Inc., a non-profit 501(c)3 organization dedicated to supporting the artistic and career development of artists and creating new markets for contemporary music. For more information, please see: http://dc-soniccircuits.org/

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CUNEIFORM RECORDS, one of the most longstanding and widely respected record labels in the international avant-garde music scene, has been based in downtown Silver Spring since its founding in 1984.  It specializes in cutting-edge music that challenges, redefines and/or transcends genres, including rock (avant-progressive, experimental, R.I.O., chamber rock), jazz, electronic, classical, ambient/world and much more.  Over 30 years, it has released, distributed and internationally promoted at least 370 recordings by many of the world’s best avant-garde artists. Besides The Kandinsky Effect, Cuneiform's roster includes such fast-rising stars as John Hollenbeck's The Claudia Quintet, Rob Mazurek's Sao Paulo Underground, Steve Moore, and The Ahleuchatistas, in addition to such long-established avant-garde icons as Wadada Leo Smith, Soft Machine, Richard Pinhas/Heldon, Univers Zero, David Borden/Mother Mallard Portable Masterpiece Co., Robert Wyatt and more. Cuneiform releases frequently appear in music critic’s Best of Year lists. In recent years, Cuneiform itself has placed in the top 10 contemporary jazz/Creative Music labels worldwide in several international critics polls (New York City Jazz Record/USA; El Intruso International Critics Poll-Argentina (ranked at #2; above ECM at #3!); Musica Jazz-Italy, DownBeat-USA). In 2013, one of Cuneiform’s releases, Wadada Leo Smith’s Ten Freedom Summers, a monumental musical tribute to the Civil Rights movement, was named one of the three official finalists for the Pulitzer Prize in Music, the most prestigious award in American music.  For more information on Cuneiform, see: http://www.cuneiformrecords.com

________________________________________________________________

BIOWALL PLAZA is a radically unique, multi-dimensional public space that integrates cutting-edge architecture and landscape design, nature and technology, and art/vision with music/sound. It is part of an architecturally striking complex of buildings being built in downtown Silver Spring by United Therapeutics, a biotechnology company focusing on the development and commercialization of unique products to address the unmet needs of patients with chronic and life-threatening conditions. Designed by Schick Goldstein Architects, the United Therapeutics complex won a 2010 LEED Gold Award for Excellence in new Building Design and Construction from the US Green Building Council. Located on Cameron Street between Spring and Fenton, one block north of Colesville Road, BioWall Plaza fronts the complex’s main entrance. Designed by landscape architect Oehme van Sweden & Associates, who also designed the World War II Memorial in Washington in DC and various projects at the University of Virginia, Charlottesville, the New York Botanical Garden, and elsewhere, BioWall Plaza is a circular, stone-paved outdoor space featuring a fountain, native plantings, and sculptural seating (some illuminated internally with shifting colors) that face a 16”x 9” video screen displaying nature scenes. Ambient music emerges from hidden sound sources on the plaza and along nearby sidewalks. A unique urban space that feels at once open and intimate, organic and carefully composed, BioWall Plaza is an ideal setting to hear The Kandinsky Effect perform their music, music at once global and intimate. For more information on BioWall Plaza and Oehme, van Sweden’s other landscape projects, see: http://ovsla.com/portfolio/commercial-portfolio/united-therapeutics/

Thursday, June 5, 2014

The Microscopic Septet's 'Manhattan Moonrise' Album Release Show on June 12 at Small’s Jazz Club

New York City!
Come Celebrate the Release of Manhattan Moonrise 
with The Microscopic Septet 
on June 12, 2014 at Small’s Jazz Club

MANHATTAN MOONRISE
NYC ALBUM RELEASE PARTY

Thursday, June 12, 2014
2 sets, 9.30PM / 11PM
Small's Jazz Club
183 West 10th St., NYC, NY
http://www.smallsjazzclub.com/
smallsjazzclub@gmail.com
cover: $20



The Microscopic Septet's June 12th concert at Small's is a "Must See" for NYC jazz fans. Not only is it the official Record Release Party for Manhattan Moonrise, but also the Micros' only Summer 2014 NY appearance.

The Micros will play two sets, featuring selections from Manhattan Moonrise as well as from their previous release, Friday the 13th: The Micros Play Monk.

NYC & CA Bay Area Friends!
Make sure to also see the JOEL FORRESTER / PHILLIP JOHNSTON DUO CONCERTS on June 10 & 15, 2014 [scroll down for more info]


*******

THE MICROSCOPIC SEPTET
MANHATTAN MOONRISE

The Microscopic Septet, NYC’s Fave Purveyors of Swing,
Roar Back into the Limelight with
Manhattan Moonrise,
an Album of 21st Century Tunes Dedicated to their Beloved Manhattan





"Let's Coolerate One" (mp3 download)stream: @SoundCloud / @Bandcamp / @YouTube

Release Date: 5/27/2014 - Genre: Jazz
Format: CD / Digital Download

Track Listing
1. When You Get In Over Your Head (3:50)
2. No Time (5:51)
3. Manhattan Moonrise (8:15)
4. Obeying the Chemicals (3:22)
5. A Snapshot Of the Soul (4:13)
6. Star Turn (5:13)
7. Hang It On a Line (5:49)
8. Let's Coolerate One (5:13)
9. Suspended Animation (5:02)
10. Blue (4:14)
11. You Got That Right! (4:57)
12. Occupy Your Life (5:15)

The Microscopic Septet is
Phillip Johnston: soprano saxophone
Don Davis: alto saxophone
Mike Hashim: tenor saxophone
Dave Sewelson: baritone saxophone
Joel Forrester: piano
Dave Hofstra: bass
Richard Dworkin: drums

Music lovers and romantics entranced with New York City’s jazz life, take note: The Microscopic Septet are back in the jazz spotlight, disproving F. Scott Fitzgerald’s comment that there are no second acts in American lives. Since roaring back into action in 2006 after a 14-year hiatus, the indefatigably creative ensemble has continued to evolve, burnishing and extending a well-earned reputation as one of the most consistently inventive jazz bands of the 1980s and 2000s/2010s. Reverently irreverent, insistently playful, unfussily virtuosic and unapologetically swinging, the band offers further evidence of its resurgence with Manhattan Moonrise, the Micros’ first project with newly composed originals in 25 years.

With co-founders pianist Joel Forrester and soprano saxophonist Phillip Johnston crafting all the album’s compositions and arrangements the band plays with the loose-limbed precision of a dance orchestra in the midst of a six-month tour. The strength of the Micros flows from the old-school virtue of consistency. Along with the co-founders, the seven-piece ensemble features largely the same cast of improvisers with which it emerged from Manhattan’s wild and wooly Downtown scene in 1980. Drummer Richard Dworkin, baritone saxophonist David Sewelson, bassist David Hofstra, and altoist Don Davis (who replaced John Zorn in 1981) have all been along for almost the entire Microscopic journey, while tenor saxophonist Mike Hashim joined the fold in 2006.

Manhattan Moonrise touches on the band’s entire three and half decade history, with several previously unrecorded tunes from the Micros’ early years, like Forrester’s lushly orchestrated “No Time,” which sounds like a catchy back page from Cedar Walton’s songbook. Johnston’s brief but scorching “Obeying The Chemicals” is another early piece, a deliciously telegraphic booting barrelhouse romp. And then there’s the new work, like Forrester’s episodic Beethoven-inflected closer “Occupy Your Life.”

Whatever the music’s vintage, it shares the unmistakable Micro stamp, a convivial marriage of ingenious craftsmanship and extroverted improvisation. If the band has a patron saint, it’s clearly Thelonious Sphere Monk, whose presence is manifest in the Micros’ cagey humor, harmonic syntax and hurtling rhythms. In much the same way that Monk’s music existed apart from contemporaneous bebop, drawing directly on Ellington and Harlem stride piano while inhabiting its own avant-garde zone, the Micros are avid students of jazz history but unburdened by revivalist notions.

“I've always considered that the Microscopic Septet presents an outward show of being a ‘revival’ outfit,” Forrester says. “But what we attempt to revive...never existed. A revival of the future, then?”

The future has never sounded so hip.

PURCHASE LINKS //
ITUNES - AMAZON - BANDCAMP - WAYSIDE MUSIC

ARTIST SITES //
www.microscopicseptet.com - www.cuneiformrecords.com


****
NYC & CA Bay Area Friends!

Don't miss the June 2014 JOEL FORRESTER / PHILLIP JOHNSTON DUO CONCERTS
Micros co-leaders/composers Joel Forrester and Phillip Johnston will be playing concerts as a duo on both the East and West Coasts. They have been playing together as a duo for nearly 35 years, and released a duo recording, Jazz Times called their Live At The Hillside, “a masterpiece of intimacy, energy and synergy". This rare Bay Area duo appearance is their first since the recording of their live CD in Berkeley CA in 2011.

NEW YORK CITY, NY
Joel Forrester/Phillip Johnston Duo
Tuesday, June 10th, 2014
7:00 pm
SpectrumNYC
121 Ludlow St.
NYC, NY
http://spectrumnyc.com/blog/calendar/
OAKLAND / SAN FRANCISCO, CA
Joel Forrester/Phillip Johnston Duo
Sunday, June 15th, 2014
9PM
Duende
68 19th St, Oakland, CA 94612, USA
510-893-0174
http://duendeoakland.com/

Thursday, May 22, 2014

Guitarist Joel Harrison Revisits his DC Roots with Two Record Release Shows!

Guitarist Joel Harrison Revisits His Roots Growing Up in Washington, D.C.


Harrison releases Mother Stump, a new album out May 27th
on DC/Silver Spring-based Cuneiform Records
&
plays two record release shows in the DC area with his Mother Stump Band!

Fri., May 30 - 9:00PM
Arlington, VA: Iota Cafe
(with the Anthony Pirog band)
2832 Wilson Blvd - 22201

Sat., May 31 - 8:00 PM
Baltimore, MD: Orion Sound
(with the Anthony Pirog band)
2903 Whittington Ave., Suite C -  21230

For more information or to set up an interview while Harrison is in D.C., email Joyce@cuneiformrecords.com

Check out "John The Revelator" from Mother Stump:



Mother Stump Highlights Harrison’s Guitar Playing Originals and On Covers of Buddy Miller, Leonard Cohen, Al Kooper, Luther Vandross, Paul Motian, George Russell And More

Featuring Top NY-Based Sidemen Michael Bates (bass), Jeremy ‘Bean’ Clemons (drums) accompanying Joel Harrison


For many years, guitarist Joel Harrison claimed he had no roots. Growing up in Washington D.C., a place whose identity and values are always in drift, Harrison was convinced he had to “go out into the world with a shovel and plant something of my own,” he says in his liner notes to Mother Stump, his latest album on Silver Spring, MD-based Cuneiform Records, a fitting home for a record paying tribute to the artist’s DC-upbringing.

But as we often discover, time and distance have a way of putting things in perspective. Looking back, Harrison realized that Washington D.C. was, in fact, a town whose musical gravity overpowered whatever ephemeral political and cultural winds might blow. “I had to move away and get older to see those roots,” Harrison says. “You can hear them on this record.”

“Washington D.C. was quite a segregated place in the 1960s and ’70s, and yet the musicians were inclusive and open in their tastes,” Harrison recalls. A plethora of genres were represented around town. One could hear bluegrass by The Seldom Scene andThe Country Gentlemen, and soul, jazz, and funk by Roberta Flack, The Blackbyrds, Terry Plumeri, and Ron Holloway. Blues was a pervasive force represented by Roy Buchanan, The Nighthawks, and the legendary Powerhouse Blues Band that featured Tom Principato. On the folk scene were people like Jorma Kaukonen, Emmylou Harris, and John Fahey.

“I remember seeing psychedelic rock groups, maybe backed by a light show, at Pipeline Coffee House or at Fort Reno ― bands like Tractor, Tinsel'd Sin (with Paul Sears), Crank, Grits, or Grin (with Nils Lofgren). There were outliers like Root Boy Slim and Evan Johns, whom I jammed with before we started shaving.”

“On any given night there might be a redneck band from Southern Maryland, a hillbilly band from nearby West Virginia, or an infusion of urban blues and Philly soul. The people who affected me the most, welcomed it all into their guitar playing.”

When Harrison discovered local guitarist Danny Gatton, he became a quick devotee. “If I ever had an idol, it was he,” Harrison says. “I followed him around like a stray dog in the early and mid ’70s, sometimes placing a cassette recorder on a beer-stained table in one of the many low-rent bars he inhabited.” Gatton’s ability to incorporate many streams of American music, such as country, blues, jazz, rockabilly, and funk, would play an important role in Harrison’s own future development as a genre-crossing guitarist.

No matter what kind of music was heard in Harrison’s circle of musician friends, the common thread binding it all together was a passion for musical expression in all forms. “I remember jam sessions in my friend Henry's basement where we'd play for hours in some zone between rock, soul, jazz, and country ― not practiced enough yet to know enough about any single thing ― open, searching.”

Harrison began studying jazz with a guitarist named Bill Harris, who had a studio in the Northeast DC.  Jazz began to take hold of him, but true to his musical upbringing, he would continue to explore across genre lines.  “You'd want to play some bluegrass, learn some Cornell Dupree licks, pick up a slide for the Allman Brothers tunes, learn your bebop harmony, and then practice your Bach and Albeniz on a nylon string,” Harrison recalls. This was a time of important breakthroughs for the guitar, when the instrument was becoming a generative force in new jazz contexts.

“It was an amazing time in which to come of age musically. Minds were open, blueprints were being created, invention was everywhere, and yet strong tradition anchored the experimentation. You'd go way beyond the borders, but there was still that tangle of roots that stretched beneath and across the town,” Harrison says in his liners.

On Mother Stump, unlike some other of Harrison’s albums, the focus here is on his playing and not his writing and arranging. “It's a mixture of Luther Vandross, Buddy Miller, George Russell, a traditional spiritual, Paul Motian, Leonard Cohen, and in a couple of my pieces, a nod to those formative years, with six old guitars and two old amps.”

“It's a lot of history that I'm trying to make new again.”

Cuneiform Records 2014