Gordon's Progress

Posted: 10/19/2006 12:27:07 PM
GordonC

From: Croxley Green, Hertfordshire, UK

Joined: 10/5/2005

First up a big Hi to visitors from the White Label Music forum (http://whitelabel-music.co.uk/forum/viewforum.php?f=1&sid=15aeaebc03833d3e5e6636c03f7fad0f). And specially to Garry for insisting I write it up - hope you enjoyed the show. :-)

I made it to the venue in record time - 1 hour. Leaving early and having a good grip on the route helped. A significant improvement on the four hours it took to get to that part of the world the first time. So there was plenty of time to set up my gear at a leisurely pace.

Passing Clouds is a Victorian Warehouse. There are two floors - downstairs has a nice sized stage and I reckon you could pack about three hundred people in there without completely sardine-tinning them. There was a basic bar. Upstairs is like a giant chill-out zone - a couple of dozen sofas, and various comfy chairs scattered around, white walls, random objects - a tuned piano, a white wedding dress with hooped shirt suspended from the ceiling, and another bar.

Upstairs and down people were busy setting up sound equipment, video projectors, 16mm film projectors, slide projectors - by the time they were done pretty much every available surface had moving lights splashed all over them. More people were sitting around and chilling. A couple of pizzas appeared and almost disappeared before someone decided to pay the delivery man. Good pizzas too! Mmmm.

I sat and noodled a bit on the theremin, which attracted some attention - mostly from various girls adorning the sofas, but a few boys too, all wanting a go and absolutely loving it. Ha! I even got an offer to date a young lady. I fended her off with my wedding ring, and the assurance that, while my marital status may not matter to her, it does to me. Nice little ego boost though.

One of the evening's poets turned up. I think it was Malgorzata Kitowski (who incidentally has a poem entitled Theremin (http://the-beat.co.uk/theremin/) on the web) but I'm not 100% sure. It might have been Lisa Hayden. We talked a bit about Terpsitones (theremins controlled by dancing) which a couple of people suggested would be a neat idea.

Our poet rehearsed parts of her long poem [i]World War III Woman[/i] whilst moving as if on a terpsitone, with me interpreting her movements on the theremin - it had a kind of Harry Partch in experimental mode sound to it. Then we tried a sort of call and response thing, where she would sing a line and then I would play it back to her. Lots of fun.

I'm getting this idea for a bunch of thereminists, a poet and some interpretive dancers. All busy interpreting each other in words, music and dance.

After a while Ninki V turned up, and shortly after the pointed out the pile of boxes of Vietnamese (or possibly Chinese) food that no-one had noticed arrive. So we tucked in. Got through a couple of bowls before other people caught on and grabbed a bowl.

Next arrived a lady with yet another slide projector, and an empty carousel. I had brought a bunch of my digital slides along on the off-chance. We projected them onto a big white wall while people started arriving, and I pointed out to anyone nearby - [i]that's my daughter, that's my son[/i] etc.

Then all of a sudden, in total disregard of the running order, I was the opening act. The ring-master, for want of a better term, set me a hard act to follow with a long experimental poem in Russian. (Apparently the warehouse had been occupied in the 1920's by Russian experimental poets.)

For Testy Culbert (see above) worked well from a warming-me-up point of view, but I think the audience were a little puzzled. It is very brief and odd. Like the Laurel and Hardy theme on acid. I may well look at expanding and refining it.

My House Resounds went OK, I thought. I did not try to do the words and music at the same time. Rather I read a couple of lines, then played the melody, then a couple more lines, and the melody, slightly higher and slightly
Posted: 10/19/2006 1:24:54 PM
Edweird

From: Ypsilanti, MI, USA

Joined: 9/29/2005

Glad the show went well! It's times like these, I wish I was in England. The place you played sounds really cool. I really like it when art and music get combined in one show. It doesn't seem to happen enough. I'm also coveting your Marshall delay box. I think it's going to be my next stomp box, but I have other gear I need before that.

On a personal note, I'll be spamming my e-mail list soon and threw you on it. I have some stuff coming out and it has my first theremin recording on it. Spellbound will be next.
Posted: 10/19/2006 6:55:37 PM
GordonC

From: Croxley Green, Hertfordshire, UK

Joined: 10/5/2005

The amazing thing is, I had no idea a year ago but yeah, there's plenty of folks that enjoy seeing and hearing a theremin - a whole sub-culture, more or less, that likes its otherworldliness.

I am sorry if I'm making you jealous, Edweird, but its good news for Hands Off 2007. Speaking of which I'll be off to World Thereminisation when I've written this to talk about the latest development. Here (http://www.thereminworld.com/forum.asp?cmd=p&T=1981&F=801&p=2). 6th posting down.

But first, just a random bit I had thought to mention in my write-up - I wore my red Indian suit and white gloves - no fluorescent: not really a good place to mount the lamps, and a tiny bit on the light side (lighting was moody) anyway. But, white gloves turn out to have another use. I don't normally perspire particularly, but while performing it just poured down my forehead. Weird. Adrenaline or something, I guess. Cotton gloves. Very handy.

No recordings, as far as I can tell - didn't spot anyone with recording equipment. Except, someone somewhere has a little mobile phone footage of me fooling around before the show started.

Posted: 10/20/2006 8:51:47 AM
DiggyDog

From: Jax, FL

Joined: 2/14/2005

Gordon,

I am very glad it went well.

Congrats on the offer from the young lady. It's always a nice ego boost.

It doesn't happen to me as often as it used to but I always brag to the missus when it does....

The poetry and theremin thing is a lot of fun.

The first time I played my theremin in public I accompanied myself with some of my poems.

It was hard to do both so I sort of looped some theremin sounds and then read some poems, going back and forth wihtt the two.

I want to go to the same venue again now that I sort of know my way around the instrument and do another one of those shows.

It is a neat crowd and they are open to almost anything.


Posted: 10/20/2006 9:04:45 AM
Edweird

From: Ypsilanti, MI, USA

Joined: 9/29/2005

I forgot to thank you for the link to the Sun Ra documentary. It was brilliant! Interestingly enough, I don't own any Sun Ra, yet I have Grachan Moncur III and Archie Shepp in my collection. I guess I need to visit the record store soon.

Thanks again.
Posted: 10/20/2006 9:35:51 AM
vonbuck

From: new haven ct.

Joined: 7/8/2005

ahh, the women love the theremin. ask my girlfriend. congradulations on the show.

Andy
Posted: 10/20/2006 10:55:38 AM
GordonC

From: Croxley Green, Hertfordshire, UK

Joined: 10/5/2005

I'll tell what else is a nice little boost: a good review. :-)

Once again big thanks to Garry for a lovely review - here (http://whitelabel-music.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?p=548#548) - and also for some grainy photos - here (http://myspace-499.vo.llnwd.net/01313/99/41/1313191499_l.jpg).
Posted: 10/24/2006 7:13:57 PM
GordonC

From: Croxley Green, Hertfordshire, UK

Joined: 10/5/2005

I've got a big week coming up next week. Got my Halloween party gig Tuesday evening.

I've been getting into the mood for that. Garry over at WLM suggested a Tesco (it's a large supermarket) own-brand "Spooky Sounds" CD. A worthwhile expenditure of 94p ($1.76) This is a one hour montage of every spooky cliché you can think of. It's an amazing, cheesy, inspired piece of musique concrete. I've been improvising over the top of it and it's a load of fun.

Also, I got fed up of waiting for the recording studio to call me. If they ever do I'll tell them they lost a customer. And, having decided yesterday to look for another local studio, today there's a flyer in the mail. Basically it says - come and do karaoke in our recording studio and we'll make you sound like a pop star, complete with a DVD of the event. And there's a website (http://www.starday.co.uk/). And on the back page they mentioned by the by that they do serious stuff too, and there's another website (http://www.influentialstudios.co.uk/). Same price per hour off-peak as the previous place, much more professional, long equipment list that I occasionally understand, good business sense (cashing in on The X-Factor etc). And if you work your way through the photos you'll eventually see they have the same bar stool for vocalists to sit on as I use when I'm theremining. Went and met the guy and I'm booked in for next Tuesday morning for an hour.

And then on Wednesday I'm off to Passing Clouds to talk to one of the team, along with Diana who set up the gig last week and who has now moved Songbird to Passing Clouds permanently. I see some interesting possibilities.

Now I'm off to bump the Colour of Time thread (http://www.thereminworld.com/forum.asp?cmd=p&T=2139&F=557) back onto the front page - they should have venues - imnsho.

Posted: 10/27/2006 7:40:49 PM
GordonC

From: Croxley Green, Hertfordshire, UK

Joined: 10/5/2005

I've been down with nasty cold for a few days, and thinking about Halloween, and where demons come from.

The very deepest parts of the ocean, those below 6 kilometres, are called the Hadal Zone, from [i]Hades[/i], the Greek underworld. Hell. It is 90% unexplored, totally dark and home, as far as is known, to very little life. Crushing pressure, pitch black, virtually lifeless, icy cold. But not, I imagine, silent.

Sounds carry. Long, slow, deep whale-song from miles away. Occasional high pitched sonar pings from submarines passing overhead. A few strange, chittering, bubbling noises from the unexplored 90%. The sound of Chapel Perilous.

Very melancholy, lonesome. Reflecting how I feel. Colds really can be hell. But... possessed of dignity, majesty even. Ancient.

Practicalities. Delay - max mix - very wet, between a quarter and a third of a second delay, enough feedback for about a dozen audible sonar pings. Whale-song - bordering on melodic, slow enough to let the delay make the notes pulsate. Chittering - mid-tones, short strokes, fanning the hand across the volume antenna at a faster rate than the delay.

[i]The Hadal Zone[/i]. A very different hell to that traversed by the Void Ship. That's about power manifest. This is latent.



Posted: 10/27/2006 10:32:09 PM
buddycraigg

From: Kansas City MO

Joined: 10/24/2006

I’m not so talented with words to describe it, but I share your pain. I’ve got a sinus infection right now myself.

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