Eric Leonardson

Monday, July 7, 8 p.m. @ Brown Rice

Live Improvised Music with Dan Godston and Guillermo Gregorio

1st set

Guillermo Gregorio — clarinets and saxophones
Eric Leonardson — springboard, amplified objects
Dan Godston — trumpet, small instruments

2nd set : Altamira
Ricardo Lagomasima — drums
John Deblase — electric bass
Nick Millevoi — guitar

 

Brown Rice
4432 N Kedzie Avenue
Chicago IL 60625
www.brownricemusic.org

8:00 p.m.
$5 suggested donation

Directions: Brown Rice is small storefront located a half block north of the Montrose-Kedzie intersection, a few blocks south of the Kedzie station on the CTA Brown Line. There is a small sign over the entrance that reads “Perfect”. View Map.

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New CD release, Rarebit on Transparency

Rarebit CD front coverRarebit

by Steve Barsotti and Eric Leonardson

Transparency CD0125

Performed and recorded with Steve Barsotti at Experimental Sound Studio in Chicago. From 1994 until 1999 we performed as a duo, and with other local and internationally known artists, including Dan Burke (Illusion of Safety), Carol Genetti, Fergus Kelly, Tatsu Aoki, Chris Heenan, Yuko Nexus6, Yasuhiro Otani, Satoru Wono, Claude Wiley, and many more.

Description:

Rarebit is the culmination of a four-year project in electroacoustic music by sound artists and instrument inventors Steve Barsotti and Eric Leonardson. Their self-built instruments produce remarkable sounds that belie their humble origin. Barsotti and Leonardson’s sense of musical form arises from their deep attention to the individual essences of sounds, rather than the conventional grid of harmony and meter. What results is abstract sound composition that possesses a communicative style. Rarebit will draw comparisons to the sound palettes and ethereal soundscapes of such intrepid purveyors of “left field” and exploratory music as Hal Rammel, Hugh Davies, and Bob Rutman. Nine tracks. Running time 72 minutes.

Rarebit can be purchased from Transparency for $15 ($12 plus $3 postage) to meridianavenue@yahoo.com via PayPal.

Download Chicago Phonographers’ First Live Performance

Listen to the first Chicago Phonographers’ performance at Brown Rice via WAV stream or download the MP3 file. Available now, thanks to Joshua Manchester on this web page www.joshuamanchester.com/ChiPhon.html

Sunday, June 22, Auris at the Music Institute of Chicago

7:30 p.m., Sunday I perform with Auris (Christopher Preissing and Julia Miller) in the…

auris-krannert_2008

Guitar Faculty Recital of
Jazz, Folk, & Contemporary Guitar at
Music Institute of Chicago
Evanston Campus & Nichols Concert Hall
1490 Chicago Avenue
Evanston, IL 60201
(847) 905-1500
www.musicinstituteofchicago.org/
Admission: Free

musicinstitutechicagoDirections: MIC is located at the southwest corner of Grove St. and Chicago Ave., across from Raymond Park (Davis stop on the el and Metra). View Map

Monday, June 16, 9 p.m. Chicago Phonography @ Brown Rice

Chicago Phonography with Todd Carter, Chad Clark, Chris Hammes, Michael Hartmann, Eric Leonardson, Joshua Manchester, Robert Pleshar, Patrick Scott, Aaron Zarzutzki, and Philip von Zweck.

Brown Rice
4432 N Kedzie Ave
Chicago IL 60625
www.brownricemusic.org

9:00 p.m. (Doors open 30 minutes before show)
$6 suggested donation, $4 for students

  • 1st Set: screening of Tampico, a documentary directed by Suree Towfighnia.
  • 2nd Set: Chicago Phonography
  • Directions: Brown Rice is small storefront located a half block north of the Montrose-Kedzie intersection, a few blocks south of the Kedzie station on the CTA Brown Line. There is a small sign over the entrance that reads “Perfect”. View Map.

    Background: Initiated by Chad Clark through the chi-improv Yahoo! Group, Chicago Phonography is a way to gather people interested in producing and broadcasting unprocessed field recordings (made in and around Chicago) as an ensemble in a context of live improvisation. This group has never performed together before and is inspired, in part, by the Seattle Phonographers’ Union.

    Choice quote: “nature performs and we provide the secretarial services”—R. Murray Schafer

    Video: “CHARLES COHEN AT THE BUCHLA MUSIC EASEL”

    This is a wonderful video of CHARLES COHEN at The BUCHLA MUSIC EASEL a new short film by Alex Tyson on Vimeo. Since our first meeting back in 1997, Charles has a way with this synthesizer that’s been nothing but a pleasure for me to hear.

    This colorful video features sound artist Charles Cohen improvising on a 1970’s Buchla Music Easel. This extremely rare instrument is one of Don Buchla’s 200 series. Buchla (a pioneer of audio synthesis) only manufactured 14 of these units. The entire film was edited from an hour-long set of free improvisation, with audio was taken directly from Charles’ mixing board.

    All of the photography and editing was produced by Alex Tyson, a sound and video artist from Pennsylvania. The film was shot in 16:9 720p High Definition format, using the Letus35 Extreme and a 35mm LensBaby 3GPL.

    Article Published on eContact! 10.3

    Eric playing Springboard in studio, 1998

    My presentation for the 2007 Toronto Electroacoustic Symposium has just been published. eContact!, the electronic journal of electroacoustics, is published by the Canadian Electroacoustic Community (CEC).

    This issue was edited by David Ogburn, Chair of TES 2007.

    Please visit the eContact! 10.3 Table of Contents

    Direct link to my article:
    The Springboard: The Joy of Piezo Disk Pickups for Amplified Coil Springs

    View a photo of the Springboard

    Radio Without Boundaries 2008, post-conference notes

    Tetsuo Kogawa pict on eleonardson photostreamThe conference was a wonderful experience.

    Highlights, moments of curiosity, and conviviality: conversations with Trademark G, who performed on Saturday; capturing a spontaneous conversation about listening and the conference on my DAT with Amber and Andrea from Union Docs in Brooklyn; meeting Chantal Dumas; hanging out with Anna Friz, Peter Courtemanche, Glen Gear, who performed on Friday night as Absolute Value of Noise…and with Justin Groteleuschen, who helped Anna and me out last year when we toured to Boston, and wrote about this conference for Transom.org.

    Tetsuo Kogawa’s workshop, talk, and performance were superb. You’ll get a sense of what his performance was like by viewing and listening to Justin Groteleuschen’s clips on his Vimeo site: http://www.vimeo.com/user512919/videos. Please read his Deep Wireless report on Transom.org. Justin also has a good set of photos from the conference on his Flickr photostream, and I added a few photos to my own Flickr site, and this video on



    To see Tetsuo Kogawa’s diagrams, tools, “howto”, peripherals, and histories visit How to build a micro transmitter. He has done a great job of providing this information in English. For a direct tutorial web page including circuit schematics, go to Kogawa’s “How to build the most simplest FM transmitter?”

    Keynote Address: Re-examining radio art by Tetsuo Kogawa

    A talk and performance given at the Deep Wireless Radio Without Boundaries conference in Toronto, on Sunday, June 1, 2008

    Keynote description from the New Adventures In Sound Art (NAISA) website

    Tetsuo Kogawa demonstrates how to make antenna

    Kogawa is credited with starting free radio in Japan. He studied and teaches philosophy there, and uses the ideas of Felix Guattari to frame his own concept of radio and transmission art. Rather than belabor you with all that this richly implies, this statement encapsulates his concept nicely. Quoting from Kunstradio’s announcement of Tetsuo’s October 2007 live broadcast from Musikprotokoll, Graz:

    “My performance consists of radio transmitters/receivers and my hands that wave over them. Every space of my performance has different airwave conditions. But the point is to create resonances and fluctuations of airwaves and to crystallize them into the sounds or/and images. I think radio must be understood as radiation. Radiation is communication of ‘messages’ as well as artistic imagination. I am more interested in the latter function. Radio is based on the electronic transmission. This transmission is between mind and body, and brain and hands. Radio could give a model to link different zones of our body and our outer worlds. In the microscopic scale of our body, we have neurotransmitters while in the macro scale we have hands. By my hand-waving transmission, I move between virtual and physical areas, technology and techne (τέχνη) which originally means handwork.”
    —Tetsuo Kogawa

    My quick web search for an online version of Kogawa’s talk revealed many references, but not the actual text of “Re-examining radio art”. Kogawa’s main page seems the best source for searching and learning about his ideas and work. One interesting link is a paper by Sarah E. Kanouse on transmission and memory. The PDF download link is here.

    My search also reminded me that the latest issue of Leonardo Music Journal, LMJ17 makes mention of Tetsuo Kogawa. This is the same issue that carries my article on the Springboard. The companion CD compiled by Sarah Washington, entitled the Art of the Gremlin, has one track by Knut Auferman with Tetsuo Kogawa entitled fm:i/o.

    parts for Tetsuo Kogawa’s transmitter workshop May 31, 2008

    As he stated in his talk, Tetsuo isn’t interested in radio-as-broadcast, “…free radio does not broadcast (scatter) information but communicates (co-unites) messages to a concrete audience.” In my hands it certainly is a radio-as-instrument, and Tetsuo demonstrated this most completely and convincingly in his performance. Again, you can watch a video clip of Sunday’s performance here. And, this 53-minute video on Google from Newcastle closely matches the content in last Sunday’s talk, workshop, and performance.

    This is the sort of radio I’m most interested in. It connects the cultures of radio art, hardware hacking, and electronic music performance to one another. In the context of broadcasting it blurs the traditional roles of the sender and receiver making this relationship into one where you or I can easily become a sender-receiver, or a transceiver. The activity of “transception”—on the micro-scale-transmission range of one meter-that Kogawa is interested—results in radio that merges radiation in the electro-magnetic spectrum with the capacitance of his own body.

    Eric's mini-FM transmitterHere’s a photo of the transmitter I built on Saturday, which was part 1 of the workshop. In part 2, participants built antennas for their transmitters with coaxial cable, as shown in Justin’s photos. I’ve received useful knowledge from the Radio Without Boundaries conference on radio and transmission art, with applications in my own performance in hand and for potential student projects. I used the FM transmitter I built in Wednesday night’s rehearsal with Auris, and want to experiment with it further.

    Hopefully, there will be audio transcripts of the Radio Without Boundaries sessions available so that anyone interested in art, sound, and radio will be able to learn and grow.

    Radio Without Boundaries 2008

    RWB08_logoThis weekend I’m attending the 7th annual Radio Without Boundaries conference on Radio & Transmission Art in Toronto.

    Among the participating artists and producers are Tetsuo Kogawa (Japan), Chris Brookes (Can), Jared Weissbrot (USA), Trademark G (USA), Chantal Dumas (Can), Anna Friz (Can), Andreas Kahre (Can), Peter Courtemanche (Can), Damiano Pietropaolo, and Neil Sandell (Can).

    The performances and talks begin Friday evening, May 30th and are streamed live on free103point9.org’s Transmission Art Radio. Use this for the online stream. All this continues through Sunday, June 1st. Visit the Radio Without Boundaries website for the schedule. I plan on participating in the Micro Radio and Text and Sound workshops, using the blog format of this web page to report on what I learn, so please come back and have a look and listen.

    About the conference…

    Radio Without Boundaries (RWB) is a part of the month-long Deep Wireless Festival, an annual event organized by New Adventures In Sound Art. The significance of the Deep Wireless Festival is in its intensity and caliber of invited artists. It is a month-long annual festival that brings together the world’s most influential artists, composers, producers, and thinkers in radio art and audio documentary. Read the rest of this entry »

    Sunday, May 25, Auris, Edwards-Leonardson duo, and Vertonen live on “Something Else”

    auris-krannert_2008

    Tune in to Something Else, Chicago’s only weekly radio program of audio art, experimental music, and live performance in Chicago, hosted by Philip von Zweck since 1995.

    This Sunday’s performers are:

    AURIS
    • Eric Leonardson and Blake Edwards duo
    VERTONEN

    Listen in every Sunday from 10 p.m. until 2 a.m. (US CST/GMT -6) WLUW-FM 88.7

    Outside the local broadcast range? Listen via webcast.