Lucky Number: The Music of Syd Clayton
Venue: ABC Iwaki Auditorium
Date: Friday July 17 2009, 7pm
Syd Clayton composed a significant body of experimental music in Melbourne from
the mid 1960s until his
death in 1994. Clayton explored chance operations as a compositional tool, using
his signature toy roulette
wheel to select musical elements to be used within structures that he would
adapt from such diverse sources
as cricket score cards and childrens games. The result was a unique blend of
music, theatre and ritual.
His work has been described as magical, achieving a Zen-like veneer of
simplicity that masks a deep
complexity of ideas both musical and philosophical.
Since his heyday at Carlton's La Mama theatre in the late 1960s/early 1970s,
Clayton's music has only been
performed sporadically, and virtually forgotten by contemporary performers since
his death. In Lucky
Number, director Barnaby Oliver dusts off Clayton's sometimes-oblique scores and
issues the challenge to
a new cast of performers from Melbourne's experimental music community
(featuring a smattering of former
Clayton collaborators) of interpreting Clayton's music in a fashion that is both
true to the original spirit and
injects new energy.
ABC Iwaki Auditorium, ABC Southbank Centre, Ground Floor, Southbank Bvd,
Southbank VIC 3006.
Friday July 17 2009, 7pm
Admission $25/$20.
Performers:
- Adam Simmons (saxophones)
- Mark Cauvin (double bass)
- The Crystal Set with Judy Pile (vocals and percussion)
- Barnaby Oliver (piano / percussion)
- Clinton Green (pitched percussion)
- Hugh McSpedden visuals
Programme to include:
- Yehudi (wind and double bass)
- Archaeopteryx (wind, drone, percussion)
- Birds of Passage (wind, voice, percussion)
- Lucky Number (pitched percussion)
- The Man On The Left He's Joe Bigger From Topeca (voices, instruments)
- He Colours the Wild Orchid Slipper Wagon (piano - World Premiere)
Performance of Lucky Number will commence at 7pm and continue throughout the
evening. The main program
will start at 8pm.
Lucky Number is a rare, one-night-only exploration of one of Melbourne's most
neglected composers that is
not to be missed.
For more information:
email: luckynumbersyd@...
web: www.myspace.com/sydclaytonluckynumber
Undecisive God 'A Vinyl Construction' 7" - Undecisive God's recent experiments
with multiple turntables and prepared/broken records come to full fruition here
with a release that poses questions both to the use of turntables as instruments
and vinyl as a format. The music - crunchy multi-layered
improvisations/processes that randomly sample small broken chunks from the
original vinyl materials - is itself presented on 7" vinyl, in handmade covers
reconstructed from old record covers and broken vinyl shards; each cover is
different, individually numbered and an interesting one-off creation in itself.
Limited edition of fifty copies from Revolution Records, available from Shame
File Music, Sunshine & Grease, and Missing Link.
Also new on Shame File:
Screwtape 'Whenever I hear the words Pop Culture, I reach for my gun' mini CD -
noise/power electronics using meat as a sound source!
Mark Cauvin 'Transfiguration' 2CD - Reputedly the first of it's kind, a double
CD tour de force of solo double bass, performing works from composers like
Scelsi, Berio and more.
I'm playing a bit of a different gig in July as well (4 hour solo pitched
percussion!) - see http://www.myspace.com/sydclaytonluckynumber
Shame File Music - specialising in Australian experimental
http://ShameFileMusic.com
Recent editions - March 2009
The Scroungers - "Bored, Pissed & Agro: 1991-1997" mp3/CD - online release
documenting the best of this largely-ignored 1990s home recording project that
resulted in some of the most intense and interesting punk to come out of
Australia. The online version includes full liner notes by Clinton Green,
discography and lyrics. Download for free or order a CDR copy for AU$10ppd from
http://ShameFileMusic.com
Screwtape "Goodbye Cruel World" CD - The current musical concern of Andrew
McIntosh, the man behind The Scrougners. Multi-tracked harsh noise soundtrack
to the end of the planet via rogue asteroid. - $AU8ppd
Automating "Train in Vein" CD - Ranging from manipulated field recordings and
samples to industrial noise soundscapes littered with live music recordings,
Sasha Margolis has created a considered and varied alternative to Y35.3's power
electronics - AU$8ppd
Zac Keiller/Clinton Green "Residential" - CD These two Melbourne guitar
experimenters join up to run the gambit of ambience, drone and noise, with 3
tracks crafted from private improvisations and live performances - AU$10ppd
Green Beret CD - Rare collaboration output from this trio of Melbourne regulars
(Arek Gulbenkoglu, Henry Krips and Justin Fuller); an interesting exploration of
electronics, static and noise - AU$12ppd
Francisco Lopez - "El día anterior a la emergencia de los adultos de magicicada"
mini CD - Earlier Lopez recording (1993) originally released on tape now on CD,
very soft most of the time, going almost imperceptably in and out of silence.
Essential for Lopez fans - AU$7ppd
Rectoplasm - "Lemuria: songs from a sunken continent" CD - Music from the
mythical lost continent of Lemuria are reimagined with a healthy dose of humour
- AU$8ppd
Trades can be arranged on most titles - contact for details.
Recent editions - June 2008 Absoluten Calfeutrail - "Dehydrated and Dumped"
casette - High quality production power electronics from Melbourne;
limited edition of forty professionally reproduced casettes. AU$5ppd
(US$4ppd)
Biffplex "A Tent is a Soft House" CD - New release featuring the best of Biffplex's signature deep ambient drones. AU$8ppd (US$6ppd)
Botborg "Principles of
Photosonicneurokinaesthography" DVD - The first available documented
results of Botborg's researches into the 'occult' science of
Photosonicneurokineasthography. Translated as "writing the movement of
nerves through use of sound and light", knowledge of
Photosonicneurokineasthography has remained all but hidden until this
time. AU$25ppd (US$20ppd)
Flew Creeking CD Ocassional collaboration between
key Brisbane-originating sound artists Michael Norris & Joe
Musgrove, caught on CD for the first time here - AU$8ppd (US$6ppd)
Anthony Pateras "Chasms" CD - A riveting piece in three movements for
solo prepared piano that explores the full range of textures Pateras
acheives with his piano prepartions, from dense clusters to gaping
chasms. - AU$10ppd (US$8ppd)
Screwtape "Let Art Be Vomit" CD - Voice
samples juxtaposed against high end distortion noise creates euphoric
nihilism, finished off with a nice dark understated drone. - AU$8ppd
(US$6ppd)
Slasher Risk "Triple Jesus" CD - A series of guitar
based improvisations, ranging from ambient to industrial to noise (from USA).
AU$8ppd (US$6ppd)
Undecisive God "Everything's Broken" CD - New
works from the last 3 years, featuring further exploration of
turntable/broken record perparations, extended guitar techniques, field
recordings and mixer feedback pieces. - AU$10ppd (US$8ppd)
"Everything's Broken" is
the new CD from Undecisive God.It
contains new works from the last 3 years, featuring further exploration of
turntable/broken record preparations, extended guitar techniques, field
recordings and mixer feedback pieces.
Since 1990, Undecisive God has been
pushing the limits of the guitar as an instrument.“Everything’s Broken” is
the latest step in this strange journey.
New Undecisive God mini CD "Duos
for guitar and broken records" (limited edition of 52) - this release
documents some new directions I've taken, this time with prepared
turntables/broken records dueting with guitar.
Each cover is indivudually handmade out of
said-broken records and their covers. This is a preview of work on my
upcoming full length CD "Everything's Broken". You can hear one
of these tracks here - http://www.myspace.com/undecisivegod .
About half of these mini CDs are gone already so be quick AU$7ppd
(US$5ppd)
Clinton Green Live in collaboration with Zac Keiller - as part of the "String
Theory" compilation CD launch, at Bar Open, Brunswick St, Fitzroy,
Melbourne. Tuesday 6 November - $7.Also with Seth Rees, Chris Smith, Barnaby Oliver and various other
axemen.
Other new editions to the Shame File catalogue:
Ernie Althoff
- we've been fortunate to acquire a large chunk of acclaimed
instrument-maker and composer, Ernie Althoff's back
catalogue:
"Thirty More" cassette -
1992 release that provides 30 small audio snap shots of Althoff's
work at the time, including voice, tape and installation pieces. Each cassette
cover is an individually designed collage. - AU$5ppd (US$4.50ppd)
"Heliosonics"
CD - Australia's premier instrument maker creates a series of solar
powered music machines and plays them together in various combinations, evoking
images of the natural enviornment. Comes
with a booklet detailing these extraordinary machines. - AU$20ppd (US18ppd)
"Catchment" CD -
Recordings of water in various different situations; from the rain on the roof
to hose, basin and pool. Althoff makes this precious
resource an instrument over which he exercises deft control - AU$10ppd
(US$9ppd)
"Dark By 6" CD - Five
recordings of Althoff's extraordinary sound
installations, featuring his homemade music machines that are largely turntable
driven. Comes with a booklet detailing each installation and excellent photos -
AU$10ppd (US$9ppd)
Jim Denley - "Through Fire, Crevice
and the HiddenValley" CD - Denley spend 15 solitary days in
the BudawantMountains in the east
of Australia, interracting with the natural soundscapes
with his saxaphone. These sublime recordings are the
result. AU$25ppd (US$20ppd)
Justice Yeldham - "Cicatrix" CD - The
definitive document of Lucas Abela's bloody plate
glass-playing/smashing noise act. Three sets of recordings - studio, soundcheck and live - plus a
graphic booklet in full colour. AU$15ppd (US$12.50ppd)
Splinter Orchestra CD - Sydney's improv big band (sometimes swelling to over 50 musicians)
go from minimalist to maximalist in their debut
release, using just about every instrument imaginable. AU$25ppd (US$20ppd)
**as always, Shame File Music welcomes trades of your own music**
The Wall of E Electric Guitar
Ensemble (17 guitars!)
Undecisive God
JK Fuller
Tim Catlin
Seth Rees.
I will also be performing and speaking on a couple of panels
at this year’s Electrofringe in Newcastle (late
Sept). See http://www.electrofringe.net/ for
details.
Artefacts of Australian Experimental Music: 1930 – 1973 is a
landmark compilation CD documenting the forgotten pioneers of Australian
music. For full details, track listing and audio samples, go to http://ShameFileMusic.com
This
Wednesday night from 10pm, myself and Warren Burt will appear
on 3RRR-FMs Symbiosis programme to chat about the Artefacts project.Stream from http://www.rrr.org.au .
Bruce Clarke – The Jingle
Workshop
A major landmark in the history of Australian electronic
music was not the result of an extensive research project, but of a musicians
strike.
In early 1960s Melbourne, Bruce
Clarke discovered the electronic works of Stockhausen, and was inspired to
begin exploring electronic music himself.Clarke was one of the first Australian’s to work with early
synthesisers, like the Moog.Clarke
worked in a “Jingle
Workshop”, where advertising jingles were written and recorded.A strike by the Australian Musicians
Union in the early 1960s led
to Clarke creating a completely electronic soundtrack for a cigarette
commercial.
Clarke is one of those rare cases in Australia of
experimental music coming from a commercial industry.He expressed doubt regarding the notion
of ‘art for art’s sake’, favouring more practical
applications of problem-solving experimentation.Clarke said experimental musicians could
only overcome the conservative Australian artistic climate by presenting their
work as a saleable commodity.
Artefacts of Australian Experimental Music: 1930
– 1972 features Clarke’s “Of Spiralling
Why”, one of the first completely electronic compositions produced in Australia,
commissioned for the Adelaide Arts Festival in 1966.
Clarke continued to work in both experimental music and
jazz.He worked extensively with
composer Felix Werder, including Werder’s
excursions into electronic music, also featured on Artefacts.
The Melbourne CD launch approaches:
Friday 13 July, NorthMelbourneTown Hall, from 7:30pm – Robin Fox on analogue
synthesisers again, and a panel discussion on the history of experimental music
with Robin, Pauline Oliveros, Warren Burt &
Rainer Linz.
Artefacts of Australian Experimental
Music: 1930 – 1973 is available now from http://ShameFileMusic.com for
AU$27ppd (US$23ppd).Look for it in
shops in the coming week.
Artefacts of Australian Experimental Music: 1930 – 1973 is a
landmark compilation CD documenting the forgotten pioneers of Australian
music. For full details, track listing and audio samples, go to http://ShameFileMusic.com
Keith Humble – The Mentor
Keith Humble had a major influence on the fledgling
Australian experimental music scene from the late 1960s onward.Humble established himself early in life as
a child prodigy on the piano and later as a
composer, before leaving Australia for Paris in the 1950s.There he ran the alternative performance
space Centre de Musique.
He returned to Melbourne in 1966 and
set about inspiring a new generation of composers and musicians to explore new
musical ideas.Humble established
the Society for the Private Performance of New Music, which provided an outlet
for young composers such as McKimm, Rooney and Clayton.The monthly Society concerts took part
in the GraingerMuseum (Humble
wanted to draw attention to an Australian music tradition with the connection
to Grainger) and took the form of performance workshops directed by Humble and other
composers .He also took up a teaching post at MelbourneUniversity (where his
students included Ron Nagorcka) and taught
in San Diego in the early
1970s.Artefacts of
Australian Experimental Music: 1930 – 1973 features a piece Humble created during his time in San Diego. “And Tomorrow”was recorded the San DiegoUniversity’s
Electronic Music studio, and is believed to be a computer piece for an
unrealised opera.
Humble’s
compositional palate ranged from avant-garde music to electronic works to his
vast Nunique events, which involved rock
bands, lectures, dramatic performances and string quartets all taking place
simultaneously according to a detailed plan.Most significantly, Humble mentored
several young composers who would form the next generation of Australian
experimental music.He set the
scene in the late 1960s that made the later burst of activity in Melbourne possible,
including institutions like the Clifton Hill Community Music Centre.He pioneered the La Trobe University
Music Department, which in turn brought another musical ‘lightning
rod’ to Australia in Warren Burt.Humble died in 1995.
Hear some of the equipment Humble used during these times at
the Brisbane and MelbourneArtefacts launches in the coming 2 weeks, where Robin Fox will be
performing on these analogue synthesisers, as part of the Liquid Architecture
Festival:
Friday 6 July,
Brisbane Powerhouse, from 7:30pm – Robin Fox and others
Friday 13 July, NorthMelbourneTown Hall, from 7:30pm – Robin Fox on analogue
synthesisers again, and a panel discussion on the history of experimental music
with Robin, Pauline Oliveros, Warren Burt &
Rainer Linz.
Pre-order your copy of Artefacts
of Australian Experimental Music: 1930 – 1973 compilation CD
for the special price of AU$23ppd (US$17.30ppd) from http://ShameFileMusic.com . This special deal ends this Friday!.
Artefacts of Australian Experimental Music: 1930 – 1973 is a
landmark compilation CD documenting the forgotten pioneers of Australian
music. For full details, track listing and audio samples, go to http://ShameFileMusic.com
I will be
chatting to Fenella Kernabone from The Sound Lab about the CD on JJJ Sunday
night from 11pm – tune in or stream from http://www.abc.net.au/triplej/
Melbourne Dada Group
(featuring Barry Humphries) – Buy Kellogg’s Bulk!
Best known for his Dame Edna Everage character, Barry
Humphries began his stage career as an 18 year-old in Melbourne in a series
of Dada-influenced performances.For
the first time “Wubbo Music” by Humphries’ Melbourne Dada
Group is officially released, on Artefacts of Australian
Experimental Music: 1930 – 1973.
Humphries says “Wubbo” was a pseudo Aboriginal
word that means “nothing”, and was used to distinguish the
group’s activities from European Dadaists (the Melbourne group at
this time had not heard any of the European Dada or Futurist recordings).Recorded in 1952, this is the earliest
known experimental recording made in Australia.In the context of conservative 1950s Australia; with its
thumping piano dirge, whistles, hammers, gramophone recordings and shouted
advertising slogans (“Kellogg’s bulk!); the recording conveys an
iconoclastic spirit that is peculiarly Australian.
Pre-order
your copy of Artefacts of Australian
Experimental Music: 1930 – 1973 compilation CD for the special
price of AU$23ppd (US$17.30ppd) from http://ShameFileMusic.com
. This special deal is only available for 1 more week.
The CD will
be launched in Brisbane this Friday
night as part of Liquid Architecture 8, with Robin Fox performing on ancient
Keith Humble synthesisers.Friday 6
July from 7:30pm at the Brisbane
Powerhouse.Melbourne launch to
follow on Friday 13 July.
More new
stuff on the Shame File mailorder catalogue:
Various Artists "Smell The
Stench" 5CD Celebrating their 100th net release,
noise label Smell the Stench put together this massive 5 CD set documenting the
best of contemporary noise, featuring among the masses Fckn'Bstrds, Rats With
Wings, Novasak, Mystified, Undecisive God, Sonic Disorder, XV Parowek, Bone
Machine, Cripple Slaughter and dozens more. - $20ppd
r.domain“Conscious and Dreaming” 2CDAdelaide’s
r.domain furthers his mastery of sombre ambient instrumentals and soundscapes,
with layers of guitar being the main tool- $14ppd
Sympathetic
Division CDA collection of this Adeladian's best
electronic/ambient material of the past few years, these tracks fill as many
spaces as they leave in a balanced ambient workout - $8ppd
Shame File
Music – specialising in Australian Experimental
Artefacts of Australian Experimental Music: 1930 – 1973 is a landmark
compilation CD documenting the forgotten pioneers of Australian music.
For full details, track listing and audio samples, go to http://ShameFileMusic.com
Percy Grainger – The Quest for a Free Music
In the early 20th century, Percy Grainger was the
equivalent of an international pop star.Famed as a composer and pianist, Grainger was also a collector of folk
music, as well as an eccentric interested in sado-masochism.He was also the first Australian to
record a significant body of experimental music.
In the early 1920s he
worked with cutting player piano rolls by hand to enable his complex
compositions to be played.His work
with Free Music took place in the late 1940s and 1950s, but the idea had been
developing throughout his life.A
young Grainger, boating on Melbourne’s AlbertParkLake, observed
the waves lapping against the side of the boat led him to wonder why music
couldn’t have the same continuous motion.
The central idea of Free Music was the concept of a
“gliding tone”.He
worked with Leon Theremin and his theremins in the 1930s to realise the idea,
but Theremin returned to Russia in the late
1930s and Grainger was frustrated with the lack of control he had over the
pitch of the theremin.His desire
for more precise pitch control led him to work with physicist and engineer
Burnett Cross to construct devices that could produce the gliding tones
Grainger envisioned.
Cross recalled that Grainger was on a lifelong search to
explore this unknown territory, and he was impressed by the composer’s
persistence in his quest.Many
people didn’t understand what Grainger was trying to achieve, and some
even questioned his mental stability.Later in life, Grainger became somewhat socially isolated in the
conservative Australia of the
1950s.Keith Humble suggested that
Grainger, who he saw as the most radical and significant musician Australia had
ever produced, be commissioned to write a music for the opening of the
Melbourne Olympic Games in 1956, but the idea was treated with scorn.Grainger died in 1961, and it has only
been in more recent times that some appreciation of what Grainger attempted to
achieve with his Free Music experiments has begun to emerge.
Some of Grainger’s Free Music recordings have been
released elsewhere, but “Free Music (Reed Box – Top and Bottom
Ranks – Thick)” is presented for the first time on Artefacts of Australian Experimental Music: 1930 – 1973.Recorded in 1951, the piece
is a riot of tone clusters produced by a re-tuned reed organ and hand-cut paper
rolls.The voice at the beginning
of the recording is Howard Cross (brother of Burnett).The rolls were cranked by hand, using
variations in speed and direction.This astounding recording is power electronics/noise from 1951!Warren Burt has said that he likes to
play this to people who only know Grainger for his composition English Country Garden and watch their reaction.
Pre-order your copy of Artefacts
of Australian Experimental Music: 1930 – 1973 compilation CD
for the special price of AU$23ppd (US$17.30ppd) from http://ShameFileMusic.com .
This special deal is only available for 2 more weeks.Look out for launch events at this
year’s Liquid Architecture Festival in both Melbourne and Brisbane.
Artefacts of Australian Experimental Music: 1930
– 1973 is a landmark compilation CD documenting the
forgotten pioneers of Australian music.For full details, track listing and audio samples, go to http://ShameFileMusic.com
This is the first of a series of communiqués giving you a
taste of some of the characters who populate the history of Australian
experimental music.
Jack Ellitt – The Sound Pioneer Australia Never Knew
It Had
Jack Ellitt is virtually unknown in the annals of Australian
experimental music, yet his work in sound composition as early as 1930 was
cutting edge on an international scale.
As a teenager, Ellitt met New Zealander Len Lye (who later
became an important avant garde filmmaker
and sculptor) in Sydney in the
1910s, and later followed him to London in
1928.The two antipodeans worked
together in experimental film during the 1930s, with Ellitt often composing the
live soundtracks to accompany films.
Ellitt saw film sound technology as an opportunity to
reinvent music through the use of the entire spectrum of sounds.He expressed a desire to “free our ears
(from) tight-laced musical values”.He advocated abstract sound where it could be appreciated in its purely
elemental state. Prophetic of modern day sound art practice, he wrote,
“When good recording apparatus is easily acquired, many people will
record simple everyday sounds which give them pleasure.The next step would be to mould these
sound-snaps into formal continuity”.Yet Ellitt felt there was much opposition to his ideas and became
increasingly secretive about his music experiments.This continued for the rest of his life,
eschewing contact with other more famous electronic music pioneers who
attempted contact with him, including Stockhausen.This also partly explains why Ellitt’s
music has never before been released.
Artefacts of Australian Experimental Music: 1930
– 1973 features “Journey
#1”, the first Ellitt recording ever released.Recorded in London around
1930, this astounding piece was originally made to accompany a Lye film on
space travel.“Journey
#1” is a musique concrete style collage of
sound recordings, either recorded by Ellitt or culled from film sound libraries,
and spliced together on audio tape.Not
only is this an important find in the context of the history of Australian
music, but in regard to experimental music on an international scale.Here a sample of this track at http://ShameFileMusic.com
After retiring from the film industry, Ellitt returned to Australia in the
early 1970s and devoted himself to sound composition.He completed several new works but did not
seek public performance.He died in 2001.Tragically, many of his recordings and
documents were disposed of after his death.“Journey
#1” and some other later recordings were amongst the few that were saved.
Pre-order your copy of Artefacts of Australian
Experimental Music: 1930 – 1973 compilation CD for the special
price of AU$23ppd (US$17.30ppd) from http://ShameFileMusic.com
.Look out for launch events at this
year’s Liquid Architecture Festival in both Melbourne and Brisbane.
Two
long-term projects from different spectrums of my work – writing and
music research – are coming to a head.
1. The Horror That Came To FootSCARY –
Book launch for The Percival Tyler
Files :
an novel by Clinton Green
My
debut novel The Percival Tyler Files
has finally been published in the UK by Rainfall books.I have limited copies to sell in Australia, and will be holding a launch for
people in Melbourne.
But it
will be much more than a book launch.The Horror That Came ToFootSCARY will feature book readings from two
other local horror writers in Anna Dusk and Deborah Crabtree, as well as from myself.Anna’s stunning werewolf paintings will
also be exhibited, and there’ll be live dark ambient music provided by Screwtape.
Friday the 13th of April, 7:30pm
The Dancing Dog Café
42a Albert Street, Footscray
Free Admission
Read an excerpt from the novel at http://ShameFileMusic.com/clinton.If you can’t make it on the night, you can order a copy of the book
here as well.
Clinton Green’s
writing explores traditional horror themes from a realist perspective. The
symbolism of horror myth is evoked in everyday settings, both modern and
historical. His stories have appeared in numerous magazines and anthologies.
...packs a powerful
punch, providing the kind of dread that horror aficionados love... - The Horror Channel
Green creates strong,
realistic characters drawing horror from the inner demons each is tormented by – HorrorScope
Clinton Green has produced a fine tale of psychological
horror...9/10 - SF Reader
Anna Dusk is the author of soon-be-published “werewolf
fairytale” In-human.Dusk also painted elaborate works for her novel, some of which will be
shown at this event.
Deborah
Crabtree’s
stories have won & been nominated for occasional awards, and have appeared
in publications such as Aurealis & the Shadow-Box
e-anthology. One has even appeared in operatic form and was performed by OzOpera in 2001. She has a story awaiting publication in
the US Anthology, Vintage Moon, a novel in (slow)
progress awaiting a conclusion and several short stories on the go. She is also
a judge in this year's Ned Kelly Crime Book Awards. She will read from a
current work-in-progress.
2. Artefacts of Australian Experimental Music: 1930
– 1973 CD
Over
three years in the making, this compilation of early Australian experimental music is nearing the
light of day.
Here
is the finalised track listing:
1. Jack Ellitt "Journey #1" excerpt (Early 1930s)
2.
Percy Grainger "Free Music (Reed Box - Top and Bottom Ranks - Thick)"
(1951)
3.
Melbourne Dada Group (featuring Barry Humphries) "Wubbo
Music" excerpt(1952)
4.
Robert Rooney "Duo 3" (1965)
5.
Bruce Clarke "Of Spiralling Why" excerpt (1966)
6. Val
Stephen "Fireworks" (1967)
7.
Barry McKimm "Monotony for Eight Trumpets"
8. Syd
Clayton "Yehudi" excerpt (1968)
9. Arthur Cantrill "soundtrack for Eikon" (1969)
10.
Tully "Phsssst" (1970)
11.
Felix Werder "Oscussion" excerpt
12.
Keith Humble "And Tomorrow" excerpt from an Opera (1972)
13.
NIAGGRA "Excerpt #2" (1973)
14. Ron Nagorcka "Apathetic Anomaly 2" excerpt
(1973)
Excerpts from the extensive
liner notes that will accompany the CD along with some mp3 samples are
available from http://ShameFileMusic.com
The CD is scheduled for a July 2007
release.Look for details of special
launch events in the coming months.
NMATAPES, the essential series of compilations documenting Australian
experimental music that ran from 1982-92, is now available in full for free
download or on CDR from Shame File Music.
NMATAPE 10, originally released on cassette in 1992,
completes the series.Of particular
interest here is “Changing The Subject” by
Machine For Making Sense, a veritable super group featuring Chris Mann, Jim Denley, Rik Rue, Amanda Stuart
& Stevie Wishart.Also included is a vocal performance by
the late Jas H. Duke,
as well as tracks by Caroline Wilkins, Stelarc,
Alistair Riddell and others.
Each edition of the series is available from http://ShameFileMusic.com for free
download, or on CDR for AU$8ppd (US$6ppd) (with the exception of NMATAPE 4,
which is slightly more expensive as it is a double CDR) or for trade.Full cover artwork and original liner
notes is included in each release.
Alternatively, you can purchase the entire series on CDR for
the special price of AU$75ppd (US$55ppd).
This series is pretty much essential for anyone with an
interest in Australian music throughout this period.
Original publisher of NMA, Rainer Linz,
will join myself and Simon Hampson on
3RRR-FM’s Symbiosis program on Wednesday 13th December from 10pm for a special on the series.Those outside Melbourne can tune in
via the live stream at http://www.rrr.org.au
Stay tuned for Shame File Music’s upcoming compilation
of early Australian
experimental music from the ‘50s and ‘60s entitled “Artefacts
of Australian Experimental Music, due out in mid 2007
Clinton Green
Shame File Music – specialising in Australian
experimental
Alien Tape CD - A remote collaboration between Screwtape'sAndrew McIntosh in Australia and
US-based Richard Wixner, creating a
mix of ambient industrial pieces with a space theme
NMATAPE 9, the penultimate in Shame File Music’s
reissue of these seminal compilations, is now available for free download or on
CDR from http://ShameFileMusic.com
Of particular interest here is Ross Bolleter’s
“That Time (Simulplay II)”.Bolleter is
perhaps best known for his work with ruined pianos, but here he composed a
piece for two improvising players on opposite sides of the Australia to be
played simultaneously without being able to hear the other, as an exploration
of synchronicity.Bolleter’s accompanying article on the concept of the
piece from NMA 9 is linked from the web site.
Other names of interest here include Alan Lamb, Lindsay
Vickery and Jonathan Mustard.
NMATAPE 10, the final in the series, will be available in a
few weeks.
Also new to the Shame File Music catalogue:
BakaTatakau
“1st” CD – collaboration between Brisbane’s
Joe
Musgrove & DaijiIgarash
AU$12ppd (US$9ppd)
Lloyd
Barrett “Mise En Scene” CD - unique sound compositions based
on theories of filmic sound, that range from starkly alien to all
embracing AU$20ppd (US$15ppd)
Robin
Fox & Clayton Thoms “Substation”
CD – two of Australia’s best contemporary improvisers, on live
processing and double bass respectively; a must have AU$20ppd (US$15ppd)
DEFENDERS OF THE AXE #3,Wednesday October 25th
2006 – Loop Bar, Myers
Place, Melbourne –
from 8pm - $5
The third in Dreamland Records’ series, showcasing
live performances from guitarists with new approaches to the instrument.
The West Footscray Community String Band (Chris Smith,
Justin Fuller, Barnaby Oliver, Clinton Green) come together to play new
compositions for multiple guitarists by Barnaby and yours truly.My two pieces are essentially structured
improvisation that explore dynamics between guitarists and enforces a musical
co-operation guitarists are not traditionally known for!My scores available online at http://ShameFileMusic.com
Also performing are Tim Catlin, Chris Rainer, & Troy
Naumoff.
The eighth edition in Shame
File Music's reissue of the seminal Australian experimental music series
NMATAPES (as referred to in the current issue of The Wire's article on the Clifton Hill Community Music
Centre) was originally released in 1990, and collects together a series of
media, voice and installation pieces from artists active at the time.
Of particular note are the pieces by Ian Andrews, whose collages of advertising
and commercial radio snippets hold up a mirror to consumerism. Similarly,
Douglas Kahn's "Hotel", uses audio from the 1980s TV programme of the
same name in his collage piece.
Other names of interest include Densil Cabrera, and
Richard Vella's composition for multiple funk bass
guitars.
Shame File Music continues in the
reissue of the seminal NMATAPES series, the 7th installment
now available for download from http://ShameFileMusic.com
NMATAPE 7 features some of the very
early pioneers in
Australian experimental music, including Percy Grainger, a controlled
improvisation from Keith Humble, Ron Nagorcka, ErnieAlthoff & Graeme Davis.
Two tracks of particular interest are from former Teletopa
and AZ Music member, Ernie Gallagher, who is working with mulitple
off-centre records.
NMATAPES 1-7 are available for free
downloads, complete with cover art and liner notes,
from ShameFileMusic.com.
Related to the history of
Experimental music, Shame File now has copies of the Five Fold Galactic Bells
"Omni-Viola!" CD fo
a couple of years back.Five Fold
featured custom-made 1970s synthesisers salvaged from the dumpster by Robin Fox
and Michael Munson when
La Trobe Uni Music Dept was shut down a few years
back.See the catalogue for
details.
Shame File Music is past the halfway mark in the reissue of
the seminal Australian compilation series NMATAPES, originally released on
cassette in the 1980s, and now presented as free downloads complete with cover
and liner notes.
NMATAPE6 (1987) focussed on the early work in
computer music.One of Australia’s
pioneers in this field, Warren Burt, presents a
piece made up of processed orchestra samples, and Mark Rudolf’s
“Beautiful But Marred by the Blemish of a
Perpetual Dissatisfaction” is an early example of
voice performance processed by a computer.
Other names of interest here include David Hirst, Alistair Riddell and Cindy John (Robin Fox’s
mum!).
NMATAPES 1-6 are available for free download as a complete
zip file from http://ShameFileMusic.com,
or for trade on CDR if you haven’t got the bandwidth.
- Also new on the Shame File Catalogue:
* Bokor “Loss” CD
– Atmospheric, ambient guitar workouts interwoven with field recordings of
natural sounds, featuring yours truly on 2 tracks.AU$8ppd (US$6ppd)
* Biffplex “Music for Piano
& Electronics” CD – First new studio work in 3 years, the
Brisbane duo take a slight left turn whilst looking over their shoulders to the
electro-acoustic 1960s/70s and explore the piano, inside and out.Limited edition of 50.AU$15ppd (US$11ppd)
Clinton
Shame File Music – specialising in Australian
experimental
Our re-issue of the NMATAPES compilation series as free mp3s
continues with 1987’s NMATAPE #5, available for free download (including
cover and liner notes) from http://ShameFileMusic.com,
or for trade on CDR.
Of particular interest here Syd Clayton’s “Lucky
Number”, an excerpt from this 9 hour chance pianissimo composition.Clayton’s work has been criminally
ignored, and this was his only recording released in his lifetime.Look for more of Clayton’s work
released by Shame File Music on a compilation of early Australian
experimental music due in 2007.
Other names of interest on this edition of NMATAPES include Chris
Mann, Rainer Linz, Amanda Stewart and Ernie Althoff.
*****
Also new on Shame File Music, from 2006 this time, is a
taste of culinary noise in “Bite the Capsicum”:
“If my memory services me correctly,
and I think it does, it was in 1995 when I appeared as a contestant upon
television program The Iron Chef.
Regrettably, my defeat was to such an extent that it would dishonour my
ancestors even more to speak of it here. I vowed from that day that I would
never cook again. I managed to obtain the network's master copy of this
episode, and in a rage wiped the tape so my shame could never be witnessed
again. Or so I thought…
It
has come to my shameful attention that this hated master video tape was not
completely wiped despite my efforts. Thankfully, no images remained, but some
audio was still evident. The magnetic wiping process as distorted the audio to
such extremes that it is surely beyond the recognition of anyone except for my
shameful self, yet some knave has seen fit to release this distorted shameful
memory to the public at large. To the unsuspecting listener, the cries of
"Corn!" and "Foie Gras" amongst the layers of distorted
noise will simply arouse confusion, or mild curiosity
at the most. Yet for myself, it brings back those
shameful memories of eels overcooked, sea urchin under-salted, and caviar
forgotten.
I
urge you all to not submit yourself to this mini CD entitled Bite The Capsicum
PS
- you get a free recipe with each CD”
Bite it yourself for AU$7ppd
(US$5ppd).See http://ShameFileMusic.com to download the
sample track “Dreaming in French”.
***
Also
new on the catalogue is Screwtape’s latest CD “A
Hundred Flowers Bloom”, which sees a new plunderphonic
approach to his dark noise, looping the likes of jazz, bagpipes and more onto
themselves.
The wheel has turned and I’ve finally got myself a web
domain and said good bye to the ads and pop-ads.With many thanks to Scott
Sinclair and Half/Theory, you can now browse
the Shame File catalogue ad-free at http://ShameFileMusic.com
To spread the good will around, there’s a special for
the month of July where if you order 2 items you’ll receive a 3rd
item of equal or less value for free.
Of course, there’s also lots of free stuff every day
of the year on Shame File, including the reissues of seminal compilations
NMATAPES, available for free downloading (or on double CDR for trade).
This month we go back to 1985 for the fourth edition of the
series.NMATAPE 4 concentrated on
female Australian composers of the time.Highlights include Sarah Hopkins’ Interweave, performed with 6 of
her “whirlies” (a
precisely-tuned instrument twirled in the
air), and Annea Lockwood’s inferno-like
“Shadow Burn”.Other
artists of interest include Catherine Schieve, RosBandt and Caroline Wilkins.
Download this as well as the first 3 NMATAPES from http://ShameFileMusic.com as complete
.zip files including artwork and liner notes.Look out for NMATAPE 5 soon.
Also new on the Shame File Catalogue is Warren Burt’s
"Poems of Rewi Alley" CD. Rewi Alley was a New
Zealand born poet who
spent most of his life in revolutionary China, and his
poems paint vivid pictures of turbulent times, both from Alley's revolutionary
and dissident viewpoints. The poems are read by actor John Britton, and Burt
processes the recordings through Audio Mulch to create ringing artefacts of the
spoken words as a musical setting - AU$8ppd (US$6ppd) or trade.
We also have new in stock some reissues of the back
catalogue of Sydney’s
Rats With Wings.RWW runs the gamit of minimalilst
industrial soundscape to electronic noise over a
series of releases, and each CD comes in innovative handmade covers using
recycled materials including corrugated cardboard, academic journals and the
like.Each CD is AU$8ppd (US$6ppd)
or available for a trade of your own music.See the web site for full details on the
releases available.
Clinton
Shame File Music – specialising in Australian
experimental
Shame File Music continues with the re-release of Australian
1980s cassette series NMATAPES, now available as free downloads or on CDR.
NMATAPES 3 (1984) featured tape work, electronic and theatre
music and commercials.Of
particular interest on this collection are 3 Japanese Coke Ads and a “theme
song” for the Australian Bi-centennial. Also featured are Jon Rose, The Makers Of The Dead Travel Fast, Rik Rue
and more.
Download this and NMATAPES 1 & 2 from http://ShameFile.tripod.com.All three are also available on CDR for
trade.
Other recent additions to the Shame File Catalogue:
Ross Bolleter “Crow Country”
CD – features Bolleter’s well-known
composition for ruined piano in a sheep shed (“ants poured out of the
piano as I started playing”), and other pieces including an improvisation
for two performers on opposite sides of Australia. $10ppd
Warren Burt “Harmonic
Colour Fields” CD – Burt has been a leader in microtonal work for
some time, and this CD demonstrates the spatial effects he can achieve as his
drones will the room. $10ppd
Duct Tape Sadist “Demo” & “Satan
Records” CD – DIY cover disguises rather interesting minimalist
electronic noise. $8ppd each
Y35.3 “Ballarat Tour” CD
– Power electronics duo currently clearing pubs in Melbourne.$8ppd
DNA fanzine – recent additions of this long-running Adelaide underground
music fanzine are now in. $2ppd
And on a non-music note, I scribbled some horror fiction
that’s been included in an anthology called “Butcher Shop Quartet”.You can read an extract of my story, a
rather good review and order the book for AU$23ppd from http://clintongreen.tripod.com/stor/houseextr.html
Cheers,
Clinton
Shame File Music – specialising in Australian
experimental
Butcher Shop Quartet is a new
anthology of 4 novellas (or long short stories if you prefer) by Boyd E.
Harris, Michael Stone, A.T.
Andreas, and me! – Clinton Green.
The Horror Channel said of my story “The House on the
Hill"...packs a powerful punch,
providing the kind of dread that horror aficionados love...It is the subtle
underplayed horror and the questions left thereafter that makes 'The House on
the Hill'such a great read.Read the full review at http://www.horrorchannel.com/index.php?name=Reviews&req=showcontent&id=962
I have some copies of Butcher Shop Quartet for AU$20 (AU$23ppd).You can order online via secure credit
card from the extract page above.
I also have some copies of Horror Library Volume I from the same publisher for the same
price.It contains 30 new stories
from the best up-and-coming horror writers.Order from http://clintongreen.tripod.com/stor/houseextr.html
as well.
Shame File Music continues with re-release of the NMATAPES
series with NMATAPES now available on CDR or for free download at http://ShameFile.tripod.com
NMA Magazine was published from 1982-92.Ten issues were produced, each
accompanied by a cassette compilation featuring Australian experimental music
of the time.
Originally released in 1983, NMATAPES 2 covers vocal,
electronic, environmental and chamber music.Highlights include three recordings of
Ernie Althoff’s “Music Machines”
and an excerpt from Ron Nagorcka’s “Atomb Bomb”, a piece for voices and four portable
tape recorders, recorded live at the Clifton Hill Community Music Centre. Other artists of note on NMATAPES 2
include Chris Mann, Les Gilbert and Rainer Linz.
NMATAPES 3-10 will also be re-released by Shame File Music
over the coming months. Note there
was an problem with downloading NMATAPES 1 (released
last month) that has since been resolved – so if you had a problem
downloading this then, try again now.
* Hi
God People - Shortwave Children mp3/CDEP Four
haunting pieces of clanging improvisation tempered with layered, droning vocals
that create an atmosphere of primitive devotion. An interview with Hi God
People is also featured on the Shame File site. This
the sixth (and final) volume of the Terra Australis
Incognita series of new Australian experimental music. Download for free
or order a CDR version for AU$10ppd.
"Shortwave Children" completes the Terra Australis Incognita series, all now available for free
download or on CDR for AU$10ppd:
Volume
I: W.I.T. "While You Were Ill..." Volume
II: The Feeder "Locus of Variation" Volume
III: Undecisive God "Headless" Volume
IV: r.domain "In Remembrance" Volume
V: Bokor "Venture" Volume
VI: Hi God People "Shortwave Children"
* With
the end of the Terra Australis Incognita series,
Shame File takes a step back in time to re-release NMATAPES.
Ten
issues of NMA Magazine were published from 1982-92. Each magazine was
accompanied by a cassette featuring music documented in the magazine. These
cassettes covered a varied cross-section of experimental, electronic and new
music from Australia produced
over this period. Rainer Linz of NMA Publications has
granted permission to Shame File Music to make these tapes available as free
downloads or on CDR (for trade only).
NMATAPES
1 is now available for free download from the Shame File Music site.
Originally released in 1982, the first release in the series covers
computer music, improvised work and computer controlled piano pieces from that
time. Highlights include Jon Rose's 19 string cello workout "Don't
Panic" and two rather funky EssendonAirport tracks.
Also featured are works by Warren Burt, David Hirst, John Jenkins, Alistair Riddell and more. A CD
cover is included in the download that features the tape's original liner notes
as well.
The
other nine NMATAPES will follow in the coming months.
* Also
still available: Undecisive God - Eccentricites
CD (AU$10ppd or trade).
Clinton Shame File Music
- specialising in Australian experimental http://ShameFile.tripod.com