Friday, December 31, 2021

Meat Puppets live pic!

 

Meat Puppets in San Francisco, ca. 2011.

Thursday, December 30, 2021

John Finkbeiner RIP

 

Berkeley-based guitarist, improvisor, and composer. 

This photo taken at Berkeley Arts Festival Building, 2013.

Wednesday, December 29, 2021

Yet another live shot!

 

Guitarist for Shame Waves at Eli's Mile High Club, Oakland CA. August, 2017.

Tuesday, November 23, 2021

Jeff Surak-Eris I Dysnomia; eh? Records #118, cassette, 2021

 

Recent big life changes have rendered Disaster Amnesiac unable to really think, let alone blog, but thanks to Public Eyesore/eh? Records and a laptop on loan from Mrs. Amnesiac, I'm back, however briefly, and digging on delicious, intriguing drones and tones from Jeff Surak and his recent Eris I Dysnomia cassette! 

Side A's entirety is made up of Parasite Lost, in which discrete elements are blended into a whole, that while seemingly simple on its face, rewards repeated listens. It's been fun to just give in to Parasite's granular depths, and while Surak hints at clues being given to an attentive listener, whose task is then to start their own mental journey within the sounds, the track is juicy enough to go beyond being mere intellectual exercise. Indeed, as I've listened, I have enjoyed flights from the various sounds' colors and textures as they've floated past. It's been quite pleasurable to take the trip that these sounds can induce within an attentively focused imagination. Layers are mixed in ways that evoke wheat pasted poster fragments on old power poles; big tone washes give glimpses of ozone-saturated skies; feedback sounds take me to late night street scenes of buzzing electrical lines; bits of the overtones series whirl by in technicolor; mysterious clanks and clangs move the mind to some imagined junkyard on the outskirts of town (mine is in SF's China Basin, near 3rd St.) These actions all occur within a very seamlessly crafted work of Musique Concrete. Parasite Lost does a fine job of fusing technique with artistry. 

On Side B, we find four individual tracks. Concupiscent Strings utilizes what sounds like loose metallic guitar strings for a study in quivery. These treated strings throw off glistening, gamelan sounds and brief clips of pure white noise as Surak digs deeply into their physicality. Gravelly, gritty physicality for the ears here. Next up, on Asphalt Muzak, strange start-stop modalities are derived from.....something. Surak's admonition to a listener "finding their own direction" is instructive here. This track has an opaque quality that makes Disaster Amnesiac feel as though I'm immersed in some kind of underwater vehicle and descending. Not exactly blissful, but intriguing nonetheless. Stuck features a fusion of analog synth sounds, bubbling and burping in contrast to wider drone tones. It's as if one has found a way out of the sinking ship of the previous track and into a cave of luminous crystals and bizarre rock formations. It's very lovely to inhabit this mental space as the underwater lights reflect off of the roof! Percussive attacks then bolster a kind of Space Lounge Music and you hear a voice intoning some kind of spoken language, but you can't really figure out what it's saying, and then it gets blasted out by washes of sheer white Noise for an ending. Set closer 16 Hours on Neptune has an kind of New Age feel as the Surak brings back the technique of layering what sounds like multiple sound sources into a sublime environment of shimmery sonic cotton candy. What a deliciously poetic way to walk out! 

Washington D.C resident Jeff Surak has spent a ton of time producing music and helping others produce theirs. All of this work shows up in really great ways within Eris I Dysnomia, surely. Fans of creatively constructed Noise/Musique Concrete/Industrial will surely love this recent offering from him. If you're one of these people, get on over to the Public Eyesore/eh? Records sight and float him some coin. 



Friday, September 3, 2021

Another live shot!

 

The great Ghost Echoes, live at the Li Po Lounge circa 2009. They should have stayed together longer, but surely they had good reasons not to (?).

Photo by either Scarp Home or his former wife Sandra.

Wednesday, August 25, 2021

Goodbye Charlie Watts

 

The Rolling Stones music has meant a lot to Disaster Amnesiac for a long damn time. I recall marveling at how ugly they looked on copies of my mom's LP's, back in the early 1970's. That was not off putting to me in the slightest. When I first started to really listen to music, to hear music, Start Me Up was a current hit, and I loved it. My appreciation for the band grew during high school years, especially their post-Brian Jones works. As I've aged, the purity of their approach has never been lost on me. One has to figure that this has a lot to do with Charlie Watts. Mick, Keith, Bill, and whomever else they recruited over the years were so fortunate to have such an uncomplicated musical thinker behind them. Watts never strayed from the essential back beat-rooted nature of Rock 'n Roll, and why should he have? He always seemed to have that Big Beat front and center within his concept, and, in doing so, he allowed the other Stones the room to shine in their singular, successful ways. Disaster Amnesiac often marvels at the humble, rooted groove of Watt's drumming as I inevitably tap my toes to any song by the Rolling Stones that I may be listening to. Many other drummers have made their reputations with flash; Charlie made his by playing the song, pure and simple, and leaving it at that. Charlie Watts always served the music, and music has lost a truly singular practitioner with his passing. We won't be seeing the likes of him again. Rock 'n Roll on, Charlie Watts, and thanks for giving us all of that hip shake.

Sunday, August 22, 2021

Contra Costa College Sculpture Garden-8/22/21; San Pablo, CA

 

This is for certain: over the past year and a half, there has been a lot more time to go back to my reading list and finish books that were put aside at one time or another.  One such book is Lucy Lippard's The Lure of the Local. Over the course of a couple hundred pages, Lippard muses upon the ways in which art can have greater effectiveness on human consciousness when its focus is of a place, more than just in a place. Disaster Amnesiac is simplifying a lot here, and I recommend that you read it and all of the rest of Lippard's stuff if you're concerned with that type of thing. I bring it up in order to lead in to fascinating couple of visits that I recently had to the sculpture garden at Contra Costa College in San Pablo.

Mrs. Amnesiac and I have gotten into the habit of taking Sunday walks that generally have us going through the lovely campus of CCC since 2017 or so. Of late, we've gotten used to having it pretty much to ourselves. People just don't seem to want to leave their houses, even on sunny days. Last Sunday, even the missus felt like staying home, so I had to stroll unaccompanied. I took the opportunity to diverge slightly from our customary path, and found myself within the sculpture garden for the first time. 

This is where Lippard's concept comes into play for me. As I took in the handful of sculptures placed there, I pondered her ideas of locally based art, and the art of locale. Who were the unnamed artists whose sculptures are placed within this relatively humble spot? When were these pieces placed there, and with how much or how little fanfare within the community? Do they ever bring their loved ones to the sculpture garden and proudly show them their works? Does anyone even notice them as art anymore? Does anyone even care about and for them, especially in this current era of distance learning and campus closure (CCC has not been open for classes since March of 2020)? These types of questions arose at least partially from a Lippard-ian viewpoint within my head, along with the simple pleasure of looking at art live and in person. An altogether pleasurable experience, to be sure. 

Forward in time a week, and Disaster Amnesiac returned to the campus, this time with my lovely bride in tow. I insisted that we go to the sculpture garden so that she could see the sculptures and I could take photos for this post. I was fascinated to find that two of the sculptures had been damaged over the course of the week. One, a surreal frog with its long red tongue hanging down to its feet, had been completely demolished, with only the plaster feel remaining. Another, a metallic mushroom, had been pushed from its base and onto a prone position in the dirt. Initially saddened by this turn of events within the garden, I began to ask more questions. Who did this? Was it a group of teens, getting high and drunk and feeling destructive? Was it the work of the campus grounds crew, having been requested to remove them? Was it a lone vandal, taking out some frustration on this seemingly unremarkable spot? Only the security cameras know for sure, and man would I like to see what they see. Obviously, it will have to remain a mystery to me, and that is alright. In a paradigm in which so many decisions and occurrences are so opaque, that's the kind of mystery that Disaster Amnesiac can live with angst-free. They simply embellish my esteem for the place that I've called home for the past five years.

I do hope that Contra Costa College will at least let the creators of those two pieces know of their fates. If that happens, how will they respond?

Below: intact sculptures within the Contra Costa College sculpture garden; note "additions" to the bird sculpture





 



Below: the two damaged pieces 





Tuesday, July 13, 2021

Last Live Shot!

 

Well, last one in this series anyway! Multi-instrumentalist and audio engineer HL Nelly has already been featured, but I just could not resist including this one! Multi-instrumentalist and composer Moe! Staiano is in the background. Community Music Center, Mission District, San Francisco, 2017.

Monday, July 12, 2021

Live Shot #39!

 

Drummer Donald Robinson, Berkeley Arts Festival Building, 2015. Master of Jazz and Improvised Music.

Sunday, July 11, 2021

Live Shot #38!

 

Drummer Rob Pumpelly. Berkeley Arts Festival Building, 2015.

Saturday, July 10, 2021

Live Shot #37!

 

Two musicians rehearsing. City College of San Francisco, 2017. This little auditorium was freezing when I took this shot.

Friday, July 9, 2021

Live Shot #36!

 

Woodwinds player, electronic musician, and composer John Vaughn. Finnish Hall, Berkeley CA, 2018. Always a positive force.

Thursday, July 8, 2021

Live Shot #35!

 

Woodwinds player and composer Biggi Vinkeloe. I once asked Biggi to show me her compositions, and she was really gracious about doing so. Such generosity is not always available from musicians, or your average citizen for that matter.

Wednesday, July 7, 2021

Live Shot #34!

 

Trumpeter, electronic musician, composer, and writer Tom Djill. Berkeley Arts Festival Building, 2015.

Tuesday, July 6, 2021

Live Shot #33!

 

Drummer, composer, film maker Sheila Bosco. Berkeley Arts Festival Building, 2015.

Monday, July 5, 2021

Live Shot #32!

 

Drummer Timothy Orr, Berkeley Arts Festival Building, 2015. From Free Improvisation to Country & Western, Timothy can and does play it all. A top flight drummer.

Sunday, July 4, 2021

Live Shot #31!

 

Guitarist, flute player, electronic composer, graphic artist and designer Mika Pontecorvo. Trans Pecos Cafe, Ridgewood Queens, NYC. 2018.

Saturday, July 3, 2021

Live Shot #30!

 

Guitarist and graphic designer Melne Murphy, teaching a class of students in Concord CA, 2018. The one girl student in the class was so excited to hear Melne speak.

Friday, July 2, 2021

Live Shot #29!

 

X, The Regency Ballroom SF, 2018. I just love the way that the light makes Exene look like an aetheric angelic being. I mean, that's what she is!

Thursday, July 1, 2021

Live Shot #28!

 

Percussionist Nava Dunkelman, Berkeley Arts Festival Building, 2015.

Wednesday, June 30, 2021

Live Shot #27!

 

Multi-instrumentalist, singer, audio engineer HL Nelly. Eli's Mile High Club, Oakland CA 2017.

Tuesday, June 29, 2021

Live Shot #26!

 

Bass player, composer, and vocalist Elijah Pontecorvo. Hemlock Tavern SF, circa 2018.

Monday, June 28, 2021

Live Shot #25!

 

Woodwinds player, composer, visual artist, and film maker Brandon Evans. Born and raised in SF. Tempered in NYC. Complexity of mind and depth of soul. Richmond CA 2018.

Sunday, June 27, 2021

Live Shot #24!

 

Claude Palmer, oud and Peter Altenberg, tabla. The Ivy Room, Albany CA, 2017. Deep focus and grooves.

Saturday, June 26, 2021

Live Shot #23!

 

Multi-instrumentalist for Big City Orchestra and internet radio podcast practitioner Ninah Pixie. Cafe Colonial, Sacramento CA 2017.

Friday, June 25, 2021

Live Shot #22!

 

Multi-instrumentalist, dancer, visual artist, shamanic practitioner Bob Marsh. Dance piece at Berkeley Arts Festival, 2015. Bob's roots go back to the mid-20th Century in Detroit. He attended shows at the Grande Ballroom. He currently runs qi gong classes in Pueblo, CO.

Thursday, June 24, 2021

Live Shot #21!

 

Joshua Marshall, tenor sax player of excellence. Berkeley Arts Festival Building, 2015.

Wednesday, June 23, 2021

Live Shot #20!

 

Instrument maker, visual artist, master carpenter Sung Kim. Berkeley Arts Festival Building, 2015.

Tuesday, June 22, 2021

Live Shot #19!

 

Guitarist and visual artist Jacob Pek, Berkeley Arts Festival Building, 2015.

Monday, June 21, 2021

Live Shot #18!

 

Zach G the Outlaw. Party in Richmond CA 6/19/21. Emerging Country singer/songwriter and astute interpreter of songs by earlier artists such as David Allen Coe, Willie Nelson, Hanks I-III, etc. His album is being recorded.

Sunday, June 20, 2021

Live Shot #17!

 

Multi-instrumentalist, singer, and composer Polly Moller. Berkeley Arts Festival Building, 2015.

Saturday, June 19, 2021

Live Shot #16!

 

Collision Stories, Berkeley Arts Festival Building, 2015. Bryan Day, Michael Gendreau, Jorge Bachmann, Mason Jones.

Friday, June 18, 2021

Live Shot #15!

 

Dancer, Berkeley Arts Festival Building, 2015. I do not know this dancer's name. If my memory serves correctly, she was affiliated with Anna Halprin's dance company.

Thursday, June 17, 2021

Live Shot #14!

 

Blipvert, Berkeley Arts Festival Building, 2015. Impassioned laptop-generated Noise with howling vocals.

Wednesday, June 16, 2021

Live Shot #13!

 

Cellist, percussionist, vocalist, and electronic musician Ann O'Rourke, KZSU studio, Stanford CA, 2018. Self-made and unashamed.

Tuesday, June 15, 2021

Bill Brovold-pi; Public Eyesore Records #149 DVD, 2021

 

Let's take some time to step away from live shots of various SF Bay Area improvising musicians, shall we? 

Disaster Amnesiac received Bill Brovold's new release, pi, on DVD from Public Eyesore a few weeks back, and I've had some time now to sit in front of the tube and take it in. Let me just say, it's a lot to take in! pi is the result of Brovold's work in education. It stems from building projects that are utilized as a means to teach math to children. These projects involve guitars that are tuned to specific pitches and struck in sequences of ten. I can't really explain it too well, but essentially what happens from this action is that a sequence of pi emerges from it. It would be fascinating to actually have Brovold do an interview and explain it in a better way, that's for sure! Hmmm.......

As for the sounds of pi, what the listener is treated to is a five hour meditative-sounding coil of chiming guitar tones, struck with gracefully patient strokes. It's been quite fun for me to ponder these tones as they tail off and mingle with sounds either emerging from subsequent strokes or previous strokes. These blends are hypnotic as they shift from spare to dense, depending on where within the sequence of strokes they are positioned. Disaster Amnesiac would recommend the listener move around within the environment in which pi is being presented, as I've definitely noticed differences in timbre as the sounds have been reflected off of diverse surfaces within my space. Bring your deep listening mind, as its perceptions will be rewarding for the patience. 

pi being a DVD, its graphics should also be mentioned. Designed by Daniel Liss, they present simple graphic fields, say orange-red or teal or lavender, with the numbers 1 through 9 (plus 0, is 0 a number?) placed at their middle. My screen is of a decent width, and noticeable is the richness of the shades of these seemingly simple colors, along with how nice the chosen font of the numbers is. One can stare at these fields for hours as they move from one to another. The experience is akin to washing waves lap up to earth or grasses swaying within the wind. 

It's Disaster Amnesiac's hope that pi has had a chance to have been presented within a gallery space or two, as that would be its natural habitat. It would be so cool to walk into a darkened space with big screens and really great audio systems and be confronted by it there. That said, it's worth having within one's home habitat as well. Load up your player and allow yourself to be transfixed for a while.

Monday, June 14, 2021

Live Shot #12!

 

Drummer Aaron Levin, Berkeley Arts Festival Building, circa 2015.

Sunday, June 13, 2021

Live Shot #11!

 

Drummer Patrick Telesfore teaching students at a school in Concord, CA, 2019.

Saturday, June 12, 2021

Live Shot #10!

 

Theremin player and poet Andrew Joron, Berkeley Arts Festival Building, circa 2015. Exploring sound through the mechanisms of movement.

Friday, June 11, 2021

Live Shot #9!

 

Violin improvisor and composer gabby fluke-mogul, KZSU Stanford Studio, circa 2017. A moment of repose in between the musical missions.

Thursday, June 10, 2021

Live Shot #8!

 

Dancer Amy Lewis and guitarist Bill Wolter. Berkeley Arts Festival Building, 2015.