Friday, 22 December, 2006

night #4 the NOW now festival

Saturday, 20 January, 2007
6:37 pm

EVENING at THE FACTORY

8:00 Anthony Pateras, prepared piano
Clayton Thomas, double bass and objects
Tony Buck, drums & percussion

9:00 ABJECT LEADER
Joel Stern & Sally Golding

9:30 Jim Denley, woodwinds
Peter Blamey, electronics

BREAK

10:10 SLICES OF MY LIFE
John Blades, spoken word
Robbie Avenaim, sound and vision
Chris Abrahams, piano & dx7

10:45 FILM: BLACK IS, BLACK TV AND BLACK PLUS – X
by Aldo Tambelinni (USA)
Live score performed by: EMBERS (MELB)
Adam Simmons, saxophones
Kris Wanders, saxophones
Dave Brown, electric bass
Sean Baxter, drums

11:20 Autistic Daughters:
Werner Dafeldecker, guitar, bass and electronics
Martin Brandlmayr, drums
Dean Roberts, electronics and voice

BREAK

12:00 HAMMERIVER
play the transcendental skeleton of Alice Coltrane with video by Cicada
Clare Cooper, guzheng, harps and electronics
Monica Brooks, accordion
Jaime Fennelly (NYC) harmonium
Matt Earle, electronics
Scott Horscroft, electronic bells
Jeff Henderson, Richie Belkner & Lloyd Honeybrook, baritone saxophones
Karen Booth, alto saxophone
Chris Abrahams, Hammond organ
Clayton Thomas, double bass
Robbie Avenaim, percussion

Seeing Sound
The NOW now Film Program ’07 presented by Otherfilm

(Program 4): Saturday 6:15pm to 8pm
The Printed Signal (90 minute running time)

Passages from James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake
Mary Ellen Bute, USA
Black and White, 90 minutes, 1965

Bute’s experimental visuals are an attempt to come to terms with Joyce’s innovative language. His words are also displayed in subtitles giving the viewer an opportunity to separate Bute’s interpretation from Joyce’s language.

Live Soundtracks #4:

EMBERS (MELB)
Adam Simmons, saxophones
Kris Wanders, saxophones
Dave Brown, electric bass
Sean Baxter, drums
+
A selection from the rapid-fire montage films of American political filmmaker Aldo Tambellini;
Black Is, 4 minutes, 1966
Black Plus-X, 9 minutes, 1966
Black T.V, 9 minutes, 1970
Black Trip, 4 minutes, 1966
Blackout, 8 minutes, 1966
Moonblack, 13 minutes, 1968

BUY TICKETS TO CLOSING NIGHT HERE