Cuneiform Curates The Stone Nov. 15-30, 2011
Festival highlights are numerous, and include performances by special guests normally only seen at much larger venues. Cuneiform at The Stone opens on Nov. 15 with a performance by Ideal Bread, Josh Sinton's revelatory repertory group dedicated to Steve Lacy. Later that night, trombonist and avant-garde icon Roswell Rudd who's featured on several Cuneiform recordings, including a key archival album (Early & Late) by the legendary Steve Lacy-Roswell Rudd Quartet will perform with Ideal Bread as his backing band. Later in the festival, on the evening of Nov. 27th, award-winning jazz pianist Jason Moran performs with Ergo, Brett Sroka's jazz/electronics group. Every evening between Nov.15 and 30th excepting Thurs. Nov. 24th, the Thanksgiving holiday Cuneiform presents two musical feasts, most priced $10 each. There is something here for every avant taste. Nov. 17 is jazz dance party night, with The Revolutionary Snake Ensemble from Boston (New Orleans Second Line meets Ayler & Sun Ra) and Taylor Ho Bynum & Abraham Gomez-Delgado's alterna-avant-Latino-jazz band, Positive Catastrophe. Jason Adasiewicz, Chicago's 2011 Musician of the Year (Chicago Reader) brings his group Rolldown to the Stone on Nov. 18th, the same night that The Claudia Quintet + 1 performs with Theo Bleckmann. On Nov. 20th, an all-acoustic version of The Mahavishnu Project performs, while the next night, two legendary avant-rock groups from Denver Hamster Theatre and Thinking Plague make an estremely rare East Coast appearance. The last two nights of the festival feature, on Nov. 29th, two avant-rock groups that have been with Cuneiform since its earliest days Forever Einstein and Doctor Nerve and on Nov. 30th, two young jazz/rock/genre-bending groups Zevious and Gutbucket- that are among Cuneiform's newest signings. And in addition to the groups mentioned in this paragraphs, there are much much more... Concurrent with it's two-week New York festival at The Stone, Cuneiform will present a two-day music festival in Baltimore, called CuneiFest: Cuneiform Comes to Baltimore. CuneiFest will consist of a 6-band rock showcase at Orion Sound Studios on Nov. 19th, and a 5-band jazz showcase at An Die Music on Nov. 20th, 2011. For more information, see: Cuneiform at the Stone is Cuneiform's second label showcase in New York City. The Washington DC/Silver Spring MD label held its first NYC showcase in 2001 at The Knitting Factory. Now, ten years later, Cuneiform takes siege of another NY landmark. We hope that you can join us in lower Manhattan in November 2011, as Cuneiform's musical forces occupy The Stone! About the Stone The Stone is Manhattan's epicenter of experimental and avant-garde music in all genres rock, jazz, electronic and beyond-genre and more. It thus inherits the role served by such predecessors as the Knitting Factory and Tonic: a place in one of the world's greatest cities for musicians to experiment with and perform non-commercial music, and for audiences to hear music outside the mainstream. The Stone was founded by John Zorn in 2005 as a not-for-profit performance space, and is supported entirely by donations and benefit performances. 100% of the ticket proceeds from all events including Cuneiform's two-week showcase goes directly to the performing artists. Located in Alphabet City on New York City's lower East Side, in a corner building formerly used for a Chinese restaurant, The Stone is an intimate, gallery-like space with audience seating and a grand piano for the performers. Cuneiform at The Stone is part of a April 2011 through March 2012 series conceived by Zorn and dedicated to and curated by independent record labels. Besides Cuneiform, the other labels in the series include Arbiter, Aum Fidelity, Cryptogramophone, Ecstatic Peace, Ehse, Erstwhile, Esp, Exp Intermedia, Hospital, Innova, Intakt, Luaka Bop, Mode, New World, Nine Winds, No Fun, Non Sequitur, Nonesuch, Pi, Pogus, Shinkoyo, Thirsty Ear, and Winter&Winter. to get to The Stone: Take F train to Delancy, left onto Norfolk, right on E Houston, left on Avenue C.
About Cuneiform
Cuneiform releases and internationally promotes and distributes recordings by some of the best avant-garde musicians from around the world. Its artists include numerous young, rising-star rock (Afuche, Upsilon Acrux, Zevious) and jazz ensembles (Jason Adaseiwicz's Rolldown, John Hollenbeck's The Claudia Quintet,) as well as avant-garde icons (Wadada Leo Smith, Soft Machine, John Surman, Richard Pinhas/Heldon & Merzbow, David Borden/Mother Mallard Portable Masterpiece Company, Steve Lacy & Roswell Rudd). Cuneiform's catalogue contains the primary oeuvre often dozens of recordings spanning thirty years to the present day by such musical mavericks as Univers Zero; Richard Pinhas/Heldon; Curlew; David Borden/Mother Mallard. While primarily releasing original music by composers/improvisors, Cuneiform also has a few repertory groups devoted to creative arrangements of Contemporary Masters such as Steve Lacy, John Mclaughlin, and Frank Zappa, While primarily release new material, it also releases previously unreleased and historically and musicial significant archival material, and reissues significant out-of-print material. The evocative, genre-bending musics released, distributed and promoted by Cuneiform are some of the most forward-looking, progressive jazz, rock, and classical works on the 21st C. scene. Cuneiform At The Stone provides not only a glimpse of the Cuneiform label's broad roster, showcasing bands that have been with the label since its earliest days (Doctor Nerve, Forever Einstein, Birdsongs of the Mesozoic, Rattlemouth) as well as recent signings (Positive Catastrophe, Dead Cat Bounce, Alec K. Redfearn & The Eyesores, Zevious), but a good overview of where the most exciting developments are in jazz and rock music today. |
The Lineup November 15
********* CuneiFest: Cuneiform Comes to Baltimore Baltimore: ******** |
Ideal Bread
http://www.cuneiformrecords.com/bandshtml/idealbread.html
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From Transmit: "As Usual"
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Ottokar Ottokar, a new musical group with strong roots in Philadelphia, informs itself as "IIRI - intuitive, instrumental rock improvisation", for keyboards, guitars, and percussion. The players create music on the spot, with influences ranging from progressive rock, fusion, hard core improvised music, and jazz. They are a cross between early Pink Floyd, Soft Machine, Hatfield and the North, Pat Metheny, Bruford, The Music Improvisation Company, and Weather Report, among others. However the music of Ottokar is 100% original, and the three players are bonded in a collective spirit, in which each generously provides the other with rhythmic and melodic backgrounds for solos, as well as providing an impetus for compositional direction. This clarity, timing, and patience in the music of the ensemble creates extended pieces of beauty and power, reaching beyond the bounds of ego and hierarchy. It should also be noted that the players employ all manner of vintage and modern gear, merging sounds of the past and future in rapture. from Jim Meneses offical website
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Joel Forrester's Secret Identity
Joel Forrester is the composer of more than 1200 tunes, a versatile and accomplished jazz pianist, leader of his own quartet and prolific recording artist. He has performed in an extraordinary diversity of settings – from large ensembles to a duet setting with a tap dancer! His playing draws from stride, boogie-woogie, bebop, trance and what he likes to call 'salon pieces' but each composition bears the stamp of this most individual artist. Since its founding in 1980, under the co-leadership and co-compositional duties of soprano saxophonist Phillip Johnston and pianist Joel Forrester, "the Micros" have been "New York's most famous unknown band"; since 1990, the catchy, film noir theme they created for NPR’s “Fresh Air with Terry Gross” has aired daily on stations across America, and may now be the most-broadcast jazz tune in the world. http://www.cuneiformrecords.com/bandshtml/micros.html
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From Seven Men in Neckties:
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Revolutionary Snake Ensemble The Revolutionary Snake Ensemble is a costumed funk/street beat improvisational brass band performing a unique blend of traditional New Orleans and other original modern improvised celebratory styles. Performer Magazine noted that the band "may operate from the traditions of New Orleans music, but the boundaries are pushed wide open when they actually play.” Leader Ken Field, a longtime member of the modern music ensemble Birdsongs of the Mesozoic formed the group in 1990 with trumpeter and cartoonist Scott Getchell to entertain at a pagan women's ritual celebration. As a performer, Field has worked as a sideman with countless renowned reggae, funk, R&B, rock, jazz, and world beat artists - and performed for former President Bill Clinton.
http://www.cuneiformrecords.com/bandshtml/rse.html
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From Forked Tongue:
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Positive Catastrophe Positive Catastrophe is the brainchild of Taylor Ho Bynum (cornet) and Abraham Gomez-Delgado (percussion). Taylor is one of the most impressive of the latest crop of up and coming jazz musicians and Aib has long been expanding the boundaries of Latin-based music and jazz. Together they have come up with Positive Catastrophe: a trans-idiomatic ten-piece little big band that successfully connects the dots between Sun Ra and Eddie Palmieri and beyond! The group enlists a bevy of New York’s most adventurous jazz and salsa musicians, all of whom are composers and leaders in their own right. The full line up is: Taylor Ho Bynum (cornet, flugelhorn, co-leader), Abraham Gomez-Delgado (vocals, percussion, co-leader), Jen Shyu (vocals, erhu), Matt Bauder (tenor sax, clarinets), Michael Attias (baritone sax), Mark Taylor (french horn), Reut Regev (trombone), Pete Fitzpatrick (guitar), Alvaro Benavides (bass), Tomas Fujiwara (drums). With the exceptional musicianship of all of these players and their fluidity in multiple genres, a unique instrumentation that hints at a traditional jazz and salsa big bands yet includes french horn, erhu, and rock guitar, and a pair of dramatic vocalists that are comfortable singing in three languages, Positive Catastrophe creates a truly boundary-crossing kind of new music. "If you’ve been hungering to hear Latin-based jazz in a new light, your prayers have been answered." – NY Press
http://www.cuneiformrecords.com/bandshtml/positive.html
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Jason Adasiewicz's Rolldown Vibraphonist and composer Jason Adasiewicz formed the Rolldown in early 2003. In the time since the band started, Adasiewicz has become a prolific member of Chicago's jazz and improvised music scene. He is quickly gaining widespread recognition and is one of the most exciting vibraphonists and interesting bandleaders working today. Rolldown, which consists of reedist Aram Shelton, cornetist Josh Berman, bassist Jason Roebke, and drummer Frank Rosaly sounds like a combination of Blue Note's classic, avant-leaning '60s albums with contemporary drive, swing, energy, and attack. “Adasiewicz has assembled a quintet of astounding musical proportion and depth, playing his tricky music that seems to have no limits of imagination, wit or wisdom." - The All Music Guide
http://www.cuneiformrecords.com/bandshtml/rolldown.html
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The Claudia Quintet + 1 Formed by the twice Grammy-nominated drummer/composer John Hollenbeck, who The Village Voice called, "superb, technically ingenious... passionate and serious, but also playful and funny...” The Claudia Quintet explores the edge without alienating the mainstream, proving that genre-defying music can be for everyone. They are an astonishing band with a huge range of emotional depth and range with appeal far beyond strictly 'jazz' listeners. The Claudia Quintet has amazed audiences from Alabama to the Amazon. Their unique sound has inspired dancing hippie girls at a New Mexico noise festival, the avant-garde cognoscenti in the concert halls of Vienna and Sao Paolo, and a generation of young musicians worldwide. Their music marries jazz, new music, post-rock – but no laundry list of influences is quite sufficient to describe their iconoclastic sound. Suffice it to say, you can feel secure bringing your hipster nephew and your math professor along to a gig, and everyone will go home happy. The Claudia Quintet’s music demonstrates that “Innovative jazz does not have to be harsh, angry, loud, shrill or grating; it can be delicate, witty, ethereal and radiantly lyric…”(Chicago Tribune).
http://www.cuneiformrecords.com/bandshtml/claudia.html
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From Semi-Formal: From I, Claudia:
The Claudia Quintet Official Website
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Upsilon Acrux
Prefix Magazine notes that the music is"...weird and playful and glowing, a much-needed antidote to the normally sober world of instrumental progressive rock.” The combination of blazingly fast, interwoven musical lines delivered at blinding speed mixed with their unique melodic sense makes Upsilon's music instantly recognizable. They are "Technically brilliant, rhythmically unbelievable, with just the right amount of melody," (Disagreement.net). Upsilon Acrux is one of the most creative and original of the shockingly large number of great post-punk, avant-garde rock bands today.
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From Radian Futura: From Galapagos Momentum:
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Afuche Based out of Brooklyn, NY and creating a group sound that is truly their own, Afuche is a band that needs to be heard by lovers of adventurous, modern progressive music! Formed by Ruben Sindo Acosta & Zach Ryalls in 2008, they have been adding to the ensemble and evolving their sound by writing, performing, and touring non-stop – it was at one of their many shows where we found them and watched their continued development with keen interest. Afuche is a 5 piece band featuring Ruben on keyboard, vocals and percussion, Zach on guitar, Denny Tek on bass, Andrew Carrico on baritone sax and Max Jaffe on drums. Taking their cues from Can, The Dirty Projectors, Frank Zappa, King Crimson, James Brown, Tortoise, as well as African and Afro-Cuban music, they take these musical influences as a base and apply their own group sound to it and bend it all into a hybrid, original and very progressive contemporary rock music that is interestingly complex without losing its inviting quality; most of all Afuche is a lot of fun.
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From Highly Publicized Digital Boxing Match:
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The Mahavishnu Project Founded in 2001 by drummer and composer Gregg Bendian, The Mahavishnu Project is dedicated to reviving and bringing to today's audiences the excitement and the transcendent experience of visceral intensity of the early days of jazz/rock in general and the music of the Mahavishnu Orchestra specifically. The band was formed by Gregg to perpetuate the spirit of live performance in which this music was created by performing this great music live! Return to the Emerald Beyond features a 11 piece band interpreting The Mahavishnu Orchestra’s Visions of the Emerald Beyond, one of the most explosive albums in the fusion genre. This is not a sound-alike project; Gregg and the band do not try to recreate the solos of the original players. What they do do is capture the amazing intensity and fire that the Mahavishnu Orchestra exuded, add their own selves to it and allow people to experience it first hand in concert and now on record. The band just slay the material and play it with conviction and belief .
"What is primary to me is they are all great musicians. Everyone has to be a good improviser. It's not enough to transcribe the tunes themselves. You have to be able to take them to another place.... These guys can get there." - Jan Hammer. "...they grab the bar the original Mahavishnu set during its 1971 - '74 peak and raise it a notch. There's a truly amazing level of musicianship at play here, balancing focus, intensity and freedom..." - The Boston Phoenix
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From Return to the Emerald Beyond:
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Hamster Theatre
Their compositions are “delivered with amazing technical dexterity, focusing on melody, mood and dynamics. The group really tears it up, performing with passion and daunting expertise." - Paul Lemos
http://www.cuneiformrecords.com/bandshtml/hamster.html
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From Public Execution: From Carnival Detournament:
Hamster Theater Official Website
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Thinking Plague
"Thinking Plague stands out as a shining example of avant-garde music blended with just enough rock for it to be called progressive rock" - Music.com Thinking Plague’s music combines lyricism with intense and sophisticated rhythmic and harmonic ideas. Their influences cover a spectrum ranging from Beatles and Byrds to Henry Cow and William Schuman. At moments the sound of Thinking Plague may begin to resemble pop or jazz music only to be stretched or "morphed" in the next instant into new regions that often defy categorization.
http://www.cuneiformrecords.com/bandshtml/thinking.html
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From A History of Madness: From Early Plague Years: From In Extremis:
Thinking Plague Official Website
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Cellular Chaos "let's get something straight right now everybody: don't call me "Walter". I don't come up to you and call you by your last name. we're not in japan or the military. get used to it." John Zorn is indeed amazing, but the saxophonist/composer/record-label owner tends to be the token name that's thrown out when talking about modern avant-garde or so-called improvised weirdo music. Weasel Walter, even though there's nothing token about him, arguably needs to be included in this discussion. A former Chicago and Oakland resident who currently lives in New York City, Walter co-founded the spazztastic (and sadly defunct) The Flying Luttenbachers before moving on to collaborations with a ridiculous amount of fellow uncompromisers, ranging from Marshall Allen and Henry Kaiser to Mary Halvorson and Jim O'Rourke. On top of that, Walter has been, for years, releasing some of the most far-leaning left-field albums out there on his ugEXPLODE Records. (A newbie to the label? Start with the quartet and double-trio effort Firestorm, where Walter writes "With this music, I am attempting to express highly articulated violence and fury" in the liner notes.) For his Super Happy gig, drummer Walter will be joined by an all-star cast of local improvisers, including Sandy Ewen (guitar), Seth Paynter (woodwinds), David Dove (trombone), Nick Hennies (vibes), Thomas Helton (tuba) and, last but not least, Damon Smith (bass), a recent Houston transplant who has appeared on countless recordings with Walter, and is the person responsible for bringing this sonic madman to town. Houston Press
With the success of his so-called "spazztastic" past ensembles and shows, his newst project, Ottokar, will be sure to please.
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Jason Robinson's Janus Band "Tenor saxophonist Jason Robinson marries intellect to seat, brains to bawdiness, narrative to sidetrack, straight line to detour, familiarity to surprise–the dualities peppering this long, exciting disc go on. The tunes shift meter, texture and voice...the nine tracks here roil, burn and involve. Parsing each track would spawn an article far longer than a magazine can bear. To appreciate its ambition, daring and execution, listen to Robinson's ambitious, boundary-busting album. Then listen again. Modern, oracular and communal, it stretches the limits of improvisation." – JazzTimes
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FromThe Two Faces of Janus:
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Carlo DeRosa's Crossfade
"Great writing and ensemble playing. Deep thoughtful solos." – Jack DeJohnette
http://cuneiformrecords.com/bandshtml/derosa.html
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From Brain Dance:
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Dead Cat Bounce
The Washington Post has described Matthew’s writing as "sharply contrasting forms, textures and tones... strident, joyful, lush and strutting" Seminal saxophonist Dave Liebman writes, "great writing originality of style, and a wide variety of moods" Matthew Steckler was born and raised in Schenectady, NY, the product of artistic, post-1960s child-rearing. His parents, both at one time art teachers, encouraged Matthew to appreciate all things beautiful and, at the same time, pursue his muse, particularly with lessons on piano and saxophone. In high school, theater, music, discussion, literature and travel led to the formation of his worldly views. Matthew then enrolled at Wesleyan University where he studied music, as well as Russian, literature and history. It was here that the idea of individuality in music took on importance.
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Birdsongs of the Mesozoic
Birdsongs of the Mesozoic is a striking 4-piece ensemble that is almost entirely instrumental, and incorporates many different musical elements. They combine equal parts progressive rock, pulse, classical, and more into an instantly recognizable whole. Critic Rick Anderson writes, "Very few bands have ever managed to straddle the worlds of modern classical music and rock as successfully as this one did. ” Perhaps because of their tie to the ever-popular Burma or perhaps because of their sheer excellence and innovative instrumental music, Birdsongs Of The Mesozoic has earned audience appeal and wide international recognition. The New York Times called them "the world's hardest rocking chamber music quartet." Their unlikely mix of rock, punk, classical, minimalism, and free-form sound appealed to a broad range of musical tastes.
http://www.cuneiformrecords.com/bandshtml/birdsongs.html
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From Dawn of the Cycads: From Iridium Controversy: From Dancing on A'A: From Pyroclastics:
Birdsongs of the Mesozoic Official Website
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Rattlemouth Rattlemouth is Richmond, Virginia's Ethio Jazz and World Groove powerhouse. Featuring the saxophone tandem of Danny Finney and Roger Carroll, the monster rhythm section of Robbie Kinter (drums) and Marc S. Langelier (bass) and the guitar of George M. Lowe, they blaze through spirited instrumental updates of classic tunes from around the world (Mali, Ethiopia, South Africa, Zimbabwe, Nigeria, Cuba, Jamaica, Lebanon, etc.), plus similarly flavored originals, inspiring audiences to equally spirited dancing. This current body of work, which comprises their live repertoire, is captured on their new cd 5.
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Alec K. Redfearn and the Eyesores Alec K Redfearn is a musician, songwriter and composer who has created music for dance, theater, and film. He has also developed a unique style of playing the accordion, introducing elements commonly associated with the guitar such as distortion, drone, and noise. He has performed on accordion and recorded in several ensembles of which he also composes for, such as Amoebic Ensemble, Barnacled, Beat Circus, and most notably, the Eyesores.
http://www.cuneiformrecords.com/bandshtml/redfearn.html
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From The Blind Spot: From The Quiet Room:
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Ergo
"...into completely new horizons similar to nothing you've heard before... captivating, hypnotic, and attractively exotic music" - All Music Guide Ergo is a trio made up of Carl Maguire on Rhodes electric piano and analog synth, Shawn Baltazor on drums and lead by Brett Sroka on trombone and laptop. Their music is one of stark melodic beauty, enveloping electro-acoustic texture and empathic imagination. They have been playing together since 2003, combining the modern sound of electronica and beyond with jazz and ambient music. The basic building blocks of their sound are beats and electronics, trombone, the Fender Rhodes and drums. The music here generally develops slowly but it's also very accessible while remaining something that holds active interest.
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From Multitude, Solitude:
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Forever Einstein
Forever Einstein is an avante-garde band formed in 1989, described as a, "very smart trio," consisting of percussionist John Roulat, bassist Kevin Gerety, and guitarist Charles O'Meara, aka C.W. Vrtacek. Past members include original bassist Marc Sichel and Jack Vees. They were a featured act at the annual MIMI festival of progressive music in France (1991) and Prog Day in North Carolina (2003). They are known for tightly weaving a variety of styles such as folk, surf-rock, jazz, metal, country and more into concise, highly arranged pieces with long, often ridiculous titles. They have been compared to King Crimson, Frank Zappa, and Gong.
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From Racket Science: From One Thing After Another: From Artificial Horizon: Official Forever Einstein Website
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Doctor Nerve Nick Didkovsky (born 1958) is a composer, guitarist, computer music programmer, and leader of the band Doctor Nerve. He is a former student of Christian Wolff, Pauline Oliveros and Gerald Shapiro. Didkovsky has developed a Java music API called JMSL (Java Music Specification Language). JMSL is a toolbox for algorithmic composition and performance. JMSL includes JScore, an extensible staff notation editor. JMSL can output music using either JavaSound or JSyn. "With diligence and dedication, Kit Watkins and Nick Didkovsky have found a way to pursue their art. For them, success isn't measured in dollars. It consists of daily satisfaction in their work. Without Kit and Nick, I might not bother listening to music." Jim Dorsch - Beer, The Magazine
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From Ereia: From Every Screaming Ear: From Skin:
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Zevious After forming Zevious in 2006 as a straight jazz trio, guitarist Mike Eber, drummer Jeff Eber, and bassist John DeBlase immediately broke free of the bonds of tradition. Mike ditched the jazz guitar for a Telecaster and DeBlase replaced his upright with an electric bass and they both picked up distortion pedals and cranked them up. Zevious began combining progressive rock grooves, tech metal, structured group improvisation, and complex song forms with a conventional jazz sound, creating a unique compositional style. Zevious is a distinctive fusion band in the burgeoning punk-jazz movement. Vijay Iyer notes, "The music of Zevious shrewdly juxtaposes order and its opposite: structural intensity pushed to its breaking point in the most appealing way. These boys are brilliant and fearless."
http://www.cuneiformrecords.com/bandshtml/zevious.html
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From After the Air Raid:
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Gutbucket
Founded by bassist Eric Rockwin, saxophonist Ken Thomson, guitarist Ty Citerman, and drummer Paul Chuffo between shifts at Columbia University's vital WKCR, Gutbucket built their all-important live rep in New York clubs before spreading across east coast college towns like a hoard of freethinking barbarians. The decade-old New York quartet is not only equally comfortable playing in front of 900 sweatily pogo-ing teenage skate-punks, a crowd of cosmic indie-psych freaks, or on an anarchist German art collective houseboat, but most importantly, their music fits right in.
http://www.cuneiformrecords.com/bandshtml/gutbucket.html
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From A Modest Proposal:
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