Wednesday, June 17, 2009

Afterthoughts on the Equinox Festival

Well, the Equinox Festival has been and gone, and Comus have played their second gig in 35 years!
The audience response was ecstatic and fantastic, and we unveiled the first of the new Comus songs, 'Out Of The Coma', as an encore. Things overran quite a bit though earlier in the evening, and we felt bad about the fact that Kinit Her's set seemed to have been cut short to accommodate us. Sorry guys.

An interesting event overall though! It was very good to catch the other bands, especially as I'm curious about the noise / electronica people, and listen to William Basinski and Heroines Of The USSR quite a bit.

It struck me, watching the musicians hunched over tabletops of electronics, that we had no immediate way of knowing for certain how the sounds were being generated; the tabletops of pedals, Electribes, delays and oscillators unleashed great oceanic waves of distorted and filtered sound that broke across the audience. I also wondered why we were all looking at the stage! Perhaps it's because we're so used to seeing musicians playing identifiable instruments that we can't quite relinquish the need to gawp.

I managed to snatch a brief chat with Pietro Riparbelli, who told me about his use of short-wave radio signals as the source material for processing. But I sensed, from a trawl through the websites, a chthotic sub-text to at least some of the music - hardly surprising, given the festival context - and I wonder how, or if, this influences the generative / compositional process. I don't know much about the esoteric / occult world at all. Perhaps I should have caught a couple of the lectures on offer earlier in the afternoon to get a sense of context.

Maybe because of the use of conventional instruments and the inevitable drone violin link with the Velvet Underground, but Yan-gant-y-tan were more immediately comprehensible compared to the music that preceeded and followed. Again, I'd like to know how their electronics conjurer, Mark Pilkington, works. I'm so used to the music 'running out' when I stop blowing or hitting something that it seems very attractive to generate almost limitless sound constructs from the tap of a finger on a mike!

Where did noise insert itself into Western music? Extending instrumental ranges / new instruments / oscillating valves / 'orientalism' / Debussy privileging moment and colour over structure? Radio waves? Futurism? Varese? All of these.....?

I remember reading somewhere that almost as soon as telephony was developed people began to listen to the static and started to interpret sounds they could hear in the noise. And of course, vinyl crackle has its own curious attraction.

I shall return to Rob Young's excellent 'Undercurrents; The Hidden Wiring of Modern Music', for further insights!

My alt. band, Red Square, were interviewed recently by Frances Morgan of Plan B (who, coincidentally, turned up playing bass with Yan-gant-y-tan at Equinox!). At one stage guitarist Ian Staples said that his earliest musical memory was of listening to the timbre of the piano when a note was played. I was struck by the fact that his earliest musical memory was timbral. It occurred to me that my earliest musical memories are largely melodic, probably vocal, but largely 'a-timbral'.

Perhaps that's why I'm fascinated by the noise / electronica thing, but don't naturally go there myself, and why my first instrument is the saxophone.

Jon

Friday, June 5, 2009

The Manchester gig poster


COMUS
(5 of ORIGINAL LINE UP, 2nd UK SHOW IN 35+ YEARS)
LIVE IN MANCHESTER
SATURDAY 27th JUNE 2009
St CLEMENTS CHURCH CHORLTON MANCHESTER
plus support from CIRCULUS
LICENSED BAR, DOORS 7PM
TICKETS FROM TICKETLINE
0161 832 1111
GET 'EM QUICK!!

Through the steaming woodlands

We are SO pleased to have a 6 page article about us in The Wire, (the magazine, not the TV show!), with the first official band photos for 37 years to be exact.....and for this to appear close to our Equinox Festival appearance on June 13th. (So, if you didn't know about it, you do now!)

The magazine is a bit specialist, but you should be able to find it in the big newsagents.

Unfortunately, Colin, our violinist couldn't come over for the shoot as he lives in Berlin, but we plan to have some more shots done this weekend when we'll all be together for a rehearsal. Hopefully it will be something suitably rural - in the steaming woodlands......or amongst the trunky deeps....

Really looking forward to our dates this summer - and we hope to add to these by recruiting an agent very soon. Keep checking this site, and the myspace - (www.myspace.com/comusofficial) for info.

Bobbie