Author Topic: Velvet Lounge/611 Florida/Clavius Productions schedule  (Read 24366 times)

thirsty moore

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Re: Velvet Lounge/611 Florida/Clavius Productions schedule
« Reply #15 on: July 06, 2007, 03:24:00 pm »
Didn't realize this guy was still around.  I saw him sometime in the late 90's over at Phantas with Felt.
 
 
Quote
Originally posted by snailhook:
  French ­guitarist/composer Richard Pinhas

snailhook

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Re: Velvet Lounge/611 Florida/Clavius Productions schedule
« Reply #16 on: July 06, 2007, 03:46:00 pm »
wow. he played with felt? how was that show?

thirsty moore

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Re: Velvet Lounge/611 Florida/Clavius Productions schedule
« Reply #17 on: July 06, 2007, 04:20:00 pm »
OK, NOT Felt.  Just looked them up.  It was two guys that played obscure instruments.  One word.  
 
 I got it!  It was Pelt.  Either way.  Good gig.  Pinhas was using heaps of visuals.

snailhook

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Re: Velvet Lounge/611 Florida/Clavius Productions schedule
« Reply #18 on: July 15, 2007, 02:15:00 pm »
Clavius Productions presents:
 
 Sunday, July 15
 Velvet Lounge
 915 U St NW WDC
 http://www.velvetloungedc.com
 $8, 21+, doors at 9pm
 
 Mary Halvorson & Jessica Pavone (experimental guitar/viola duo, mem. of Anthony Braxton's Septet)
 Judith Berkson (solo Wurlitzer organ)
 Motreb (improv guitar/drums duo from VA)
 
 
 Mary Halvorson & Jessica Pavone
 http://www.myspace.com/maryandjess
 http://maryhalvorson.com/
 http://www.jessicapavone.com
 
 "Their experimental instincts, sharpened by an affiliation with Anthony Braxton, commingle with a folksy lyricism; sometimes they even sing, without a trace of protective irony." (Nate Chinen, The New York Times)
 
 "They listen as though they're hotwired into each other's brain, their taut structural discipline prompting a domino effect of great ideas." (Philip Clark, The Wire)
 
 Mary Halvorson is a guitarist, composer and improviser living in Brooklyn. She grew up in Boston and studied jazz at Wesleyan University and the New School. Since 2000 she has been performing regularly in New York with various groups and has toured Europe and the U.S. with the Anthony Braxton Quintet (Live at the Royal Festival Hall, Leo Records) and Trevor Dunn??s Trio-Convulsant (Sister Phantom Owl Fish, Ipecac Recordings). She has also performed alongside Joe Morris, Nels Cline, John Tchicai, Elliott Sharp, Lee Ranaldo, Andrea Parkins, Marc Ribot, Tony Malaby, Oscar Noriega and John Hollenbeck. Current projects which Mary composes for and performs with include a chamber-music duo with violist Jessica Pavone (Prairies, Lucky Kitchen, 2005); The Mary Halvorson Trio with John Hebert and Ches Smith; and the avant-rock band People (People, I & Ear Records, 2005). She also performs regularly in ensembles led by Taylor Ho Bynum, Ted Reichman, Peter Evans, Tatsuya Nakatani, Jason Cady, Matthew Welch, Brian Chase and Curtis Hasselbring.
 
 New York native Jessica Pavone is a string instrumentalist and composer based in Brooklyn who holds degrees in viola performance, music education and composition. She's studied viola with tons of classical teachers, improvisation with Leroy Jenkins and is continuously learning by working within a community of creative musicians in New York, most notably through her work with composer Anthony Braxton.
 
 Most recently, she tours Europe and the United States with The Anthony Braxton Sextet and Twelve+1tet and in a collaborative duo with Mary Halvorson (guitar, viola, and voice). She currently leads two ensembles; The Pavones and Quotidian and improvises in groups led by William Parker,Taylor Ho Bynum, and Matana Roberts. She plays bass guitar with; Minnows, Christy and Emily, and Jason Cady and the Artificials.
 
 She has performed at a number of international music festivals including, the Molde Jazz Festival in Norway, The Banlieues Blues Festival in Paris, The Victoriaville Festival of New Music in Canada, the Santa Annarresi Jazz Festival in Italy, All Tomorrows Parties in England, Jazz em Augusto in Portugal, The Wels Unlimited Festival in Austria, and at the Ciclo Jazz Foundation in Spain.
 
 As a composer, she has received commissions to write chamber music for The Eastern Winds and Till by Turning, and her pieces have been heard throughout the northeast in venues such as the Kitchen and Issue Project Room in New York and Real Art Ways in Hartford, Connecticut.
 
 As an instrumentalist, she has interpreted new music by musicians such as Glenn Branca, Butch Morris, Matthew Welch, James Fei, Matt Bauder, David Grubbs, Loren Dempster, Aaron Siegel, and Andrew Raffo Dewar.
 
 Since 2000, she has documented her music via her self-run label Peacock Recordings, which was recently awarded a grant from The Aaron Copland Fund for Music Recording Program, and her growing discography and list of works can be witnessed via her web site, www.jessicapavone.com.
 
 
 Judith Berkson
 http://judithberkson.com/
 http://www.myspace.com/judithberkson
 
 Judith started singing when her father taught her the blessing over wine in 1981. She joined the family group which toured Chicagoland and the Midwest playing shows at community centers and synagogues. After music conservatory she moved to Brooklyn where's she's been writing music and playing in bands. Judith likes the challenging music, teaching Schoenberg harmony, speaking in 3rd person, finding good clothes and hanging out with her sick creative friends.
 
 Judith has played with folk legend Theodore Bikel, saxophonist Steve Coleman and has performed new music by Milton Babbitt, Joe Maneri and Osvaldo Golijov. Her voice was the basis of "Twilight" a multimedia project by Hans Breder and Carlos Cuellar at DOSA museum in Germany. She has worked with composer Gerard Pape who runs the Center for Music Iannis Xenakis in Paris (CCMIX) and sang the American premier of his "Two Electro-Acoustic songs" in 2004. Judith is also a Cantor and works at Old Westbury Hebrew Congregation on Long Island.
 
 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 
 Two Safranin bands plus the amazing Echolalia...
 
 Monday, July 16
 Velvet Lounge
 915 U St NW WDC
 http://www.velvetloungedc.com
 $6, 21+, doors at 9pm
 
 The Antiques (Washington DC black jangle post-funk)
 The Offering (VA shoegaze)
 Echolalia (solo theremin)
 
 The Antiques
 "For fans of semi-obscure '80s British acts such as Comsat Angels and the Chameleons UK ... well, here is your new favorite band. The songs are dramatic without being overwrought, as the band doesn't get bogged down with unnecessary instrumentation. A thick organ sound envelops tracks such as "Painted Post Road" and "Don't Stand in My Room," which plod along gingerly while Greg Svitil gives a perfect deadpan delivery of lines like, "Don't light up my life / Yours is the light I don't need / When did you become such a creep? / When did you become so psychotic?" Things are more sprightly on "One Day You'll Be Sorry Too" and "Auburn Aumbry," recalling some different obscure '80s U.K. acts -- let's say Felt and Orange Juice this time. People who are serious about their 7" record collection will seriously love this album." ??Washington Post
 
 The Offering
 The Offering of Fredericksburg, Virginia are no stranger to noise violations. Started in 2005 by Charles Pinto and former guitarist and vocalist Andrew Cooke, the band's mission to modernize, but experiment with, what the two considered to be "the classics" was clear. As many bands had done in the past, the two forged their music on the foundation of guitar, bass, and drum machine, forgoing a drummer for no better reason than to create a unique sound. The result was nothing short of that. Pinto's dark, primal rhythms encompass what becomes epic turns song after song, and his driving sometimes distorted bass lines compliment the percussion amply.
 
 Upon Cooke's parting, guitarist Billy Noom took the role of lead quite naturally. His jangly but somehow still melancholy guitar work, leads the band efficiently guiding second guitarist Shane Huffman's harmonious and piercing riffs throughout the journey. Coupled with Huffman, keyboardist Chris Critzer provides at times eerie background soundscapes, but also fills the role as a strict keys player nicely. Critzer also fills in as second percussionist on many songs, yielding only a single tom-drum as his tool. The band's live show is a finely tuned psychedelic freak-out and their tendency to sound check and tune instruments at higher volumes than most band's entire sets has earned them a spot as one of the noisier independent bands in America.
 
 "Dark vocals, sheets of blistering paint-peeling guitars, and a propulsive drum rhythm combine to make some fantastic music akin to New Order, Skywave, Ceremony, Jesus and Mary Chain, The Chameleons, etc."- Tonevendor
 
 Echolalia
 Influenced by Found recordings, random thoughts while daydreaming, things around the apartment, walking down the street, and "ideas or phrases I hear on tv, the radio, or in everyday conversation.," Echolalia is "sometimes quiet, sometimes noisy, sometimes spooky, sometimes funny, sometimes sad or other times a mix of everything."  A member of DC's legendary freak champions Alzo Boszormenyi and the Acid Achievers.
 www.safraninsound.com
 www.theantiques.org
 www.myspace.com/echolalianova
 
 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 
 Tuesday, July 17
 Velvet Lounge
 915 U St St NW WDC
 http://www.velvetloungedc.com
 $7, 21+, doors at 9pm
 
 Thintap Woodsap (experimental psych-pop)
 Afuche (Latin free jazz from Brooklyn)
 
 Thintap Woodsap
 www.myspace.com/thintapwoodsap
 www.myspace.com/thintapwoodsapone
 
 The press calls Thintap Woodsap "frighteningly talented" (Boston's Weekly Dig), but he isn't so frightening anymore. See, he will have eaten only bananas and water for a week by the time you see him and he will have lots of paper and crayons and other fun activities for you to do. He'd bring a durian for fun and sniffing but the last time he did that, the authorities ripped out the floor of the studio where he was recording thinking there was a gas leak.
 
 So, now for the credentials and name dropping in one long, confusing sentence: Thintap's compositions and improvisations range from very complex, mammoth pieces for orchestra to neo-vaudeville musicals, noise rock operas, long term collaborations with the thaumaturgical Stormy Laughter, and with the utterly original dancer, Zack Fuller, percussionists Tatsuya Nakatani, Will Redman, and Jeff Arnal, and violinist Katt Hernandez, and reed players John Dierker and John Dikeman to intimate songs that he sings and plays on the piano and accordion all by himself, which you will hear this evening. He has also enjoyed many lentil dinners with Joe Maneri and if you want to do some snooping, he also has the name, "Jonathan Vincent". He is a completely original and nutritious protein without any gimmicks or fashionably processed sarcasm. Missing him in your lifetime will really dissapoint your children.

snailhook

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Re: Velvet Lounge/611 Florida/Clavius Productions schedule
« Reply #19 on: July 18, 2007, 01:37:00 pm »
Clavius Productions presents an evening of dadaist performance art, interpretive dance, experimental electronic music, and accompnaying visuals:
 
 Thursday, July 19
 Velvet Lounge
 915 U St NW WDC
 http://www.velvetloungedc.com
 $7, 21+, doors at 9pm
 
 Chic Nerve (Rebecca Mills of Caution Curves with interpretive dancer Ginger Wagg)
 Eagle-Ager (dadaist performance art with costumes/sculptures/dance/music, from NYC)
 Slim Castle (solo experimental electric guitar with visual projections, ex-Kohoutek, on Sockets)
 Boyzone (electronic improv theatre from NC)
 
 
 Chic Nerve
 http://www.thecautioncurves.com/
 
 
 Rebecca Mills is a sound artist based in Washington, DC who uses found sounds and samples of live instrumentation to create laptop compositions under the name Chic Nerve. She comprises one-third of the avant-rock band The Caution Curves, described by The Sound Projector as "a single-minded trip into mild dementia that is totally engaging". The band??s unique approach to sound has garnered critical recognition by sources such as The Wire and The Washington Post. Rebecca also plays clarinet in the avant-jazz horn-and-percussion ensemble Gestures, and documents aural experiments and oddities through the label Initiated Eye Recordings. Recently she collaborated with dancers Jane Jerardi and Ginger Wagg on the performance installation piece Façade, and composed a live mix from an original score by Audrey Chen for performances of Daniel Burkholder??s piece Together/Apart.
 
 Ginger Wagg is a dance artist focused primarily on improvisation. She performs with two DC-based companies: Sharon Mansur/mansurdance and Daniel Burkholder/The Playground. She has performed with Shua Group (NYC), Amber Kendrick (DC), Marcy Schlissel (NYC), and Havana Select (DC) among others. She received her BFA in Dance from George Mason University, VA and has studied extensively at various improvisation workshops and festivals.
 
 
 Eagle-Ager
 http://www.eagleager.com
 
 Eagle-Ager is a multimedia art team and sculpture band:
 
 Charlotte Gibbons - dancer/performance artist
 Geoffrey Nosach - sculptor/performance artist
 Stephen Cooper - composer/musician/performance artist
 
 We all graduated from Suny Purchase in 2004 and we like to read heady books. If you see us you will likely see cardboard costumes, electronic music, ritualistic actions, absurd set peices, scrap wood, blood, fancy pants, eagles, toy firetrucks, florescent Jesus figurines, thumbs, paintings of mountains, and maybe styrofoam starfish suits.
 
 Eagle-Ager is a performance art team that is based in NYC, who have been playing around the NYC area for the past three years. The work is a mix of puppetry, performance art, and electronic music. Influences include cartoons, art history, ancient rituals, eerie disappointments, paganism, horror, fun, simulations, questions, and nature/culture conflicts. Eagle-Ager's art team and sculpture band will be touring for the first time in July 2006. The works will likely consist of sets made of scrap wood, junky trashy puppets, cardboard man suits, ritualistic actions, birds and snakes, paintings of mountains, styrofoam starfishes, and thumbs way up, all working to construct a socially relevant absurdist profundity. Eagle-Ager strives to be a totally portable art band. The art world goes the way of the capitalist elitist. The working class shaman's reaction to this is a shared passion for cheap, powerful artwork.
 
 
 Slim Castle
 http://www.myspace.com/slimcastle
 
 Slim Castle is built around a goosebump factory. The engineers examined the goosebump architecture of bad bands and transposed it to a setting with a lot more taste, stretching the most cathartic sections.
 
 The results sometimes sound like Charles Bronson's early, furtive watercolors -- blunt, broad washes on burlap that aren't scared of beauty, but have some grit and backbone. Other more frilly tracks are laced with sketchy aural pentimenti and outlined mistake.
 
 In live performance the recordings are stripped down and scrawled over with gestural guitar, lit with syncopated video, made rough and immediate.
 
 
 Boyzone
 http://www.myspace.com/boyszone
 
 "These revelations preceded Boyzone, a painful filibuster of industrial noise and artless stagger. It was the first dance piece in many years that I walked out on. After a promising beginning, Charlie St. Clair and Lauren Ford's work quickly devolved into movement that mainly suggested what Martin Sheen's initial scene in Apocalypse Now -- drunk and disorderly in a Saigon hotel room -- might have looked like before the final edit. Pointless, eternal, and enhanced only by the monochrome, headsplitting electronica of Neill Prewitt, Ryan Martin, Jeff Rehnlumb and Kelly Reidy, this work single-handedly drove
 much of Aumiller's audience into the night, before sanity -- and dance -- resumed in a blindfolded finale, Burnt. By then, the majority who did not return apparently felt that way themselves." (Raleigh dance critic Byron Woods)
 
 Boyzone has performed with played with Ariel Pink's Haunted Graffiti, USAISAMONSTER, Prurient, Tom Grimley, Jason Crumer, Dan Deacon, Art Lord, They Shoot Horses Don't They?, White Mice, Dance Disaster Movement, An Albatross, Kill Me Tomorrow, Little Howlin Wolf, Kohoutek, Alissa Cardone, Breaker Breaker, Jessica Rylan/Can't
 
 from No Future Fest III: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_qt-sWFI8S8
 some recent pics: http://www.flickr.com/photos/thisreallyhappenedok/sets/72157600214775419/
 http://www.flickr.com/photos/thisreallyhappenedok/sets/72157600155578944/
 http://www.flickr.com/photos/thisreallyhappenedok/sets/72157600116501880/

snailhook

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Re: Velvet Lounge/611 Florida/Clavius Productions schedule
« Reply #20 on: July 19, 2007, 07:17:00 pm »
Clavius Productions presents:
 
 Sunday, July 22
 Velvet Lounge
 915 U St NW WDC
 http://www.velvetloungedc.com
 $7, 21+, doors at 9pm
 
 Unorthodox (legendary MD doom metal, ex-Spirit Caravan)
 Tides Within (NYC sludgy art-metal a la Neurosis/Isis, ex-Agnosis)
 Stifling (NoVA bass/drums sludge duo, ex-Valkyrie)

snailhook

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Re: Velvet Lounge/611 Florida/Clavius Productions schedule
« Reply #21 on: July 24, 2007, 02:29:00 pm »
Clavius Productions presents an all-out punk-rock guitar assault from Radio Birdman's legendary Denis Tek:
 
 Wednesday, July 25
 Velvet Lounge
 915 U St NW WDC
 http://www.velvetloungedc.com
 $8, 21+, doors at 9pm
 
 The Last of the Bad Men (mem. of Radio Birdman/Exploding Fuck Dolls)
 Albert Strange ('90s DC rawk)
 The Spoils of NW (DC '60s-inspired pop-psych/garage, ex-High Back Chairs/Pussy Galore/Tuscadero)
 
 
 The Last of the Bad Men
 http://www.thelastofthebadmen.com/
 
 The Last of the Bad Men are an international group whose members are considered outlaws by some and heroes by others. This is an alliance brought together by a common sense of urgency: there is NO SECOND CHANCE! It's not TV fashion time! Get out of line, this is warfare, no time for love or hate, let the leaders pray for gas, it's your time, it's our time! Scrape yourself off of the city streets, quit sniveling, get back into the deep end, and try again! The end is near and we're not goin' out without a fight! The sun is going down and the final hour is upon us. Who's gonna lead the way? Be ready to kill or be killed. These are the ones to join, grab your weapons, sticks, rocks, skateboards, guitars, drums and basses. Scream your guts out and be a part of...The Last of the Bad Men.
 
 Radio Birdman proto-punker Deniz Tek, a couple Exploding Fuck Dolls, and some skateboard guy comprise the ranks of the awesomely named Last of the Bad Men. All of 'em are spread out in various hotspots all over the world -- Australia, Cleveland, Nowheresville -- but they convened in Vancouver, where they recorded these tracks, presumably under a cloud of cigarette smoke and alcohol fumes. So it's a "project," really, and thusly lacks the road-worn cohesion of Birdman or the Fuck Dolls, but kicks are kicks, and "Nowhere Is Safe" provides plenty of 'em, in a US Bombs-y gruff-punk sorta way. Tek tosses out some classic glam-punk riffs on this 'un, especially on anthemic "Get in Line" and the Pistols packin' "Free Wheeler," and the slashing closer "City Pigs" is an authentically disgusted slice of pogo-ready punk rock snarl. Not quite as villainous as their name would imply, these Bad Men, but still plenty mean. I'm sure this'll sound great blasting out of the boombox while you wait for the paramedics to show up and put your shattered kneecap back together after grinding the Charlie, or whatever you skater creeps call it." (Sleazegrinder)
 
 This is straight-up old-school punk played by a serious rag-tag lineup. Deniz Tek (Radio Birdman), Art & Steve Godoy (Exploding Fuck Dolls), Danny (Factory 13) and the bassist from the Darkest of the Hillside Thickets create a serious melting pot of styles. Fom Sham 69 and the Stitches to the Boys. Fans of Hostage records will shit all over themselves when they hear rippers like "Tail Block" and "Free Wheeler." The guitars on this album blaze as Tek and Godoy share lead duties with neither party overdoing it. Curbslappys frontman Danny sounds like a surf nazi who ate a fucking truckload of angel dust and is ready to rape an entire pet store, he says "fuck" 13 times in a row in one of these selections. About as close to the real deal as you will get. (Absolute Underground)
 
 
 The Spoils of NW
 http://www.spoilsofnw.com
 
 The Spoils of NW is made up of former members of the High Back Chairs (Peter Hayes, guitar, vocals, keyboards, harmonica); Tuscadero (Phil Satlof, bass); Cleveland's the Revelers (Joel Kaufman, guitar); and Philadelphia's Pteradactyl (Bill Brown, drums). Bill and his two sons, Charlie and JJ, are in another amazing band called Eyeball Skeleton. The Spoils play heavy, melodic rock with echoes of '70s psych, blues and soul.

snailhook

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Re: Velvet Lounge/611 Florida/Clavius Productions schedule
« Reply #22 on: July 24, 2007, 03:38:00 pm »
Clavius Productions presents:
 
 Thursday, July 26
 611 Florida Ave NW WDC
 http://www.claviusproductions.org
 8pm, $5 suggested donation
 202-360-9739 for info
 BYOW!
 
 Thee Ultimate VAG (DC guitar/percussion improv duo, mem. of Kohoutek/To Live and Shave in L.A.)
 Neg-Fi (NYC experimental/noise duo, mem. of Branca-Bloor Quartet)
 This Is My Condition (one-man band from Lawrence, Kansas)
 FFFFs (DC solo guitar/electronics, Sockets)
 
 
 Thee Ultimate VAG
 http://www.claviusproductions.org
 http://www.myspace.com/accidentswithmagnets
 
 Dreamy moonlit melodies as imagined by axeslinger Chris Grier (To Live and Shave in L.A./Sean McArdle Band/ex-Mungo Jerry) and skinpounder Scott Verrastro (Kohoutek/Insect Factory/Sequence Chair/ex-Ozark Mountain Daredevils). Setting a course for the heartland of America, this duo contructs ribald ditties derived from ancient Lithuanian ballads translated to these modern, not-so-chaste times. Bring your lambskin.
 
 
 Neg-Fi
 http://www.myspace.com/negfi
 
 sounds like: a burlap sack of tin and aluminum scraps falling down a cast iron spiral staircase, highly amplified.
 
 "In the '50s, a time of postwar optimism and faith in science, there was Hi-Fi. In the '90s, an era of slackers and diminished expectations, there was Lo-Fi. In the '00s, a time of neanderthal government and outright contempt for the arts, there is Neg-Fi. A watershed moment in the history of art and music -- some might say sub-nadir... " (Tom Moody, art guy)
 
 "One very memorable one for me was a presentation by a group named Neg-Fi, and it was great because I forget who was on either side of them but it was some fairly high-tech sophisticated stuff, and what they brought in were these little cardboard boxes they had assembled that sort of crackled if you plugged something into them. And their band is named Neg-Fi, which is a pretty great name. So they just put these little boxes on the table and sat behind it and it was very stark and they were very kind of serious and they made these little crackles and they were being serious on purpose because it was funny." (Douglas Repetto, founder of Dorkbot and Artbot, in an interview in WIRED NEWS)
 
 
 This Is My Condition
 http://www.thisismycondition.com/
 
 This Is My Condition is a one-man band in which Craig Comstock plays guitar, drums and sings all at the same time. In the tradition of noise rock this music is heavy, tough and intense, while at other times very free and unstructured. This Is My Condition deals in power, spontaneity and passionate lyrics. Coming from a background of experimentation, repetition and angst in Many Series and Black Calvin, Craig takes things in a new direction by going solo and performing on-the-spot improvisations of the same ilk.
 
 Craig was working on a new project after his trio with Brandon Brown (guitar/vocals in Teriyakis) and Ryan Johnson (drums in Floyd the Barber and others) fizzled out. His search for a drummer who had the desire and skill to play improvised hardcore and art rock failed to succeed. He started applying himself to learning how to be the drummer he was searching for. In the midst of this, somehow, he placed his guitar over his drums and found he could actually play both at the same time. This resulted in his first show at the Replay Lounge with Pixel Panda and My Name Is Rar Rar (who failed to show due to a broken down van in Utah). A day or so before the show he went up to KJHK and played a song acoustically on Plow the Fields and billed himself as Comstock, in the tradition of Dokken, Dio, Bon Jovi and Van Halen. And while the phrase "Less Talk, More Comstock" was screamed by the crows at several of the first shows, it was not to stick. Feeling a bit overly egotistical Craig decided to change the name to This Is My Condition, knowing that the name would always apply regardless of his current condition.
 
 When TIMC opened up for Lightning Bolt in Kansas City, this was a defining moment. Craig challenged Lightning Bolt to a duel. Of course, it was not a duel of volume, Lightning Bolt clearly had the advantage there. Unfortunately the duel didn't happen, but TIMC got to play to a large crowd of enthusiastic kids from KC and learned that the bass player from Lightning Bolt secretly wished he could do something similar.
 
 TIMC took a hiatus from shows during Winter 2003 and found time to record several songs at Chubby Smith's studio in a barn in the countryside outside of Lawrence.
 
 After a couple more shows and delving into more of the experimental improvisational side of TIMC, Craig was invited to play a Seminar at the UMKC school of Music. He played to a group of 30 or so Music Composition students and played just as loud and as intense as at a normal show. Most everyone covered their ears and nodded in approval. The discussion centered around "context" in the music, something that doesn't get discussed much at a regular venue.
 
 Currently Craig has his sights set on playing in far away cities with old friends and honing his skills of improvisation, song-smithing and rocking.
 
 
 FFFFs
 http://www.myspace.com/scdr
 
 FFFFs is Sean Peoples' solo project. Non-ornamental, melodic loopworks, pure and clean. It explores the various impact of vocal loops and otherwise unconventional noise loops in a controlled and song-based environment. Songs contain atmosphere usually tending toward ambient but also including beat and minimal synth-oriented material. I also use found sound recordings. My music taste is all over the map -- beat-oriented, tape loop noise, accessible, experimental. The music tends to reflect that wide-reaching map.

azaghal1981

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Re: Velvet Lounge/611 Florida/Clavius Productions schedule
« Reply #23 on: July 24, 2007, 08:03:00 pm »
Set times for this thursday?
احمد

snailhook

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Re: Velvet Lounge/611 Florida/Clavius Productions schedule
« Reply #24 on: July 24, 2007, 09:40:00 pm »
i never have exact set times at 611, but it'll roughly be this:
 
 ffffs: 9-9:30
 this is my condition: 9:45-10:15
 neg-fi: 10:30-11:00
 ultimate vag: 11:15-11:45
 
 all bands will play half an hour or less, the vag might play for 35. it'll be over by midnight for sure, and the metro's right by the house.

snailhook

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Re: Velvet Lounge/611 Florida/Clavius Productions schedule
« Reply #25 on: August 10, 2007, 03:36:00 pm »
Clavius Productions presents:
 
 Sunday, August 12
 611 Florida Ave NW WDC
 http://www.claviusproductions.org
 6pm, $5 suggested donation
 202-360-9739 for info
 BYOW!
 
 The Wayward (Magic Bullet Rec., ex-Carrion)
 The Conformists (St. Louis heavy math-rock, mem. of Yowie, 54 40 or Fight Rec.)
 Durga Temple (NoVA sludge rock)
 Motreb (NoVA improv experimental psych guitar/drums duo, mem. of Contact Contact)
 
 
 The Wayward
 http://www.geocities.com/wearethewayward
 http://www.myspace.com/theewayward
 
 The Wayward was formed in Summer 2004 by two ex-members of Carrion, just four months after the breakup of that band. After three months of songwriting and local shows, The Wayward began touring the eastern half of the US, playing w/ the likes of Battles, Mastodon, Breather Resist, Ed Gein, Anodyne, Baroness, and many more.
 
 After quickly selling out of a pressing of self-recorded, hand-numbered cd's, a second, more hi-fi home recording, the Not Showing the Past EP, was released, sold out, and repressed. In September 2005, a self-titled 7" was released on vinyl on Black Box Recordings.
 
 Meanwhile, The Wayward continued to tour relentlessly, including a 9-week run in late '05 that saw them play with Kayo Dot, Dysrythmia, Stinking Lizaveta, Forensics, The Dream Is Dead, and many more.
 
 The Wayward's debut full-length, The Wayward, is set for release on June 6, 2006, on Black Box Recordings.
 
 Hailing from Fairfax, Virginia (and currently in Baltimore), it's kind of amazing to consider that THE WAYWARD collectively have but a mere six arms. Simply put, there's a LOT going on with the band's music. Slabs and slabs of riffs uncoil at a frenetic pace courtesy of Nicholas and Jesse Skrobisz, a hypnotic concoction brewed from years of brotherhood and shared experience. One-swinging-guy Nathaniel Simms powers his way through the hot choppery, finding rhythms eschewing both harmonious conviction and technicality.
 
 Having looped the U.S. numerous times already, the band will set out this October and November yet again. Overexposure, their second full length and Magic Bullet Records debut, will be in tow on both CD and LP formats.
 
 
 The Conformists
 http://www.theconformists.com
 http://www.myspace.com/theconformists
 
 For once it seems as though all the ??sounds like? listed in the biography are right on the nose: Don Caballero, Unsane, US Maple, Slint, and the Jesus Lizard. Yup, they??re all here. The Conformists are hardly what their name suggests, which is surely another shot of irony to the rock and roll world. There are lots of solid ideas here, many of which never seem to go anywhere. For example, once you can get past the stupid opening of the track "Black People," the latter part of the song totally kicks ass. It??s got an intense forward march approach with the guitars, sounding like they came out of the Steve Albini school of rockin?? (hey, whaddya know! Albini recorded the album!) with vocals that bellow anger and chaos and the inability to break free. On "Meredith Knezvitch," the opening line "You??re the big man now" had me waiting for one more word (dog) in the hopes that it was a tribute to one of Sean Connery??s finest works, "Finding Forester." But alas, it never came. Instead, the band continued to pound out haphazard beats, wild vocals, subtle basslines and off the wall guitar chords. There??s something going on here; something I really like but there??s also something else keeping me from totally getting into this. I like me some math rock, but this is like drunk math rock on cocaine. Strangely enough, I think I mean that as a compliment. (Kurt Morris, 54 40 or Fight!)
 
 
 The Conformists have been twisting guitar music into new shapes for over ten years. Like Oxes and Shellac they take something pretty inaccessible and make it somewhat less inaccessible.
 
 Three Hundred is an angular, abstract mess that will put off three times as many people that will love it. It is an album that will frustrate as many people as it pleases. In fact it would be a frustrating album even for those it pleases. The Conformists no doubt themselves take great pleasure in this. They are thoroughly non-conformist in their approach to laying out their post-rock grooves.
 
 Despite the band??s bizarre attempts to sabotage their own record Three Hundred is just about successful. They just about avoid novelty rocking. There are moments of playful self-indulgence and moments of pointless self-indulgence. How much is pretension and how much is pissing around is hard to discern at times. This is something else that probably brings a smile to the faces of these weirdoes.
 
 Guitar, bass, drums and the odd vocals are all used as weapons to confuse the listener. They take you down dark, dank paths and up febrile, enchanting trails. The abrasive, staccato "Are These Flowers" dares to teach Shellac a lesson in musical misanthropy. It is both harsh and yet strangely alluring. The epic "You??re Welcome" wanders about intensely looking for trouble. Guitars bristle with an almost tangible tension. "Tax Deduction" is a prickly affair reminiscent of Slint at their most eerily wiry and passive-aggressive.
 
 "Black People" has a great title but starts off with an endless series of climaxes before launching into a muscular piece of rocking post-hardcore. The smart arse likes of "Stairway To Heaven" and "Laundry Hepburn" are fun for a few listens but are too slight and end up as essentially inane filler.
 
 Not many people will love them but The Conformists are an endearing band if you happen to like your music difficult and filled with sarcasm. (Nadeem Ali, New-Noise.net)
 
 Find out more about the Conformists here: http://www.riverfronttimes.com/Issues/2000-07-12/music/music.html

snailhook

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Re: Velvet Lounge/611 Florida/Clavius Productions schedule
« Reply #26 on: August 15, 2007, 06:12:00 am »
Clavius Productions presents the first New American Folk Hero DC showcase:
 
 Wednesday, August 15
 Velvet Lounge
 915 U St NW WDC
 http://www.velvetloungedc.com
 202-462-3213
 $7, doors at 9pm, 21+
 
 Kohoutek Dashin Gassoudan (Music Fellowship/Sockets, all percussion set!)
 Mike Tamburo (Music Fellowship, solo experimental guitar/hammered dulcimer from Pittsburgh)
 Tusk Lord (New American Folk Hero, solo experimental folk/psych from Pittsburgh)
 The Cutest Puppy in the World (New American Folk Hero/Sockets, DC improv psych duo)
 
 
 Kohoutek Dashin Gassoudan
 http://www.claviusproductions.org/kohoutek/index.html
 
 Improvised psychedelia ranging from atonal noise to delicate melodies, with a keen focus on spontaneous composition, inspired by the likes of Can/Amon Duul 2/Krautrock, Acid Mothers Temple/Ghost/Japanese psych, Bardo Pond, Dead C, Skullflower, Trad Gras Och Stenar, Sun Ra/Art Ensemble/free jazz, Sonic Youth, MBV/shoegaze, drone, doom/sludge metal, etc. Textures and mood over technical proficiency.
 
 For this set, Kohoutek will be strictly percussion-based, with all sounds electronically manipulated via contact mics, filters, and pedals, somewhat akin to the solo percussion experiments of Tony Oxley, Paul Lytton, and Henry Cow's Chris Cutler.
 
 
 Mike Tamburo
 http://www.miketamburo.com/
 http://www.myspace.com/miketamburo
 
 Hello, I was born on March 30, 1977 in New Kensington, PA. When I was around 15 months old I was diagnosed with Otitis Media. My ears had filled with fluid and I was unable to hear correctly for several months. I had surgery and was sent to ear specialists that introduced me to the world of test tones and perceptual challenges.
 
 Music has always been a part of my life. My father played guitar and sang me Beatles songs and sometimes his own self penned songs when I was young. My Grandmother and Aunt also played piano and sang Italian influenced songs. They all seemed happiest or at least at peace when they were playing music. I guess perhaps through imitation I decided I wanted to play music as well. For as long as I can remember I was playing something, hitting something, making some kind of noise. I first started out playing chord organ and toy xylophone. I can still remember holding out long tones on the chord organ. I remember that I loved to just hold down the chord buttons for as long as I could. Oddly enough one of my first musical performances was for Ralph Nader. I was probably around 5. My mother was doing a video interview with him. I was on the floor underneath them banging on my toy xylophone. I doubt he was impressed. In school I took up clarinet and played with the school band. At the time I hated it, but now looking back I realize that I learned the fundamentals of music on a B Flat clarinet.
 
 Aside from various art projects I took up, I don't remember ever wanting to do much other than just being in a band. I started my first one when I was 13 or 14. I met some local kids that were playing together. I ended up singing for them. We were called Lurch. A very strange, I guess emo-type, band that included a bass player with a hunchback. This went on for a few years, until guitarist Chris Pecoraro and I decided we wanted to be a little freer and more experimental. I was still singing and I took up drums. Chris still played the guitar. This became Eskimo 88. We did this for the rest of our high school careers. We recorded and released to cassettes Open Your Ears and Hear a Sound and Inside Outside.
 
 In 1995 I went away to Edinboro University. Instead of going to class I spent all of my time reading and writing music. I decided to try to learn the guitar. I made over 200 recordings of myself trying to learn the guitar. I was reading as many books on 20th century composition that I could find and then after trying to figure out what it all meant, I tried to apply it to guitar.
 
 I dropped out of school at the end of the semester. I came back to Pittsburgh and started playing with Ken Camden and Brian Camphire. This was the start of Meisha. Shortly after Brian left, Pete Spynda joined. We recorded several times and released Meisha, Meisha Returns, Meisha Forever, The First Lessons in New Era Time: The Universal Orchestra of Pituitary Knowledge Sing Om to the Disturbed Onlookers, Who were Meisha and Robin Anyway?, The Fourth Lesson In New Era Time: The Republic of Meisha, On A Clear Day You Can See Forever, Meisha Machine Music, and A Celebration of Life.
 
 I returned to Edinboro University to study and make films. While there Pete Spynda and I formed Arco Flute Foundation with Matt McDowell, Rob Dingman and Jeff Komara. We recorded and released The Second Lesson in New Era Time Exploring the Possibilities of New Wave Villains; And What of Boy?, The Third Lesson in New Era Time: Running Slow-Motion Marathons With Purple Rejoice; Who Killed the Party House?, Everything After The Bomb Is Sci-Fi, Everything After Everything Is The Bomb Is Sci-Fi, I Ate Tony Conrad's Pierogies, The Fifth Lesson in New Era Time: The Unconsciousness of Yukon Steve. We also created a new system of time that was 3 hours and 14 minutes behind Eastern Standard Time.
 
 Both bands did several tours and imploded leaving the shattered ashes for all to see. I now play alone and am always recording, painting, making films and video, listening to music, studying Enthobotany, thinking or watching T.V.
 
 
 Tusk Lord
 http://www.myspace.com/tusklord
 
 Tusk Lord is the recording vehicle of New Kensington, PA native Mike Kasunic, and the perfectly titled Familiar Trails is the first widely available release I??ve heard under the name to date. Coming to us courtesy of Mike Tamburo??s New American Folk Hero, Kasunic fits in well among the eclectic roster of experimental noise and primitive sound artists that NAFH has come to exemplify. Like label owner Tamburo, Kasunic combines distortion and drone with rustling acoustic ragas that prove highly worthy of your time if enraptured by the current (free) folk renaissance and the new noise scene at the same time.
 
 Opener ??Sword? slices through the ether on ferocious electric currents that gracefully give way to the delicate raga of ??Grassy Summit? and the mind-cleansing medieval vibe of ??Wayfarer.? ??Cold Air? spreads out a bit longer on the glistening lo-fi currents of a post-industrial waterfall, while longer tracks like ??No More Sunrise? and ??Sky Burial? conjure moods of foreboding and solemnity respectively.
 
 While it could be argued that Tusk Lord isn??t doing anything particularly innovative in the free-primitive-whatever-the-heck landscape, the one man ensemble has a voice and a perspective that demands attention from anyone with even a modicum of interest in such things. [iFamiliar Trails? is a solid journey through primitive folk noise abstraction, plus an excellent opening salvo in what looks to be a promising, unfolding musical journey. Very nice. 8/10. (Lee Jackson, Foxy Digitalis)
 
 "Though Tusk Lord began as a continuation with Mike Kasunic's grimy, ghastly work as part of the duo Slices, he's more recently exited the grimy underground tunnels that birthed the dark and foreboding work of his self-titled debut, and wandered into new realms. Slices, a band of both ear-searing electronic squall and massive guitar/drums plodding thunder, dissolved just as they entered a new phase of existence. And while the Tusk Lord moniker and Kasunic's solo work were birthed during Slices' short lifespan, it was after the duo were no more that Tusk Lord became Kasunic's main vehicle, and the receptacle for the bevy of ideas that Kasunic so eagerly soaked up from various corners of the musical spectrum. Tusk Lord's self-titled debut CD-r is an album heavy on inner ear torture and ugly sounds, though not without signs of the about face that Kasunic was soon to make. Familiar Trails finds Tusk Lord in a decidedly different mode, making largely acoustic music in a more meditative, mildly psychedelic manner. The sun-speckled tracks that make up the disc may not boast the forceful impact of Kasunic's earlier work, but Familiar Trails finds Tusk Lord in perhaps his most confident delivery yet. This is the music of unexplored forests, clouds gathering on the horizon, and rocky foothill paths, all viewed through a filter that lends an unnatural veneer to the terrain. It's music of the earth, imperfect and unpolished, and all the more beautiful for it." (Adam Strohm)
 
 
 The Cutest Puppy in the World
 http://www.questionthetruth.com/noise/cutestpuppy/
 http://www.myspace.com/thecutestpuppyintheworld
 
 The Cutest Puppy in the World is Bryan Rhodes (of Baltimore) and Layne Garrett (of Washington, DC). We explore emergent forms, extremes of saturated and empty space, scorched remnants of the familiar. We play electric piano, analog synthesizer, combo organ, guitars, found-object percussion, thumb piano, bass clarinet, styrofoam, whatever is within reach. Our music is all improvised.
 
 Since the summer of 2005, we have performed extensively in DC and the mid-Atlantic region. Highlights include: creating improvised soundtracks for experimental films by DC artists Heather Levy, Christopher Lynn, and Jay Rees; several appearances at the Electric Possible experimental music showcase at George Washington University; the 2005 Sonic Circuits Festival in DC; and a 2-hour pyrotechnic-enhanced set in the middle of the night at Soundquilt Music Festival last summer. We've had the pleasure to play alongside a number of spectacular musicians, including: Jack Wright, Reuben Radding, Andrew Drury, Nate Wooley, Mazen Kerbaj, Mike Bullock, Vic Rawlings, Joseph Hammer, Sayo Mitsuishi, Michael Thomas Jackson, Hans Buetow, Ben Hall, John Dierker, Matt Weston, Charalambides, Volcano the Bear, Kohoutek, Na, Green Milk from the Planet Orange, Whelp, Insect Factory, Big Cats, Zach Mason, Tone Ghosting, WZT Hearts, Echolalia, Piasa, Mass Movement of the Moth, Slim Castle, Cash Slave Clique, FFFFs, etc!
 
 In 2005, we self-released a CD-R entitled ::shut in the basement::. It made free103point9's Top 150 of 2005. Sockets put out Finfolk in early 2006, with cover art by Joseph Mills. The record received critical praise from Terrascope, Fakejazz, and Noiseweek, among others. Apotrope is due out in April on New American Folk Hero.
 
 "What fundamentally seems to set The Cutest Puppy so far apart from the larger portion of the experimental scene is that for all their variations and stylistic diversity, they still seem very much concerned with the making of music, with all its robustly humanistic implications....The Cutest Puppy allows their pieces to flow together organically, taking in melody and discord in whatever quantities that might instinctually seem to be right....through their unpretentious, wildly humanistic ministrations on this release [FINFOLK], The Cutest Puppy in the World does succeed in underscoring some of the impressive potential that experimental music regularly fails to live up to. This record demonstrates in brilliantly unassuming terms that experimental music can not only exist without all its intellectual poses, but can also beat and shake with all the delicate passion and warmth of a heart and a soul." (Germ Ross, ArtNoise)
 
 "The DC-Baltimore duo sound like the soundtrack to a soap opera by David Lynch." (Bob Massey, Washington Post Express)
 
 "[The Cutest Puppy in the World's] Shut in the Basement is a walk through a macabre circus sideshow, each booth revealing another bizarre character, another dark vision that laughs with joyful madness." (The Ptolemaic Terrascope online)
 
 "Cutest Puppy in the World's songs are like Calder mobiles, made of wire, string, and dense, sweet-smelling wood." (Molars)

azaghal1981

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Re: Velvet Lounge/611 Florida/Clavius Productions schedule
« Reply #27 on: August 15, 2007, 11:31:00 pm »
Roughly how late will the Religious Knives/Ultimate Vag show go? 1-ish?
احمد

snailhook

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Re: Velvet Lounge/611 Florida/Clavius Productions schedule
« Reply #28 on: August 16, 2007, 03:53:00 am »
that's about right. i doubt any of the four sets will be longer than 35 minutes, except for maybe the religious knives.

snailhook

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  • Posts: 1608
Re: Velvet Lounge/611 Florida/Clavius Productions schedule
« Reply #29 on: August 16, 2007, 04:44:00 pm »
Four shows in a row this weekend...
 
 Thursday, August 16
 Velvet Lounge
 915 U St NW WDC
 http://www.velvetloungedc.com
 202-462-3213
 $8, doors at 9pm, 21+
 
 Caution Curves (DC electro-acoustic improv ensemble)
 Capillary Action (Philly instrumental experimental genre-hopping prog-psych)
 Zdrastvootie (Holy Mountain, prog weirdness from CA)
 
 
 Caution Curves
 http://www.thecautioncurves.org
 
 A cosy electro acoustic combo comprising Amanda Huron, drums and percussion, Tristana Fiscella, vocals and guitar, and Rebecca Mills on her laptop, hailing from Washington DC, who's music is refreshingly nice (as opposed to nasty).
 
 "Lemons" begins with a yawning sleepy start from vocalist Tristana Fiscella...something about liking lemons?
 
 A slightly neurotic potpourri of naive noises...the music flittering about dangerously like moths round a candle, but hanging together on thin threads. A change comes half way through as Ms Fiscella tries desperately to stay awake as she sings some "proper verses" over simple, understated drums.
 
 On "Leslie", a naïve ambling clattering of drums, percussion and twangy guitar floats along nicely. The sun is out, it's spring, and squirrels hop from branch to twig, until after a deep breath, a moaning and a wailing hails drums building and falling, against a feathery warm duvet of laptop gurgling. The track sinks into colder regions, the sun is obscured by dark clouds and guttural words can be made out as bassy low bit drones fill out the space?as the voice soars, we quiet down to almost nothing as Tristana pleads, please please please please, please Leslie come home!
 
 Maybe it's the sound of Tristana Fiscella's voice or the lemony nature of the first track, but this awakens something in my severely damaged memory and, on hands and knees I finger my way along my vinyl shelf until I dust off Danielle Dax, and more specifically her early work in the Lemon Kittens (hence the lemons). This was a pleasant reminder of the lovely Ms Dax, and the observation that experimentation when in feminine hands is simply and wonderfully NON-po-faced and refreshingly UN-nerdy!
 
 And there is something feminine and charming about The Caution Curves, that is pastoral and free. The warmness of the laptop sounds that fill the air are delightful, the voice is improvised and happily carefree and unselfconscious. The drums although nicely recorded, are verging on the amateur, and it takes a while for me to decide whether I like them like this or whether someone needs a few lessons?but finally I decide that I not only like them like this, I love them like this...don't change?please?
 
 As my favourite German improvisers, Can once said? I want more? (furthernoise.org)
 
 
 Capillary Action
 http://www.capillaryaction.net/
 
 For all intents and purposes, Capillary Action is Philadelphia native and Oberlin College junior Jonathan Pfeffer accompanied live by keyboardist Sam Krulewitch, drummer Ricardo Lagomasino, and bassist Spencer Russell.
 
 The music is hard to describe in simple terms: on Capillary Action's 2004 debut, Fragments (Pangaea Recordings), Pfeffer demonstrated an uncanny ability to dip into everything from melodic death metal rave-ups, fractured no wave-inspired crescendos, Latin rhythms, video game music, lazy alt-country pop, lounge jazz, new wave synths, and mathy melodies -- sometimes all within the same song.
 
 But on Capillary Action's sophomore effort, Cannibal Impulses (Pangaea Recordings), Pfeffer discards the eclectic math rock stylings of Fragments for something completely fresh. Incorporating influences ranging from the meticulous nature of early 20th century classical and the satisfying crunch of chip tunes music to the insistent melodies of Javanese Gamelan and the heavily orchestrated soundscapes of Japanese noise artists, Cannibal Impulses is a harsh and challenging expedition into Jonathan Pfeffer's warped psyche.
 
 "Fragments is a nifty guitar record that plays well with different moods and feels, making for a cohesive whole that flows from track to track in an almost suite-like fashion. It's an assured debut, and Pfeffer is a clearly talented musician who bears watching to see where he'll take his craft." (Joe Tangari, Pitchfork Media, #46 on Joe Tangari's Best of 2005 List)
 
 "It's impressive that Pfeffer managed to make an instrumental guitar rock record with a lot of genre-changing and without a single style to call its own (there is no Capillary Action sound in the same way that there was a Don Caballero sound), all without ever entering jam band territory. Pfeffer's songs are compact, and they're full of unexpected changes rather than endless repetition." (Charlie Wilmoth, Dusted)
 
 
 Zdrastvootie
 http://www.myspace.com/zdrastvootie
 
 "Holy Mountain, the label that has so far essentially been home to only two artists, Six Organs Of Admittance, and Steven Wray Lobdell (and of course his Davis Redford Triad) has finally drawn new blood, seeking psychedelic sustanence from outside their very elite holy land. Coming soon, massive, lugubrious psych drone from OM (ex-Sleep!) but first stop, Santa Cruz, and the curiously named Zdrastvootie. The minute we threw this on, we immediately thought: Polvo plays Torch of the Mystics (the Sun City Girls classic). And we haven't really been able to come up with a more apt description. Angular guitars woven into dreamy post-rock soundscapes, occasional Greg Ginn-like psychedelic squalls, all with a very Eastern raga-like hue. Rollicking and shambolic one moment, shimmering and pastoral the next. Riffs explode into full-on rock mode but immediately decay into splattery, spare ambience. Chaotic skronk and skree implode into propulsive Krautrock mesmer. Really fucking great." (Aquarius)
 
 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 
 Friday, August 17
 Velvet Lounge
 915 U St NW WDC
 http://www.velvetloungedc.com
 202-462-3213
 $8, doors at 9pm, 21+
 
 Religious Knives (Troubleman, mem. of Double Leopards/Mouthus/White Rock)
 Thee Ultimate VAG (DC improv guitar/percussion duo, mem. of Kohoutek/To Live and Shave in L.A.)
 Woods (mem. of Wooden Wand & the Vanishing Voice/Meneguar, Fuck It Tapes/Release the Bats)
 Twilight Memories of the Three Suns (DC experimental acoustic sounds, mem. of Kohoutek/Piasa/Alzo Bozsormenyi)
 
 
 Religious Knives
 http://www.doubleleopards.org
 http://www.heavytapes.com
 
 Religious Knives is Maya Miller, Michael Bernstein and Nate Nelson. They spend a lot of their time playing in bands like Double Leopards, White Rock, and Mouthus, and running labels like Heavy Tapes and Our Mouth. This recent incarnation of Religious Knives has been compared to Goblin and Popul Vuh, which is chill, because who wouldn't love that? Electric piano, guitar, drums, percussion, tapes, effects, and plenty of singing, moaning, and screaming all find themselves together at last in Brooklyn, New York. Come and love with them today.
 
 The circle-jerk noise-rock scene has ensured that you've probably never heard of Religious Knives. The New York trio??consisting of members of more "popular" groups Mouthus and Double Leopards??originally issued the recordings collected on Remains on limited-edition CD-R and vinyl, and the group is more likely to mount an art-gallery installation than a conventional tour. The five instrumental tracks on Remains make an argument for Religious Knives' promotion from the avant-garde minor leagues, and if one of Paul Bowles' surrealist desert novels ever gets adapted for film, the score is already finished. From the krautrock/industrial groove of the 16-minute "Bind Them" and the muezzin-call drone of "Electricity And Air" to the Scott Walker-in-Morocco murk of "Wax & Flesh," the sonic equation is easy to figure out: East Germany meets the Middle East meets the East Coast. (Matthew Fritch)
 
 
 Thee Ultimate VAG
 http://www.claviusproductions.org
 http://www.myspace.com/accidentswithmagnets
 
 Dreamy moonlit melodies as imagined by axeslinger Chris Grier (To Live and Shave in L.A./Sean McArdle Band/ex-Mungo Jerry) and skinpounder Scott Verrastro (Kohoutek/Insect Factory/Sequence Chair/ex-Ozark Mountain Daredevils). Setting a course for the heartland of America, this duo contructs ribald ditties derived from ancient Guatemalan ballads translated to these modern, not-so-chaste times. Bring your lambskin, earplugs, and a box of chocolates.
 
 
 Woods
 http://www.fuckittapes.com/woods.htm
 
 Woods began in the woods, at the foot of Bear Mountain. In the earliest days it was a collaborative improvisational group with two core members and several guests, known as "woodsists." Shortly thereafter, Jeremy Earl and Christian DeRoeck emerged from the woods, dusted themselves off, and began to walk upright. The two woodsists immersed themselves in human culture, learned to craft a melody, to wield a tambourine, to construct a crude phonograph from spare bicycle parts. They learned the value of a cassette. Jeremy and Christian returned to the woods and shared their newfound knowledge with the other woodsists. The result was Woods, songs and improvisations by outsiders, inspired by the human experience.
 
 "Spawn of the holy Meneguar are The Woods and their completely rad debut. Originally put out on The Woods' own Jeremy Earl's Fuck It Tapes label as a double c20 near the end of '05, Release the Bats has now done it up as a proper CD. Sometimes, the four short sides seem like an advantage, giving the short album a distinct pacing and more proper feel but others I just feel like I'm flipping stuff over too much too often. The sound quality here sucks but the scratchy cassettes fit this band perfectly. I can only hope that the Release the Bats CD doesn't clean it up a terrible amount. The album founded mostly in acoustic guitar-led folkiness with the duo laying down massive vocal hook after massive vocal hook in reedy falsetto but the influence of Fuck It is evident: the pop songs are visited frequently by noise, tape trickery, massive psych guitar, retarded classic rock soloing, glockenspiel and, on one occasion, larynx-ruining hardcore vocals. The lyrics here deal with the oft-trodden grounds of love and loss but the boys' singing voices give them an abstract feel; as if you have no idea what they're singing about even though you know exactly what's going down. All the songs here have any extremely unified feel, making discussing them individually useless. An album doesn't have to be varied to be great. Didn't Loveless teach you that?" (Fakejazz)
 
 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 
 Clavius Productions presents the debut of Not Bullshit, a DJ night -- first Mondays at the Velvet Lounge -- for people who hate DJ nights.  And to show you we're not full of shit, we are celebrating with live sets by a couple of kickass noise-rock bands and a couple of brain-raping noise acts.  No spinning during music sets allowed!
 
 Saturday, August 18
 Velvet Lounge
 915 U St NW WDC
 http://www.velvetloungedc.com
 202-462-3213
 $7, doors at 9pm, 21+
 
 Catacombs of Rome (garagy synth-punk from Milwaukee, in the vein of Drive Like Jehu/Devo/Silver Apples/Chrome/Brainiac)
 Tenement (Wisconsin punk rock!)
 Byron House (noisy scum-rock duo from Tampa FL)
 Oubliette (solo analog noise/tape loops from GA)
 Haves and Thirds (five-minute walkman-and-guitar set, from Tampa FL)
 
 plus DJ sets by members of Kohoutek and The Points!
 
 
 Catacombs of Rome
 http://www.myspace.com/catacombsofrome
 
 Sounds like: If Devo smoked a J laced with katnip, then performed a Herniorraphy on an Arena Rock band (such as .38 Special). Maybe throw a conjoined twin or two in there and you have our sound.
 
 About: We don't take ourselves too seriously, which has helped us play music together for 5 years. We sweat a lot. We released a split EP with Jackalope in March of 2006 called "Chapter 1: Talking On the Telephone." We write songs about people. Bill Hicks saved our lives, so did Hot Snakes. The Jerk is the best movie ever made. We tend to watch the show Cops a little too much. We'll play in your living room if you want us to.
 
 
 Byron House
 http://www.cephiastreat.com/
 
 A two-piece guitar/vocals/drums noisy scum-rock band. Have been playing for the past five years. Performances include self-induced hysteria, irrational momentum and "crazy eyes". Based out of Tampa, Florida.
 
 
 Oubliette
 http://www.myspace.com/0ubliette
 http://www.obelisksounds.hostrocket.com
 
 Dude from the back woods of Clyo, Georgia. He plays broken analog equipment and hand-sliced tape loops. He usually enjoys playing with his upper torso covered in barbed wire.
 
 
 Haves and Thirds
 
 One man band who performs with an old '80s hood and aviator sunglasses over his face to build the mystery. Plays the most blissed-out, body-moving balm music you've heard in just five minutes. Just a walkman and a guitar. Tampa, Florida.
 
 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
 
 Sunday, August 19
 Velvet Lounge
 915 U St NW WDC
 http://www.velvetloungedc.com
 202-462-3213
 $7, doors at 9pm, 21+
 
 Jack Wright (improv solo sax from PA)
 Safe (DC analog electronics/tapes/shortwave radio duo)
 Scott Allison (of Kohoutek, solo electronics/guitar textures/field recordings)
 
 
 Jack Wright
 http://www.springgardenmusic.com/jackbio.html
 
 Over the past twenty-five years Jack Wright has been a bold saxophonist, as well as an influential musical personality. Either on tour or organizing the next one, he has played in virtually every venue available to experimental improvised music in the US, and many in Europe as well. In 1982 he created Spring Garden Music as a vehicle for organizing an improvisational music community, with a home base at his house in Philadelphia, now a residence for improvisers. He has been called the Johnny Appleseed of free improvisation for his encouragement to young players. As a musical explorer as well, his music passes through radical shifts of style and approach from one year to the next, yet always somehow identifiable as his own. These days he is playing mostly alto and soprano saxophones, in every possible direction, sometimes even recognizable as such. He lives in Easton, which enables him to commute easily to NYC and Phila. He is also increasingly active in Europe, touring both sides of the Atlantic with European musicians.
 
 The Washington Post once allowed this to be printed: "In the rarefied, underground world of experimental free improvisation, saxophonist Jack Wright is king." And a German publication, Bad Alchemy, had this to say of his solo: "Wright does not make music, he embodies it, he transforms it with a naiveté of another order. It grows into a sound river, he is part of the diaphragm through which the heterogeneous whispers."
 
 Jack has over sixty partners around the US and in Europe with whom he plays on his travels and records. His most recent tours have been with Fabrizio Spera and Alberto Braida in Italy; with Agnes Palier and Olivier Toutlemond in France, Switzerland and Germany, with Michael Johnsen and Sebastien Cirotteau in Europe; with French soprano sax player Michel Doneda and percussionist Tatsuya Nakatani in Japan, France and the US; Carol Genetti, sound vocalist of Chicago, and Jon Mueller, percussionist of Milwaukee; cellist Bob Marsh of the Bay area; Nate Wooley, trumpet, of NYC in Europe; Michael Griener percussion and Sabine Vogel flute of Berlin; Reuben Radding, NYC bassist; and Phil Durrant, English laptop musician.
 
 
 Safe
 
 The new improvisational collaboration of Tyler Higgins and Dave Vosh. Employing assorted electro-acoustic devices and modular synthesizer, they focus on the sound emitted by machines, sounds derived from radio and slowly evolving noise. Dave has been experimenting with electro-noise music since the early `70s and this project with Tyler is among the first things he`s done since escaping the basement last year. Tyler has been creatively misusing technology alongside other musical pursuits since high school, recently focusing on very direct ways of producing and manipulating sound.
 
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 JUST ANNOUNCED! Sunday 9/2 @ Velvet Lounge:
 
 Eugene Chadbourne & Jimmy Carl Black (original Mothers of Invention member, the Indian of the group!)