Fred Frith: Two Day Residency


Fred Frith

THURSDAY 28th April 2011
Tickets : £10 advance / £12 on the door

Fred Frith solo
duo w/ Roger Turner
trio w/ John Butcher & Hannah Marshall
quartet w/ Butcher/Marshall/Turner

FRIDAY 29th April 2011
Tickets : £10 advance / £12 on the door

duo w/ Evan Parker
duo w/ Annie Lewandowski
trio w/ Lewandowski/Parker

Two day pass : £18 adv

Door Times : 8pm

 

One of the most inventive and eclectic figures in contemporary music, guitarist and composer Fred Frith takes up residency in Café Oto again for two days of improvised encounters with a hand-picked selection of London's most exciting musicians.

FRED FRITH

Frith's work has ranged from ground-breaking avant-garde rock with Henry Cow and Art Bears to extended compositions for choirs, orchestras and saxophone quartets and collaborations with figures such as Mike Patton, John Zorn, Brian Eno, Ikue Mori and Derek Bailey. His highly individual approach to the guitar and use of extended and unorthodox techniques give his music a unique and at times disorienting sense of texture and space.

Frith's musicial journey started when he formed Henry Cow with Tim Hodgkinson in 1968, a legendary group that expanded the parameters of rock music to include complex compositional forms as well as improvised elements.

After moving to New York in 1979, Frith was a key figure in the downtown experimental music scene, his collaborations with Zorn, Laswell, Mori and others helping form an important new musical vernacular in which elements of rock, contempary composition, noise and improvisation overlapped and intertwined.

Since 1999 Frith has been Professor of Composition at Mills University, California. Recent projects have included duos with Anthony Braxton and Evelyn Glennie, collaborations with the Arte Quartett and choreographer Donna Uchizono, and numerous festival appearances in Europe and America.

"A masterful sound colorist, Frith is in no way subject to analyses of has artistic legitimacy - (he) redefines the possible uses of the guitar and makes traditional discourse irrelevant". L.A. Herald Examiner (USA)

Fred Frith website




Fred Frith photo by Antonio Matos Silva.