Today

£12 £10 Advance £6 MEMBERS

NEW IN THE SHOP

Preparations is an event where 23 artists create a preparation each for the grand piano. Three pianists/groups are then tasked with constructing individual live performances with the adaptable unit of preparations. For this second iteration of Preparations, musicians Finn Carter, Dear Laika and Ted Mair & Ed Bernez performed on the grand piano with preparations made by Ryoko Akama, Zoë Annesley, Jasper Appleby Sherring, Grace Black, Joseph Bradley Hill, Yasmine Brennan, Kara Chin, Gabriele Ciulli, Jacob Clayton, Leo DMB, enorê, Georgia Gendall, Harley Kuyck-Cohen, Kiran Leonard, Ruoru Mou, Siân Newlove-Drew, Karanjit Panesar, Lou Lou Sainsbury & Gabi Dao, Harry Smithson, Aga Ujma, Jake Vine, Tiffany Wellington & Isobel Whalley Payne. Finn Carter - untitled: For the preparation of the piano, Carter decided to leave the preparations untouched during his performance of the piece, with the sculptures positioned as follows: Yasmine Brennan’s My Albion?? was draped over the cast iron frame in the centre, next to Isobel Whalley Payne’s Untitled clover handkerchief which was weaved between the strings. Joseph Bradley Hill’s Jerry (an old oil can with ball bearings inside and a cloth coated wooden wedge protruding from the underside) sat on the iron frame closer to the keys, accompanied by Harley Kuyck-Cohen’s Demerara, Coffee, Tobacco (a carved wooden cat with a rotating head and beeswax eyes). Moving further up the piano, the arms of Jake Vine’s Mermaid’s Purse (a leather pouch with ceramic buttons inside) were fed in-between the strings, followed only by Gabriele Ciulli’s M & Ruoru Mou’s Scratch - Ciulli’s engraved brake pad dulled the strings with its weight, with Mou’s elongated ceramic hand causing a light resonance. Grace Black’s Conical Side Effect (a metal cone with a connected battery compartment that causes an LED to flash if the compartment is jolted) protruding behind them accompanied by Jacob Clayton’s Fishing magnet to put inside a piano, which stuck firmly to the frame, leaving the plastic keyring attached to the magnet to dangle on the strings and be moved by the vibrations. Sian Newlove-Drew’s Physics Angel was deemed too perishable to sit inside the piano itself, so for all three performances the glow-in-the-dark candle angel resided on the outer ledge of the piano, looking out at the audience. Dear Laika - Small vessel in sea green: For the performance, Thorn began by using Aga Ujma’s a midwinter night's dream (a silver aluminium wiry net of bells) as a shaken percussion instrument and Leo DMB’s waste i saw lorelei to as a mallet to hit the lower strings of the piano. The lower half of the piano was heavily prepared with Georgia Gendall’s Tapestry of Breath (a vacuum packed Ryvita with toothpaste, tic tacs and broken spaghetti), Kara Chin’s Shopping List (a large photo-covered, raisin box-filled, tentacled object), Harry Smithson’s Pothole to Aven (wrapped in Isobel Whalley Payne’s handkerchief) & Jasper Appleby-Sherring’s Praise (cavolo nero) (a bronze cast of kale atop a wooden and metal plate with locator bolts) all sat along one set of strings. Near the end of the performance Thorn used Karanjit Panesar’s Small vessel in sea green as a slide against certain strings, bifurcating them so each one would play two separate pitches on either side of the pot, reaching a sound halfway between that of a slide guitar and ondes martenot/theremin.

Late Works: Preparations II – 13.2.23

** English/German edition. Large format **The first comprehensive publication on his work focuses on Conrad Schnitzler "intermedia" work between Düsseldorf, West Berlin and New York in the late 1960s to 1980s. During this period, the Joseph Beuys student and sculptor Konrad Schnitzler developed into the Zodiak founder and electronic musician of Kluster and Tangerine Dream, into the busy video and performance artist "Konrad von Berlin" and finally into the internationally connected sound artist and musician Conrad Schnitzler.Contributions by Alexia Ciosses, Geeta Dayal, Gregor Jansen, David Keenan, Florian Meier, Stefan Schneider and Linnea Semmerling bear witness to Schnitzler's importance at the intersection of visual art and electronic music, cassette culture and mail art, video and performance, action and installation, which transcends borders in every respect. “I’m a performer, performance artist, intermedia artist—not multimedia, but between the media. I tend to see the word ‘musician’ as a derogatory term.” For Schnitzler, “intermedia” literally meant working between media with simple technical equipment. He treated his sound and video creations not as finished works, but as intermediate stages, set pieces, or momentary states that would unfold their potential in a continual series of new audiovisual constellations. He highly valued the political, economic, and artistic independence of his work.  In the early 1970s, Schnitzler bought his first synthesizer, the affordable and portable EMS Synthi A. With this monophonic, analog device, he was able to create his own electronic sounds, albeit only one at a time. That wasn’t enough for Schnitzler, and so he recorded the individual sounds on different cassette tapes, which he could then play back and mix. While the sparse instrumentation of his early concerts consisted of only the synthesizer and two cassette recorders, over the course of the 1970s he developed a performance practice with up to twelve tape recorders. He also continuously expanded his sound spectrum by recording found sounds from his surroundings and other synthesizers on cassettes and adding them to his sonic universe. This is how the format of the cassette concert, which he invented, came about as a unique combination of composed, improvised, and conceptual music.  Kluster (Konrad Schnitzler, Hans-Joachim Roedelius, Dieter Moebius), Klopfzeichen, 1970 (produced by Conny Plank)- Schnitzler’s ear was shaped by the sound of the bombs during the war and the noise from the factory where he completed his apprenticeship as a machinist. He was determined to transform these industrial soundscapes into art, and to this end he developed his own electroacoustic instruments consisting of modified classical musical instruments and homemade noise makers, whose sounds he electronically amplified and altered. “Back then I wanted to replay what I knew from my time as a machinist—the noise from the factory buildings—with instruments. I didn’t want normal scales, nor could I play them. That was my freedom: not being able to do anything. Sometimes it got out of hand and turned into music.” Schnitzler released an enormous amount of acoustic material in the 1970s and 1980s, deliberately disregarding the mechanisms of the music market. Whether his tracks were released on vinyl or cassette, on a label with professional distribution, or as a private release usually simply depended on whether he had requests from music labels or galleries. Pieces were often released in multiple editions and different versions—for example, on cassette in the early 1970s, as a video soundtrack in the late 1970s, and finally on vinyl in the 1980s. 

Conrad Schnitzler – Sometimes It Degenerates Into Music

New Events

Saturday 9 December 2023

Upset The Rhythm – 20th birthday party:

LINDA SMITH & NANCY ANDREWS + RATTLE + RUSSELL WALKER

£14 £12 (DICE)

Sunday 20 August 2023

MATINEE:

Ju House – @xcrswx + Ash & Jackson + Florence + Halldora + DJ S-fox

£7 £5 Advance FREE FOR MEMBERS

Coming up

Wednesday 9 August 2023

5 GATE TEMPLE PRESENTS: Rocheman + Scattsman + Jennifer Walton & Daniel Evans + Emma Sheridan Stonework

£14 £12 Advance £7 MEMBERS

Thursday 10 August 2023

Thanatosis presents Linnéa Talp + Alex Zethson + Martin Küchen

£14 £12 Advance £7 MEMBERS

Friday 11 August 2023

Laila Sakini + Kenichi Iwasa + Leeway + Luisa Amorim

£15 £13 Advance £8 MEMBERS

Saturday 12 August 2023

CAFE OTO SUMMER FAIR

Free Event