Sunday 21 April 2013, 8pm

CLORINDE + TOM ROGERSON (Three Trapped Tigers) + CHORA

No Longer Available

An eclectic set of performances that will touch pure abstraction, uplifting melodies, musical experimentalism and hypnotic rhythm - an inspiring and evocative vortex of sounds and visuals. The sonic worlds of Clorinde,Tom Rogerson (Three Trapped Tigers) and Chora will fuse at the end with a combined improv set!

CLORINDE

Clorinde is an instrumental avant-folk project composed by multi-instrumentalist Andrea Salvatici, Simone Salvatici David Harris & Derek Yau. Formed in 2005 in the city of Glasgow by Italian brothers Simone and Andrea, Clorinde make extensive use of acoustic and electric instruments (banjos, guitars , vibraphones, African kalimbas, zithers, clarinet, bass, electric organ, Cello, flute, various drums and percussions), bringing an enchanting flavor of rhythmic psychedelia mathematical post-folk with exciting structures and surprising passages of minimal introspection.

Clorinde are launching their new double album "From the Gardens of Bomarzo" playing an entirely new live set accompanied by visuals.

www.clorinde.org

Clorinde - The Temple from Clorinde on Vimeo.



TOM ROGERSON

Tom Rogerson plays keyboards in Three Trapped Tigers, as well as being an improvising pianist. He has recently started a new electronic improv night called Proof Positive.

threetrappedtigers.believeband.com



CHORA

London based group working collaboratively but with a mainstay presence of Ben Morris (Akke Phallus Duo, Lost Wax) and the artist Rob Lye. Over the last few years Chora have engineered an elemental, exhilarating strain of improvised psychedelia that pulsates with the fearsome spirit of the finest free music and the basest, most primitive heavy rock. Sketching a ‘violent pointillist’ aesthetic, their junkyard gamelan jams inhabit a future primitive ritual zone, which can lift to tonal elation in one movement or fall into a stark, submerged scrape in the next.

"Shifting sonic territories and a sense of perpetual struggle create a volatility that really does feel like life lived on the edge" THE WIRE