Tuesday 25 October 2016, 8pm
Very excited to welcome composer, saxophonoist and all-round musical polymath, Matana Roberts to OTO. Over the course of her ongoing Coin Coin project, Roberts has carved out an utterly compelling and evocative soundworld all her own – “creating a unique and very personal experiential body of sound work that speaks to, and reminds people of all walks of life to reach, stand up, give voice, regardless of difference, created from mere labels of intellectual classification.”
“Memory is a powerful thing, but it’s so private, fluid, and unreliable that it can seem almost impossible to capture in a work of art—and history is often no more stable, once you look closely enough. Roberts has succeeded at evoking both, though, and gives her audience a long look at something ghostly, tragic, and beautiful. She is carving out her own aesthetic space, startling in its originality and gripping in its historic and social power.” – Peter Margasak
“A major talent” – The WIRE
“The spokeswoman for a new, politically conscious and refractory jazz scene” – Jazzthetik
Matana (mah-tah-Nah) Roberts (they/them) is an internationally documented multidisciplinary artist,composer, saxophonist,and sound experimentalist.
Roberts works in many contexts and mediums, including improvisation, sound art, dance, poetry, and theater. they made two classic records as a core member of the Sticks And Stones quartet in the early 2000s and has gone on to release a diverse body of solo and ensemble work under their own name on a variety of international record labels. They are perhaps best known for their acclaimed Coin Coin project, a multi-chapter sound work of “panoramic sound quilting” that aims to expose the mystical roots of American creative expression while maintaining a deep and substantive engagement with global narrativity, history, community and political expression within improvisatory structures. Constellation began documenting the Coin Coin project in 2011 and has released the first 5 of a projected twelve album-length “chapters” to date.
They have been invited to teach, lecture, run workshops and/or take up artistic residencies in countless places under a variety of conditions and with diverse communities over the past two plus decades.
Alexander Hawkins’ work ranges from his acclaimed solo performances (‘intensely intricate…powerful, technically brilliant and melodically inventive’) through to works on a much larger canvas, such as his Togetherness Music ('[a] masterpiece that can stand next to the best works of Mitchell, Braxton or Parker’). He collaborates regularly with all generations of creative musicians, including the likes of Anthony Braxton, Marshall Allen, Evan Parker, John Surman, Joe McPhee, Hamid Drake, Nicole Mitchell, Tomeka Reid, Sofia Jernberg, Shabaka Hutchings, and many others. Further creative associations, with two very different icons of African music, Louis Moholo-Moholo and Mulatu Astatke, stretch back for well over a decade. He has been widely commissioned as a composer, including by the likes of the BBC, Berlin’s Pierre Boulez Saal, and numerous festivals. His performance schedule takes him to club, concert hall, and festival stages worldwide.
"Sounds like all the future jazz you might imagine without ever being able to conceive of the details" – The Guardian