Archive for ‘interviews’

February 7, 2012

interview with Hiro Kone from New York

by fancypunk01

Hiro Kone is an artist from New. A link with some of her tracks on soundcloud http://soundcloud.com/hirokone  and with her gorgeous website here http://www.hirokone.com/. I would like to special thanks Jen and Hiro Kone for this interview.

SI: Could you tell us something about yourself and your artistic background please. 

HK: A constant, unyielding engagement with the break between the worlds.

SI: Do you work on your own, what collaborations do you participate in (label, musical partners, etc)? 

HK: I work mostly by myself but I enjoy collaborating — especially since I’ve become a solo artist. Tim Dewit (formerly of Gang Gang Dance) and I got together late last winter and produced my latest EP out on Bitterroot Records. I’ve also worked with composer Alexis Georgopoulos (Arp, The Alps). I have some new collaborations in their beginning stages that I’m very excited about, but they are a secret.

SI: Something you want to share about your local scene, some insights or recommendations? 

HK: Everything is so over-saturated these days. I recommend that everyone take a break from Facebook. Take a walk and discover something on one’s own. Talk to someone outside of your age/social group… And don’t forget to check the bottom shelf at your local book store.

SI: What equipment do you use, what is your work process? 

HK: I’m a multi-instrumentalist — though my early foundation is in classical and punk music — I work a lot in “synthetic” medium now — challenging myself by using computers, drum machines, and analog modeling synths to create what is currently the Hiro Kone sound. I’ve been hard at work learning a new language the last couple of years.

SI: What are your next gigs and where can we preview your works online? 

HK: I’m performing an entirely original piece for CINEMA 16 in Philadelphia on Feb. 17th. This is an incredibly challenging and exciting show for me to do. (http://ihousephilly.org/events/cinema-16/)  I will do a Hiro Kone show on Feb. 29th (Leap Year!) for the release of latest edition of PERFECT WAVE (http://www.perfectwavemag.com/). They are doing their first ever physical supplement and it will include a 12″ with an exclusive HK track entitled “Fever.”

SI: Any plans for the future you want to announce here…? 

HK: Finish the next record. Read my books and write more.

SI: How about some namedropping, do you want to recommend some artists that inspire you? 

HK: Jorge Luis Borges, Diamanda Galás, Mark E. Smith, Ira Cohen — I’m drawn to people that actually say something.

January 31, 2012

interview with the Siberian artist “Aleph”

by fancypunk01

I have discovered his music recently after exchange couple of emails with King Deluxe label from Canada.His music style is very inspiring and kicking, the passage from experimental to something like post dubstep was the first impression i got by listening. After listening his tracks , I immediately wanted to contact him and arrange and interview. His answers to my questions are as excited as his music. Very honest and passionate. We would love in the near future to give space on this blog  more artists from Russian federation. It seems that a wide variety of great artists live and create music there. Enjoy the interview

Q1 Could you tell us something about yourself and your artistic background please.
For most of my life I spent in Omsk. A Siberian city on the border with Kazakhstan. We can not say that the city itself is fantastic, but I’m still happy to come back because I love the people who live there. Despite the fact that the city is not very big and cold, there still is a considerable amount of music and various movements connected with it. In Omsk, it is almost impossible to earn anything with music , because the city itself is industrial.
But people often organize various parties, knowing that they either remain with nothing, or even become more and need the money.
But it does not bother them, since everything is done for the soul, to support musical movement to develop, for the people. I currently live and study in St. Petersburg. This is a large wonderful city in northern Russia with its strong history, with buildings preserved 18th century and the center of the city resembles a European city. St. Petersburg is called the second capital, cultural capital, so there a lot of different clubs, bars, Festus, events, music, partying, which is very good.

I really do not remember a time when I’m not involved in music. When I was five, I went to music school to play violin and played for 9 years.
In parallel, I had difficulties to create different groups, but I was extremely lively in music. In Omsk I had a progressive methyl team, we have been giving concerts, recorded in the studio and for me it’s the happiest time of my youth. I had a desire to play on anything that came to hand, so at the house had a lot of guitars, keyboards, I was doing vocals. Now left only one drum set, and when I come back from time to time in Omsk, spend two to
three hours at least to play with the drums. I dream in the future to record a full album with live instruments and electronics, build my own ensemble.

I started producing electronic music two years ago, one of my friends showed me a couple of music programs and I began to write without stopping.

Q2 Do you work on your own, what collaborations do you participate in (label, musical partners, etc)?

I have already issued two releases on King Deluxe, I really like this label and music, which is published there. Now I’m busy for the
release of Lowriders. Another is preparing an album of remixes by King Deluxe. But while I can not tell you any exact dates, or that it will be. I think it will be a surprise. Just a lot of different ideas about free collections with my music and my friends’ music, I like my musical entourage. I think a lot of my friends whose music does not go beyond the borders of their native region, deserve attention, especially since in Omsk people write very specific to music, especially outside of any style, and regardless of fashion trends.

Q3 Something you want to share about your local scene, some insights or recommendations?

In St. Petersburg, a lot of really talented people. Name all of them is very difficult, because I do not want anyone to lose sight of, and if you name them all, you get a very long list. Here, there is  very interesting dubstep, and techno as well, instrumental hip-hop, beats, juke. There is nothing that would not have been in St. Petersburg. The same music I am inspired by my friends here. But in Russia, a lot of music is not only in the pivot cities. Across Russia, I like music such as Possible Adress, Damscray, Hmot, Vntgnike, Esoh. But since my soul is filled with Omsk sound, i love the music of my friends. Clonki, Sublowjob, Joska, Chioak, Akue. Of course they all have different music styles, but we walked along the path of the study of musical boundaries. Though we have started with what we have with just taken drugs together. A bit ridiculous, but it’s true. Their music is not always understandable from the first time, it requires attention, the `experienced listener. Those guys are not easy.

Q4 What equipment do you use, what is your work process?

In fact, I wrote my first release,  in bad conditions. My very cheap speakers, built-in sound card and a couple of music programs, even without basic midi keyboard. But I have always practiced inventing melodies on the piano and guitar, rhythm on a drum kit, and then just took notes and embodied in the program. But I have a very long time attached no importance to mastering the sound, the sound quality, for me the main thing was that the structure
of melodies, rhythms, no matter what quality. Recently, I have a SP-404, but I’m not writing music with it , too poor functional for me, I like to have fun with it at a party with friends.

Q5 What are your next gigs and where can we preview your works online?

Online – anywhere any time soon. Well, I think will play at some parties in St. Petersburg, but so far the dates are not confirmed. Maybe I will play at a party with Teebs and Samiyam in march. In general, we stably hold a party in Omsk, our crew cold “leftCoast”, Unpretentious name, since we all live on the left bank of the Irtysh River. Recently went on tour to Novosibirsk, also a great city with its own musical movement. I m also invited to play in Romania, but still do not know, probably just go to the end of spring, there are many things that will not let me out of Russia.

Q6 Any plans for the future you want to announce here…?

I want to earn money and travel in Ukraine is a very attractive place for me and it’s very simple to implement. So I’m thinking to go to work to have at least some money in my pocket.

Q7 How about some namedropping, do you want to recommend some artists that inspire you?

It’s no problem! First and foremost I am a fan of Eglo Records. Floating Points, ARP101, I love their music label. For me it is very deep professional real music. Always verify that the release FriendsOfFriends, Rush Hour, Butterz, Melting Pot and Lowriders. Interested in music from S.Maharba,
Randomer, Blawan, Liar, Verktyget and Sui Zhen. As you can see, I listen to a lot of different music and it’s all on me very strongly affected.

- Aleph on soundcloud

December 12, 2011

Artist Feature: Eike Wesenberg

by individualusername

For todays artist feature, we have a little interview as well as an exclusive live-set by one of our favourite berlin live-acts Wesenberg.

Q1 Could you tell us something about yourself and your artistic background please.

I have been composing and playing my own music since the age of 12 when I started playing electric guitar. In the following years I had many different rockbands, the most of them very experimental and loud. I think I was nineteen when I discovered electronic music and it became another musical obsession for me. 2 years ago I decided to go to Berlin to focus on making my own music. I founded a Rockband called “Blau Neun” and started to work on my Techno Liveset.
This year my music was ready to be performed in some of Berlin’s smaller Clubs, e.g. LEVEE, about:blank, Ressort, ZMF, Brunnen 70, Insel der Jugend.

My understanding of techno was influenced a lot by the ideas of the two minimal composers Steve Reich and Philip Glass and by older Techno from the year 2000 and 2001. I guess I want my music to be pretty serious and complex, but still emotionally touching. In my liveset I focus a lot on polyrhythmic strucures within the “four to floor”-pulse.
Lately I have been working on some pieces of contemporary classic and I am more and more trying to create a synthesis of these kind of compositions and my idea of what Techno can be.

Q2 Do you work on your own, what collaborations do you participate in (label, musical partners, etc)?

I produce and compose on my own most of the time. Lately I have been playing some Liveset together with a Jazz-baseplayer called Richard Müller. We wanted to try out how a real bass-guitar would work out in a club. I am also working on another Liveset and some tracks together with “Juli N more”, who is resident at the Sysiphos club. This stuff will be more relaxed I guess.

Q3 Something you want to share about your local scene, some insights or recommendations?

Well, yes, I’d like to recommend the “Livingroom generation” (http://www.livingroomgeneration.de/) , a pool of artists, who have just released their first Sampler CD and made a great release party at the ZMF. And especially on of their Liveacts called “Gebrüder Goldstein”. The idea of the Livingroom generation is to mix up handmade with electronic music and provide a platform for this experiment.

Q4 What equipment do you use, what is your work process?

I like to keep my set-up as simple as possible, so I am just using my laptop with ableton and some midi controllers. In my actual liveset I am just using wav files and trying to find different ways to modulate them. Most of the wav files were originally taken from classic or jazz recordings, some are field recordings. Sometimes I work a long time and preproduce a certain part of a loop but some of the loops are still original files from a recording. For example in the liveset for the Shituationist Institute I am looping certain parts of Bachs Goldberg Variations.

Q5 What are your next gigs and where can we preview your works online?

I am now taking a little break from Livegigs to create a new Liveset but I guess one can hear the results in the spring of 2012, maybe earlier.
You can of course find some live recordings on soundcloud (http://soundcloud.com/wesenberg ) and I have just released my first track on the sampler of the Livingroom Generation that I have talked about.

Q6 How about some namedropping, do you want to recommend some artists that inspire you?

My greatest inspiration in electronic music is the album “loudboxer” by Speedy J.

October 18, 2011

Featured Artist: interview with Ruby My Dear

by insti2te

exclusive interview with the French artist  Ruby My Dear for the shituationist institute:



Could you tell us something about yourself and your artistic background please.

My first music education was classical guitar and then bass guitar. But the school was very boring for me,  so I continued on my own and with friends, doing collaborations with drummers until my twenties. Then I went to to study sound in college and learned to work on pro tools. There i started to compose electronic music and the same time still played in a band, rock dub style. As I moved again I decided to have my own project. But in the future, I really want to play in a band again, i like this energy.

So at the moment you work on your own? Are there collaborations you participate in ?

I collaborated with Substance B for two free EPs: one release on PEEP record’s “Uncanny Valley” under the name of Doc Colibri and the other one appears on Pavillon36 record: “Agonistes Beta-2″. We choose this EP’s name because we are two asthmatics and agonistes beta 2 is a bronchodilators. Under the name of Doc Colibri I released an EP on Sociopath recordings and LoveLove Records and stopped to release in 2010. Under the Ruby My Dear ‘s name, I have releases on Illphabetik, Peace Off, Acroplane, Braincore and Reconstruction Productions. My remix of “Building steam with a grain of salt” was chosen by Dj Shadow to be featured in a remix album (you can listen to it on my soundcloud page).

Something you want to share about your local scene, some insights or recommendations?
Let me share these French electronic producers and bands: Cellscape, Substance B, Broken toy, Stazma, broken nvep, burglecut, skuge, falcon, klitorix, Larsp, Pierro the moon, Plukx, Sec, Sam Pleater, syndrom…
What equipment do you use, what is your work process?

I use protools and reason in rewire. I start track with a melody or a sample and try to construct something around it . I use a lot of samples of other styles to try to have something with mixed influence. In most of my tracks there is more than 16 audiotracks and 4 aux channels.

What are your next gigs and where can we preview your works online?

My next gig is in London at Bang Face the 14th of October, after that in Poland (Bydgoszcz) with Duran Duran Duran on the 29th of October, and the 25th of November in Toulouse. You can check these sites for more info:
http://rubymydear.bandcamp.com/
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Ruby-My-Dear/274747137274
http://soundcloud.com/dearmyruby
http://rubymydear.tumblr.com/

You can preview my work on soundcloud, there are some tracks

Any plans for the future you want to announce here…?
Some projects but nothing sure for now. I just can say that it will be great.
How about some namedropping, do you want to recommend some artists that inspire you?
I am inspired by a lot of styles, not only hard electronic. I am interested when artists try something different, with sound exploration and ambience. Such as Vaetxh, Roots Manuva, Mike Patton, Bjork, Mount Kimbie, The Mars Volta, Techdiff, Igorrr, Krumble, Subjex, Baconhead, Squarepusher, Flying Lotus, Hidden Orchestra
Thx Ruby My Dear!
September 13, 2011

featured artists: Derrick May interview in Belgrade

by fancypunk01

This is a very beautiful , fully of positivity, interview by a classic avantgarde artist by the first generation of electronic music producers , Derrick may remains an essential artist till our days. The interview taken in Belgrade , actually i liked the thoughts of Derrick concerning the crowd in the eastern part of Europe , drug culture and technology as well as the message to new artists . This is a first post dedicated to Derrick may , next weeks I will post a complete tribute to his music and discography and history

July 5, 2011

James Blake BBC sound of 2011

by fancypunk01

Finally , I found something from James Blake online on the website of BBC sound of 2011.

London producer James Blake sails into Sound Of 2011′s 2nd spot at the forefront of the emerging post-dubstep sub genre of UK club music. The Deptford based artist started singing and studying piano at the age of six, a tutorage which eventually led to Blake’s attendance of Goldsmiths University to study Popular Music. Early listening came in the form of his parent’s classical and jazz collections, in addition to US Soul and R ‘n’ B from the likes of Stevie Wonder, D’Angelo and Sly & The Family Stone. Blake’s love of electronic music came much later when the artist discovered dubstep duo Digital Mystikz a few months prior to his Goldsmiths enrolment.

June 28, 2011

Interview : Mr.Feathers

by mnanotek

Q1.Could you tell us something about yourself and your debut album ‘Galactic Trinity’?

I am Mr.Feathers Hero of Planet Earth. When you look into my eyes you will smile, you will forget you were angry, or sad, worried, or in pain. I do not know what the future holds for Planet Earth. All I do know is that if you don’t work hard at what you like you may never achieve your goals. It takes a special person to let you know about their internal thoughts. If you miss it when they tell you, you may never know that what is they are asking. Take notice that what they’ve actually asked is if they could be your friend. That is Galactic Trinity, Triangle Earth, and all who believe in us. We have left symbols, sounds, colors, numbers, pictures…we have made sure nothing was left behind. All the magic is there for you to experience once we are.

 Q2.Do you work on your own? What collaborations do you participate in?

Yes, I do a lot of my work on my own. I’ve always asked Otto what he thinks just like everyone else does. I was really hesitant about putting out Galactic Trinity. It was a really long time before he convinced me that I should put out something. I began collecting ideas and it was completed within a couple of months.

 Q3.What equipment do you use/what is your favorite piece of equipment?

I use a laptop. I have six or seven laptops and a couple computers. I like gathering sounds on my newest toy, an ipod touch.

Q4.What is a typical day in Miami for Mr. Feathers like?

I go to sleep pretty early when I can. I really like to get most of my work out of the way from 4 am to like 5pm. At 4am I wake up and check emails. 5am I’m checking Facebook and Twitter. 6am breakfast is a cup of coffee my wife makes for me every single day of my life when I’m not on tour. My second breakfast is usually white bread (toast with jelly) and a glass of water at 7am. I have been on a health tip lately and now eat wheat bread. I make music and gather samples all day. I eat lunch at 11am and I’m back on the grind till 4pm where I head over to pick up my wife at 5pm. We drive home I eat dinner at 5:30 and I give the events page a quick review to see what’s going on that night. If I have a show that night I go straight to bed and wake up around 10 pm otherwise I stick to the routine.

 Q5.Which was your favorite city to play in, in your recent European   tour with Otto Von Schirach? Any highlights?

Everywhere I go Otto goes and everywhere he goes I go. We see through each other’s eyes. It’s a spiritual life cycle we maintain in total secrecy.

Q6.Recently you played alongside the legendary Kool Keith. What was this experience like for you?

Kool Keith is on a different vortex, just like us. He and his crew are super friendly and very talented. There are many people and groups we (Otto Von Schirach, Mr.Feathers, and David Tamargo aka Alligator Jesus) still have to play with. Our closest associates who have played with us and still participate with us are (The Notorious Nassie and Tri Bit) Otto has Triangle Aliens who play with him onstage all over the world. I personally would like to play with Ozzy Osbourne and Metallica who are on my top 10,000 list. We have played with the greats and will continue to play for as long as we are of sound body and mind.

 Q7.What/who is hot in the Miami music scene at the moment & what is the Miami crowd like compared to the European?

  Wow, that’s a really good question. The only way I can answer that is by asking if there are any two like humans on this earth? We are all different; we all have our ups and downs. I love playing anywhere I feel love and energy. I have been lucky that it has been everywhere. Who is hot right now in Miami, it fluctuates so fast from weekend to weekend. I think Juan Basshead has been pretty hot for a while now in Miami. Animal Krackers is pretty hot too, both in the dubstep scene. The dance pop scene here is wicked. Lots of acts play at many of the clubs in the downtown area of Miami. The electronic music scene like raves and stuff like that are very seldom and are greatly appreciated when they do come by. They get huge crowds and great feedback. My friends at SOS throw huge parties here in Miami and they are monster promoters that do well, just like Ultra Music Festival. The Punk and Indie Rock scene is pretty big too; you just have to be at the right place at the right time. When the second Saturday of the month rolls around people throw detailed parties to attract the after art walk people to come to the events. This takes place in Wynwood, an area that is growing in Miami by the second. Wynwood and Downtown Miami are red hot right now as far as Galleries and Clubs. We have people coming in from California who have revamped a section of our downtown to shoot their movie, and it looks really outrageous.

 Q8.Which artists have influenced you the most over the years?

I love sound in general. My greatest influence in all honesty comes from Movies. I go to the movies very often to hear new sounds more than I do to see the actual movie. Yes, people like Otto, Snares, Aphex, Romulo and Joshua, Richard Devine, Dino, and many more. I often don’t get too influenced by what I hear, you can tell by the way my music sounds. I don’t stick to the music pattern. Two weeks ago I was in love with Detroit Ghettotech and now I’m in love with dance pop tunes. I very a whole lot, just like my teacher.

Q9.Any artists that you’d like to collaborate with?

I could probably work with anyone in the world because I know so many people, but I’d rather not do that right now, because of how much work I’m dealing with. The Otto Von Schirach Industry is not for everyone, it’s very hard work. Not too many people get to see the inner work that goes on behind the scene. When he goes into action his brain goes to port whole dimension eight. It’s mentioned in many of his songs.

 Q10.What are your next gigs and where can we preview your works online?

My upcoming gigs very so much, you would have to check with me on facebook at Armando Von Feathers  http://www.facebook.com/mrfeathersearth. I have a wordpress that you can look around in and that is http://peasantswithfeathers.wordpress.com/ Facebook is probably the fastest place but you can check www.ottovonschirach.com My work can be found digitally everywhere under Mr.Feathers that’s me . The album is called Galactic Trinity. The label is called Triangle Earth.

 Q11. Any plans for the future you want to announce here?

I have taken my time in answering these questions, because the future is a very peaceful place. Our greatest and most intelligent sound is silence. To find out what we are doing in the present all you have to do is find us on facebook for now. Emails will take way too long because of the high demand in knowledge from others. What I can say is that we thank all of you for being with us. We have much more than five senses. http://www.todayifoundout.com/index.php/2010/07/humans-have-a-lot-more-than-five-senses/

Thank You MNanotek.

 Thank you all the best & beyond!!

June 21, 2011

interview with Vj Shoken (Gidon Schocken)

by markoira

Visuals in clubs and especially in techno parties and events are commonplace but live mixing and sampling of video is still a rarity, although it’s certainly happening more and more. The  live visuals are evolving from a number of directions. Boundaries are blurry, and there is little consensus about what names mean: are you a VJ, video artist, film maker or something else? Unsurprisingly many people occupy more than one category.

You probably haven’t walked into a club recently and seen someone hunched over DVD decks and a vision mixer (partly because they are still very expensive), but there is a growing scene of VJs doing exactly this in the club environment and alternative spaces.There is also a commercial world that drives forward new technologies such as the increasingly prevalent DVD decks and the cutting edge displays that deliver 3D visuals and holograms. This big money sphere also encompasses the complex visuals that accompany stadium filling concerts from established artists.

Alongside the ‘VJing scene’ and the more commercial side of things is a third source of innovation and development: ‘AV art’. There is a distinctive continuum of individuals who are using new technologies, and abusing old technology, to produce installation works and bring interactivity and the avant garde to club nights. Add into the mix DJs who have started to stray into the visual world (viz. Roger Sanchez and Ferry Corsten), and the development of a version of Serato that allows scratching and syncing of video from standard decks, and it soon becomes clear that there’s a lot of boundaries converging on live visuals.

Today I am going to interview Vj Shoken (Gidon Schocken) from Tel Aviv -Israel  mostly because I admire his work and secondly because as a video artist and upcoming live visual performer I feel the need to share with you my questions on that innovative and avant guard trend in the club scene.

1)Well Gidon, let s start this interview by telling us some things about you and how did you start your career as an audiovisual artist.

I started working at a small visual content studio at 2005, kind of by accident…. I just finished the army and was searching for an interesting job. I didn’t even know what Vjing was beforehand. I got into it pretty quickly, a few months of carrying around equipment, learning all the technical jargon, studying the different styles of the other Vjs. Then I started to take on venues by myself. I worked in the company for around two years and then decided to go study music more seriously, music has always been my main attraction. Sadly I could not juggle the two so I had to leave the studio and for the past three years I studied music production, and left the visual side of my brain to rest for a while. I graduated a few months ago, and now I’m working on combining my experience as a VJ and my musical aspirations so that it will become one unit.

2)Which is the kind of music that you get inspired more so to synthesize visually?Do you also make your own music?

I don’t think that there is a certain genre that I prefer, there is a whole musical spectrum that I enjoy listening to and that also inspires me visually, mostly experimental music. To the day I find myself more and more drawn towards noise and all of it’s sub-genres. For the past few years I have taken part in different musical collaborations, projects, bands etc. Recently I’ve left most of that behind and started to focus more on creating music alone, experimenting in different platforms and instruments, and of course importing my visual taste into it all. My latest clip called “Critters”  is the direction I’m leaning towards.

3)Is there any technology coming up in terms of projections and holograms that you would like to build into a show and which technical equipment do you prefer to use?

I always enjoy experimenting, usually my thoughts are drawn towards what I project on: screens, objects etc.  My latest has been trying projecting on buildings and other urban surfaces also layers of mosquito nets to achieve a kind of 3d effect, I’m also working on building a screen In a V shape in front of the performer with a rear projection so that I can incorporate the movement of the performer into the live show. Regarding the equipment, I run Resolume Avenue on a macbook pro with the korg nano and a akai lpd 8 as controllers, western digital firewire hd and a recently purchased mitsubishi XD600u projector.

4)
Do you make your own video footage or you prefer downloading and editing it?I saw that you like using stop motion clips as well as VA, a webcam that is strapped to your guitar.

I use a bit of everything in my sets. I recently moved to a house with a backyard and I enjoy filming all the different creatures that crawl and climb around my yard, one of my favourite was a huge caterpillar who suddenly appeared in the kitchen, I followed him around for a while with a camera and later edited him and all sorts of other creatures and use them in my sets. I also enjoy sampling vintage films, decomposing them and then combining them with different effects. I tend to use Jpegs of people a lot in my source materials, sometimes to kind of add a face to the result or just use them as background fillers. Quartz also comes to play sometimes, when I want to add 3d objects, cubes, spheres etc.  Usually my purpose is to integrate all of the above in order to create my own unique visuals, the end result is kind of “grimy hi-tech creatures” style. Regarding the webcam, it was used specially for the band Man 25 in which I played guitar. The webcam was attached to the guitar and filmed the audience during the performance. The final output was a combination of the constant movement of the guitar and the audience. This served the concept of the band which was to have the audience be a part of the show and reflect upon themselves.

5)I know that you are collaborating with other visual artists or from similar disciplines to make projects e.g with Natalie Mandel on ‘Spiders and Tools’.Would you like to tell us about these collaborations and specifically for this project which was a projection on a building in front of Ravnitzky 7, Tel Aviv.Have you done many building projection projects in public spaces and which is the process of the whole organization of it?

I always enjoy collaborating with other visual artists, it tends to add new dimensions to the creative process. Specifically the project with Natalie was born through our mutual respect for each others work. I really admire her ability to create colourful creatures from recycled garbage she finds on the street. After a few conversations she passed on a few images and short stop-motion clips she created. The next stage was creating the illusion of movement of the creatures using different video software such as Resolume Avenue and Final Cut and then projecting it on a building. We chose the building in front of Ravnitzky 7 because it corresponds with the kind of work that we do. The neighbourhood is in the south part of Tel-Aviv which has a  rundown urban atmosphere, it is also the populated by a mixed group of artists, illegal aliens, and other shady characters which became to be a great audience :)

6)Do you think that the presence of your live visual performance affect the mood of the people in a party and the whole ambient of it?

I hope so :) The process of Vjing for me is mainly subconscious. Most of the time I decide on the spot what kind of visual I want to attach to the music and In addition, try to expect what the musical direction is in order to create continuity. This hopefully enhances the viewers experience and expands their interpretation of the music.

7)Who was your favourite DJ/DJs  in a live set that his/her music inspired you to go beyond your self visually talking?

There isn’t really a certain DJ that comes to mind, the ones I appreciate the most at the moment and am also inspired by visually are musicians who create their own shows and import visuals or collaborate with other visual artists such as Murcof/Antivj, Amon Tobin/Blasthaus and Plastikman to name a few. For me they are really pushing the audiovisual boundaries.

8)Any projects coming up at the moment?

I’m currently working with Yostek who is a good friend and a fellow musician on a new musical/visual venture called Kaap. we are collecting material and hoping to start performing by the end of the summer. In addition I hope to start teaching Vjing at Muzik, for me teaching is the best way to learn :) . I’m also preparing materials for a performance by a band called Trademark at the end of the month. At the same time I hope to continue working with Natalie as well as with other artists. Finally It’s also important to state that I am always trying to improve my own personal audiovisual creations, and continue searching for new ways to express myself.

Thank you very much Gidon

interview by Markoira 

a brief bio: 

Markoira is a video and digital live artist -performer originally from Greece currently working between London and Milan.Initially trained as an actress and then moved to the direction of live digital performances in theatre, gallery spaces ,music events and electro parties. Her collaborations with  music bands as a VJ  and video maker include: XXX,, Gossip, Elephant on Air, Horseplay Events(Proud Galleries,London), a video installation for the fashion show of Vivienne Westwood(Milan Show 01.11) and some more. Recently she founf herself happy to experiment with the building visuals and the video sculpting.At the same time is pleased to contribute to the Shituationist Institue cause she finds herself continuously attacted by their  innovative ideas on contemporary electronic music and situations that  succesfully create for their paries.

www.mariakonstantinesaraka.com

June 14, 2011

Berghain Sub:Stance Interview with Scuba and Robotic @ Berlin Mitte Institut

by fancypunk01

This is an exclusive interview of Scuba and Robotic by the nice project Berlin Mitte institute 

part 2

part 3

part 4

May 17, 2011

Small Talk With Josh Wink

by fancypunk01
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