Archive for November, 2009

Double Interchange

Thursday, November 26th, 2009

Site specific collaboration with installation artist Cath Clover for Double Venturi_The Current, Melbourne Town Hall 2006.

The site was the lift shaft and stairwell of the Melbourne Town Hall, the centre of civic power for the City of Melbourne, Australia. It was chosen for its transitional and apparently peripheral nature. Little time is spent here yet it is a vital link within the building and is constantly in use. Using composed music played live in the lifts, a projection of visual sampling, and a pre-recorded sound piece the work engages with ideas surrounding transition, change, and flux.

With thanks to musicians Martin MacKerras [clarinet], Adrian Sherriff [bass trombone], Eugene Ughetti [percussion]; lift operators Gemma Collette and Alana Gibson; assistants Utako Shindo, Holly Ingleton, Johnny Pavlatos; and sound recording contributions from Kirsten Reese and Sean O’Neill

Writings about Vanessa Tomlinson

Thursday, November 26th, 2009

 - performing in Percussion Portrait: Anthony Pateras, June 13th, 14th 2009 Melbourne Recital Centre, July 29th 2009 Queensland Music Festival.
http://www.australianmusiccentre.com.au/article/anthony-pateras-percussion-portrait

http://www.theage.com.au/news/entertainment/music/bangs-without-boundaries-provide-sounds-that-resonate-for-besteffect/2009/06/15/1244917981817.html

- performing with Richard Haynes and conducting Ba Da Boom, April 2009, Queensland Conservatorium.
http://www.australianmusiccentre.com.au/article/ba-da-boom-percussion-with-richard-haynes

- performing with Gabriella Smart’s Soundstreams, OzAsia Festival, 2007

http://www.australianmusiccentre.com.au/article/ecstatic-dances-soundstream-and-oz-asia-festiva

-performing with Gabriella Smart’s Soundstreams, OzAsia Festival, 2008
http://www.realtimearts.net/article/issue82/8762

- improvising, Make it up Club, 2002
http://www.realtimearts.net/article/issue48/6386

- at See, Hear, Now Festival Townsville
http://www.realtimearts.net/article/issue81/8736

- with Clocked Out Duo –Foreign Objects 2008

http://www.australianmusiccentre.com.au/article/clocked-out-duo-dedications

- with Clocked Out Duo at MIBEM, Iwaki Studio, MElbourne February 2008 (curated by Anthony Pateras and Robin Fox)
http://www.realtimearts.net/article/issue85/9056

- with Clocked Out Duo, Terry Riley and Topology, The Brisbane Powerhouse 2007.
http://www.realtimearts.net/article/issue73/8136

- with Clocked Out – Sounding Wivenhoe, The Brisbane Powerhouse 2007.

http://www.realtimearts.net/article/issue80/8665

- curating Clocked Out – A Message from Sirius, The Brisbane Powerhouse 2009.

http://www.realtimearts.net/article/issue91/9489

- composes and performs in Clocked Out - The Wide Alley, Queensland Music Festival 2007. Co-composed with Griswold and Zou Xiangping.
http://www.realtimearts.net/article/issue90/9442_

- curated and performed in Clocked Out - All Vinko: The Theatre of Music
http://www.realtimearts.net/article/issue85/9060

- performed/composed - Bridge Song with Bonemap and Clocked Out Duo
http://www.realtimearts.net/article/issue56/7136

2010 - Australian Tour - Clocked Out Duo

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

Expect to see and hear Clocked Out Duo touring their recent CD-length concert, Foreign Objects throughout Australia in mid-2010 thanks to the generous support of Sound Travellers.

2010 Canadian Tour - Wide alley

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

From June 25th - July 5th except to find Wide alley touring to a Canadian city near year.
The Wide Alley is Clocked Out’s most ambitious intercultural collaboration bringing together five leading Australian improvisers and five Chinese musicians in an innovative fusion of contemporary, traditional and jazz styles. Commissioned by Paul Grabowsky for the 2007 Queensland Music Festival, The Wide Alley is the culmination of ten years of intercultural exchange among the key artists (Vanessa Tomlinson, Erik Griswold and Zou Xiangping). This process was funded through 2 Asialink Residencies, assistance from the Australia-China Council and extensive support from the Sichuan Conservatorium, Sichuan University, Chengdu Centre for Performing Arts and Totally Huge New Music Festival.

The Wide Alley is the product of an in-depth exploration of Sichuan street music, Chinese Opera percussion and other traditional styles set in the context of sweeping modernisation and globalisation. Griswold and Tomlinson’s work in Chengdu has introduced Chinese audiences to innovative contemporary music, improvisation, and new media, while their performances in Australia have introduced audiences to traditional Chinese styles, instruments, and ideas. Jinqian Ban master Zou Zhongxin credits their collaboration with him for bringing about an increased awareness of his artform – he was recently named a Chinese national cultural treasure.

Rosemary Sorenson of The Australian described The Wide Alley as “an experiment in inclusion” in her feature article of July 2007. Scott Spark of ABC Online wrote “while these compositions owe a great deal to Sichuan Opera and regional folk music traditions, they’re not strictly representations of particular styles of Chinese music. They’re a lot freer than that. There are moments when the music resembles jazz more than anything else. The course of the performance, which lasts for about 80 minutes, is an incredible pastiche of genres, and the breadth of dynamics is astonishing. The variety certainly works to the performance’s advantage – evoking the sense of narrative, introducing us to the sounds, sights and characters of Chengdu…”

“The Wide Alley includes music from the Sichuan Opera tradition, especially the Chuanju Iuogu (Opera Percussion), folk music traditions, high pitched singing style, Western classical music, experimental music, jazz, free improvisation, Chinese classical traditions, story-telling. In fact, the list is so long that the concert cannot be about these different styles as they receive only fleeting reference. Instead it is about a meeting place, a street, where musicians come to play together, express their history, their ideas, and possibly even leave a little of their sound world behind. In our experience living in China a day begins with a plan, and ends up having followed a completely different path. Much of the music in this show does that too. A traditional erhu solo turns into a child’s music box, morphs into jazz erhu which breaks out into an Opera inspired groove – really! Is the music Chinese, Australian, Western? Is that the right question to ask? Or is it a meeting in time, a conversation of roots, and perhaps a chance to share thousands of years of history in a context where people might listen?” (excerpt from Directors Notes, Queensland Music Festival Production, Wide Alley)

Short biography

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

Australian percussionist Vanessa Tomlinson is active in the fields of solo percussion, contemporary chamber music, improvisation and composition. As a soloist she has worked closely with influential European composers Vinko Globokar and Brian Ferneyhough, prominent Australian/American composers Erik Griswold, Liza Lim and Anthony Pateras, and instrument builder Rosemary Joy. She performs frequently with a wide array of contemporary chamber and improvisation ensembles including The Australian Art Orchestra, The Golden Orb, Twitch, Clocked Out Duo and has commissioned many solo and chamber music works.
Vanessa studied at University of Adelaide, Hochschule fur musik in Freiburg (with Bernhard Wulff) and University of California, San Diego (with Steven Schick) where she received her DMA in 2000. She has also spend extensive time studying Sichuan Opera Percussion in Chengdu China with Mr. Zhong.
Vanessa currently lives in Brisbane where she is Head of Percussion at the Queensland Conservatorium, Griffith University, director of Ba Da Boom Percussion, and co-artistic director of Clocked Out, www.clockedout.org

November 2009

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

Friday Night Concert

December 3rd, Cinnabar Heart by Chinary Ung at Banff Centre

 

Wednesday Medlies

December 1st, In the shadow of Sleeping Buffalo (Music for the Banal - Banff), a new work for found objects by Vanessa Tomlinson. Banff Centre

 

Curated by Joel Sachs

November 24th, Banff Centre, Featuring VT in Frozen Horizon by Karen Tanaka

 

PASIC

November 11 - 14th, Indianapolis
7.30pm concert, featuring Suzie Ibarra, Julie Spencer and Vanessa Tomlinson (performing Spill http://www.youtube.com/user/theclockedout#p/search/1/-DV84tN-Yvc)

PASIC 2009

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

November 11 - 14th, Indianapolis
4.30pm performance features Concerto for Prepared Piano and Percussion by Erik Griswold. Performed by Griswold, Vanessa Tomlinson, Rebecca Lloyd Jones, Stephanie Mudford, Cameron Kennedy.

Making art in the snow

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009

The act of making art in the snow, for a sunloving Australian, is taking some time to get used to. Since I deal so much with sound, the blanketing quality of snow affects my relationship with the acoustical environment significantly. What I have started thinking about are all the sounds that lie dormant under the snow throughout winter. The soundless breath of hibernating mammals, the movement of insects, and I have started creating my own imaginary universe, realised through sandpaper, breath and bowed cymbal.
That is the first 5 days in Banff, Canada.