Steady State: an evening of spectral harmonies with Clinton Green & Barnaby Oliver

Clinton Green (bowed metal bowls) and Barnaby Oliver (struck and bowed strings) 
Spring (Tim Catlin and Rod Cooper) 

Thursday 25 August 2022 8:00 PM – 9:30 PM

Tempo Rubato
34 Breese St, Brunswick VIC 3056

Tickets


Barnaby Oliver and Clinton Green use aluminium bowls and strings to create a combination of shifting resonances, coalescing into other-worldly music that at first appears static, yet constantly shifts and re-grounds itself. 

Spring features Tim Catlin and Rod Cooper playing their own newly-invented instruments – Vibrissa and Steel Keys.

New compilation track

New track composed and recorded for this themed percussion compilation from Italian label tsss tapes Free Percussion/Water. The compilation also features Ted Byrnes, Jeph Jerman and other exploratory percussionists of note.

I’m also looking forward to releasing a collaborative album with Ian Andrews (Astasie-abasie, Cut With The Kitchen Knife, The Horse He’s Sick, etc) on tsss tapes later this year.

RADIO SPECIAL

On the recent occasion of my 50th birthday, Nat Grant put together this radio special on some of my collaborative work for her Let Your Freak Flag Fly show on 3CR. It features collaborative recordings introduced by Ernie Althoff, Chun-Liang Liu, Paul Kidney and Adam Simmons.  It was such a surprise (kept secret from me until the day!) to hear this lovely programme, my thanks to Nat and all my inspiring collaborators everywhere.

Listen to the programme here.

First gig for 2022

Photo: Juana Beltran

I’ll be playing my first gig for nearly 12 months, and first solo performance since 2019, on Saturday 26 February 2022. From 7pm at Sunshine Art Spaces, 2 City Place, Sunshine. This is part of Mito Elias’ Nefelibata exhibition. Admission is free, also performing are Jonathan Sinatra and Monty.

Facebook event

Review of “Here?/Secret”

Green mentions a compositional procedure for choice of tape, tape speed and direction and panning, which yields a combination of sounds disturbingly mismatched to eerie perfection, much in the way of a prolonged chance collision…the ordinary is repurposed into a hallucinatory melange of sounds beyond conventional comprehension. It taps into a powerful strand of late 20th Century experimental music, going back to Cage’s collages from the 1950s, that’s occasionally forgotten only to be taken up again a generation later… – Boring Like A Drill

Clinton Green & Barnaby Oliver live album out today

The 10th and final instalment of the Surface Noise series is out today. Wow, what a journey. The first volume of this split series between Shame File Music and Iceage Productions came out in 2014, each one is a split between two artists contributing live recordings. How it worked is that me and Peter James would invite the initial artist, then that artist would nominate someone else to share their release with, a concept I always liked. And the final one, Surface Noise Vol. 10, appropriately is a split between me (with Barnaby Oliver) and Peter. Mine and Barnaby’s track is a live recording from an intimate performance at LongPlay in 2019 (seems so long ago now), and Peter’s is from Make It Up Club in 2012 (that IS a long time ago!) Get your copy through Shame File Music.