• 2013 in retrospective V (341)

    2013 in retrospective V (341)

    2013: The year in retrospective. Part V -SETH COOKE- Sound composer. Summary, text and photos by Seth Cooke Some concerts I enjoyed in 2013: Clive Henry (Splitting the Atom, Brighton) Kathy Hinde (Café Kino, Bristol) Henry Collins, Joe Kelly & Dominic Lash (Café Kino, Bristol)…

  • ryoji ikeda – supercodex

    ryoji ikeda – supercodex

    Algorithms and nature have a lot in common. Data ends being a perfect way to showcase the vast multiplicity of life and sound is not far behind, being a wonderful analogy to the information processes, the poetic veil that is behind the extremes of vibratory…

  • 2013 in retrospective IV (340)

    2013 in retrospective IV (340)

    2013: The year in retrospective. Part IV –CAITY KERR– Article by Caity Kerr Writing about sonic art practice is problematic. It’s too easy for the whole project to collapse into discussions about individual tastes or become a treatise on technology. Occasionally a clever academic surfaces on the…

  • 2013 in retrospective THE LISTS (339)

    2013 in retrospective THE LISTS (339)

    2013: The year in retrospective -THE LISTS AND SHORT NOTES- Here we will post the lists and short notes that we received from our editors, artists, curators, writers and readers. Lists as part of longer summaries are post individually. _______________________________________________________________________________ 2013: The year in retrospective…

  • 2013 in retrospective III (338)

    2013 in retrospective III (338)

    2013: The year in retrospective. Part III –BUDHADITYA CHATTOPADHYAY– Two thousand and thirteen, the Grande Syntagmatique Or an attempt to provide an exhaustive classification of the segmentation of a yearly narrative Text by Budhaditya Chattopadhyay Career: The glass-window of the 4th floor office-room overlooks a busy…

  • 2013 in retrospective II (337)

    2013 in retrospective II (337)

    2013: The year in retrospective. Part II -PATRICK FARMER- In praise of movement Text by Patrick Farmer The traces Robert Walser left on his path throughout life were so faint as to have been almost effaced altogether. -W.G.Sebald This, in all its brevity, is written…