Tag: mark soden

  • 2010 DroneShift – Long Nights Moon Concert

    Two weeks ago, I participated in the 2010 edition of the Droneshift at the Luggage Store Gallery here in San Francisco.
    The Droneshift has become an annual event, though this year it was part of the Full-Moon Concert Series, approximately coincident with the Long Nights Moon.

    Droneshift is a collaborative concert of improvised drone music. Between 15 and 25 musicians will gather to contribute to a continuous 2 hour drone, each adding their acoustic or electronic instruments here and there, and weaving their sounds together to create gradually shifting tapestries of music. The performance will most likely shift back and forth from completely acoustic music to electric ambiance and post-industrial noise.

    Basically, the two hour performance is one continuous ever-changing sound. No individual notes, rests, phrases, breaks, etc. That doesn’t mean it is at all monotonous – there are continuous changes in timbre, dynamics and expression, both within individual parts as various musicians enter and exit the sound.


    [Rachel Wood-Rome, Rent Romus. Photo: PeterBKaars.com. (Click images to enlarge.)]

    There were actually close to (if not more than) 30 performers participating this year. The performers were arranged along periphery of the gallery with the audience situated in the middle looking outward. So between the audience and musicians, things got quite crowded. I was able to stake out some chair space for myself my minimalist setup:

    I just had the iPad and an amplifier, and I was primarily running the Smule Magic Fiddle throughout my allotted time. It is a good instrument for droning, as one can linger on the strings pretty much forever, and play subtle pitch and dynamic changes. It’s easy to gradually fade out, and then fade in very slowly another pitch, which will change the overall sound of the performance without causing a distinct note break.

    Because the nature of overall drone sound and the large number of participants, it was often difficult to focus on what any one other musician was playing. I mostly shifted between focusing on my own part and getting lost in the overall sound, which was quite meditative at times. I was able to take in some details, such as Matt Davignon’s distinctive glass-vase performance:


    [Matt Davignon. Photo: PeterBKaars.com. (Click image to enlarge.)]

    David Michalak’s Omnichord and Joe McMahon’s plastic-tube “didgeridoo” were also quite distinctive (particularly because they were sitting near me):


    [David Michalak, Joe McMahon. Photo: PeterBKaars.com. (Click images to enlarge.)]

    I was sitting across from Adam Fong on upright bass. There were moments when I took cues from him and other string players to re-enter the mix on Magic Fiddle. I was also trying to take cues from purely electronic musicians, such as Kristen Miltner on laptop or Andrew Joron’s theremin:


    [Adam Fong, Kristen Miltner. Photo: PeterBKaars.com. (Click images to enlarge.)]

    Overall, the instrumentation was quite varied and there was a balance between winds, strings, percussion and electronic, although there were a few moments were it seemed some low-frequency analog electronics were overpowering everything else. It was interesting to hear how the textures and orchestration evolved. Sometimes similar instruments (e.g., strings) would cluster together, sometimes the texture became more scratchy and granular with lots of noise elements – something which is pushing the boundaries of what might be considered a continuous “drone” sound. At times, traditional harmonies emerged, e.g., minor or diminished chords, while at other times the timbres themselves were purely inharmonic. There were very sparse sections with only one or two participants, and others that seemed to include much of the ensemble. All of these elements just happen organically, based on how the musicians hear one another and are inspired to layer on their own parts.


    [Ron Heglin, Aurora Josephson. Photo: PeterBKaars.com. (Click images to enlarge.)]

    You can listen to a ten-minute excerpt of the full performance in this video, courtesy of Matt Davignon:

    As one can hear, the emergency vehicles that inevitably come down Market Street with sirens blaring during Luggage Store Gallery shows became part of the overall tapestry in this performance.

    My personal sense of the performance as being meditative, perhaps even more so than previous Droneshifts, was echoed by members of the audience with whom I had spoken.

    In addition to reflecting on the music, I would like to call out the photography of Peter B Kaars, which is featured in this article Those who have followed my own interest in photography know I tend to like very sharp, high-contrast black-and-white images. Additionally the monochrome fits with the full-moon theme and overall quality of the music they document. I wish I had space for more, or to call out more individual musicians. A full list of performers appears below:

    Tom Bickley – wind controller
    CJ Borosque – trumpet
    Bob Boster – processed voice
    Amar Chaudhary – iThings
    Matt Davignon – wine glasses/vessels
    Tony Dryer – bass
    Adam Fong – bass
    Phillip Greenlief – sax/clarinet
    Ron Heglin – trombone/trumpet
    Jeff Hobbs – bass, clarinet or violin
    Travis Johns – electronics
    Andrew Joron – theremin
    Aurora Josephson – voice
    Sebastian Krawczuk – bass
    David Leikam – Moog rogue synthesizer
    Cheryl Leonard – viola
    Brian Lucas – electric bass / tapes
    Melissa Margolis – accordion
    Bob Marsh – voice
    Marianne McDonald – didgeridoo
    Chad McKinney – supercollider/guitar
    Joe McMahon – didgeridoo
    David Michalak – Omnichord
    Kristin Miltner – laptop
    Ann O’Rourke – bowed cymbal
    Ferrara Brain Pan – sopranino saxophone
    Rent Romus – sax/tapes
    Ellery Royston – harp w/effects
    Lx Rudis – electronics
    Mark Soden – trumpet
    Moe! Staiano – guitar
    Errol Stewart – guitar
    Lena Strayhorn – tsaaj plaim / wind wand
    Zachary Watkins – electronics
    Rachel Wood-Rome – french horn
    Michael Zelner – analog monophonic synthesizer, iPod Touch