Author: Spirit of Gravity

Next radio broadcast on ResonanceExtra FM: Sunday 22nd September – 8.00 to 10.00pm

Gravity Waves and the Spirit World

Sunday 22nd September 2024 from 8.00 to 10.00pm on ResonanceExtra FM, DAB radio or online at extra.resonance.fm/

This month’s show is drawn from two compilations featuring friends of the Spirit of Gravity, “WE DON’T BELONG HERE VOL.1” which is compiled by the Unwanted attention night, and “Exploring an Exploding Soundtrack” compiled by Nil By Nose, both local, and both albums are available from Bandcamp – plus the 6th instalment from Spectral Transmissions: Peripheral Visions

Ascsoms – Scraping Moonshit off your boots / King Dong Quixote – Manimal / The Oneirologist – Reflections On The Motive Power of Fire / Nil by nose – OverTime in a Zord Factory / Thee Boxx Menn – Box 10 (Live) / St3v3L33 – Zord and the Ranger’s Temple of Power / IOM – State Terrorism / Brian Combe – Radioactive Monster Munch / Sonaura – Waiting Mode #1 / Nightclub in a Volcano – Old Zord New Zord

Spectral Visions:
“Before it all seemed so simple, things cast shadows. 
But now it turned out that shadows cast things, or perhaps things didn’t exist at all”
Sigizmund Krzhizhanovsky

In the sixth episode of Spectral Transmissions as the shadows start to lengthen we turn our minds to the place where the street lights end. Out here on the periphery, flickering visions and half heard noises scuff our logic with their insistent truancy. Fragments of things unbound by our narrow grasping.
On cold winter nights we would occasionally perceive a strange glimmering of lights, a marked pulsating luminosity in the very  edges of our vision accompanied by a vibrant oscillating frequency of sound, taking in certain cases, the form of bright circular waves, which seem to move from out on the periphery inward towards the centre, but if we tried to look directly at them to see them more clearly they evaded us, seeming  to drift and fade, dissipating like so much smoke.

The August edition of the Spirit of Gravity Radio show is available on the ResonanceFM Mixcloud page:
www.mixcloud.com/resonanceextra/gravity-waves-and-the-spirit-world-spectral-transmissions-out-of-office-holiday-special-25th-aug/
This edition features new recordings from the orbit of the Spirit of Gravity including Sealionwoman, Ugly Animal, Keith Seaton & Thomas Stone, plus archive releases from BBBlood & the Dizzy Tiger label, plus the 5th mix from Spectral Transmissions: Out of Office Holiday Special

Thursday 5th September at the Rossi Bar: Bantu / Yewen Jin / Armatures

Bantu: Bass music noise
Yewen Jin: Viscerally dreamy post drone
Armatures: Sturdy beats underpinning softly glitching machine music

Bantu: Gary Stewart is an interdisciplinary artist working at the intersection of sound, moving image and computational creativity. His work examines social and political issues of identity, culture, and technology. Through the application of innovative technologies and practices he is part of a global network of collaborators who are advocates for equality, climate justice and better health through the arts especially those from marginalised communities. Operating through a range of theoretical, fictional, and artistic frames, his work traverses media art, experimental music, and research.
www.garystewart.org/
www.youtube.com/watch?v=a0fwppfPiGg
www.youtube.com/watch?v=Th1WZbomLsA&t=20s

Yewen Jin is a multidisciplinary artist and research based curator who has been investigating the relationship between the self, the body and reality as systems of stimuli in the post-digital era. Her work primarily focused on data-driven real-time remote collaboration in sound and movement, particularly in the context of performances and events spaces.
Coming from the background of architecture, philosophy and mathematics, she is particularly interested in creating experiences through mediums at the crossing between the virtual and the physical construction of space-time intervals such as performance, music, digital place making and story telling.
Yewen is also co-founder of Skopetur, a new media tech research based curatorial and event production platform for globally linked network performances. And has been involved with Chinabot who have curated a night at The Rose Hill.
yewenjin.com/

Armatures is Brighton-based electronic musician Preston Parris (previously recorded as preston.outatime). This live set will feature works from his new album Limitation, late-night ambience, with sturdy yet gentle beats, underpinning glitching machine music, reminiscent of Mesh recordings or early Boards Of Canada without the hauntological aspects.
Morse code beats and shuddering chords.
www.youtube.com/watch?v=mraqk3eANRM
armaturesmusic.bandcamp.com/album/limitation

Chris [Symmetrical Forces] creates live visuals for each performance using his own lo-fi footage, dusty VHS tapes and obscure videos from the internet to create futuristic images from the past overlayed with out-of-reach memories and vague fragments of lost visions.

The Rossi Bar is a small grade II building, and they are restricted with how they can improve access for anyone with mobility issues. The live music venue is located in the basement, which can only be accessed by a short spiral staircase. More accessibility information and images of the venue are in this document:
spiritofgravity.com/site/wp-content/uploads/2022/10/The-Spirit-of-Gravity-at-The-Rossi-Bar-for-audience-members.pdf

Unfortunately, we’re unable to livestream more of our gigs, due to internet problems at the venue, but you can still catch us streaming live music sets from home at stream.gravitons.org.

“The Spirit of Gravity: making experimental music a threat again – since 2001”

Thursday 5th September 2024 | 8pm – 10.30pm | £5 (cash only)
Downstairs @ The Rossi Bar
8 Queens Road, Brighton, BN1 3WA

Wringing loose the tiny titans

September 2024
The Rossi Bar

Armatures started the first track with watery whistles and strings before long bass vibratos tucked in under an arpeggiated piano. Moving on with staccato piano and noises which nearly get overwhelmed by this vast squelching noise that mutates as it sounds into liquid mud. The third track segues straight out of that with an Orbital-ish repetitive stabbing, eventually joined by synth-y water and  a half time kick. The drums get all glitched and we get a bit of filter on the synths. The fourth starts light, interweaving high synths pinging about, featherweight pads swirl and a fast beat kicks us off into space, planets spin past… mmmm arpeggios breakdown, then it gets a bit tougher, filtering and such, harder sounds. More pinging arpeggios and strings on the fifth. The sixth starts again watery this time aquatic piano, bubbles and an emerging rhythm track that dances around the synth  parts and the rhythm., before a stammering pointillistic superfast synth part. The final track starts with wind synths, seagulls, and a deep Edgar Froese arpeggio and string synth combo. Nice. Mid-tempo, a breakdown brings in the drums, some really great development on this track and a great rounding off for the set.


Due to stuff we had a bit of a sneak preview of the start of Yewen Jin’s set as a line check, but that didn’t matter, as it meant we got to hear it twice. She starts with nicely textured drones and a very digital sounding synth taking a bagpipe like line around it swirling up and down through several octaves. There’s repletion, almost, things drift, the drones slowly move in pitch and timbre, the synth line misses notes. Add new ones. Splits notes. Almost merging with the drone and shooting off again at tangents. The drone hitting a churchy tone. A single not leads us out of this, passage, then does that same thing of sliding up and down its melodic line, a melancholic counter line, low, reflects back weeping. Some mutating bubbling bass monster comes up inside this sound – dragon in a cave-like, the melodic lines get subsumed by abstract beeps and detuning tones. Suddenly there’s reverb and cavern feelings. And amazing levels of sub-bass. For something that comes across as simple superficially, there are amazing levels of sonic detail. Rumbles, pencil swishing, reverbs and slapback delay. Swipes, bells. There’s a lengthy passage of chiming piano.  More detuning synths, some kind of tacking machine, melodic burbling delay feedback. There’s some weird point  where Ennio Morricone gets munged with John Carpenter in a nightmare fairground. Her set ends on drones then Casio notes and delayed synth meeps.


And rounding off the evening we had Bantu, Gary testing out a new set and some new kit for a show in Finland. It’s a pretty low key start, some whirring, some humming, he has a bell which he processes and loops through the synth, there’s a slow bass drum that slowly fades up and modulates into a tone, then back again. Other synths spin off, some radio interference, delay whirrs, horror sounds, chirping. The first half of the set continues like this, that pulse that goes through the whole thing morphing away, sometimes fading to nothing, but always seemingly returning. There’s a lot of space, and not much bass. Odd radiophonic interludes of clanger conversation take over, watery burbles, robot dogs barking. Slowly it gets more structured, a stepping fuzzed synth line build in intensity, getting thicker and noisier, faster and more intense. There’s a short break and we get a perhaps more usual “Bantu” set of tumbling basslines, thick and raucously burbling away, the final piece starting again as some nightmarish radiophonic set of beeps and tones that slowly takes on more and more disturbingly loud forms, some ghoulish humming and resonance whistling. Emerging from inside this we get some hard bass tone slapping, everything converging into the upper registers for the end.




New release on the Spirit of Gravity BandCamp label: Andrew Greaves – a listener’s response to urban walking

A further release from Spirit of Gravity arrives on 1 August – from Spheress, entitled Fowl.
Fowl comprises two tracks of blunt, glacial and shimmering electronics, which contrast with the earlier, more dancefloor-friendly cuts from Spheress (aka Stan Reader-Allen).
A slow crawl builds towards cold, dark, oppressive soundscape icebergs, while stripped down, distant beats allow murky electronic noise to lap at the listener’s feet.
Stream or downloaded from 1 August at: spiritofgravity.bandcamp.com/album/fowl