On Friday 12 December, students from NMH will host a live electronics concert here at Notam. The concert will feature contributions from seven artists studying live electronics at the Norwegian Academy of Music. With backgrounds in composition, jazz, classical, performance and visual art, the programme offers an exciting mix of perspectives and practices.
Somewhere between structure and spontaneity, acoustic textures and electronic experimentation, they create new musical soundscapes - highlighting the nerdiest and grooviest corners of live electronics!
Concert starts at 17:00, doors open at 16:30.
About the artists
Stine Mako and Wei Ting Tseng meet on stage for the first time, bringing together sound design, vocal textures and analogue synthesis. Their collaboration moves through disintegration and transformation, through tension, release and the quiet moment when what has broken finds its way back together again.
Eivind Vullum is a Norwegian guitarist, synthesist and composer. His set "Is my anger likely to do me more harm than your wrong?" is an electroacoustic piece for paper, electrical signal and speech.
James Layton is a British composer, musician and visual artist. His set, 'agree to proceed', is a short sketch that explores agreement, permission and ownership in the digital age.
Mirjam Eszter Pálfai is a Hungarian classical flautist who has turned to ambient industrial comfort. Her set is a mix of constructed ideas and improvisation.
Amelia Gómez Snerte is a Norwegian/Cuban vocalist, composer and lyricist. She will share an improvisation based on her ongoing work with the project "ANDRE ETASJAR" - an exploration of the female voice, speech, temporality and sound.
Ola Ur Sæbø is a Norwegian composer and performer. Tonight at Notam, he will be performing with Wouter Torringa, sharing from their live noise beat project "Pyramidefoster".