@Splendor
2015•06•13
Splendor Amsterdam


Program
Hyperlocal
Melissa Grey
Gareth Davis, bass clarinet

Bombus
Roald van Dillewijn
Bart de Vrees, percussion

Postcards from India (Postcard #1)
Milica Paranosic
Albert HC Manders, flute

KIRI
Tijs Ham
Cesare Papetti, drum set

There is nothing.
Gagi Petrovic
Albert HC Manders, flute

Lines Of Hearing
Robin Koek
Gareth Davis, bass clarinet

Machined Time
David Morneau
Bart van Gemert, drum set


Biographies
Amsterdam based flutist, composer and impresario Albert HC Manders grew up in Pittsburgh, PA where he earned a degree in Business and Anthropology while appearing in plays and performed Tom Flaherty's Flute Concerto with the University of Pittsburgh Chamber Orchestra. After graduation he traveled to the Netherlands and Spain to study contemporary flute with Anne Le Berge and Wil Offermans, and composition with Hans Koolmees. As a member of the Netherlands Flute Orchestra, Ricciotti Ensemble and the Manhattan Chamber Soloists he has toured around Europe and the US playing classical music ranging from the renaissance to many world premiers as well as jazz and improvisation. Compositions by Albert have been performed in the US, Netherlands, France and Hong Kong. He is also a member of the independent artists' cooperative Steunbeer: www.steunbeer.org


Gareth Davis plays clarinet(s), the result of a somewhat impulsive purchase whilst window shopping in Covent Garden, London, around ten years before the turn of the century. The serendipitous location of a rather wonderful (and equally important, rather cheap) second hand record shop less than 10m from the bus stop required for seven years of schooling, combined with delivering newspapers on a daily basis, lead to a somewhat eclectic, dusty and generally unclassified taste in music. The result, performances and recordings ranging from classical concerti, to newly written works by composers such as Bernhard Lang, Peter Ablinger, Toshio Hosokawa and Jonathan Harvey. Collaborations ranging from the vocal group Neue Vocalsolisten and the JACK string quartet to improvising musicians Frances­Marie Uitti and Elliott Sharp, experimental bands such as Oiseaux Tempete and Nadja and electronic artists Scanner, Merzbow and Machinefabriek.


Bart de Vrees, composer and percussionist. studied from 1996 to 2001 percussion at the conservatory of amsterdam and from 2003 to 2007 composition at the same institute. works with orchestras, ensembles, plays solo, chambermusic and performs in theatre and dance productions. wrote pieces for ensembles such as asko/schönberg, nieuw ensemble, nederlands blazers ensemble, slagwerk den haag, collegium novum zürich, adapter ensemble, ensemble caméléon, de ij-salon, aurelia saxophone quartet, utrecht stringquartet, ensemble modelo62, worldbrass and soil ensemble.

music performed on festivals such as holland festival, november music, gaudeamus festival, the aaa series of the royal concertgebouworchestra, innersounds bucharest and innovations en concert in montreal canada.

member of splendor, monoták, ‘de koene ridders’ and ‘trio hoorcomfort’, he plays drums and electronics in the band ‘f* and...’.


Bart van Gemert is a drummer and composer from the city of Utrecht, the Netherlands. Bart is bandleader, drummer and composer for the band Startas Orkester. Bart mainly works in the fields of improvised music and jazz, but he has also worked on several theatre shows as well as with classical orchestra's. Bart has studied jazz drums with Joost Kesselaar and André Groen at the Utrecht Conservatory and has graduated with honor. Bart is also a passionate teacher.


Composer Melissa Grey’s projects include concert works, electroacoustic performances, installations, food and sound events, and collaborations with artists, architectural designers, and musicians. Grey is currently Artistic Director of Circuit Bridges (Vox Novus), a monthly electroacoustic concert series presented in NYC and in communities around the world, and teaches Sound Studies at The New School.

Hyperlocal is composed for bass clarinet and fixed sound. Sine waves slowly ascend and descend, venturing beyond the range of human hearing. There is a quiet audible beat throughout. Every beat signifies a new frequency. Within this slowly evolving droning texture, the lowest range and darkest timbres of the bass clarinet are explored. The performer is invited to freely consider low frequencies and extended techniques to blend and interact with the electronic sound.


Roald van Dillewijn (1987) is a sonic designer, software designer for music, composer and performer from The Netherlands. ␣␣As of September 2013 he is graduated as Bachelor of Arts and Technology and Master of Arts in Creative Design for Digital Cultures. As bass guitar player in a post-rock band the interest in weird sounds and sound effects keeps him busy for days. These days became longer and longer with the formation of the noise/drone improvisation band Puin+Hoop. This fascination of sound and ultimate control on these sounds led him eventually to his current projects.␣␣ In 2013 he joined the international collective Soundlings to work together with professionals from all kind of disciplines.

Bombus: With the piece Bombus Roald van Dillewijn examined the differences and similarities between improvised drone music and rhythmic patterns composed for percussion. The limitations that arose by using self-made techniques to collect music material gave the composer new views on structured improvisations.


Milica Paranosic is a critically and internationally acclaimed composer, performing artist and educator. Her music was described as “Amazing…astonishing,” (The New York Times), “Like liquor-filled pralines,” (Germany’s Morgenpost), and SEAMUS coins Milica “A painter, a musical Jackson Pollack”. Milica’s works range from one-woman multimedia shows and sound installations to operatic and symphonic works. Inspired by her travels and international collaborations, Milica incorporates music of her Serbian homeland in addition to cross-continental muses such as Brazil, Ghana and China.

A recipient of many honors and awards, her recent commission by the American Composers Orchestra's for a debut in the 2012-13 season at the Carnegie’s Zankel Hall, was co-sponsored by the LVMH Moët Hennessy • Louis Vuitton.

Milica earned her Master’s Degree in composition form The Juilliard School, where is a current music faculty. She is also the Music Director of Gallery MC, co-director of Composers Concordance, founder of Give to Grow and founder and director of Paracademia LLC.

Postcards from India (Postcard #1) is a multimedia show in progress, based on my recent travels on India. I have recorded over 100 hours of digital audio and video, which I am re-inventing into a personal multimedia journal. The piece is planned to be performed in the fall of 2015, hopefully at the opening event of my new multimedia education and performance space in Harlem. This is one of the movements which I wrote for, and am dedicating to Margaret Lancaster. Margaret also provided the flute samples, along with the flute player from Varanasi, shown in the opening sequences of the video. Apart from Margaret’s flute in the track, all the media is 100% ‘organic’ (captured on location).


Tijs Ham (1981) is a musician and sound artist with a background in visual arts, a member of the Soundlings collective and founder of the recordlabel Tapeface. Tijs also works at STEIM, The Studio for Electro- Instrumental Music where he organizes workshops and artist residencies, Musically, anything is possible, which is reflected by the broad sonic range of his output. In his artworks he applies programming, live-electronics techniques and system design to explore and expand the possibilities of audible expression. Inspired by artificial intelligence, evolutionary processes and machine learning he incorporates these approaches to create dynamic structures and experiment with their aesthetic results.

KIRI (Kick Ride) is a composition for drums and electronics. All of the drum parts are inspired by digital processes whereas the electronics are based on the analysis and resyntheses of acoustic drum sounds. This results in a framework of sonic interplay in which the roles of the instruments switches back and forth throughout the piece.

Gagi Petrovic (Belgrade, 1986; raised in The Netherlands) is an award-winning composer of music and sound, and active in both autonomous settings and contexts of applied music. He is experienced in creating acoustic-, electronic-, and hybrid music and if necessary, he creates custom software to process and further elaborate his ideas. Additionally, he teaches basics of composition, and organizes concerts for sharing contemporary music.

His music often resembles his big love for all aspects of intensity and his interest for the moments where musicality and performativity are a mutual influence. This usually results in something that balances between contemporary music, digital electronics and alternative pop. For more information, please visit www.gagipetrovic.nl

There is nothing


Robin Koek (Netherlands, 1987) is active as a composer, musician and designer of artistic systems. With a main focus on sound art and interactive systems he was involved in projects that range from installation art to interactive dancepieces. These works were shown amongst others at the STRP Festival, Hermitage and Nieuwe Kerk Amsterdam. His compositions explore the spatial potential of sound in an idiom that merges electronics, field-recordings and acoustic instruments. His recent pieces 'Tuned City' and 'Inner Noises' were performed in concert halls situated in Portugal, Canada and the U.S. Koek earned a Bachelor of Honours and Master of Arts with a specialization in Sound Design in 2011, at the Hogeschool de Kunsten Utrecht, faculty of music technology.

Lines Of Hearing is a composition for bass clarinet and electronics, which investigates the relation between the position of a listener and it's surrounding urban environment. The work explores audible horizons of specific locations of New York and Amsterdam based on open-source geo-tagged field-recordings mapped in a virtual space. Crafting with the softest sounds in a specific acoustic radius, a dynamic structure unfolds that defines the perceptual boundaries of a space, informing about function, scale and the internal organization of a site. Alternating stages of the performer's interpretation of these constructed urban spaces are structured in three movements.


David Morneau is a composer of an entirely undecided genre. Described by Molly Sheridan as a "shining beacon" of inspiration, his diverse work illuminates ideas about our culture, issues concerning creativity, and even the very nature of music itself. His eclectic output has been described variously as "elegantly rendered", "happily prissy", "impressive", "unusual, esoteric, and offbeat". His recent album, Broken Memory, "absolutely wrecks shop.… For that, David Morneau wins." Morneau is Artistic Director of Circuit Bridges and Composer-In-Residence at Immigrant Breast Nest. Find out more at http://5of4.com

Machined Time can be heard as musing on the differences between machine- and human-performed rhythms. It can also be heard as musings on the nature of time, set to a beat (in time, as it were). Or, if one prefers, Machined Time can simply be heard as the sum of its parts: loops, beats and voices. Special thanks to the readers who so graciously contributed their time and voices to this project: Jay Batzner, Andy Christian, Michelle McQuade Dewhirst, Eleanor Dubinsky, Gina Ferris, Lillian Gray, Christina Hourihan, Lana Is, Maria Ljungdahl, Mike McFerron, Melanie Mitrano, JoLayne Morneau, Gagi Petrovic, Lea Rathbun, Jonathan Schnicke, Boris Willis, and Viola Yip.