Related show
- Artist: Dafna Naphtali and Hans Tammen
- Tour: Dafna / Hans California CCRMA . Montalvo . SFSU
- Date: 04/24/19
- Time: 5:30pm
- Venue: CCRMA / Stanford University
- City: Stanford , CA
- Address: 60 Lomita Ct
- Venue phone: (650) 723-4971
- Country: United States
- Admission: free and open to the public
- Age restrictions: All Ages
- Box office: (650) 723-4971
- Notes: Dafna Naphtali and Hans Tammen present artist talks on their current work and on “Audio Chandelier” (Naphtali) and “Endangered Guitar” (Tammen) to be presented in concert 4/25 also at CCRMA. −·−· −·−· ·−· −− ·− −·−· −·−· ·−· −− ·− Thu, Apr 25, 7:30pm CCRMA Stage, The Knoll FREE and Open to the Public ccrma.stanford.edu/about/directions −·−· −·−· ·−· −− ·− −·−· −·−· ·−· −− ·− DAFNA NAPHTALI – AUDIO CHANDELIER: GEARS, OUTTAKES, FRY Individual grains of nearly static sound dispersed to 8-16 speakers and altered as granular synthesis illuminates and refracts moments in time as field recordings and audio samples and live vocals are processed as one “grain” is sent to each speaker available in a surprising array of sounds and environments — from shimmering motion to reverberant spaces, to low crashing waves, to hyper-electronics refraction of sound, the speakers played as individual sounding instruments, with work to be continued Harvestworks (NYC) residency in late 2019. HANS TAMMEN: ENDANGERED GUITAR Hans Tammen likes to set sounds in motion, and then sitting back to watch the movements unfold. With dynamics, rhythm, timbral and spatial explorations as primary elements, his music is continuously shifting, with different layers floating into the foreground while others disappear. His music has been described as an alien world of bizarre textures and a journey through the land of unending sonic operations, Signal To Noise called his playing “…a killer tour de force of post-everything guitar damage”. The “Endangered Guitar” is a hybrid interactive instrument meant to facilitate live sound processing. https://tammen.org/Endangered-Guitar-in-Musical-Instruments-in-the-21st-Century
- Artist: Dafna Naphtali and Hans Tammen
- Tour: Dafna / Hans California CCRMA . Montalvo . SFSU
- Date: 04/25/19
- Time: 7:30pm
- Venue: CCRMA / Stanford University
- City: Stanford , CA
- Address: 60 Lomita Ct
- Venue phone: (650) 723-4971
- Country: United States
- Admission: free and open to the public
- Age restrictions: All Ages
- Box office: (650) 723-4971
- Notes: Dafna Naphtali and Hans Tammen present two individual performances: “Audio Chandelier” (Naphtali) and “Endangered Guitar” (Tammen). −·−· −·−· ·−· −− ·− −·−· −·−· ·−· −− ·− Thu, Apr 25, 7:30pm CCRMA Stage, The Knoll FREE and Open to the Public ccrma.stanford.edu/about/directions −·−· −·−· ·−· −− ·− −·−· −·−· ·−· −− ·− DAFNA NAPHTALI – AUDIO CHANDELIER: GEARS, OUTTAKES, FRY Individual grains of nearly static sound dispersed to 8-16 speakers and altered as granular synthesis illuminates and refracts moments in time as field recordings and audio samples and live vocals are processed as one “grain” is sent to each speaker available in a surprising array of sounds and environments — from shimmering motion to reverberant spaces, to low crashing waves, to hyper-electronics refraction of sound, the speakers played as individual sounding instruments, with work to be continued Harvestworks (NYC) residency in late 2019. HANS TAMMEN: ENDANGERED GUITAR Hans Tammen likes to set sounds in motion, and then sitting back to watch the movements unfold. With dynamics, rhythm, timbral and spatial explorations as primary elements, his music is continuously shifting, with different layers floating into the foreground while others disappear. His music has been described as an alien world of bizarre textures and a journey through the land of unending sonic operations, Signal To Noise called his playing “…a killer tour de force of post-everything guitar damage”. The “Endangered Guitar” is a hybrid interactive instrument meant to facilitate live sound processing. https://tammen.org/Endangered-Guitar-in-Musical-Instruments-in-the-21st-Century