Austin Larkin + Kozawa/Keith

Austin Larkin is a composer primarily working with violin, bells, and sirens. His performance and practice is informed by research into dimensions of vibrating bodies. Larkin’s solo violin performance situates the violin as an instrument to accentuate space, rather than to fill space. Within this space, the violin renders a continuously unfolding structure of interlocking harmonic shapes and temporal patterns. With his custom bell instruments, the experience of ringing is expanded to energize the resonance of architecture and the cochlea. Through these instruments, we hear sound is not separate from space, sound is space.

Susie Kozawa is a Seattle-based sound artist, composer, and performer who works with sound collages and site-specific installations in which the gathering of sounds is a primary activity. She explores different acoustic spaces using musical instruments that she makes out of found objects (kelp, modified toys, cardboard rolls, jars, etc.). Creating live sound design and soundscapes for dance, theater, and film productions, Kozawa has participated in a “live spectacle performance” of Guy Madden’s silent film Brand Upon The Brain! that performed in Seattle, Portland, Sao Paulo, and Winnipeg. She has also contributed to sound and sound effects in the films Torrey Pines (Petersen 2016), By the Salish Sea (Gregory 2012), and When Herons Dream (2009). She was a founding member of Aono Jikken Ensemble, an experimental group that specializes in bringing live performance to silent films, and is a member of the Seattle Phonographers Union. She has received awards from the Seattle Arts Commission, Artist Trust, Washington State Arts Commission, and the Ford Foundation.

A freelance flutist, artist, improviser, and composer, Leanna Keith (she/they) delights in creating sound experiences that make audiences laugh, cry, and say: “I didn’t know the flute could do that!” Their works focus on timbre-shifting, the mixed-race experience, queer theory, and the breaking of genre boundaries. She is dedicated to playing music by living composers, and advocates for the usage of music as social activism.

Noel Kennon: 11 scenes framed by a sunset

An evening of music. Featuring a new ensemble consisting of Gust Burns (piano), Troy Schiefelbien (voice), Aaron Michael Butler (vibraphone), Gregg Miller (clarinet), Justin Lazar (clarinet), Hanna Broback (violin), John Teske (contrabass ), and Noel Kennon (viola , clarinet).

This ensemble will present a new piece “11 scenes lit by sunset,” written by Noel Kennon and realized by the ensemble. 

Environmental Studies + Nathan Ho + MouseMan

Environmental Studies is a group of Los Angeles musicians that blends unusual electronics, left-field rhythms, and warped brass instruments. Their newest record, Planet!, will be released on August 1st on their label Drifting Boat.

Nathan Ho is a Bay Area-based electronic musician combining contemporary classical music with brutal, percussive sound design drawing from breakcore, glitch, and bass music. His debut album Haywire Frontier was released on tokinogake in September 2023. He creates his music ex nihilo using only sounds synthesized in SuperCollider, and documents his process extensively in his technical resources on synthesis and digital signal processing.

MouseMan is a Washington-based electronic experimental musician. He tries to make music intuitively while taking in many influences from the gamut of sound and patterns. As of recently he has been working on extreme midi music.

Chet Corpt & Sean Gaskell

Sean Gaskell and Chet Corpt have both studied the kora in the traditional manner with the late great Malamini Jobarteh in his compound in Gambia, West Africa. A former minister of culture for that country, in addition to being a renowned international performer of kora music, he once said “Kora is an ocean.” Very deep, wide, and touching many shores. Seeking to avoid the pitfalls of cultural appropriation and mere mimicry, Chet and Sean experiment with the means that Mande sound art provides, tight and highly abstract rhythms and melodies, to express their own personal narratives.

Guitar Worship Service

Guitar Worship Service is playful in name, however not to mislead the importance of the creative possibilities of a guitar, GWS presentations select musicians and sound sculptors to freely interpret what a guitar is. While there are physically different types of guitars (electric, acoustic, steel, bass, etc.), GWS also encourages a conceptual nature for examining how to approach a guitar even by non-physical interaction with the instrument. For example, performance art would be a medium to this interpretive approach even if a single note or a sound is produced from a guitar. With the freedom and encouragement for artists to apply themselves (or with collaborators) as they creatively see fit, the GWS series has but one requisite for every live set: A guitar, in whatever capacity, is integrated with non-traditional application.  

On this evening, GWS # 8 proudly presents four incredibly diverse solo artists: 

PINK VOID
By combining exploratory tapestry drone and (sub)liminal audio samples, a listener could sublimely abandon conceptions on how to extract sounds from a guitar. Adding to the unique technique is that not one guitar string may be strummed. The aural directive is motioned by this artist’s gradual emergence from a long hiatus that has avoided recording and performing. Consider this a rare chance to be a passenger on an immersive cruise. 

BLUES WEAVE
A melting pot of coolly askew though woven with brevities of straight ahead music but all the while shifting electronic beats jump cut the listeners attention created by this far reaching guitarist that effortlessly opens passageways into auditory environments that inventively reshape the out-jazz to come tinged with even outer-blues if it’s even suitable to reference such genres.

SANDESH NAGARAJ
The profile photo on Sandesh’s Bandcamp (link below) captures a single person posed with a guitar. The image is a misnomer. To hear the application of just one guitar will not be received by your ears. An array of instruments and sound generating objects are put into place on a foundation that does not support phonic prenotions. Sandesh is a composer that successfully avoids giving pulse to the humdrum. “Charred” sounds akin to an erratic Conlon Nancarrow piano… and then sets fire to what you thought you just heard. The proof is evident through all of Sandeshe’s Bandcamp offerings. Know that we’re going to witness an audio architect constructing compositions of astounding heights.

MONED
A conduit for channeling multiple guitars to deliver seismic walls of purely warm, sculptive Larsen effects (i.e. producing palatable feedback while utilizing no loop pedals). The strong dose of meditative listening is prescribed to absorb the subtle shifting of frequencies and moaning of tones dispense a sensory experience. MONED is a psychedelic guitarist not of that musical genre but of psychotomimetic science.

These four performances will be collaboratively washed by improvisational projectionist COLORBARD VISUAL. The white wall behind the stage will be this artist’s blank canvas. This audio-visual dynamic is intended for the audience’s enjoyment while enhancing each artist’s presentations. 

Note that Guitar Worship Service has no religious affiliation, rather the series title is a good-natured description to celebrate one of the most diverse instruments created. Doors open at 6:30.

Monster Planet + Young Scientist

Young Scientist was formed in Seattle in the mid-1970’s by James Husted, Roland Barker and Marc Barreca, performing for several years with analog synths, tape loops and keyboards. Following re-releases of 1970s material on the German labels Bureau B and Vinyl on Demand, Husted and Barreca sporadically reunite for live performances of YS’s immersive blend of pulsating electronics and soundscapes.

Monster Planet is a place that lies just around the corner of our imaginations. Discovered accidentally in April of 2010, extensive research into this vast uncharted anomaly is conducted by a clandestine organization known as SYNPROV CORP, a sprawling collective of musicians, producers, designers, pixel bandits, video specialists, and B-movie chuds. Exploring Monster planet is an immersion of surreal improvised audio/visual performance that blends cutting-edge ambient / experimental / kosmische electronica, obscure cinema, DIY visuals, and general WTFness.

Thollem/ACVilla

Video artist ACVilla and keyboardist/vocalist Thollem McDonas are touring with stories they have collected over years of travel, including ones from just the other day, retelling them through miniature films and live music. These are audio/visual sneak peeks into otherwise unobserved events that are unfolding at the same time as ours, creating seconds- or minutes-long bonds that change our day whether we notice them or not. With an eye on these connections, ACVilla highlights the moments with an analog sensibility using digital equipment that fits into her nomadic lifestyle. Thollem’s live soundtrack draws on his infinite influences to create a sonic soundscape that is as equally enlightening as it is entertaining. Stories About People & Everyone Else is exactly that, told through two artists at the center of a world on the edge.

Thollem will also play a short “Infinite-Sum Game” (solo piano) set.

Thollem and ACVilla have been performing their multimedia collaborations over the last 15 years throughout N. America and Europe. In 2025 the duo will be touring ‘Stories About People & Everyone Else’, a 60-minute series of new shorts as well as selections from older projects including Obstacle Illusion, Worlds In A Life, and Who Are U.S. Thollem’s original live music draws from these soundtracks as well as his recent releases: Worlds In A Life and Infinite-Sum Game on ESP-Disk’, Obstacle Illusion on Astral Spirits, and Hot Pursuit Of Happiness on PA Tapes.

Presented by Nonsequitur.

Jeff Schroeder + Adam Miller + Ilyas Ahmed

NOTE: Audience for this event is limited to 85 people!

Jeff Schroeder (Los Angeles) was a member of the Smashing Pumpkins from 2007 to 2023. During this period, Jeff performed on numerous recordings and traveled the world performing live with the band. In October 2023, Jeff left the Smashing Pumpkins to pursue a solo career. He released his first album, Metanoia, in August of 2024. Metanoia is a solo ambient guitar album and explores the themes of loss, fragmentation and spiritual transformation. 

Adam Miller (Los Angeles) is the founder of the acclaimed electronic pop group Chromatics, as well as one of the band’s primary songwriters, lyricists, and visual artists. Miller’s songs have been used in a variety of film, television, fashion shows and sporting events including Twin Peaks, Mr. Robot, Riverdale, American Horror Stories, Chanel, Gucci, Jil Sander, & the NBA. In 2022 Miller released an album of instrumental ambient guitar meditations titled Gateway. For this event Miller will be performing songs from Gateway as well as pieces from his forthcoming album.

Ilyas Ahmed (Portland) has been releasing records as a solo & collaborative artist for almost 20 years. His most recent solo album is A Dream of Another. He is also a member of the experimental rock band Grails with whom they recently released the album Miracle MusicHe has also collaborated with artists such as Liz Harris (Grouper) and Jefre Cantu-Ledesma.

Neal Kosaly-Meyer & John Teske: Gradus ad Ignotum

Neal Kosaly-Meyer presents his ongoing work for solo piano, Gradus: For Fux, Tesla and Milo the Wrestler. A large, mixed ensemble will perform John Teske’s novelty generator, a new improvisation framework for durational performance. Both works will be performed simultaneously as a two-hour piano concerto, with the ensemble encircling the piano.

Gradus: for Fux, Tesla and Milo the Wrestler is Neal Kosaly-Meyer’s composition in progress for solo piano. It began with the sentence, “learn to play the piano one note at a time.” That instruction became a project to devote an extended solo improvisation session to each single tone on the piano, and to each combination of tones on the piano. Now in year 24 of the project, all the pitches in the D major scale have been accumulated, and are featured in the first rung of tonight’s performance. Live performances of Gradus are presented as 3 Rungs, one Rung focused on a single pitch, a second Rung on 2 pitches, and the third on 3 or more pitches. The ambient sound of the performance space is fully as important to a Gradus performance as are the intentionally produced piano sound.

Neal Kosaly-Meyer has been actively working on Gradus: for Fux, Tesla and Milo the Wrestler since 2002. Another long-term project has been A Finnegans Wake Project, learning and performing from memory each of the seventeen chapters of James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake. Part II, Chapter 3, will be performed this December at Chapel Performance Space, one of the Wake’s longest chapters, taking approximately five hours to recite. Kosaly-Meyer also performs rock n roll with Karen Eisenbrey as Your Mother Should Know, and is a founding member with Keith Eisenbrey and Aaron Keyt of Banned Rehearsal, an argument in creative expression, now entering its forty-second year.

For more than fifteen years, John Teske has been exploring composition for open instrumentation, shaped by hand-crafted algorithms. His latest work, ‘novelty generator,’ continues this approach. Inspired by elementary cellular automata, the piece is built upon straightforward rules that allow for unexpected and complex patterns to emerge. ‘novelty generator’ will be performed by: Matt Benham, Hanna Broback, Aaron Michael Butler, Haley Freedlund, Noel Kennon, Dave Knott, Christian Pincock, Greg Sinibaldi, Dave Stanford, John Teske, and Evan Woodle.

John Teske is a Seattle-based composer writing contemporary concert music and presenting site-specific performances. He has written works for soloists, chamber ensembles, and chamber orchestras, which have been performed across the Americas and Europe. Teske’s compositional approach balances intentional composition with spontaneous expression. Using algorithmic techniques, he sculpts scores and musical systems that incorporate chance, variation, and improvisation. He experiments with distilling musical concepts to their essence and aims to write music that can be performed by any ensemble of instruments. Teske’s work has been supported by organizations such as the Seattle Office of Arts & Cultural Affairs, the Jack Straw Foundation, and the City of Seattle.

Eye Music

Now in it’s 19th year, Seattle ensemble Eye Music presents a concert of text based and graphic scores chosen for their ability to be interpreted in both sound and movement. The group of eight musicians are joined by dancer Katrina Wolfe. The works include pieces composed for the group by Eric Lanzillotta and historic compositions by Mieko Shiomi, David Toop, and Richard Teitelbaum.