Further returns on November 18th, with an evening of ghostadelic entertainment at the Portico Gallery in West Norwood, London.
Press release:
Press release:
DJ Food & Pete Williams present the second of their immersive audio visual evenings at the Portico Gallery, London. Live music from Simon James and a not to be missed A/V set from Sculpture. Get lost in Further's multi projector light and sound show. Food, drink, a record stall from The Book and Record Bar plus plenty of seating.
Programme:
7.30 - 8.30: Doors open, there will be a record stall with stock picked to compliment the evening by Micheal Johnson from the nearby Book & Record Bar and delicious local food served alongside the fully licensed Portico bar stocked with local beers and ales.
8.30 - 9.15: Simon James - former Simonsound and Black Channels member and one of the foremost exponents in today's modular electronics scene - plays a rare live set with his Buchla 200e Electric Music Box.
10.00 - 10.45: Sculpture bring their incredible live show to West Norwood via Dan Hayhurst's tape loops and electronics and Rueben Sutherland's zoetrope turntable visuals
8.30 - 9.15: Simon James - former Simonsound and Black Channels member and one of the foremost exponents in today's modular electronics scene - plays a rare live set with his Buchla 200e Electric Music Box.
10.00 - 10.45: Sculpture bring their incredible live show to West Norwood via Dan Hayhurst's tape loops and electronics and Rueben Sutherland's zoetrope turntable visuals
10.45 - 12.00: DJ Food & Pete Williams (Further) will open and close the evening with their multi-projection Light & Sound Designs.
Tickets available here
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Ghost Box have a new release - Outward Journeys, a first and fine full-length from The Belbury Circle - that is to say, Jim Jupp of Belbury Poly + Jon Brooks of The Advisory Circle- featuring once again contributions from John Foxx on two songs, in the form of vocals and synths. Dig also the new style design from Julian House which has the air of Omni about it maybe...
British vaporwave, innit? Early days of home computers, ZX Spectrums, C64s, programs on cassette and all that. I hadn't thought of Omni but I see it now you've mentioned it. Also: MAPLINS. The early days of geek culture asserting itself.
ReplyDeleteTangentially, I see a chain-smoking British SF writer who got into the amateur computer biz in a big way.
Charles Platt: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Charles_Platt_(author)