Saturday, April 26, 2025
Long Play Festival at Public Records, BRIC, Issue Project Room and Brooklyn Academy of Music: May 2 - 4 | Christian Marclay's "The Clock" at MoMA: Feb 17 - May 11
This year, once again rather than attending the Seattle International Film Festival, I will be in the city of cities partaking in the abundance New York has to offer. This begins with Japan Society, and their shared screenings with The Metrograph, presenting the incomparable cinema of Mikio Naruse. Through the two-part, 30 film series, screened entirely on rare prints imported from collections in Japan, the two cinemas host this most explicit of examples of, "The Auteur as Salaryman", in their combined, "Mikio Naruse: The World Betrays Us". Across the way at Film Society at Lincoln Center, Jia Zhang-ke's masterful generational journey, "Caught by the Tides" begins it's US theatrical run with the director in attendance, alongside Roberto Minervini's "The Damned", and a retrospective of the films of the rarely screened Odersan filmmaker, Kira Muratova. To properly take in the city is to immerse oneself in music, film, dance and cinema premieres. Among these this year, are performances as diverse of the Metropolitan Opera's presentation of the opera most lauded by Alex Ross in his books and writing for the New Yorker, on Richard Strauss' "Salome", and the same night, across Manhattan the avant-ambient leanings of Cosey Fanni Tutti's "Industrial Art" are on exhibit at Maxwell Graham. In which the Throbbing Gristle founder explores feminism, freedom and the politics of the personal, with "Time to Tell".
No time in New York would be complete without a day revisiting the Museum of Modern Art's permanent collection on view on the fourth and fifth floors. While there, also witnessing Rosa Barba's celluloid experiments, and Christian Marclay's staggering audio-visual installation, "The Clock". The run of Christian Marclay's installation at MoMA marks the work’s return to the United States for the first time since 2016, and for the first time to New York in nearly a dozen years. Of which the artist himself says of this superhuman work of assembly and editing, "‘It Became a Nightmare’: Christian Marclay on Creating Global Smash 'The Clock'". Similarly, an afternoon will be occupied at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and the unmissable array of 14th to 19th century paintings on display, as well as the 19th and early 20th century wings on offer in the Robert Lehman Collection. In addition to the work in The Met's permanent wings, there is also an assembly of romantic paintings presented in, "Caspar David Friedrich: The Soul of Nature", and an exhibition of John Singer Sargent's work from his time in Paris. Following a day at the museums, Tim Hecker's engaged noise sculpting is on display at Public Records. Whatever you do, don't refer to Hecker's dissonant washes of sound as auditory products for wellness culture, the composer has established, "Tim Hecker Helped Popularize Ambient Music. He’s (Sort of) Sorry". After days on end of museum hopping, the opera, gallery openings and cinema screenings, most every night will be coming to a close during Ron Carter's 88th Birthday Celebration at the Blue Note, and in the AM hours to the tune of late-night sets at Midtown's Tomi Jazz.
The weekend commences with the highest density of performances to be found annually in Brooklyn, encapsulated in the three day, fifty performance, fifteen venue, Long Play Festival. Programmed and conceived by one of the central the East Coast mainstays of New Music and modern classical composition. In just a few short years, Bang On A Can have assembled a festival of a caliber which, "Long Play has Risen to the Top of New York Classical Music Festivals". From this formidable roster, this year's highlights include, Kim Gordon with Kassie Krut and I.U.D. at Pioneer Works, American Opera Projects plays Arvo Pärt at South Oxford Space, Idris Ackamoor and The Pyramids at BRIC Ballroom, Body / Head, Foodman, and Emptyset at Public Records, Carl Stone and Akaihirume at Issue Project Room, Moritz von Oswald Presents: Silencio at Roulette Intermedium, Salamanda at Public Records, Max Richter and the American Contemporary Music Ensemble at the Brooklyn Academy of Music, David Lang's "Darker", performed by Ensemble Signal at BRIC Ballroom, Tashi Wada with Julia Holter at Public Records, Sophia Jani "Six Pieces for Solo Violin", performed by Maiani da Silva at Issue Project Room, Ensemble Offspring plays Iannis Xenakis, Tujiko Noriko, Niecy Blues, and the Ben LaMar Gay Quartet all in rapid succession over the course of one day at Public Records. With the festival coming to a close around the American minimalist composer Terry Riley's 90th Birthday Tribute performed by Bang on a Can All-Stars, Pete Townshend, Gyan Riley, Krishna Bhatt, Valentina Magaletti, Nicole Mitchell and Suphala, at Pioneer Works.
Sunday, April 13, 2025
Northwest Terror Fest at Neumos & Barboza: May 8 - 10
The regional venues hosting regular national and international tours spiraling out of the global metal, doom, hardcore, and noiserock have both in tumult and a thriving state of expansiveness in recent years. Regular nights, showcases, and festivals for this burgeoning and heavy end of the sonic spectrum can be seen at El Corazon, The Clock-Out Lounge, Black Lodge, and Substation, all stepping up to fill the void of what was once the locus of this culture, The Highline, after closing due to the sale of their building. In 2017, the combined venues of Neumos and Barboza became the host to this sound's most significant event of the year with the arrival of Northwest Terror Fest. For metal and its fans, it was a pivotal paradigm shift in which, "Northwest Terror Fest Flipped Seattle on its Head". An all-things-metal festival with a previous Southwest iteration, Terror Fest's three days hosted a lineup featuring no small quantity of metal issuing from the variegated low-lit landscape of black and doom metal mutations. Initially launched under the opportunity to, "Bring Warning to America: An Interview with Terrorfest founder David Rodgers", Rodger's wider curatorial vision for the festival, was detailed in Decibel's, "It's Good to Have Goals and Dreams Can Come True", and in a 2019 interview, the festival's co-organizer Joseph Schafer describing how "The Third Time (Is Still) the Charm".
Returning after three successful post-pandemic editions, Northwest Terror Fest arrives this year with some of the most potent sounds from the heavier end of the 21st century. Over the course of three nights, and six showcases, this year's lineup encompasses everything from gloaming atmospheric ambiance and doom riffs, blistering thrash and hardcore, and heavy psychedelic and stoner rock explorations. As depicted in No Clean Singing's coverage, attending Northwest Terror Fest is to witness an annual summation of the global scene's ongoing and expanding development. These sounds have now come to encompass melodicism and atmospheres lifted from shoegaze and spacerock, eruptions of heavy psych rock, industrial drumming, synth exploration and electronic atmospheres, and pure experimental noise. The expansiveness of which is detailed in Brad Sanders' essential overview, "Untrue And International: Living in a Post-Black Metal World", with complimentary curation from this sphere found in the excellent selections of The Quietus' Columnus Metallicus. The above resources sound the expanse of releases dominantly sourced from labels like, Hydrahead, Neurot, Ipecac, Deathwish, 20 Buck Spin, Dark Descent, Sargent House, Profound Lore, Season of Mist, Roadburn, Century Media, The Flenser, and Relapse.
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