Please respond to: pniblock(a)compuserve.com
This concert has been Virtualized, so no audience, but it's on the Roulette.org website
But we will be there at Roulette with live musicians playing, David First, David Watson, Daniel Goode (only people with first names beginning in "D"), with help from Katherine Liberovskaya, Dave Gearey
But not the audience, here: Roulette Intermedium, Inc, 509 Atlantic Ave, Brooklyn, New York 11217 - Roulette.org
This concert is not now scheduled to be live at Roulette, but only online
Even Phill Niblock will be there!! Really!
Phill Niblock: 6 Hours of Music and Film
Tuesday, December 21, 2021. 6:00 pm to midnight
As the longest night of the year unfolds and the journey of our planet nears the point when Winter commences in the Northern Hemisphere, Phill Niblock stages his annual Winter Solstice concert for the 11th consecutive year at Roulette. Starting at 6pm, the performance will comprise of six sublime hours of acoustic and electronic music and mixed media film and video in a live procession that charts the movement of our planet and the progress of ourselves through art and performance at its maximal best.
Niblock’s minimalistic drone approach to composition and music was inspired by the musical and artistic activities of New York in the 1960s, from the art of Mark Rothko, Carl Andre, Sol LeWitt, Donald Judd, and Robert Morris to the music of John Cage and Morton Feldman. Niblock’s music is an exploration of sound textures created by multiple tones in very dense, often atonal tunings (generally microtonal in conception) performed in long durations
Phill Niblock is an intermedia artist using music, film, photography, video, and computers as his medium. Since the mid-1960s, he has been making music and intermedia performances which have been shown at numerous venues around the world, including The Museum of Modern Art, The Kitchen, The Institute of Contemporary Art in London, and World Music Institute at Merkin Hall. Since 1985, Niblock has been the director of the Experimental Intermedia Foundation in New York where he has been an artist and member since 1968. He is the producer of Music and Intermedia presentations at Experimental Intermedia since 1973 (with 1000 performances to date!) and the curator of EI’s XI Records label. Niblock’s music is available on the XI, Moikai, Mode and Touch labels. He is the recipient of the prestigious 2014 Foundation for Contemporary Arts John Cage award.
Phill Niblock’s Winter Solstice is made possible in part with public funds from the New York State Council on the Arts’ Electronic Media and Film Presentation Funds grant program, administered by the ARTS Council of the Southern Fingerlakes.
Article by Kurt Gottschalk
There was a time when Phill Niblock’s six-hour winter solstice concerts were a key part of the Downtown winter holidays, every bit as much as Phil Kline’s Unsilent Night boombox parades from Washington Square Park to Tompkins Park or the annual New Year’s Eve sets with James Blood Ulmer at the old Knitting Factory. From 6pm until midnight every December 21, Niblock could be found at Experimental Intermedia, his home and performance space on Centre Street, playing extended, drone-based music alongside his films of people around the world doing manual labor.
Those days are gone. Niblock still hosts a run of performances and screenings at the loft—which will mark its 50th year of operation in 2018— every May and December. But conflicts with the building owner have forced him to scale back and keep a close count on attendance. His solstice concerts—where people would meet up to listen, socialize in the stairwell, pop over to Chinatown for dinner and return to submerge again into the penetrating volumes of the music—proved too popular to continue at the loft . When Roulette opened its new theatre on Atlantic Avenue in 2011, the annual ritual was on the bill and a new tradition was born.
Niblock presented his first solstice concert in 1976 and has been doing it ever since, some years augmented with a summer solstice concert as well. The original inspiration, however, seems at this point lost to history.
“Actually, I don’t really know [how it started],” he said in August, speaking via Skype from his second home in Ghent, where he was preparing for concerts in Poland and Czechia. “I don’t have any memory of that whatsoever. It used to be eight hours long, and I don’t know what the fuck I did in eight hours because there wasn’t that much material then.”
Whatever the origin, the solstice concerts in a sense epitomize much of Niblock’s work. Extended tones, extreme volume and long, filmed scenes of people working are hallmarks of his artistic output. Asked what he thought people should take away from the concerts, he said with a laugh, “It’s not my problem, it’s their problem.” But he has plenty to say about the work itself.
“The volume is actually about two things,” he explained. “One is that it announces that the music is not a soundtrack for the film but is a dominant feature. The other thing, and probably the more important part, is that the music is all about this microtonal interference in the sound cloud that appears and that occurs much more at a very high volume. Sometimes the cloud of overtones that occurs is there only when it’s fairly loud and if you turn the music down, it becomes the sound of instruments rather than the sound of microtonal interferences.”
While making music might be what he’s best known for today, Niblock’s first work was in photography and filmmaking. When he arrived in New York City in 1958, he found a place in the jazz world, photographing Duke Ellington sessions and filming the Sun Ra and his Solar Arkestra, among others. Before long, he had had taken to filming dance and, later, creating installation projects with dancers interspersed among multiple screens projecting his films. (Some of those early multi-media events were revived in March, 2017, at the Tate Modern in London.) At that point, he said, he began to see parallels between the motions of dance and the motions of manual labor.
“I was working with a dance theater from ’65 to ’70 and I began doing this project called the ‘Environment Series’ in ’68,” he said. “There were three screens of video plus some slide pieces on a fourth screen with music and live players. I found it very difficult to do these pieces because there were five people and multiple screens and we simply couldn’t do it. I began to do a series of films that I could do with a single screen or possibly two or three when it was possible in ’73. I decided to do this series of pieces looking at the movement of people doing very ordinary work. I was looking at the movement of people working in the fields or fishing or whatever they were doing rather than live dance.”
Those early films are a major part of Niblock’s solstice concerts, but this year’s concert will give him a chance to present more recent work as well.
“There’s a lot of new video in the last few years, 100 minutes of finished videos, which is completely different than the people working, no people whatsoever,” he said. “We’re doing installations where there are three screens and a fourth set of pieces that are shot on video and look better on a video monitor than they do on a large screen.”
Niblock has a long history with Roulette, dating well before his moving the solstice concerts across the East River. As far back as 1982, he was performing at Roulette’s original loft on West Broadway (not so far from his own space), presenting a program called “Once More For the Road” featuring his films from Shanghai and Lesotho with Roulette co-founder and artistic director Jim Staley on “mobile trombone.”
That history made moving to Roulette an easy invitation to accept. While Niblock originally planned to find a new location for the solstice concerts every year, he said he is glad to have found a permanent home.
“I was thinking maybe we’d switch to different places but Roulette is really a great space for us,” he said. “I’m extremely happy to work with them.”
His image on the screen then jostled as he adjusted the camera on his laptop.
“Let me pull this down a bit,” he said, “so you can see the hand on my heart.” The gesture was followed by a laugh that might be as evocative of the experimental composer and filmmaker, at least to those who were at those early concerts on Centre Street, as the loud and prolonged tones of his music.
CONTRIBUTOR: Kurt Gottschalk
Kurt Gottschalk writes about contemporary composition and improvisation for DownBeat, The New York City Jazz Record, The Wire, Time Out New York, and other publications and has produced and hosted the Miniature Minotaurs radio program on WFMU for the last ten years.
To respond, please do so at: pniblock(a)compuserve.com
Roulette Intermedium, Inc, 509 Atlantic Ave, at Third Avenue, Brooklyn, New York 11217 - Roulette.org This concert is still scheduled to be live at Roulette,and online
Even Phill Niblock will be there!!
Phill Niblock: 6 Hours of Music and Film
Tuesday, December 21, 2021. 6:00 pm to midnight
As the longest night of the year unfolds and the journey of our planet nears the point when Winter commences in the Northern Hemisphere, Phill Niblock stages his annual Winter Solstice concert for the 11th consecutive year at Roulette. Starting at 6pm, the performance will comprise of six sublime hours of acoustic and electronic music and mixed media film and video in a live procession that charts the movement of our planet and the progress of ourselves through art and performance at its maximal best.
Niblock’s minimalistic drone approach to composition and music was inspired by the musical and artistic activities of New York in the 1960s, from the art of Mark Rothko, Carl Andre, Sol LeWitt, Donald Judd, and Robert Morris to the music of John Cage and Morton Feldman. Niblock’s music is an exploration of sound textures created by multiple tones in very dense, often atonal tunings (generally microtonal in conception) performed in long durations
Phill Niblock is an intermedia artist using music, film, photography, video, and computers as his medium. Since the mid-1960s, he has been making music and intermedia performances which have been shown at numerous venues around the world, including The Museum of Modern Art, The Kitchen, The Institute of Contemporary Art in London, and World Music Institute at Merkin Hall. Since 1985, Niblock has been the director of the Experimental Intermedia Foundation in New York where he has been an artist and member since 1968. He is the producer of Music and Intermedia presentations at Experimental Intermedia since 1973 (with 1000 performances to date!) and the curator of EI’s XI Records label. Niblock’s music is available on the XI, Moikai, Mode and Touch labels. He is the recipient of the prestigious 2014 Foundation for Contemporary Arts John Cage award.
Phill Niblock’s Winter Solstice is made possible in part with public funds from the New York State Council on the Arts’ Electronic Media and Film Presentation Funds grant program, administered by the ARTS Council of the Southern Fingerlakes.
Article by Kurt Gottschalk
There was a time when Phill Niblock’s six-hour winter solstice concerts were a key part of the Downtown winter holidays, every bit as much as Phil Kline’s Unsilent Night boombox parades from Washington Square Park to Tompkins Park or the annual New Year’s Eve sets with James Blood Ulmer at the old Knitting Factory. From 6pm until midnight every December 21, Niblock could be found at Experimental Intermedia, his home and performance space on Centre Street, playing extended, drone-based music alongside his films of people around the world doing manual labor.
Those days are gone. Niblock still hosts a run of performances and screenings at the loft—which will mark its 50th year of operation in 2018— every May and December. But conflicts with the building owner have forced him to scale back and keep a close count on attendance. His solstice concerts—where people would meet up to listen, socialize in the stairwell, pop over to Chinatown for dinner and return to submerge again into the penetrating volumes of the music—proved too popular to continue at the loft . When Roulette opened its new theatre on Atlantic Avenue in 2011, the annual ritual was on the bill and a new tradition was born.
Niblock presented his first solstice concert in 1976 and has been doing it ever since, some years augmented with a summer solstice concert as well. The original inspiration, however, seems at this point lost to history.
“Actually, I don’t really know [how it started],” he said in August, speaking via Skype from his second home in Ghent, where he was preparing for concerts in Poland and Czechia. “I don’t have any memory of that whatsoever. It used to be eight hours long, and I don’t know what the fuck I did in eight hours because there wasn’t that much material then.”
Whatever the origin, the solstice concerts in a sense epitomize much of Niblock’s work. Extended tones, extreme volume and long, filmed scenes of people working are hallmarks of his artistic output. Asked what he thought people should take away from the concerts, he said with a laugh, “It’s not my problem, it’s their problem.” But he has plenty to say about the work itself.
“The volume is actually about two things,” he explained. “One is that it announces that the music is not a soundtrack for the film but is a dominant feature. The other thing, and probably the more important part, is that the music is all about this microtonal interference in the sound cloud that appears and that occurs much more at a very high volume. Sometimes the cloud of overtones that occurs is there only when it’s fairly loud and if you turn the music down, it becomes the sound of instruments rather than the sound of microtonal interferences.”
While making music might be what he’s best known for today, Niblock’s first work was in photography and filmmaking. When he arrived in New York City in 1958, he found a place in the jazz world, photographing Duke Ellington sessions and filming the Sun Ra and his Solar Arkestra, among others. Before long, he had had taken to filming dance and, later, creating installation projects with dancers interspersed among multiple screens projecting his films. (Some of those early multi-media events were revived in March, 2017, at the Tate Modern in London.) At that point, he said, he began to see parallels between the motions of dance and the motions of manual labor.
“I was working with a dance theater from ’65 to ’70 and I began doing this project called the ‘Environment Series’ in ’68,” he said. “There were three screens of video plus some slide pieces on a fourth screen with music and live players. I found it very difficult to do these pieces because there were five people and multiple screens and we simply couldn’t do it. I began to do a series of films that I could do with a single screen or possibly two or three when it was possible in ’73. I decided to do this series of pieces looking at the movement of people doing very ordinary work. I was looking at the movement of people working in the fields or fishing or whatever they were doing rather than live dance.”
Those early films are a major part of Niblock’s solstice concerts, but this year’s concert will give him a chance to present more recent work as well.
“There’s a lot of new video in the last few years, 100 minutes of finished videos, which is completely different than the people working, no people whatsoever,” he said. “We’re doing installations where there are three screens and a fourth set of pieces that are shot on video and look better on a video monitor than they do on a large screen.”
Niblock has a long history with Roulette, dating well before his moving the solstice concerts across the East River. As far back as 1982, he was performing at Roulette’s original loft on West Broadway (not so far from his own space), presenting a program called “Once More For the Road” featuring his films from Shanghai and Lesotho with Roulette co-founder and artistic director Jim Staley on “mobile trombone.”
That history made moving to Roulette an easy invitation to accept. While Niblock originally planned to find a new location for the solstice concerts every year, he said he is glad to have found a permanent home.
“I was thinking maybe we’d switch to different places but Roulette is really a great space for us,” he said. “I’m extremely happy to work with them.”
His image on the screen then jostled as he adjusted the camera on his laptop.
“Let me pull this down a bit,” he said, “so you can see the hand on my heart.” The gesture was followed by a laugh that might be as evocative of the experimental composer and filmmaker, at least to those who were at those early concerts on Centre Street, as the loud and prolonged tones of his music.
CONTRIBUTOR: Kurt Gottschalk
Kurt Gottschalk writes about contemporary composition and improvisation for DownBeat, The New York City Jazz Record, The Wire, Time Out New York, and other publications and has produced and hosted the Miniature Minotaurs radio program on WFMU for the last ten years.
PLEASE NOTE: CONCERTS ARE ONLY VIRTUAL! NO CONCERTS AT 224 CENTRE ST IN PERSON THIS SERIES...
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The December EI Calendar!! All virtual, but virtuous, and streamed live to your computerson the nights indicated from the EI website -www.experimentalintermedia.orgplease do not reply to this email address, but to - pniblock(a)compuserve.com This edition of our series is once again entirely virtual. Concerts will be streamedlive from our website at 9pm sharp NYC time on the dates listed:www.experimentalintermedia.org Right after each concert we invite performers and audience to join "The EI VirtualKitchen Hang", our Zoom meeting room, to interact between each other and with us. The EI Virtual Kitchen Hang Zoom link:https://zoom.us/j/2120765064?pwd=KzhqdkJmcUkrMGdTZGw0WnV0REZWQT09Meeting ID: 212 076 5064Passcode: 869302 As well, each evening will have a dedicated recipe created by a volunteerartist-muscian-cook especially with the evening's performer(s) in mind availablefor you to look at, try out or print... |
EXPERIMENTAL INTERMEDIA
The Forty-Eighth Anniversary of EI performances at 224 Centre Street, The Fifty-Third Anniversary of the Founding of Experimental Intermedia, the Fifty-Third Anniversary of the 224 Centre Street loft, and, not least, The Forty--first Annual Festival with no fancy name, Part One (or A)
Phill Niblock, curator
December 2021 - 9pm
Saturday 4 and Sunday 5 - from noon until 11pm, both daysA special virtual event - Double InfinityA series of 88 quarter-hours, during the 22 hourswith about 300 performers all togetherStreamed from our website - www.experimentalintermedia.org - now archived on the website Lars Åkerlund (Sweden) Friday 10
A piece based on sounds from prepared electric guitar, analog and digital devices that are processed live by different means; live guitar, samples, prerecorded sounds, analog synth, midi controllers www.larsakerlund.com Anastasia Clarke (New York) Sunday 12 Will present an intermedia meditation on disappearing or rapidly changing environments using custom instruments, computer, video, and voice https://anastasiaclarke.info/ Margaret Schedel (New York) Monday 13
The S.E.A.L.s are an AI-inspired electronic noise/surf band consisting of the collective efforts of Sofy Yuditskaya, Susie Green, Ria Rajan, Margaret Schedel and Sophia Sun augmented by the S.E.A.L. (Synthetic Erudition Assist Lattice), our AI counterparts that assist us in creating usable content with which to mold and shape our music and visuals; our music came about during the height of the Covid-19 lockdowns across the globe; our live performances online using various tech stacks are dependent upon the concert organizers preferences; during these performances we improvise on our respective music, audio and visual instruments; we regard telematic music technologies, not only as means by which our live online networked performances can be accessed but also, as a chance-agent providing a completely individualized temporal experience as the medium of the internet provides a multidimensional sensorium http://www.schedel.net/ George Moraitis (Athens, Greece) Wednesday 15
"Finis Terrae" - Sound performance using tape recorder, modular synths and field recordings; his new composition reflects upon the perception of the sonic environment of the Mediterranean basin, a sonorous cavity of multiple resonances, noises, history, rapid changes and memory; the basin seen as source and at the same time as effect of resonances; an echo chamber in which sound reverberates, generating multiple nuances of feedback, return, boundness and offering; like an interplay of mirrors in which every act or object is multiplied and even distorted www.georgemoraitis.gr Jacob Kirkegaard (Copenhagen, Denmark) Thursday 16
Opus Mors: Part 1: Opus Morturarium which is a part of a longer work Opus Mors in which he recorded four spaces and procedures related to death and its aftermath; Opus Morturarium is composed from recordings he made in different mortuaries in Denmark and Germany; the sound work is accompanied by video that he composed using microscopies that illustrate different causes of death provided to him by a forensic pathologist who collaborated with him on the Opus Mors project www.fonik.dkwww.topos.media Neil Leonard (Boston) Friday 17
Home on the 4th - Audio/visual compositions for alto saxophone, electronic processing and video; the program features A/V recent collaboration with Pierce Warnecke, an electroacoustic duet with percussionist Michael Evans, and an A/V composition made with Cuban percussionists Román Diaz and Sandy Perez neilleonard.bandcamp.comneilleonard.com Nicolas Collins (Chicago, Berlin, West Falmouth) Sunday 19
A paleo-New Yorker presents something old, something new, something appropriated, something pneu: pieces for two generations of transformed brass instruments, Cusqueña music, woodpeckers, laptop marching band, a candle and the Electroacoustic Pollini Ensemble in Padova. http://www.NicolasCollins.com
Our programs are supported by the Aaron Copland Fund for Music, the Phaedrus Foundation, and the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature
224 Centre Street at Grand, Third Floor, N Y 10013
212 431 5127, 431 6430
www.experimentalintermedia.org and www.XIrecords.org
We are now streaming the concerts live on the Wave Farm Website:
https://wavefarm.org/radio/partner-streams/schedule/e7hkxy
It's the EI December series!!
please respond to this email at - pniblock(a)compuserve.com
EXPERIMENTAL INTERMEDIA
The Forty-Eighth Anniversary of EI performances at 224 Centre Street, The Fifty-Third Anniversary of the Founding of Experimental Intermedia, the Fifty-Third Anniversary of the 224 Centre Street loft, and, not least, The Forty--first Annual Festival with no fancy name, Part One (or A)
Phill Niblock, curator
December 2021 - 9pm
Saturday 4 and Sunday 5 - from noon until 11pm, both days
A special virtual event - Double Infinity
A series of 88 quarter-hours, during the 22 hours
with about 300 performers all together
Streamed from our website - www.experimentalintermedia.org - now archived on the website
Lars Åkerlund (Sweden) Friday 10
A piece based on sounds from prepared electric guitar, analog and digital devices that are processed live by different means; live guitar, samples, prerecorded sounds, analog synth, midi controllers www.larsakerlund.com
Anastasia Clarke (New York) Sunday 12 Anastasia Clarke (New York) will present an intermedia meditation on disappearing or rapidly changing environments using custom instruments, computer, video, and voice https://anastasiaclarke.info/
Margaret Schedel (New York) Monday 13
The S.E.A.L.s are an AI-inspired electronic noise/surf band consisting of the collective efforts of Sofy Yuditskaya, Susie Green, Ria Rajan, Margaret Schedel and Sophia Sun augmented by the S.E.A.L. (Synthetic Erudition Assist Lattice), our AI counterparts that assist us in creating usable content with which to mold and shape our music and visuals; our music came about during the height of the Covid-19 lockdowns across the globe; our live performances online using various tech stacks are dependent upon the concert organizers preferences; during these performances we improvise on our respective music, audio and visual instruments; we regard telematic music technologies, not only as means by which our live online networked performances can be accessed but also, as a chance-agent providing a completely individualized temporal experience as the medium of the internet provides a multidimensional sensorium http://www.schedel.net/
George Moraitis (Athens, Greece) Wednesday 15
"Finis Terrae" - Sound performance using tape recorder, modular synths and field recordings; his new composition reflects upon the perception of the sonic environment of the Mediterranean basin, a sonorous cavity of multiple resonances, noises, history, rapid changes and memory; the basin seen as source and at the same time as effect of resonances; an echo chamber in which sound reverberates, generating multiple nuances of feedback, return, boundness and offering; like an interplay of mirrors in which every act or object is multiplied and even distorted www.georgemoraitis.gr
Jacob Kirkegaard (Copenhagen, Denmark) Thursday 16
Opus Mors: Part 1: Opus Morturarium which is a part of a longer work Opus Mors in which he recorded four spaces and procedures related to death and its aftermath; Opus Morturarium is composed from recordings he made in different mortuaries in Denmark and Germany; the sound work is accompanied by video that he composed using microscopies that illustrate different causes of death provided to him by a forensic pathologist who collaborated with him on the Opus Mors project www.fonik.dkwww.topos.media
Neil Leonard (Boston) Friday 17
Home on the 4th - Audio/visual compositions for alto saxophone, electronic processing and video; the program features A/V recent collaboration with Pierce Warnecke, an electroacoustic duet with percussionist Michael Evans, and an A/V composition made with Cuban percussionists Román Diaz and Sandy Perez neilleonard.bandcamp.comneilleonard.com
Nicolas Collins (Chicago, Berlin, West Falmouth) Sunday 19
A paleo-New Yorker presents something old, something new, something appropriated, something pneu: pieces for two generations of transformed brass instruments, Cusqueña music, woodpeckers, laptop marching band, a candle and the Electroacoustic Pollini Ensemble in Padova. http://www.NicolasCollins.com
Our programs are supported by the Aaron Copland Fund for Music, the Phaedrus Foundation, and the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of Governor Andrew Cuomo and the New York State Legislature
224 Centre Street at Grand, Third Floor, N Y 10013
212 431 5127, 431 6430
www.experimentalintermedia.org and www.XIrecords.org
We are now streaming the concerts live on the Wave Farm Website:
https://wavefarm.org/radio/partner-streams/schedule/e7hkxy
Double Infinity: A Celebration of Phill Niblock's 88th Birthday in 88 Quarter-hourswww.experimentalintermedia.org December 4th and 5th 2021
A 22 hour on-line streaming event in two 11 hour parts, Saturday December 4th and Sunday December 5th, 2021, curated by Katherine Liberovskaya with Phill Niblock and streaming engineered by Bob Bellerue and Daniel Neumann. Featuring interventions by:Esther Ferrer, Tom Johnson, Gilles Paté, Boris Nieslony, Pierre Berthet, Arnold Dreiblatt, Joerg Hiller, Nicola Hein, Matthias Kaiser, Viola Yip, Neil Leonard, Amnon Wolman, Guy De Bièvre, Sofia Bustorff, Alexandra Dementieva,, Anna Clementi, Laurie Schwartz, Janos Sugar, Tibor Szemzo, Hans W Koch, Karin Lingnau, Markus Schmickler Moniek Darge, Godfried Willem Raes, Kathryn Bauer, Arthur Stidfole, Bryan Eubanks, Andrew Lafkas, Cat Lamb, Byron Westbrook, Jens Brand, Dan Farkas, Ben Manley, Shelley Hirsch, Katherine Liberovskaya, Ursula Scherrer, Keiko Uenishi, Deborah Walker, Yvan Etienne, Marie Verry, The Nelly Boyd Ensemble, Julien Ottavi, Jenny Pickett, Kasper Toplitz, George Cremaschi, Matt Ostrowski, Andrea Parkins, Rie Nakajima, Marie Roux, Margarida Garcia, Andre Goncalves, David Maranha, Manuel Mota, Adriana Sa, Thomas Ankersmit, Mario de Vega, Robert Poss, Susan Stenger, Carlos Casas, Klaus Filip, Noid, Ryoko Akama, Tim Shaw, Caroline Demeyer, Patries Wichers, Malcolm Goldstein, Don Ritter, Ikue Mori, Jim Staley, Marco Scarassatti, Livio Tragtenberg, David Behrman, Nic Collins, Al Margolis, Leslie Ross, Walter Wright, David First, David Watson, Bruce Andrews, Michael Schumacher, Sally Silvers, Gill Arno, Richard Garet, Gustavo Matamoros, Shelly Silver, David Soldier, Sam Ashley, Tom Buckner, Ellen Fullman, Theresa Wong, Oren Ambarchi, Loren Connors, Alan Licht, Ulrich Krieger, Lawrence English, Carmen Keiso, Nao Nishihara, Barbara Held, Anne Wellmer, Alexey Borisov, Antonio Della Marina, Alessandra Zucchi, Maria Blondeel, Lieve D'hont, Esther Venrooy, Tony Buck, Mazen Kerbaj, Magda Mayas, Sharif Sehnaoui, Hedya Klein, Heimo Wallner, Gaby Zrost, Martin Zrost, Jozef Czeres, Michael Delia, Morgan O'Hara, Milos Vojtechovsky, Kjell Bjorgeengen, Lasse Marhaug, Marek Choloniewski, Thomas Köner, Francisco Janes, Jurate Jarulyte, Michel Collet, Ethan Oliver Fowke, Sarah Hannah, Eric Letourneau, Valentine Verhaeghe, Christian Kobi, Alvin Curran, Renate Hoffmann Korth, Janneke Van Der Putten, Zahra Mani, Mia Zabelka, Didier Aschour, Luca Coclite, Donato Epiro, Laura Perrone, Leif Elgren, Karl Michael Von Hauswolf, Frederic Acquaviva, Lore Lixenberg,Charlie Morrow, Juho Laitinen, Valerian Maly, Klara Schilliger, Jan Klare, Achim Zepezauer, Angelica Castello, Dieb 13, Billy Roiz, Burkhard Stangl, Astrid Klein, A. Groznykh, A. Grachev, S.Komarov, A. Scheglov, D. Shishov, A. Strokov, Luciano Chessa, Irina Danilova, Hiram Levy, Peer Bode, Andrew Deutch, Rebekkah Palov, Peter Kotik, Marcia Bassett, Barry Weisblat, Conrad Harris, Pauline Kim, John King, Seth Cluett, George Lewis, Miya Masaoka, Tom Chiu, Dan Joseph, Miah Artola, Chika, Yoshiko Chuma, John Driscoll, Phil Edelstein, Matt Rogalski, Peter Shapiro, Joseph Sledgianowski, Bob Bellerue, Daniel Neumann, Kurt Gottschalk, Adam Hogan, Monika Weiss, Brandon Lopez, Cecilia Lopez, Mayada Ibrahim, Austin Larkin, Jordan Paul, Bradley Eros, Lele Dai, Lary 7, Robert Mizaki, Ravish Momin, Cristián Alvear, Michael Winter, John Bischoff, James Fei, Laetitia Sonami, Richard Barrett, Incredible Bob, Milana Zarić, Hampus Lindwall, George Moraitis, Gerd Stern... and a few othersFind the live stream at www.experimentalintermedia.org- Saturday December 4th 2021 from noon to 23:00 (NY time, EST)- Sunday December 5th 2021 from noon to 23:00 (NY time, EST) After December 5th the archives of the recordings of all 22 hours will be accessible through the Experimental Intermedia website (www.experimentalintermedia.org)