Photo Gallery and Review: TodaysArt 2017

A weekend celebrating creative disruptions, electronic music, and spatial experiments. TodaysArt celebrated its 13th edition last September.

Conceived by a group of ex-squatters, artists, and cultural progressors back in 2005, TodaysArt—an annual gathering for contemporary experiments in electronic music, art, and digital culture—electrified the city center of The Hague last September. Featuring key performances and audiovisual highlights by Hauschka, Ata Kak, Sote, and Tarik Barri; an extensive art, exhibition, panel and workshop program; as well as two club nights against the majestic backdrop of an 18th-century classical theatre, the festival inspired over 6,000 visitors across three main venues over the weekend.

Pauline Krikke, mayor of The Hague, opened the festival with an opening speech while wearing a “Wifible”—a wearable wifi router, around her arm. Festival-goers came across this device spread throughout the festival venues; and, once connected, participants were able to see video pieces on their mobile browser displaying some of the festival’s digital artworks.

Whilst experimental by design, TodaysArt featured a spectrum of world, European, and Dutch premières. The opening concert “Sacred Horror in Design” by Sote and Tarik Barri engaged the audience with a blend of traditional Persian instruments, electronics, and abstract visuals shifting in real time on stage. Hauschka opened his concert with a short introduction, highlighting the need for European collaboration. His performance—envisioned as a score to the imaginary world his children would inherit in 50 years—took the audience on a journey through imaginative soundscapes based around piano and electronics—a mesmerizing experience within the surreal setting of the Royal Theatre.

Another highlight of this year’s program was “Still Be Here” with Japanese virtual sensation Hatsune Miku. A hologram performing pop-star with millions of fans, the show came to the Netherlands through TodaysArt for the first time and attracted many visitors, amongst them some Hatsune Miku cosplay characters. The piece, which straddled the border between hologram performance, pop-concert, and documentary format, engaged with the phenomenon and the fascination with Hatsune Miku and left many audience members questioning the nature the show: art or nothing more than a holographic gimmick? Nonetheless, the documentary raised some thought-provoking issues regarding how we consume music and how pop music will develop over the course of the next generation.

In the evening the festival’s main venue, the Koninklijke Schouwburg Royal Theatre, transitioned into a dance club, highlighting music from across the electronic spectrum on three different stages. Christian Löffler played in an intimate room in the theatre’s upstairs attic, while Torus and Mexican label collective NAAFI, with Fausto Bahia, Lao, and O.M.A.A.R, played on the main stage with their back to the auditorium and the theatre’s stunning gilded hall illuminated by strobe lights. DJ Panic was one of Friday’s highlights, closing the main stage with a gabber set, further evidence of the festival’s intent for creative disturbance in lieu of following trends.

The exhibition and “Context Program” was equally well visited and served an important function to embed the festival within the larger purpose of engaging with, and putting into question, our contemporary cultural moment. This year the festival included panel discussions with themes such as Algorithmic Complexity, Design Ethics, Gender Inequality, and Riot in the Matrix. The “Context Program” then allowed audiences to take these themes further into workshops (Cryptoparty, Make your own self-driving car, Pyramid of Technology).

Artworks were on display at all three theatre venues as well as at collaborating project spaces, with artists engaging with ideas around automation, machine learning, and algorithmic complexity. Amongst other pieces, the royal theatre was a fitting backdrop for Jacob Tonski’s Balance from within, a 170-year old sofa balancing and teetering on one leg, supported by a robotic mechanism. Jonas Lund’s “Happy or Not” gathered visitors’ data around their exhibition experience; and Bogomir Doringer’s selected footage from his ongoing research project “I Dance Alone,” screening at Filmhuis, engaged with the movement of clubbers as an organism. Meanwhile, Philip Vermuelen’s Physical Rhythm Machine / Boem BOem, an Ableton sequenced installation which shot tennis balls at speeds up to 150 km/h onto sound boxes, created an immersive visceral acoustic instrument.

Saturday also saw the headlining performance by Ata Kak, whose energy was infectious. With The Hague marking the final gig of his European tour, the band celebrated with champagne fountains on stage. The club night opened with Richard Devine’s modular synth performance releasing unhinged scattering beats upon the crowd. Late night club highlights were Clap! Clap!, Tomasa del Real, Marie Davidson, and Inga Mauer.

TodaysArt 2017 was an ode to complexity with a program seeking to challenge and disrupt by putting contrasts next to each other—be it in reference to the programming, setting or audience. From a clandestine pop-up “Toilet Room” rave to a gabber set on the backdrop of a majestic auditorium, the creativity, ingenuity, and rebellious undercurrent on both the artists and audience side made Todays Art an event that totally confounded and challenged pre-conceived notions of the experience of a contemporary electronic music and arts festival.

XLR8R to Co-Host Cinetic Art with Dorisburg, Melodie, and More

Cinetic Art debuts next week, a new party concept and label hailing out of Bucharest.

The event will be held in Guesthouse, one of the finest clubs in the city. The aim is to “prompt the crowd into a dream-like state with the music and visuals leading to a metaphysical landscape which we as humans create.”

Performing will be Swedish producer Dorisburg alongside local duo ALSI, and producer Melodie.

“You can transpose yourself into a different story and the music becomes your guide. The artists that are chosen are themselves explorers of these states, and through them, the crowd can be guided in a personal search that leads to reemerging latent energies and creative ideas. This is the basic concept of Cinetic Art, it is a movement that charges us with energy and the will to search. Cinetic Art will host a series of additional events this winter which will be announced soon.” — Melodie 

The event takes place on Friday, November 24 in Bucharest, Romania, with more information here.

Premiere: Hear a Deep and Hypnotic Teluric Remix of Laughing Man & Viktor Udvari

Berg Audio has released a new two-track EP featuring a Teluric remix.

The Shades EP is the latest work from Laughing Man & Viktor Udvari, and consists of two deep and hypnotic cuts.

Tracklisting:

A1: Laughing Man & Viktor Udvari “Shades” (Original Mix)
B1: Laughing Man & Viktor Udvari “Shades” (Teluric Remix)

It’s a vinyl-only release, with only a few copies remaining. Meanwhile, you can stream the Teluric remix exclusively in full below.

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Premiere: Hear a Deep and Hypnotic Teluric Remix of Laughing Man & Viktor Udvari

Berg Audio has released a new two-track EP featuring a Teluric remix.

The Shades EP is the latest work from Laughing Man & Viktor Udvari, and consists of two deep and hypnotic cuts.

Tracklisting:

A1: Laughing Man & Viktor Udvari “Shades” (Original Mix)
B1: Laughing Man & Viktor Udvari “Shades” (Teluric Remix)

It’s a vinyl-only release, with only a few copies remaining. Meanwhile, you can stream the Teluric remix exclusively in full below.

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Danilo Schneider ‘Solidly’

Enough! Music is starting a vinyl-only limited series, and the first release is by label owner himself Danilo Schneider.

Take A Breath EP consists of two tracks full of rhythmic elements, percussions, and a groovy dub drive.

Tracklisting

A1. Solidly
B1. Sunday

Ahead of the EP’s December 1 release, you can grab “Solidly” below.

Solidly

747 ‘Cretaceous’ (XLR8ing Through Space Mix)

Late last month, Canadian label Aquaregia launched The Paleo Series, a “four part project that explores the geological past of our planet through acid.”

First up, young Vancouver artist 747 delivers two acid-soaked cuts that invite the listener into his intriguing sonic world. From the warm pads and dubbed-out relaxed chords of “Cretaceous” to the ritualistic rhythms and acidic swells of “Cambrian,” 747 delivers an accomplished EP that proves he is one to watch in the coming years.

You can grab Paleo Pt. 1here, with an exclusive mix of “Cretaceous” available via WeTransfer below.

Cretaceous (XLR8ing Through Space Mix)

Novation Releases Browser Version of Launchpad

Novation has just released a browser version of Launchpad called Launchpad Arcade.

Launchpad Arcade runs directly inside the Google Chrome browser, letting you get straight into making music with Launchpad’s familiar clip-based user interface. The application allows you to perform tracks from an extensive loop library, and gives you the option to design and play light shows, too—although, for this feature, you will need to have a Launchpad device.

You can check out Launchpad Arcade here.

Watch Ski Oakenfull Deconstruct an Acid House Classic From 808 State

Last November, Point Blank held a day-long event with SARM Music Village, hosting masterclasses and workshops from acclaimed producers such as Trevor Horn and Point Blank’s lead course developer Ski Oakenfull.

For his track deconstruction, Oakenfull looked to 808 State’s acid house classic “Pacific 707,” which was released on ZTT Records. “Pacific 707” is one of the most iconic tracks in electronic music and was written by 808 State—at the time the group was made up of Massey, Martin Price, and Gerald Simpson (better known as A Guy Called Gerald)—in 1989. In the video, Oakenfull uses Ableton Live to build each element of the track from scratch, going over what instruments were used, and the musical theory behind it all.

You can watch the video in full via the player above, with more on Point Blank and its courses here.

Glow In The Dark ‘Sultry Creatures’

Last month, Sonar Kollektiv released the sophomore album from Harry Miller (a.k.a. Glow In The Dark), titled Into Existence.

The new LP follows in quick succession Miller’s debut album, Future Bliss, which was released by Sonar Kollektiv in February this year, with another collection of forward-thinking pop electronics. Like on his debut, Miller stylish weaves through genre cues on Into Existence, putting his idiosyncratic spin on funk, disco, soul, and leftfield pop. With Into Existence and his debut, Miller has carved out an enticing sonic signature that has us hanging for more.

You can pick the album up here, with “Sultry Creatures” available as a free download below.

Sultry Creatures

Premiere: Stream a Smooth-as-Silk Cut From Sleep D and Albrecht La’Brooy

December 4 will see the release of Sleep D and Albrecht La’Brooy‘s After The Rain EP.

The EP will land on Albrecht La’Brooy’s Analogue Attic imprint, presenting five immaculately produced cuts that range from deep, aquatic ambience to broken beat techno and jazz-tinged deep house. The tracks encompass field recordings from their homeland of Melbourne and its surrounds and are recorded live on the fly, resulting in cuts that feel as if they are living and breathing. After The Rain is a patient, subtle, and wholly unique release that will further cement the reputation Sleep D and Albrecht La’Brooy have built over the last few years.

After The Rain will be available from Analogue Attic’s Bandcamp page, with EP cut “Limestone” streaming in full via the player below.

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