Stet Lab is, and has been for some time, on indefinite hiatus. [More info…]

Stet Lab December 9th 2008: audio recordings

Audio recordings of the December 9th Stet Lab are now online.

We’re happy to be releasing these recordings under the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License. [More info…] We’d be very interested in hearing any thoughts you may have regarding the license (especially if you have performed at, or plan to perform at, a Stet Lab event) so please leave a comment on the relevant thread.

The December Lab was a great way to end the year with everyone playing at their best: Bruce Coates’ 60+ minutes of invention, Sarah O’Halloran was funny as hell, Neil O’Loghlan anchored the improbable ensemble, Kevin Terry rocked, Christian Martin leapt into the deep end… and even I (Han-earl Park) would have to admit that I played pretty well. It was also a pleasure to perform for an audience in such good form (it wouldn’t have been half as good without you).

A big thanks to Veronica Tadman for holding the Lab together during our recent difficulties; navigating the maze of reshuffles and negotiations. This month’s event could not have happened without Veronica and Kevin’s organizational skills and foot work. (Also a quick thanks again to the Cork Indy for their write-up.)

And thanks to all who’ve come to listen over the last year. Hope to see you again in 2009 for more real-time mutations and hybrids!

Stop press: Stet Lab December 9th 2008 (new date!)

STOP PRESS: new date! Unfortunately, this month’s Stet Lab has had to be postponed by 24 hours. The Lab will now take place on Tuesday, December 9th 2008. [Details…]

Same place (Upstairs @ The Roundy), same time (9:00pm), same remarkable / outstanding / implausible / magical lineup (Bruce Coates, Sarah O’Halloran, Neil O’Loghlen and Han-earl Park).

Our sincerest apologies for any inconvenience caused. We hope that you can still come and participate.

Special thanks to Veronica Tadman for organizing a smooth rescheduling of the Lab under less-than-optimal circumstances, and Kevin Terry for doing the footwork on the posters and publicity.

Stet Lab December 9th 2008 (reminder)

The final Stet Lab of 2008 takes place in one week (Monday, December 8th Tuesday, December 9th) at 9:00pm, upstairs @ The Roundy. [Details…]

The event will feature Birmingham based saxophonist Bruce Coates—navigator of the boundary between avant jazz and after-Cardew experimentalism. Coates will be performing with composer-performer-installation artist Sarah O’Halloran, improviser-guitarist Han-earl Park, and double bassist Neil O’Loghlen.

The Coates-O’Halloran-Park trio originally kicked-off the first Stet Lab in November 2007. Check out audio recordings of the very first Stet Lab (including the very first six minutes and three seconds) for a sample of what to expect (or not).

Hope to see you there, participating as audience, performer or helper, and thank you for your continued support: we’ll be closing Stet Lab ’08 with a very high note (perhaps from a sopranino saxophone).

updates:

12-05-08 change date of December Lab from 8th to 9th.

Lab report November 10th 2008: mindful auto-pilot nonsense

While in the past I’ve generally worked through group improvisations intuitively, the concept of working strategically has become more and more appealing for a number of reasons which I’m not going to get into here. No revelations, just re-considerations.

The aspiration for this month’s Lab (though I admit I decided on it less that five minutes before playing) was to play quasi-logically; pick a strategy and don’t budge… So I decide early on (‘do you need me here…’) to shadow Andrea and try to limit myself to playing while he isn’t. This is then complemented/complicated by playing pianissimo lyrically when he is playing. This is maintained throughout.

The second (‘you might, just…’) went in similar fashion with me deciding on a strategy early on and sticking to it like crazy. In the third (‘we don’t know…’) I gave up on rational thought when I figured out it was just Andrea and myself as opposed to the quartet of the previous two ditties (kind of like when the cartoon coyote looks down to find that the cliff ended a couple feet back).

Still though, two out of three isn’t bad.

It’s interesting for me to read Han’s descriptions of his thought processes during his improvisations with Franziska. I can’t imagine reasoning like that on the fly. Maybe it is because I tend to rely on my focal attention as opposed to my global/general attention?

And so, for December’s Lab do I push my luck and maybe try to juggle two strategies? Or do I throw caution to the wind and go for the intuitive thing?

Stet Lab December 9th 2008 (update)

Next Stet Lab will be on Monday, December 8th Tuesday, December 9th 2008, upstairs @ The Roundy, Castle Street, Cork, Ireland [map…]. Up-to-date details…

Stet Lab’s final event of 2008 featuring saxophonist Bruce Coates

Monday, December 8th Tuesday, December 9th 2008

9:00 pm (doors: 8:45 pm)

Upstairs @ The Roundy [map…]
Castle Street
Cork, Ireland

€10 (€5)

Following the successful first birthday celebrations, Stet Lab, Cork’s monthly improvised music event, returns to The Roundy, Castle Street, on Monday, 8th Tuesday, 9th December. The final event of 2008, the lineup comes full circle and the Lab welcomes the return of Birmingham based saxophonist Bruce Coates who performed at the very first event in 2007.

Bruce Coates is a saxophone player with a solid foundation in avant jazz, free improvisation and experimental music. Coates is the founder of many projects in the city of Birmingham including the free jazz / free improv concert series FrImp, and the Birmingham Improvisers’ Orchestra. Furthermore, he has performed with many of best known names in improvised and experimental music including Paul Dunmall, Lol Coxhill, Christian Wolff, Mark Sanders, John Edwards and Mike Hurley (whom Stet Lab featured in July). The deft and accomplished technique of Coates is his own: creative, innovative yet approachable allowing any sax lover to identify with the sonic timbre.

Joining Coates will be a group of Cork-based improvisers including composer, performer and installation artist Sarah O’Halloran and improviser-guitarist Han-earl Park, plus the young, up-and-coming double bassist Neil O’Loghlen.

The event will begin at 9:00 pm (doors open at 8:45 pm) and entry is €10 (€5).

Stet Lab will return in January 2009 with more real-time, musical mutations and hybrids.

updates:

12-05-08 change date of December Lab from 8th to 9th.

Audio recordings: proposed terms and conditions

The audio recordings on this site have been made available courtesy of the performers. The current handshake agreement, however, is a little haphazard, and (potentially) prone to misunderstandings. I am therefore proposing to move these recordings onto the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License. Continue reading ‘Audio recordings: proposed terms and conditions’

Lab report November 10th 2008: out of my depth

I knew this was going to happen sooner or later. Not exactly coasting, but I’ve been fairly comfortable with the tactics, strategies and lexicons I’ve deployed at Stet Lab. Minor criticisms here and there of course, but nothing that seemed to warrant a wholesale rethinking of what to play or how to improvise.

But those security blankets—tactics, strategies and lexicons—seem now to be liabilities.

A little background: since a set of gigs in late-2007 with Murray Campbell, I’ve pretty much retired the devil-on-my-shoulder improviser. Prior to this, I’d been a more (for lack of better word) ‘careful’ improviser; one that thinks first, thinks second, thinks third, and only then, after careful consideration, maybe (and just maybe) acts.

Although it was with those performances with Murray that I found this other way of improvising, it emerged, in retrospect, as a solution to problems flagged up at another musical encounter in 2007.

How do you evolve as an improviser? Under what conditions do practice and approach mutate? If change is a response to the environment, magic is just ’round the corner since, this month, I was out of my league—out of my depth.

the adrenalin response

In his report on the July Lab, Tony O’Connor wrote that

…Improvisation should be an immediate response, and every time a thought gets in the way, it puts a filter between the event and the response.

What Tony called the ‘immediate response’, Franziska Schroeder terms the ‘adrenalin response’—the decisions you make, the paths you take, during heat-of-the-moment, seat-of-your-pants, real-time performance. This is the response, since those performances with Murray last year, that I’ve come to rely upon. I’ve also come to (and red lights are flashing even as I type this word) expect the resultant choices to be dramatic, imaginative, circuitous and lateral-thinking.

However, on November 10th, in the company of Franziska, this response was exactly what turned out to be a liability.

During the duets with Franziska, I was flummoxed by the context and content—by Franziska’s playing. My adrenalin responses tended towards obvious choices, and the devil-on-my-shoulder would return to say ‘no, no, no, no, that’s a dumb choice, you can’t do that!’ The devil would slow me down, but perhaps more worryingly the number of options would shrink. At various junctures during the performance, I would compute a set of possible routes, but the devil would discount this and that (“that’s obvious, don’t do it; that’s naive, you can’t do that…”), leading to an ever diminishing set of choices. I could almost see doors shut one by one.

It’s ironic that the thing that apparently caught Tony off guard in July was that I was “playing melodies” because what threw me was Franziska’s lines. Lines reach into areas of my playing that I’ve neglected, and I was too unsure of my skills to make an excursion into that territory. Questions that popped into my head during the performance:

How do (should? can?) I even parse that?
How do I make (il)logical translations / transmutations / transformations that can (be made to) make sense within my own lexicon?

It’s no coincidence that, for me, my best contribution to the performance occur when the line rested for a spectral-dynamo-plus-percussion encounter (‘warmed me up…’). Although, if I take a step back, ‘doesn’t have broken glass on the floor’ is probably a more successful improvisation—less safe, not as easy, more of a troublemaker.

But, by and large, if my adrenaline-choice-machine was doing anything, it was always looking for the nearest, most convenient route, avoiding interesting, circuitous options—the ones that lead off-the-edge into ugly-beutiful spaces and serendipitous-contradictory relationships.

playing (and listening) differently

Franziska showed me, beyond a doubt, what options were not available to me.

For me, this is all good: now I need to go find other doors.

After all, the floundering and stumbles of a year ago led, overtime, to a new approach, and I’m optimistic that these new challenges will lead to something else. I very much doubt the return of the devil-on-my-shoulder improviser, but I expect to be playing (and listening) differently in future. I know it will take time to patch up the holes, to lay the groundwork for approaching new choices, and to reinvent and abandon tactics (habits?), but if past experience is anything to go by, in the coming weeks, I’ll emerge from this a different player.

…And that’s my little note of thanks to our guest improviser-saxophonist-theorist.

an unanswered question & a note of thanks

Given my difficulties at the last event, how come I was happily playing lines in a duet with Marian Murray in May (‘don’t eat the red acid!’)? What was so different then?

A personal note of thanks to Kevin Terry and Veronica Tadman for the help running the last few Stet Lab events (putting up posters, flyering, managing the door, setting up the stage, writing press releases, etc). November’s Lab, in particular, could not have happened without them.

Lab report November 10th 2008: the rockstar wannabes

So, judging by the camera the following morning, this months Stet Lab was so successful that Ad-Hoc… just couldn’t resist posing for the album art. Well why wouldn’t we after the fantastic collaboration that occurred?

I have performed at several of the Stet Lab evenings and as the only performer that doesn’t have an instrument that is material to hide behind, I often feel exposed and perhaps somewhat uncomfortable; this has consequently had a knock-on affect on my performance. However, not so much this month.

When asked to form the ‘house band’ for November’s Lab I was honoured and left with a task that I had to be tactful with. What with my old band members dispersed around the world I had to delve into the fresh bag of improvisers that Cork has to offer. As I had found working with Han and Jesse a fun, fruitful experience in October, I figured why not go for a similar line up? (It is interesting to note that in the past I have found it difficult to work with guitar players—nothing at all to do with my diva-ish background!) Therefore, I called upon my fellow improviser Barry who I knew had similar ideas and sensitive approach to improv and he pointed me in the direction of Paul.

Thankfully for me this was a great tactic: I knew from the first moment the three of us met to ‘practise’ that we would get on like a house on fire. We all seemed to respect each other as musicians and appeared to know when to back off before we intruded too much on each others space. Perhaps this sounds rather Brady Bunchesque because sometimes a bit of friction and roughness does add spice to improvisation; however, as I am slightly out of practise and wanted my first ‘independent’ pursuit to be successful I wanted to test the boundaries before I entered into ‘extreme improv.’ (We all have to start somewhere!)

Yes I did hold back, probably due to nerves, but this month I really made an effort to let go—something that I do find difficult in this form of performing—and I am glad that I did because the post-performance high was something that I had almost forgotten the feel of. I feel that the success of November’s Stet Lab will really have a positive affect on my future performance.

Stet Lab December 9th 2008

The next Stet Lab (featuring Bruce Coates) will take place upstairs @ The Roundy, Castle Street, Cork, Ireland, on Monday, December 8th Tuesday, December 9th 2008. [Details…]

updates:

12-05-08 change date of December Lab from 8th to 9th.

Stet Lab November 10th 2008: audio recordings

Audio recordings of the November 10th Stet Lab are now online.

A very big thank you to Franziska Schroeder who took time to grace us with her presence, share her expertise, and demonstrate (especially to Han-earl Park who joined her on stage) exactly how good an improviser she is.

Thanks also to Veronica Tadman for organizing The Real-Time Company (for the Ad-Hoc Association) of… herself with Paul Dowling and Barry Twomey, to all who participated onstage (Andrea Bonino and Kevin Terry), and to the behind-the-scenes personnel. Kudos also to The Roundy and its staff for again hosting this left-field venture. (And a quick thanks to the Cork Indy for their write-up!)

Finally, as always, thanks to all—newcomers and old-timers—who came to listen, hangout and await the leap off the edge. We couldn’t (and wouldn’t) do this without you!