Jun

29

LPR 15: Drew McDowall (of Coil) – In The Round LPR 15: Drew McDowall (of Coil) – In The Round

with Dreamcrusher & Leila Bordreuil

Thu June 29th, 2023

8:00PM

Main Space

Minimum Age: All Ages

Doors Open: 7:00PM

Show Time: 8:00PM

Event Ticket: $0

Day of Show: $0

Ticketing Policy

Proof of vax is NOT required for this event

the artists the artists

Drew McDowall (of Coil)

Scottish experimental/electronic musician Drew McDowall’s lifelong interest in an elegiac solo bagpipe style called pibroch (ceòl mòr in Gaelic) has been an inspiration for much of his previous work (including Coil’s legendary Time Machines). This form, often traditionally used for laments and for tributes to the dead, fuses modal drones with flickering dissonance and plaintive melody evoking an ancient, solemn mood.

His latest work, A Thread, Silvered and Trembling, both incorporates and transforms these elements via exploratory electronic processing, weaving an electro-acoustic tapestry of strings, shudders, voids, and voices, alternately disembodied and displaced. Co-produced with engineer Randall Dunn at Circular Ruin Studios in Brooklyn, the collection’s four pieces capture McDowall at his most elevated and elusive, in thrall to “the ineffable – that which refuses to be spoken.”

McDowall’s palette here is unusually eclectic, sourced from a dynamic orchestral ensemble arranged by Brent Arnold and comprised of cello, viola, violin, harp (Marilu Donovan of LEYA), and french horn. Ebbing between shrouded electronics and enigmatic, sometimes spectralist orchestration, the album moves with a seething, simmering energy, surging into elegant, uneasy crescendos. The first two pieces are inspired by a liberatory hijacking and inversion of a grim biblical story (and by a cryptic and strange UK simple syrup branding). Opener “Out of Strength Comes Sweetness” shivers with short echo and resonant pads, before shifting into the album’s centerpiece: the 14-minute saga “And Lions Will Sing with Joy.” A murmuring electrical storm of keening strings and disorienting drones gradually grows darker and denser, until suddenly there’s a crack in the clouds, revealing mutated choral voices and sparkling harp. McDowall describes the track as “an incantation to help usher in a break, and a new beginning.”

The record’s latter half evokes a deep untamed animism shot through with spiraling radiance. “In Wound and Water” sways with harp, plucked strings and eerie cello undertows while lush layers of disorientated electronics hang in the dusk. There is no resolution, only a faint gradient of fragile dissipation, leading into the album’s harrowing and climactic closer, “A Dream of a Cartographic Membrane Dissolves.” Processed voices (credited on the liner notes to “The Ghosts Who Refuse to Rest”) contort, whisper, and gather as the rest of the ensemble sharpens, poising to strike. Then it does – grand, tragic stabs of strings and horns lashing the sky, storming heaven by force.

The fallout is poetic and inevitable, raining embers into a dark sea. But the journey and catharsis of A Thread linger long after it goes silent. Like so much of McDowall’s multifaceted catalog, this is music of immanence and alchemy, attuned equally to the sacred and the profane, to the tile and the mosaic.

Dreamcrusher

Dreamcrusher is a New York City-based musician and artist, who describes the project as ‘nihilist queer revolt musik.’ Dreamcrusher’s work is at once personal and abstract, revealing and antagonistic; performances and recordings shift between genres while subjecting the characteristic elements—melodies, beats, instrumentation—to distortion until the point of transformation. Dreamcrusher has released dozens of recordings with labels such as PTP, Fire Talk, and Corpus, as well as on Bandcamp and other online platforms. Dreamcrusher is also a member of the duo Centennial Gardens with King Vision Ultra.

Leila Bordreuil

Leila Bordreuil is a cellist, composer, and improviser based in Brooklyn.
She accesses concepts as diverse as Noise, contemporary classical, free jazz, and other experimental traditions but adheres to none of them. Driven by a fierce interest in pure sound and inherent texture, Leila challenges conventional cello practice through extended techniques and xtreme amplification methods, to the extent she sometimes seems to be playing the P.A system rather than her cello. Her immersive performances are rich in psychoacoustic effects, which she produces by merging audio-feedback, harmonic overtones, room resonance and other acoustic phenomena.

Leila is an active player in New York’s improvised music scene, and collaboration is central to her practice. Her cross-genre explorations have brought her to diverse collaborative projects, including duos with Lee Ranaldo (Sonic Youth), Luke Stewart (Irreversible Entanglements, Laurel Halo, Tamio Shiraishi (Fushitutsa), Bill Nace (Body Head), Kali Malone, Julia Santoli, and a trio with Joanna Mattrey and Sean Ali.

Leila tours regularly in Europe and the USA, having performed at MoMA PS1, Lincoln Center, Pioneer Works, Issue Project Room, The Lab (San Francisco), Art Basel (Switzerland), Berlin Atonal (Germany), Barbican Centre (London), BOZAR Museum (Brussels) and countless basements across the US.

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