Author: Tats Nice

In Bloom

In Bloom installation version (2024)

2023 / 2024

Bloom as an expression of fulfillment: a miracle of becoming, fullness.

In nature, the body is not just the self, but can also be understood as food, or fuel, for a larger motor of the living in an ecological relation. How can we know what it means, to be posthuman, or posthumanist, on this ontological level? This song is a conversation between bacteria, mold, fungus, and a recently dead human. These voices guide the listener through the after-death as their body decomposes and intimately enters the cycle of life.

Performance Score for vocalist + instruments + tape

In Bloom was initially commissioned by Productions Totem Contemporain for the instrument bol, which could be considered as a kind of percussion instrument with a membrane and compressed air, and live spoken voice.  This work was premiered with performer Francis Leduc.

The score for percussion and voice was later adapted as a score for wind ensemble for New Music Chamber Collective Alkali and featured Megan Johnson as a vocalist.

Exhibition / Performance History

Commissioned by Totem Electrique for bol, objects, and voice. Performed by Francis Leduc in Montreal QC, November 2023

Performance for bol, objects, and voice (Francis Leduc) in 16 channels as part of 50th anniversary of Sporobole artist-run centre in Sherbrooke, QC

Performed by Alkali Collective (Bass Clarinet, flute, saxophone, trombone, cello, percussion) + Megan Johnson (voice) in Hamilton NB 2024

Installation version for stereo audio recording and listening environment developed for Kamias Triennial (Toronto) 2024

Presented in Dolby surround as part of Project Immersed – Centre Phi, Montreal 2024.

Video

In Bloom Performance

VOCAL SOLOIST

Your voice is a portal to materialisms beyond our human senses, guiding the listener through the simultaneous care and brutal indifference of nature. You are a pink-collar worker of death, and you take great pride in your work. The vocalist can take some liberties with the text by repeating consonants or words for embellishment, inserting mouth sounds or unintelligible whispering, or switching between whispered and soft-spoken vocal styles. The rhythms of the text should more or less correspond to what is in the tape part: for this reason, I recommend memorizing the piece by rehearsing it on headphones while taking long walks in nature. The hands of the performer should gesticulate in imitation of ASMR performers online that trace shapes, manipulate objects, create finger flutters, touch an imaginary face in front of them, or touch their own face. You shouldn’t gesture constantly: try assigning different gestures to different sections of music to keep focus, sometimes stillness speaks for itself. Tracing shapes in different sizes and speeds, moving forward and backward, in spirals or from side to side, are all interesting options when performed with intention. Sections referencing the brushing of a face might benefit from a real brush prop, or you can simply brush with your fingers. These gestures reinforce the idea that there are real/microscopic hands breaking down the listener’s sensory organs, offering abstract simulations of impossible touch.

 

INSTRUMENTALISTS

You are a host of forest creatures, mushrooms, bacteria, slime mold, and life itself.  You are not directly engaged with the listener but are more like a choir that comments on the action, listening and responding to the vocalist.  Sometimes your presence is an imminent threat, but often a sensitive, delicate one.  The sounds you make can range from swells of chords to subtle and delicate bursts of noise, to loud harsh interjections.  Close micing the instruments to pick up on subtle sounds of key clicks, air in the instrument, singing into the instrument, or even tapping or touching the instrument offers more creative options that are in tune with the sonic inspiration of the work.  Be careful to not sonically overwhelm the soloist when they are speaking.

Score for wind ensemble and voice

Please contact the artist to access the score for percussion instruments and voice.

Audio installation

The work was adapted into an intimate listening installation for headphones, custom printed bedsheet, linen wrap, and earth installation as part of the Kamias Triennial 2024 at Gallery TPW, Toronto, curated by Patrick Cruz, Su-Ying Lee, and Karie Liao.

The work has also been adapted into Dolby surround sound for Centre Phi’s Habitat Sonore space as part of the programming of Project Immersed 2024.

Gallery

In Bloom installation version (2024)

In Bloom Audio preview

La Lumière MBASMR

La Lumière MBASMR (2022)
Performance

2022

In 2022, Canadian composer and media artist Erin Gee was commissioned by the Broodthaers Society of America (NYC) to perform a remote concert inspired by 20th century Belgian conceptual artist Marcel Broodthaers’ La Lumière Manifeste.

The performance was part of the programming celebrating a new vinyl album of Broodthaers reading some of his late poetry recently unearthed and remastered by Raf Wollaert (Doctoral Fellow at the University of Antwerp). Gee uses the original French versions of Marcel Broodthaers’ poems as the basis for her online multimedia song book, aided by English subtitles, the tools and gestures of ASMR, and the inherent immersion and drift of the internet.

Gallery

Video

La Lumière MBASMR (2022) Performance

Sensitive Superpositions

Sensitive Superpositions (2022)

2022 / 2023

Focused on expanding virtual space, Buenos-Aires based visual artist Magdalena Molinari and Montreal-based composer Erin gee created a visually rich musical performance of about 30 mins based on the aesthetic world of our VR work Sensitive Superpositions (2021), which premiered as part of MUTEK Argentina in 2022.

“The sky is not something far away: it is something all around you. The weather is never far from you either: it craves your intimacy. Air, pressure, heat and humidity penetrate and rewrite your autonomic and unconscious nervous system, influencing your thoughts and feelings, corroding the metals of a harddrive reading and writing in clicks inscribing yourself as a person on the network as you move on and offline. When you really think about it, everything belongs to nature: Plastic, silicon, toy dogs, genetically modified corn. What you typically think of as nature–organic, carbon-based materials and cyclical time – is a reflection of your own body, which is only one of many bodies in the natural world. Let’s unpack this.”

Sensitive Superpositions is a landscape that is as technological as it is natural: light and sound interact to transform perception, using raw vocalizations to bring warmth and vulnerability to a seemingly cold and inhospitable world. What does it mean to meet a digital system on an emotional level? Color, light and circular movement are key to loosening knots of perception, creating an atmosphere, a physical experience in a digital universe. Sensitive Superpositions combines the 2 of 5psychosomatic power of orbital, circular and looping light patterns in combination with the tactile intimacy of whispered vocals and verbal suggestion. The work of Gee and Molinari is characterized by slowly rolling landscapes of light sculptures, informed by Molinari’s research into the encounter between natural light and the earth’s atmosphere, as well as Gee’s smart and self-aware sensual voice, claiming to be “your mother, father, lover and best friend.” The sensual minimalism of the collaboration proposes new technologies of attention, psychosomatic loops, and the affect of information in contemporary digital life, working the subconscious in an attentive and receptive state through a seductive “tech poetry.”

Exhibition History

VR version – MUTEK Argentina 2021
Performance version – CaSo Buenos Aires, 2023

Fulldome performance – commissioned by Buenos Aires cultural municipality, 2023

Virtual Reality Experience

Screencaps

Gallery

Sensitive Superpositions (2023) in Buenos Aires

Video

Sensitive Superpositions (2023) in Buenos Aires

Intimacy Alphabet

Intimacy Alphabet (2020)

2020 / 2022

This is a piece for emotional survival in difficult times.

I wrote it in October 2020, during a deep state of mourning for the intangible social connections that were absent not only in my life, but in the lives of others that needed support. The pandemic had me in a state of emergency, and craving repair. Queer studies scholar Eve Sedgewick once said that the reparative is a reconstruction of shattered objects so that they can bring us pleasure, and that the affect of the reparative is love. I symbolically shattered music not into notes, gestures, or textures, but into an alphabet of affect and intent, hoping to inspire myself and others to create moments of intimacy, care and repair through microphones and camera. The shattered pieces are assembled in the score, and are reassembled through performance.

”Each performance of Intimacy Alphabet is organized through psychosomatic “triggers” in the spirit of internet phenomena Autonomous Sensory Meridian Response (ASMR). Each trigger is its own universe, but there can be some overlaps. Some listeners might recoil in horror from these sounds, but others draw in closer. Under musical aesthetics of affect, the invitation is for one to open to the performer’s intent to transfer touch and reparative intimacy through sound. Imagination closes the circle.”

Performance history

Performed by Andrea Young
https://redshiftmusicsociety.bandcamp.com/track/intimacy-alphabet

Performed at Vancouver New Music concert 2022

The work was performed by soprano Andrea Young on her 2020 album Echo to the Sense.

In 2022 I scored the work for choir, which was assembled through a week-long ASMR performance workshop. The choral version debuted in 2022 at a concert with Vancouver New Music.

Publications

Included in new publication A Year of Deep Listening (2024)
https://www.deeplistening.rpi.edu/ayodl/

 

Score

Intimacy Alphabet (2020)

Gallery

Intimacy Alphabet (2022)

Video

Intimacy Alphabet (2022)