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VIEWING ALL POSTS FOR: APRIL 2009

Thursday, April 16, 2009

8:39 PM
Posted by jodi rose

It's the Singing Bridges Gold Anniversay

YES, 50 BRIDGES!!!

I recorded the 50th today, Hoge Brug in Maastricht
A beautiful range of sounds on 5 resonant sweet spots
mmmm tasty looking forward to hearing it in concert for the kunsttour

a small picture preview to start your aural imagination running riot xxxj

Sunday, April 12, 2009

9:34 AM
Posted by jodi rose

good morning and happy spring easter sunday

I woke up laughing this morning - sometimes it happens for no particular reason, just bubbles of joy overflowing my system - today is different.

You may know that I have spent the last seven years (almost) full-time in pursuit of the elusive method and process for creating a 'Global Bridge Symphony'... If not, refer to the archives ;)

Anyway, after finding many different strategies for NOT creating a global bridge symphony, testing various possiblities and trying out different ideas, always with the hope in the back of my mind that this will the 'the way'. I managed to convince 16 engineers to come out onto a bridge with me in Singapore for a site visit, and I've had two fabulous wonderful engineers write to me and say 'I'm building a bridge, would you like to come and make art, or play with it?' Oh yes!

In fact one of them is still happily singing away to itself, if you happen to be in brisbane go and visit the Eleanor Schonell bridge and say hello from me. A friend is there this weekend, she promises to record some of the live sound as the bridge is permanently amplified on cables 4 & 8, and hopefully she'll be dancing to their music!

I've been the guardian of a bridge over the Danube, and had the chance to play on many bridges, with all kinds of lovely people, all over the world. It's got to the point now where someone referred to me in a conversation/interview recently as the 'Bridge Expert'.

It made me laugh. Afterwards, I though, 'No, I'm not an expert, I'm a Bridge Punk!!' I mean, really, how on earth do you 'play a bridge?'

Well, this question has occupied me for some time now. Along with 'how on earth to do you link up many bridges together at the same time' and 'what kind of compositional process and technique would make a musically satisfying, coherent 'symphony' out of them all?'

I am thrilled to tell you that I have no answers to these questions.
What I do have as of this morning, is a radical shift in perception.

It kind of relates to another slightly different statement in the same vein, when someone introduced me recently with the phrase ' Jodi makes bridges sing'. I got up and said, well, actually, the bridges are singing already, I simply go out and listen to them....

All this week I've been writing up concept proposals for various exhibition, installation, concert and performance strategies that deal with some of these possibilities for playing bridges together around the world. Which has made me realise, that I am - and always have been - more interested in hearing what other people do with the sound, and being infected by different ideas and approaches to the idea, than imposing my own compositional strategy onto the bridge.
Of course, also hearing the bridge in it's 'natural' state. If that's possible, being highly mediated by technology and all. Although I've been saying for years that you can't hear the sound without amplifying it, and you know what...? I was wrong!!! I just went and put my ear up to the beautiful red cables of a small pedestrian bridge in Ghent the other week, and there they were, resonating and popping away.
Ok, maybe you can't hear the range of sounds, and clarity, and yes, on many bridges with the thick layer of dampening polythylene you can't hear any vibration at all - even with the contact microphones.

Still, this opens up all kinds of potential for ad hoc punk bridge concerts.... A friend sent me a gorgeous video of a dance intervention in the extremely grand hall of Antwerp central station. It ends with 200 dancers completely inhabiting the space, people joining in and laughing in amazement - to 'do re mi' from the sound of music, which I think is a nice joyful choice. Another friend who runs a film and music festival in paris saw the link on my fb profile, and said - hey, that might be great for the festival. Not sure if he was joking, but now we're having a ridiculous conversation about getting 200 dancers onto a bridge in paris. The pont des arts, naturally - nice and wide, with lots of people already hanging out there, enjoying the ambience.

So that's all part of it, along with the fact that people seem to want to join me on this crazy bridge adventure, and since I can't fit you all into my suitcase, we need to be strategic about how to do this...

It seems astonishingly simple to me now and I'm almost embarrassed by how ridiculously obvious it is too - then again, the clarity comes from many conversations and experiences and reflections that somehow feed into each other, infect and interact to create a new level of understanding or moment of perception. Makes me giggle too.

So the rest, well I'm really sorry to do this to you after all the build-up, but I'm going to keep it under my hat for a while. You know how an idea loses focus and energy if you talk about it too quickly? This time, I'm going to be smart. Keep working quietly away here at Intro In Situ, the wonderful sound art foundation who are currently hosting me, with a beautiful workspace, a very nice laptop and a view of a magnolia tree! Did I mention that I've been a post-media artist for a year now. Yes, ever since my laptop broke in Berlin last March.

Somehow, continuing to work on a series of borrowed equipment - thank you to all the wonderful friends, festivals, and foundations who have shared their resources and digital spaces... that's all part of it too. They call me Pirate Jodi!! or sometimes Queen Jodi. I'm not that much of a diva, really....

We're having a sunday matinee today at Artspace Rondeel, so if you happen to be in maastricht, come along! Stay tuned also for details of the very exciting gold jubilee. Yes, Celebrating 50 Singing Bridges!!

With a concert and sonic intervention on the Hog Brug in Maastricht on May 23/24 as part of the city Kunsttour,


Wednesday, April 1, 2009

11:24 AM
Posted by jodi rose

Brussels for Beginners

Part 2 Things to Do in Brussels published on Viator.com travelblog


Brussels is a beautiful city. Unexpectedly chaotic, hilly and fragmented, it mixes sumptuously decorative architecture with seedy waterfront districts, fancy chocolate emporiums, stylish shopping streets, urban decay and myriad creative expressions of design, arts & performance.

You may have suffered from the stereotypical misperception that Belgium is not the most interesting of places, and Brussels has nothing much going on beyond the European Parliament and museums filled with Old Flemish Masters. Well, like me, you'd be wrong. According to a Dutch friend, Belgium is 'The Spain of the North,' and after my three short visits there, I can say that Brussels is the city I was dreaming of when I moved to Berlin.

It's grittier, cooler, curvier, and full of stylish and diversely interesting looking people with a gregarious and highly sophisticated cultural life. The spectrum of dance, music, electronic media and performing arts is astounding. Whatever your taste, in ultra-creative Brussels you can find something to indulge and inspire. Like any intriguing metropolis, the city contains a lively and distinct mix of neighborhoods, with contrasts and complexities that feel as though you could live there for years and still uncover something new around the corner.

Look out for the colored lights that are installed on various landmarks, my favorite is the telecommunications tower next to the national tv/radio building. So I was happy to begin my latest trip there, with a visit to the studios and meeting various producers.

The cultural activities of the city go far beyond the International Affairs and European Centre of Management, and let's face it, I am unlikely to end up in the European Union Parliament, although it could be a worthwhile destination for the contrast. There is plenty of underground, alternative and spontaneously happening culture, if you know where to look.

I return to Brussels to sample the diverse musical offerings of the Kraakfestival

Held at Recyclart, a lively cultural venue rehabilitated from an abandoned railway station, Chappele-Kapellekerg. The dark bar is a great place to while away the afternoon in between concerts. Strolling through the neighborhood, my local guides took me to another cosy cafe (the Fontainas bar - on jardin des olives), with chilled out music and a decadent vibe, excellent soup and fresh mint tea. The alternative street name 'Tigress Blanche/White Tigress' is part of a public art project transposing Belgian comic book culture onto the streets.

We dropped into q-o2, a dedicated sound art workspace and performance venue to talk with their lovely director Julia Eckhardt about a residency project in spring.

I felt like a truly trans-cultural ambassador after meeting ebulliently charming Philippe Franck, director and curator of Transcultures (centre interdisciplinaire des cultures électroniques et sonores)

Producers of City Sonics sound art festival in Mons

and les Transnumeriques festival across Paris, Mons, Lille & Bruxelles, with a nomadic philosophy of exploring diverse digital cultures and emergencies.

On my next trip I will definitely make it to iMal where the recent exhibition: 'Stock Overflow: Recontextualising the Crisis' examined alternative economic strategies, disasters and interpretations in exhibition and conference,

Bains Connective multidisciplinary international art laboratory located in an ancient swimming pool in the forest, with their fabulously named Plankton Bar,

and Nadine, which promises research into trans-disciplinary experiments in media and live arts, and an international tree climbing day.


It's thrilling that there is still more of this fantastic metropolis to discover, I think that's what makes it so captivating, the sense of being many different cities in one, containing a vibrant diversity of cultures, people and lifestyles. Of course, my perceptions are necessarily fragmented, each time I visit gives a shift of the kaleidoscope and uncovers a new perspective with unexpected secrets. I trust you will have a fantastic time in Brussels, whichever side of town you start from or end up in!

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

11:12 AM
Posted by jodi rose

New Dimensions in Travel

coming soon to Viator