KEIJI HAINO SHOW
Presented by MONA, PBS 106.7FM, Beat Magazine and JOLT
KEIJI HAINO + UMINARI TRIO
THE GODFATHER OF SOUND ART
In Melbourne and Sydney we think he will probably play electric guitar – but what ho, he might not. Probably he will. He might sing. Or not. Maybe there will be electronic gadgets. Who can say? It will be amplified. It will be electric – whatever it is.
On this landmark visit to Australia, one of Japan’s true innovators of the sonic arts shares his love of unbounded sonic creation – of the psychedelic; the rock; the troubadour; the outsider; the life force that cannot be tamed. Haino’s electric shows can feel shamanic – where the artist allows the raw energy of life to talk over his body. Perhaps it was the might of this raw creative power that led to NHK, Japan’s national broadcaster, banning Haino from 1973–2013.
And for MONA Hobart, Haino will deliver a rare bespoke percussion performance tailored for the elegant gallery art space where this 21st master will perform.
CONCERT PLAN:
SET ONE : UMINARI TRIO
Intermission
SET TWO : KEIJI HAINO
UMINARI TRIO
Yasumune Morishige // cello + Cal Lyall // banjo + James Hullick // piano
Uminari Trio represents the sonic communion between three artists who bow to the might of auditory creation. Everything is improvised, though falling into self-similar sonic places that the trio will visit in each concert. These sonic places have beginnings and endings – shaped like pieces – but for the trio they are continuations that play out through multiple performances and through a loyalty each of the musicians shares for the higher ideal of sonic creation. It’s an elegant intertwining sound that arises from acoustic instruments: cello; banjo; prepared piano; sometimes voice; that can be amplified and electronically translated or left in their acoustic domains. Each of the artists in the trio have been radically influenced by sonic art culture; the cultures of ancient creators; and the global mayhem of the proliferating information soup pouring out through the internet. This is music ecstasy with a meditative backbone: an ocean rising up after a still night over moonlit waters.
KEIJI HAINO SHOW
Presented by MONA, PBS 106.7FM, Beat Magazine and JOLT
KEIJI HAINO + UMINARI TRIO
THE GODFATHER OF SOUND ART
In Melbourne and Sydney we think he will probably play electric guitar – but what ho, he might not. Probably he will. He might sing. Or not. Maybe there will be electronic gadgets. Who can say? It will be amplified. It will be electric – whatever it is.
On this landmark visit to Australia, one of Japan’s true innovators of the sonic arts shares his love of unbounded sonic creation – of the psychedelic; the rock; the troubadour; the outsider; the life force that cannot be tamed. Haino’s electric shows can feel shamanic – where the artist allows the raw energy of life to talk over his body. Perhaps it was the might of this raw creative power that led to NHK, Japan’s national broadcaster, banning Haino from 1973–2013.
And for MONA Hobart, Haino will deliver a rare bespoke percussion performance tailored for the elegant gallery art space where this 21st master will perform.
CONCERT PLAN:
SET ONE : UMINARI TRIO
Intermission
SET TWO : KEIJI HAINO
UMINARI TRIO
Yasumune Morishige // cello + Cal Lyall // banjo + James Hullick // piano
Uminari Trio represents the sonic communion between three artists who bow to the might of auditory creation. Everything is improvised, though falling into self-similar sonic places that the trio will visit in each concert. These sonic places have beginnings and endings – shaped like pieces – but for the trio they are continuations that play out through multiple performances and through a loyalty each of the musicians shares for the higher ideal of sonic creation. It’s an elegant intertwining sound that arises from acoustic instruments: cello; banjo; prepared piano; sometimes voice; that can be amplified and electronically translated or left in their acoustic domains. Each of the artists in the trio have been radically influenced by sonic art culture; the cultures of ancient creators; and the global mayhem of the proliferating information soup pouring out through the internet. This is music ecstasy with a meditative backbone: an ocean rising up after a still night over moonlit waters.
Artists
Morishige Yasumune
MORISHIGE YASUMUNE cello / piano / voice / improvisation / photograph As one of Japan’s most unique voices of the cello, improvising musician Morishige Yasumune continues to collaborate with a wide array of dancers and musicians both in Japan and around the world. His...
Keiji Haino
KEIJI HAINO improviser / singer-songwriter Active since the 1970s, Japanese improviser and singer-songwriter, Haino Keiji, remains a towering figure in contemporary experimental music. Born in 1952 in Chiba, Haino was first drawn to the theatre by way of Antonin...
James Hullick
JAMES HULLICK JOLT Director & CEO / Composer / Musician HULLICKSTUDIOS.COM James Hullick is an auditory creator like no other in Australia. Recently James’ artistic identity has been shifting from cutting-edge composer to that of an all out iconic...
Cal Lyall
CAL LYALL musician / sound artistBorn in Montreal, Cal Lyall studied classical composition and jazz performance in Quebec, eventually moving westward in Canada to teach music and perform. An interest in diverse musical forms led to intense travel and study throughout...