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DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20250213T153000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20250213T163000
DTSTAMP:20250421T175947Z
CREATED:20250113T145237Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250421T175947Z
UID:15265-1739460600-1739464200@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:[Cancelled due to Inclement Weather] | hakosalo_tuohino: "How a Sound Follows Another" (Performance @ Silence)
DESCRIPTION:* Cancelled due to Inclement Weather * \nPlease join us on Thursday\, February 13 at 3:30 PM (ET) for a performance of “How a Sound Follows Another” with hakosalo_tuohino.\n \nThis presentation will take place in person at Silence\, 46 Essex Street\, Guelph\, Ontario.  \nThis is a free event that follows the duo’s talk at the University of Guelph. \nMore About this Performance:\nThis performance of “How a Sound Follows Another” follows-up on the duo’s talk at the University of Guelph. \nIn this performance\, hakosalo_tuohino will demonstrate their art-theoretical approaches. \nIn their own words: \nOur improvised music comes from the archaic kantele playing tradition\, where you are in the music instead of making it. Drawing from the deep listening method\, our sonic expression is a spatial and temporal experience that cannot be recorded and repeated. \nOur relationship with musical transitions is two-fold: we understand the power of slow transitions when creating our musical structures\, but at the same time they inevitably set up new boundaries and classifications. How can we compose together with each other and the audience without creating new structures and boundaries? \nWith our music\, we aim for sonic freedom\, where we break away from the western understanding of music and our musical backgrounds. The drone has a special role in our music\, because we think of it as a purely experiential unit where compositional logic breaks down. At the end there is only sound\, a resonance. \nOn the other hand\, the importance of silence is even greater: you must be quiet in order to listen. What will thus remain of our musical deconstruction? \nMore About the Performers:\nhakosalo_tuohino\nduo for kantele and computer from Finland \nCHANGE FROM DOING TO BEING\nWhat happens when ancient traditions collide with experimental electronic\nmusic?\n \nThe duo for kantele and computer consists of folk musician Osmo Hakosalo and sound artist Jussi Tuohino. \nThe Finnish ancient traditional instrument kantele is estimated to be 1500 years old and belongs to the Baltic zither family. The tradition of playing kantele relies heavily on archaic\, improvisational techniques where kantele is seen as a vehicle\, rather than a musical instrument\, to travel to the essence of music transferring the experience from making music into being in it. Furthermore\, the prepared kantele and immersive spatialized digital expression will transform the delicate kantele sonicality into the modern art of electroacoustic music. \nIn this journey one reaches other states of consciousness\, and the total communication between the musicians and their dedication provides a fascinating sonic landscape to the audience. \nhakosalo_tuohino duo takes the sonic properties of kantele still many steps further: from the acoustic sound immersive soundscapes are built in an intuitive and open-ended fashion. With both performers having varied musical backgrounds in folk\, classical\, jazz\, and electronic music\, the duo is able to perform without preset plans regarding musical form and microscale decisions concerning sound material. Kantele-playing is traditionally improvised\, and an interesting confluence to freeform electroacoustic live performance can easily be made. \nThe duo builds their soundscapes up from live kantele sound\, which is the only sound source\, and performs with specialized surround sound systems to help the performers and audience to reach their immersive sonic goals. \nDuo was formed in January 2024\, but it has been able to gain success quickly\, with performances already in Finland\, Japan\, Lithuania and Canada. Duo has also prepared a commission piece for a Swedish modern music ensemble Elefantöra. The piece had a premiere in Stockholm in October 2024 and was performed in Nordic Music Days in Glasgow in November 2024. \nIn addition\, the duo started a collaboration with a Japanese film/media artist Keitaro Oshima for a joint multimedia piece in the fall of 2024. The duo is also working in academia with Jussi Tuohino leading the music technology program in Oulu University of Applied Sciences and Osmo Hakosalo working in the same university’s research program of Art Innovations. \nFor more info\, please visit our web page www.hakosalotuohino.com
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/hakosalo_tuhino-how-a-sound-follows-another-performance-silence/
LOCATION:Silence\, 46 Essex Street\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1H 3K8\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Community Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/layers.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20250213T100000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20250213T113000
DTSTAMP:20250421T175859Z
CREATED:20250113T145832Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250421T175859Z
UID:15270-1739440800-1739446200@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:[Cancelled due to Inclement Weather] | hakosalo_tuohino: “How a Sound Follows Another” (Talk @ ImprovLab)
DESCRIPTION:* Cancelled due to inclement weather * \nPlease join us on Thursday\, February 13 at 10:00 AM (ET) for a public talk: “How a Sound Follows Another” with hakosalo_tuohino.\n \nThis presentation will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph. This is a free event.  \nA free performance by the duo will follow at 3:30 PM at Silence\, 46 Essex Street\, Guelph\, ON. \nMore About this Performance:\nIn this discussion\, we’ll shed light on the art-theoretical approaches of the hakosalo_tuhino duo. Our improvised music comes from the archaic kantele playing tradition\, where you are in the music instead of making it. Drawing from the deep listening method\, our sonic expression is a spatial and temporal experience that cannot be recorded and repeated. \nOur relationship with musical transitions is two-fold: we understand the power of slow transitions when creating our musical structures\, but at the same time they inevitably set up new boundaries and classifications. How can we compose together with each other and the audience without creating new structures and boundaries? \nWith our music\, we aim for sonic freedom\, where we break away from the western understanding of music and our musical backgrounds. The drone has a special role in our music\, because we think of it as a purely experiential unit where compositional logic breaks down. At the end there is only sound\, a resonance. \nOn the other hand\, the importance of silence is even greater: you must be quiet in order to listen. What will thus remain of our musical deconstruction? \nMore About the Performers:\nhakosalo_tuohino\n(duo for kantele and computer from Finland) \nCHANGE FROM DOING TO BEING\nWhat happens when ancient traditions collide with experimental electronic\nmusic?\n \nThe duo for kantele and computer consists of folk musician Osmo Hakosalo and sound artist Jussi Tuohino. \nThe Finnish ancient traditional instrument kantele is estimated to be 1500 years old and belongs to the Baltic zither family. The tradition of playing kantele relies heavily on archaic\, improvisational techniques where kantele is seen as a vehicle\, rather than a musical instrument\, to travel to the essence of music transferring the experience from making music into being in it. Furthermore\, the prepared kantele and immersive spatialized digital expression will transform the delicate kantele sonicality into the modern art of electroacoustic music. \nIn this journey one reaches other states of consciousness\, and the total communication between the musicians and their dedication provides a fascinating sonic landscape to the audience. \nhakosalo_tuohino duo takes the sonic properties of kantele still many steps further: from the acoustic sound immersive soundscapes are built in an intuitive and open-ended fashion. With both performers having varied musical backgrounds in folk\, classical\, jazz\, and electronic music\, the duo is able to perform without preset plans regarding musical form and microscale decisions concerning sound material. Kantele-playing is traditionally improvised\, and an interesting confluence to freeform electroacoustic live performance can easily be made. \nThe duo builds their soundscapes up from live kantele sound\, which is the only sound source\, and performs with specialized surround sound systems to help the performers and audience to reach their immersive sonic goals. \nDuo was formed in January 2024\, but it has been able to gain success quickly\, with performances already in Finland\, Japan\, Lithuania and Canada. Duo has also prepared a commission piece for a Swedish modern music ensemble Elefantöra. The piece had a premiere in Stockholm in October 2024 and was performed in Nordic Music Days in Glasgow in November 2024. \nIn addition\, the duo started a collaboration with a Japanese film/media artist Keitaro Oshima for a joint multimedia piece in the fall of 2024. The duo is also working in academia with Jussi Tuohino leading the music technology program in Oulu University of Applied Sciences and Osmo Hakosalo working in the same university’s research program of Art Innovations. \nFor more info\, please visit our web page www.hakosalotuohino.com
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/hakosalo_tuhino-how-a-sound-follows-another/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Community Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/layers.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20250209T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20250209T150000
DTSTAMP:20250123T175033Z
CREATED:20250123T175033Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250123T175033Z
UID:15314-1739106000-1739113200@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Sam Newsome—The Popeye Effect: Unlocking the Artist's Power to Transcend (talk + solo concert)
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Sunday\, February 9 at 1:00 PM (ET) for “The Popeye Effect: Unlocking the Artist’s Power to Transcend (talk + solo concert)” with Sam Newsome.\n \n\nThis presentation will take place in person at Silence\, 46 Essex Street in Guelph. Tickets are $20/PWYC (available at the door).\n \nAbout the Event\nIn this masterclass\, we explore the importance of moving beyond our earthly selves to reach our true creative potential when improvising. As artists\, our improvisational journeys can take us from the explainable to the unexplainable\, from the ordinary to the extraordinary. Using the iconic cartoon character Popeye the Sailor Man as a metaphor\, we will discuss what true transcendence looks like in the creative process. We will also delve into how to employ extended techniques and instrument preparations as methods of transcendence\, pushing the boundaries of traditional performance. Active participation from fellow musicians is highly encouraged. \nAbout the Artist\nSam Newsome stands as a multifaceted figure in the world of jazz—a saxophonist\, music professor\, and accomplished writer. In 2023\, his artistic endeavors manifested in two duo recordings: Soprano-Logues\, a collaborative effort with saxophonist Dave Liebman\, and Cosmic Unconsciousness Unplugged\, where he joined forces with pianist Jean-Michel Pilc. These releases showcased Newsome’s ability to engage in sonically-rich musical dialogues across different instrumental landscapes. His contributions to the music world have not gone unnoticed. In 2022\, Newsome received the prestigious Bronx BRIO Award for Instrumental Music and secured the title of Soprano Saxophonist of the Year in the 14th Annual International Critics Polls. His accolades extend to the 2020 Instant Award in Improvised Music\, the 2018 Alpert/Ragdale Prize in Music Composition\, the 2016 NYFA Fellowship for Music Composition\, and he’s been a consistent nominee for Soprano Saxophonist of the Year by the Jazz Journalist Association over the past five years. Beyond his musical accomplishments\, Newsome is a prolific author\, having penned two books of personal essays: “Be Inspired\, Stay Focused” (2022) and “Life Lessons from the Horn” (2015). In 2023\, his piece\, “From NoHa to SoBro” was featured in the Bronx Memoir Project Anthology\, VII. Newsome’s avant-garde approach\, particularly in the realm of prepared saxophone\, has positioned him as a sought-after player in New York’s improvised music scene. His innovative voice has resonated in collaborations with notable artists such as Elliot Sharpe\, William Parker\, Fay Victor\, Daniel Carter\, Joe Morris\, and Dave Liebman. Through his diverse talents and contributions\, Sam Newsome continues to shape and enrich the landscape of contemporary jazz.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/sam-newsome-the-popeye-effect/
LOCATION:Silence\, 46 Essex Street\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1H 3K8\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Community Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/SamNewsome_Silence_ii2025.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Vancouver:20250206T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Vancouver:20250206T203000
DTSTAMP:20250113T162953Z
CREATED:20250113T162846Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250113T162953Z
UID:15275-1738868400-1738873800@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Book Launch—Soundin’ Canaan: Black Canadian Poetry\, Music\, and Citizenship\, by Paul db Watkins
DESCRIPTION:We are pleased to announce the initial book launch for Soundin’ Canaan: Black Canadian Poetry\, Music\, and Citizenship\, by Improvising Futures team member\, Paul db Watkins on Thursday\, February 6\, at 7:00 PM (PST).\n \nThe event will take place in person at The Vault Café\, (499 Wallace Street\, Nanaimo\, BC). The book launch is by donation (5$ suggested).\n \nLearn more about the book and pre-order by following this link! \n\nMore About the Event:\nThis initial book launch will feature poet and musician Sonnet L’Abbé (Sonnet’s Shakespeare) and Nanaimo Poet Laureate Neil Surkan (Unbecoming). The author will also be performing remixed versions of sections from the book.  \nDoors open at 6:30 p.m.\, and the readings will run from 7:00 to 8:00 p.m.  \nMore About the Book:\nPart exploration of a key group of Black Canadian poets\, part literary\, cultural\, and musical history\, Soundin’ Canaan demonstrates how music in Black Canadian poetry is not solely aesthetic\, but a form of social\, ethical\, and political expression. \nSoundin’ Canaan refers to the code name often used for Canada during the Black migration to Canada. The book analyzes the contributions of key Black Canadian poets\, including their poetic styles and their performances. The book has several key objectives\, including recuperating the collision of the historical and the Biblically derived figure of Canaan\, the promised land of freedom and security for an African American population seeking to leave the shackles of slavery behind and the northern terminus of the underground railroad. Centering around the poetry of George Elliott Clarke\, Dionne Brand\, M. NourbeSe Philip\, Wayde Compton\, and rapper K’naan\, it delves into how these poets draw inspiration from African American and Afro-diasporic musical genres\, such as blues\, jazz\, reggae and dub\, hip-hop\, and remix\, to reshape the notions of identity and citizenship. Soundin’ Canaan asks: what does Canadian citizenship sound like\, especially when voiced by Black Canadian poets who embrace a fluid and multicultural form of citizenship that moves between local and global spaces\, much like music does? \nMore About the Presenter:\nPaul db Watkins is a Professor of English at Vancouver Island University. He is also a research team member with the International Institute for Critical Studies in Improvisation (IICSI). He has published widely on multiculturalism\, hip-hop\, Canadian poetry\, jazz\, DJ culture\, and improvisation. Under his DJ alias\, DJ Techné\, he has completed several DJ projects that explore the spaces between poetry\, hip-hop\, and jazz.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/book-launch-soundin-canaan-black-canadian-poetry-music-and-citizenship-by-paul-db-watkins/
LOCATION:The Vault Cafe\, 499 Wallace Street\, Nanaimo\, BC\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Community Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/book-launch-poster-scaled.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20250125T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20250125T213000
DTSTAMP:20250123T134025Z
CREATED:20250121T142450Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250123T134025Z
UID:15302-1737831600-1737840600@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Wet Sounds Series Presents: Pantayo
DESCRIPTION:Please join us Saturday\, January 25 at 7:00 PM (ET) for Wet Sounds 2: Pantayo\, presented by our friends at Musagetes.\n \n\nThis presentation will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph.\n \nSuggested PWYC tickets of $15 will be donated to Filipinos United for Palestine. No one turned away for lack of funds (NOTAFLOF). \nPurchase your tickets here! \nMore About the Event\n6:30 doors open\n7:00 Talk\n8:00 refreshments + cash bar\n8:30 performance \nOn Saturday January 25th\, 2025\, Wet Sounds: feminist + queer music practices in the polycrisis presents a performance and conversation with PANTAYO. The second guest in the series hosted by Musagetes in Guelph\, Pantayo are queer Filipinx kulintang gong punks based in Tkaronto\, Canada. The ensemble combines traditional Kulintang music from the Philippines with contemporary influences and experimental sounds derived from their experiences as queer diasporic Filipinxs on Turtle Island. \nMore About the Series\nWet Sounds is a quarterly arts series that presents conversations and performances centring the intersections of feminist and queer musicians’ academic work\, artistic practice\, and collaborations in the polycrisis. This series will examine notions of grief\, ritual\, queerness\, pleasure\, land\, embodiment\, colonialisms\, decay\, noise\, and sound. Wet Sounds will ask how artists see their practice as impacted by or responding to the interconnected crises unfolding around us—climate chaos\, genocide\, fascism\, an erosion of democracy\, and multiple sites of oppression and resistance.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/wet-sounds-series-presents-pantayo/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Community Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/https___cdn.evbuc_.com_images_928790283_74265215811_1_original.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20241218T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20241218T220000
DTSTAMP:20241211T174554Z
CREATED:20241211T174554Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241211T174554Z
UID:15237-1734552000-1734559200@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Audiopollination Guelph—Season 3\, Episode 2
DESCRIPTION:Audiopollination Guelph returns for our second episode of Season 3\, featuring new lineups of musicians and performers performing improvised music never before heard! It’s most likely going to be a chilly evening\, but I hope you can make it for the final night of improvisation and community in 2024! (more to come next year) \nThe 2025 shows still have open slots\, but they’re filling up quick! Sign up here! \nAudiopollination Guelph is devoted to being identity-affirming space for all people\, please come as you are and/or as you desire to be! \nWednesday\, December 18th\, 2024 \nCost: $20/PWYC \nSilence (46 Essex Street\, Guelph\, ON) \nDoors Open at 7:30pm | Music Starts at 8pm \nEnsemble 1: Nico\, Connor Kurtz & Claire\nEnsemble 2: Thomas Rolf\, Tyson & Monte Fenske\nEnsemble 3: Jamie Eriksen\, David Sait & Tess Martens\nEnsemble 4: Wettendrop \nPlease do your part to keep Audiopollination Guelph scent-free. \nWe are so thankful for support to the show from the Guelph Arts Council! \nIt’s flu season\, so masks are encouraged and will be provided at the door. \nNote: While the suggested payment is now $20\, the show is still fully PWYC and NOTAFLOF.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/audiopollination-guelph-season-3-episode-2/
LOCATION:Silence\, 46 Essex Street\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1H 3K8\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Community Events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/AudioPollination-1208.png
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