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DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20250121T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20250121T133000
DTSTAMP:20260220T152229Z
CREATED:20250113T142538Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20260220T152229Z
UID:15256-1737460800-1737466200@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Thinking Spaces: Justine Woods\, “Re-stitching as Methodology: Garment-making as a Transformative Practice in Research-creation”
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Tuesday\, January 21 at 12:00 PM (ET) for Thinking Spaces: “Re-stitching as Methodology: Garment-making as a Transformative Practice in Research-creation” with Justine Woods.\n \n\nThis presentation will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph. As always\, our Thinking Spaces events are free! \nTo attend the talk\, RSVP via our Google Forms. \nMore About this Workshop:\nIn this combined presentation and workshop\, Justine Woods will discuss garment-making as research-creation with particular focus on the role garments play in resisting settler colonial displacement of Indigenous ontologies and bodies to place. Informed by her PhD dissertation research\, Justine will expand upon the concept of ‘re-stitching’ as both a theoretical framework and embodied practice in exploring how the act of garment-making done by the Indigenous body can regenerate Indigenous ontology and re-stitch new worlds and futurities. \nTo support the workshop component of the talk\, attendees are encouraged to bring an article of clothing that they do not mind making permanent changes and or adjustments to. \nMore About the Presenter:\nJustine Woods is a garment-artist\, creative scholar\, educator\, and curator. Stretching across fields of study\, including but not limited to\, fashion studies\, performance and embodiment\, and research-creation\, Justine’s work passionately situates fashion as a pluriversal phenomenon. Her research centres garment-making as a practice-based method of inquiry toward re-stitching alternative worlds that prioritize Indigenous resurgence and liberation. To learn more about Justine\, please visit her website: www.justinewoods.com\nTo attend the talk\, RSVP via our Google Forms.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/thinking-spaces-justine-woods-re-stitching-as-methodology/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Thinking Spaces
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Thinking-Space-Justine-Woods-2025.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20241205T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20241205T203000
DTSTAMP:20241104T195229Z
CREATED:20241016T173803Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241104T195229Z
UID:15038-1733425200-1733430600@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:[Postponed until Spring 2025] Thinking Spaces: Eric Fillion\, Sean Mills\, and Désirée Rochat\, "Statesman of the Piano: A Conversation on the Politics of Archiving\, Curating\, and Music Making"
DESCRIPTION:*Postponed until Spring 2025* \nPlease join us for Thinking Spaces: “Statesman of the Piano: A Conversation on the Politics of Archiving\, Curating\, and Music Making” with Eric Fillion\, Sean Mills\, and Désirée Rochat.\n \n\nThis presentation will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph\, as well as online via IICSI’s new Twitch Stream. As always\, our Thinking Spaces events are free! \nTo attend the talk in-person or online\, RSVP via our Google Forms. \nMore About the Roundtable Discussion\nPlease join co-editors Eric Fillion\, Sean Mills\, and Désirée Rochat for a conversation around and about Statesman of the Piano: Jazz\, Race\, and History in the Life of Lou Hooper (MQUP\, 2023). The book “sparks new conversations about Hooper’s legacy while shedding light on the cross-border travels and wartime experiences of Black musicians\, the politics of archiving and curating\, and the connections between race and music in the twentieth century.” \nMore About the Presenters\nEric Fillion is director of the International Institute for Critical Studies in Improvisation (IICSI) and assistant professor at the School of Languages and Literatures (SOLAL) at the University of Guelph. His research explores the social and symbolic importance of music\, within countercultures and in Canadian international relations. His ongoing work on cultural diplomacy and Canadian-Brazilian relations builds on the experience he has acquired as a musician. It also informs his current research on the postwar Canadian cultural public sphere: his two main projects examine the emergence of the music festival phenomenon in Canada and the entangled sonic histories of diasporic social movements. An affiliate of the North American Cultural Diplomacy Initiative (NACDI)\, Eric Fillion is the founder of the Tenzier archival record label and co-editor of the journal Critical Studies in Improvisation. He is the author of JAZZ LIBRE et la révolution québécoise: musique-action\, 1967-1975 and Distant Stage: Quebec\, Brazil\, and the Making of Canada’s Cultural Diplomacy. His latest book\, Statesman of the Piano: Jazz\, Race\, and History in the Life of Lou Hooper (co-edited with Sean Mills and Désirée Rochat)\, is now available through McGill-Queen’s University Press \nSean Mills is professor and Canada Research Chair in Canadian and Transnational History at the University of Toronto. He is the author of The Empire Within: Postcolonial Thought and Political Activism in Sixties Montreal\, and A Place in the Sun: Haiti\, Haitians\, and the Remaking of Quebec. Most recently\, Mills is the co-editor (with Eric Fillion and Désirée Rochat) of Statesman of the Piano: Jazz\, Race\, and History in the Life of Lou Hooper (2023). Mills is a Member of the College of New Scholars\, Artists\, and Scientists of the Royal Society of Canada and a 2024 Fellow of the Pierre Elliott Trudeau Foundation.\n \nDésirée Rochat is a community educator and transdisciplinary scholar with a PhD in Educational Studies from McGill University. Guided by an integrative approach connecting historical research\, community archival preservation and education\, her work aims to document\, theorize and transmit (hi)stories of Black communities’ activism. Rochat is a FRQSC Post-doctoral fellow at the Centre for Oral History and Digital Storytelling at Concordia University.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/thinking-spaces-eric-fillion-sean-mills-and-desiree-rochat-statesman-of-the-piano-a-conversation-on-the-politics-of-archiving-curating-and-music-making/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Thinking Spaces
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20241122T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20241122T133000
DTSTAMP:20241108T173954Z
CREATED:20241009T174704Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241108T173954Z
UID:15016-1732276800-1732282200@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Thinking Spaces: Priya Zalis\, "Clinical Improvisation in Music Psychotherapy"
DESCRIPTION:*** Rescheduled to 12:00 PM (ET) *** \nPlease join us on Friday\, November 22 at 12:00 PM (ET) for Thinking Spaces: “Clinical Improvisation in Music Psychotherapy” with Priya Zalis.\n \n\nThis presentation will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph. As always\, our Thinking Spaces events are free! \nTo attend the talk in-person or online\, RSVP via our Google Forms. \nMore About this Workshop:\nIn this workshop\, Priya will introduce her approach to music psychotherapy in the context of adult mental health\, inviting attendees to participate in exploring the role that clinical improvisation can play in accessing and processing emotions\, building social connection\, and developing personal insights and growth.  \nMore About the Presenter:\nPriya Zalis (RP\, MTA\, MMT) is a music therapist\, psychotherapist\, and educator working in adult inpatient mental health and addictions in Guelph\, Ontario\, Canada. She holds a Master’s in Music Therapy (Wilfrid Laurier University) and a Diploma in Gestalt Psychotherapy (Gestalt Institute of Toronto)\, and has prior experience in hospice\, oncology\, long-term care\, and community mental health settings. Current research explores the impacts of group music therapy in trauma processing and issues related to diversity\, equity\, inclusion\, and belonging in Canadian music therapy. She loves spending time with her family and getting lost in a good book. \nTo attend the talk in-person or online\, RSVP via our Google Forms.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/thinking-spaces-priya-zalis-clinical-improvisation-in-music-psychotherapy/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Thinking Spaces
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20241115T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20241115T133000
DTSTAMP:20241108T174031Z
CREATED:20241016T171906Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241108T174031Z
UID:15036-1731672000-1731677400@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Thinking Spaces: Phil Mullen\, "Ways Into Improvisation"
DESCRIPTION:*** Rescheduled to 12:00 PM (ET) *** \nPlease join us on Friday\, November 15 at 12:00 PM (ET) for Thinking Spaces: “Ways Into Improvisation” with Phil Mullen. \nThis presentation will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph. As always\, our Thinking Spaces events are free! \n\nTo attend the talk in-person or online\, RSVP via our Google Forms. \nMore About the Workshop\nIn this participatory workshop\, Dr Mullen will look at three approaches to group improvising—1) improvising with pulse and rhythm\, 2) using stimuli such as text\, visuals and thematic starting points\, and 3) the Search and Reflect methodology as pioneered by Phil’s mentor John Stevens\, a key figure in European Free Group Improvisation. Please bring an instrument if possible. \nMore About the Presenter\nPhil Mullen has worked for forty years developing music with people who are socially excluded. He specializes in working with excluded children and young people at risk. He has run workshops\, seminars and training in 28 countries across Europe\, North and South America\, Australia and Asia. \nPhil has a PHD from Winchester University and has written a number of book chapters on musical inclusion including for the Oxford Handbook of Community Music (2018). Phil’s book “Challenging Voices: Music making with young people excluded from school” is published by Peter Lang.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/thinking-spaces-phil-mullen-ways-into-improvisation/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:Thinking Spaces
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20241113T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20241113T141500
DTSTAMP:20241107T211904Z
CREATED:20241107T211802Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241107T211904Z
UID:15090-1731502800-1731507300@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:On Cuddling: Loved to Death in the Racial Embrace—Reading and Conversation with Dr. Phanuel Antwi (UBC)
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Wednesday\, November 13 at 1:00 PM (ET) for On Cuddling: Loved to Death in the Racial Embrace—a Reading and Conversation with Dr. Phanuel Antwi (UBC) \nThis event will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph. This event is free and open to everybody!\n \nMore About the Event\nRanging from the terrifying embrace of the slave ship’s hold to the racist encoding of ‘cuddly’ toys\, On Cuddling is a unique combination of essay and poetry that contends with the way racial violence is enacted through intimacy. Informed by Black feminist and queer poetics\, Antwi focuses his lens on the suffering of Black people at the hands of state violence and racial capitalism. As radical movements grow to advance Black liberation\, so too must our ways of understanding how racial capitalism embraces us all. Antwi turns to cuddling\, an act we imagine as devoid of violence\, and explores it as a tense transfer point of power. \nMore About the Presenter\nDr. Phanuel Antwi is the Canada Research Chair in Black Arts and Epistemologies in the Department of English Language and Literatures at the University of British Columbia. He is an artist\, teacher and organizer concerned with race\, poetics\, movements\, intimacy\, and struggle. He works with text\, dance\, film\, and photography to intervene in artistic\, academic\, and public spaces. He is a curator\, activist\, and associate professor. He is an alumnus of the U of G and a research team member with the IICSI. \nPresented by Interdisciplinary Programs\, the International Institute for Critical Studies in Improvisation\, and the Office of Academic Equity and Anti-Racism
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/on-cuddling-loved-to-death-in-the-racial-embrace-reading-and-conversation-with-dr-phanuel-antwi-ubc/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20241025T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20241025T123000
DTSTAMP:20241016T173909Z
CREATED:20241011T153914Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241016T173909Z
UID:15030-1729854000-1729859400@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Thinking Spaces: Melissa Noventa\, "Movement Across Borders: Improvisation\, Diplomacy\, and Transcultural Dialogues"
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Friday\, October 25 at 11:00 AM (ET) for Thinking Spaces: “Movement Across Borders: Improvisation\, Diplomacy\, and Transcultural Dialogues” with Melissa Noventa\, accompanied by percussionist Mario Allende.\n \n\nThis presentation will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph\, as well as online via IICSI’s new Twitch Stream. As always\, our Thinking Spaces events are free! \nTo attend the talk in-person or online\, RSVP via our Google Forms. \nMore About the Workshop\nIn a world with ever increasing migration and cultural exchange\, dance holds a unique power to facilitate dialogue across cultural and political boundaries. Combining an informal talk with an interactive movement session\, we’ll dive into how movement can act as a tool for diplomacy\, offering new ways to engage with people from different backgrounds and experiences. Participants will be encouraged to engage with the nuances of improvisation as both a personal and collective practice\, experiencing how movement can communicate across borders. Whether you are a seasoned dancer\, or someone just curious about how the body communicates\, come ready to move\, experiment and reflect. No prior experience is required—just a willingness to move and explore new ideas! \nMore About the Presenter\nMelissa Noventa is a dancer and ethnographer originally from Guelph\, Ontario. She has over 15 years of experience performing and teaching a wide range of dance genres\, including classical\, contemporary\, urban\, West African\, Latin\, and Afro-Caribbean vocabularies. Melissa has collaborated with renowned institutions such as NYU Tisch and performed alongside a diverse range of artists from Canada’s Arcade Fire to some of Cuba’s premier folkloric ensembles. Most recently\, she performed in the Obeah Opera which toured South Africa over the summer. Melissa holds a BFA and MA in Dance from York University and is currently a PhD candidate at Queen’s University where her research focuses on cultural diplomacy through music and dance\, with a particular emphasis on the relationship between Canada and Cuba. \nFor this presentation\, Melissa will be accompanied by percussionist Mario Allende.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/thinking-spaces-melissa-noventa-movement-across-borders-improvisation-diplomacy-and-transcultural-dialogues/
LOCATION:Ontario
CATEGORIES:Thinking Spaces
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20241024T190000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20241024T213000
DTSTAMP:20241016T172852Z
CREATED:20241009T190452Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241016T172852Z
UID:15019-1729796400-1729805400@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:"SAVE THE DATE!" A Creative Community Concert with Jimmy Weinstein and Lilly Santon
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Thursday\, October 24 at 7:00 PM (ET) for the culminating event of our Fall 2024 Improvisers-in-Residence Series: “SAVE THE DATE!” A Creative Community Concert with Jimmy Weinstein and Lilly Santon.\n \n\nThis community concert will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph. The event is FREE and open to everybody.\n \nMore About the Event\nAfter an inspiring series of six “Open Sessions” workshops\, IICSI’s 2024 Improvisers-in-Residence are thrilled to invite you to a two-part evening of creativity and surprise: \n“SAVE THE DATE! A Creative Community Concert with Jimmy Weinstein and Lilly Santon” \nThe night kicks off with an interactive\, behind-the-scenes look at how multidisciplinary collaboration comes to life\, as  Jimmy and Lilly\, along with an ensemble of creative community members from diverse artistic traditions\, invite you to “peak behind the curtain” and witness their creative process. \nIn the second half\, Jimmy and Lilly will take the stage for a more formal\, concert-style performance with VERY special guests. (We can’t spill the beans yet\, but you won’t want to miss it!) \nMore About the Performers\nJimmy Weinstein / drums\, piano\, guitar\, composer \nBorn in Chicago\, Jimmy moved with his family to California and Spain. A Berklee College of Music alumnus ’89 and leader of a consortium of New York based ensembles\, Jimmy has been on the move for over 25 years\, touring the US\, Europe and Japan.  Major associations include recordings and tours with virtuoso improvisers\, Ahmed Abdullah\, Chris Cheek\, Ben Monder\, Satoko Fujii\, Alex Harding\, Jeff Parker\, Oscar Noriega\, Natsuki Tamura\, Frank Carlberg\, Elie Massias\, Dan Fox\, Sten Hostfalt\, Masa Kamaguchi and Matt Renzi.  As a sideman he has worked supporting Sheila Jordan\, Noah Preminger\, Rachel Gould\, Greg Burk\, Marcello Tonolo and Reggie Veal.  \nIn collaboration with Abdullah\, Harding and Kamaguchi he founded the adventurous and highly acclaimed melodic quartet NAM\, whose album Song of Time was voted among the top 25 all time live performances by critic Kevin Whitehead. As a leader\, his discography contains albums released by Fresh Sound\, Clean Feed\, Accurate\, CIMP\, El Gallo Rojo and Gunther Schuller’s GM Recordings.  Among Weinstein’s current projects\, is a quartet featuring the pianist extraordinaire Satoko Fujii\, in addition to trumpeter Natsuki Tamura and vocalist Lilly Santon . As a teacher\, Weinstein’s experience has brought forth TRAVELING SCHOOL PLAYJAZZ\, an organization dedicated to conducting jazz workshops where he often performs with his students.  Jimmy’s new quintet features Chris Cheek\, Ben Monder\, Tom Beckham and Dave Ambrosio\, all musicians who he has worked with over the past 25 years\, coming together to perform Jimmy’s new compositions on his latest album “Sobrinos”.  \nTraveling School Playjazz has been organizing the yearly jazz workshop at the acclaimed Mallorca Jazz Sa Pobla Festival since 2006.  Over the years Jimmy has coordinated workshops with leading artists including Lee Konitz\, Sheila Jordan\, Chris Cheek\, Dennis Irwin\, Matt Garrison\, Noah Preminger\, Dan Fox\, Toni Miranda\, Pedro Cortejosa\, Perico Sambeat\, Marco Mezquida\, Paolo Porta and Carlo Cattano.  \nLilly / Liliana Santon / vocalist \nLilly Santon trained as an architect before venturing into the world of jazz and energy therapy. After spending her formative years in Brazil\, she attended middle and high school in Padua\, Italy and received her degree in architecture from the University of Venice. \nLilly lived in New York and Munich between 1980 and 2003 where she worked as an architect and studied jazz with the likes of Barry Harris\, Sheila Jordan\, Mark Murphy and Jay Clayton. During the 80’s in New York she performed with Don Cherry’s Collective Ensemble alongside Jim Pepper\, Bob Moses\, Dennis Charles and Clarence “C” Sharpe. While deepening her musical studies\, she trained in bio-energetic therapy\, which has been integrated into her teaching methods in private classes and workshops. In 2003\, she moved to Italy and Spain\, and co-founded the Cultural Association Traveling School. Lilly performs regularly with Satoko Fujii\, Jimmy Weinstein Quintet\, and different formations of the Traveling School Band. \nProjects include Sten Hosfalt’s Microtonal Ensemble Dimensional States; vocal duet improvisations with renowned composer Constance Cooper; 2014 appereances in NYC recording sessions with Jimmy Weinstein Quintet\, Noah Preminger. New collaborations 2016/2017 include Johnny Lapio’s Porta Palace featuring Satoko Fukjii\, Giancarlo Schiaffini and Natsuki Tamura.  Story Told By Sound a multi-media project with Elie Massias and Jimmy Weinstein.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/save-the-date-improvisers-in-residence-community-concert/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20241023T120000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20241023T130000
DTSTAMP:20241016T175232Z
CREATED:20241016T175119Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241016T175232Z
UID:15043-1729684800-1729688400@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:SOAN and IICSI Present: "Deference Rituals and Creative Buzz: Theorizing the Creative Trajectories of Songs and Songwriters" with Taylor Price.
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Wednesday\, October 23 at 12:00 PM (ET) for the first event in the 2024–2025 SOAN Seminar Series: “Deference Rituals and Creative Buzz: Theorizing the Creative Trajectories of Songs and Songwriters” with Taylor Price.\n \n\nThis presentation will take place in person inside MCKN 621 at the University of Guelph (6th floor\, next to the elevators). The event is free and open to everybody!\n \nMore About the Seminar\nTaylor Price will dive into the dynamics of culture creation in songwriting teams\, exploring how cognition\, interaction\, and relationships shape the creative process. Drawing from his ethnographic observations in music studios and interviews with music producers\, he will discuss the social interactions that drive both the linear and nonlinear paths of creativity. \nMore About the Presenter\nTaylor Price is a postdoctoral fellow in New York University’s Department of Sociology. He completed his PhD at the University of Toronto\, where he wrote a dissertation exploring how cognition\, interaction\, and relationships facilitate culture creation in songwriting teams. His postdoctoral research draws on ethnographic observations in music studios and interviews with music producers to understand how social interactions facilitate the linear and nonlinear dimensions of the creative process. Beyond his research on creative situations\, he has also written about cultural consecration\, knowledge production\, and qualitative social research methods. \nFor more information\, contact Prof. Mervyn Horgan (mhorgan@uoguelph.ca).
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/saon-and-iicsi-present-deference-rituals-and-creative-buzz-theorizing-the-creative-trajectories-of-songs-and-songwriters-with-taylor-price/
LOCATION:MCKN 621\, 87 Trent Lane\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20241022T121500
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20241022T124500
DTSTAMP:20241016T182124Z
CREATED:20241016T182124Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20241016T182124Z
UID:15052-1729599300-1729601100@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:"Singing in the Circle\," with the GCVI Chamber Choir\, Carey West\, and Joe Sorbara
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Tuesday\, October 22 at 12:15 PM(ET) for “Singing in the Circle\,” with the GCVI Chamber Choir\, Carey West\, and Joe Sorbara. This concert will take place at the “How To Draw A Tree” Wellness Circle\, at the SW corner of Johnson Green\, University of Guelph Campus (across from the Reynolds Building near Gordon Street). The event is free and open to all students and community.\n \nDon’t miss the GCVI Chamber Choir (directed by: Lane Osborne) improvising with vocalist Carey West and percussionist Joe Sorbara in a special collaboration with the IICSI! \nRain Date: Thursday\, October 24. \n\n“Singing in the Circle” is presented by HowToDrawATree.ca with support from the International Institute for Critical Studies in Improvisation\, UG Grounbds\, and the “Activating Art Microgrant” through the Guelph Arts Council.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/singing-in-the-circle-with-the-gcvi-chamber-choir-carey-west-and-joe-sorbara/
LOCATION:“How to Draw a Tree” Wellness Circle\, Johnson Green\, Gordon Street\, Guelph\, Ontario\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events
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END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240927T110000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240927T123000
DTSTAMP:20240927T115135Z
CREATED:20240917T235606Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240927T115135Z
UID:14945-1727434800-1727440200@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Thinking Spaces: Jimmy Weinstein and Lilly Santon\, "Building a Safe Creativity Environment"
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Friday\, September 27 at 11:00 AM (ET) for Thinking Spaces: “Building a Safe Creativity Environment” with Jimmy Weinstein and Lilly Santon\, a featured event in the Ontario Culture Days calendar! \n\nThis presentation will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph\, as well as online via IICSI’s new Twitch Stream. As always\, our Thinking Spaces events are free! \nTo attend the talk in-person or online\, RSVP via our Google Forms. \n\nMore about this talk:\nJimmy Weinstein and Lilly Santon founded Travelling School in 2002 in Padova\, Italy with the mission to teach jazz and improvisation as applied to general education. Many different projects grew out of this initiative. Drawing on their life in music and in association with other musicians\, they create workshops at jazz festivals\, music schools and regular schools.Over the course of twenty-two years since the founding of Travelling School\, Jimmy Weinstein and Lilly Santon have developed a highly effective methodology for introducing concepts taken from jazz improvisation. These concepts can be applied to general and special education situations and dynamics. Today\, their introduction to these creative and educational concepts takes the shape of their workshop: Building a Safe Creativity Environment. \n\nSome of the points that will be outlined in this workshop could be: \n1. Inclusion with the self: Self inclusion exercises (most evident when one feels embarrassed). \n2. High Energy Encouragement: Positive high energy received in the moment of improvisation as a teacher. Real ability to improvise a class\, and how to develop this. \n3. Inclusion of conflict and disruption: Using disruption as catalyst for the improvising teacher applied in real life class dynamics. \n4. The Concert Game: The game of the 30 second concert presented as a game for kids. \n5. Listening to jazz pieces and transposing the emotion into a solo or interactive performance/concert. \nMore about the Speakers:\nJimmy Weinstein / drums\, piano\, guitar\, composer \nBorn in Chicago\, Jimmy moved with his family to California and Spain. A Berklee College of Music alumnus ’89 and leader of a consortium of New York based ensembles\, Jimmy has been on the move for over 25 years\, touring the US\, Europe and Japan.  Major associations include recordings and tours with virtuoso improvisers\, Ahmed Abdullah\, Chris Cheek\, Ben Monder\, Satoko Fujii\, Alex Harding\, Jeff Parker\, Oscar Noriega\, Natsuki Tamura\, Frank Carlberg\, Elie Massias\, Dan Fox\, Sten Hostfalt\, Masa Kamaguchi and Matt Renzi.  As a sideman he has worked supporting Sheila Jordan\, Noah Preminger\, Rachel Gould\, Greg Burk\, Marcello Tonolo and Reggie Veal.  \nIn collaboration with Abdullah\, Harding and Kamaguchi he founded the adventurous and highly acclaimed melodic quartet NAM\, whose album Song of Time was voted among the top 25 all time live performances by critic Kevin Whitehead. As a leader\, his discography contains albums released by Fresh Sound\, Clean Feed\, Accurate\, CIMP\, El Gallo Rojo and Gunther Schuller’s GM Recordings.  Among Weinstein’s current projects\, is a quartet featuring the pianist extraordinaire Satoko Fujii\, in addition to trumpeter Natsuki Tamura and vocalist Lilly Santon . As a teacher\, Weinstein’s experience has brought forth TRAVELING SCHOOL PLAYJAZZ\, an organization dedicated to conducting jazz workshops where he often performs with his students.  Jimmy’s new quintet features Chris Cheek\, Ben Monder\, Tom Beckham and Dave Ambrosio\, all musicians who he has worked with over the past 25 years\, coming together to perform Jimmy’s new compositions on his latest album “Sobrinos”.  \nTraveling School Playjazz has been organizing the yearly jazz workshop at the acclaimed Mallorca Jazz Sa Pobla Festival since 2006.  Over the years Jimmy has coordinated workshops with leading artists including Lee Konitz\, Sheila Jordan\, Chris Cheek\, Dennis Irwin\, Matt Garrison\, Noah Preminger\, Dan Fox\, Toni Miranda\, Pedro Cortejosa\, Perico Sambeat\, Marco Mezquida\, Paolo Porta and Carlo Cattano.  \nLilly / Liliana Santon / vocalist \nLilly Santon trained as an architect before venturing into the world of jazz and energy therapy. After spending her formative years in Brazil\, she attended middle and high school in Padua\, Italy and received her degree in architecture from the University of Venice. \nLilly lived in New York and Munich between 1980 and 2003 where she worked as an architect and studied jazz with the likes of Barry Harris\, Sheila Jordan\, Mark Murphy and Jay Clayton. During the 80’s in New York she performed with Don Cherry’s Collective Ensemble alongside Jim Pepper\, Bob Moses\, Dennis Charles and Clarence “C” Sharpe. While deepening her musical studies\, she trained in bio-energetic therapy\, which has been integrated into her teaching methods in private classes and workshops. In 2003\, she moved to Italy and Spain\, and co-founded the Cultural Association Traveling School. Lilly performs regularly with Satoko Fujii\, Jimmy Weinstein Quintet\, and different formations of the Traveling School Band. \nProjects include Sten Hosfalt’s Microtonal Ensemble Dimensional States; vocal duet improvisations with renowned composer Constance Cooper; 2014 appereances in NYC recording sessions with Jimmy Weinstein Quintet\, Noah Preminger. New collaborations 2016/2017 include Johnny Lapio’s Porta Palace featuring Satoko Fukjii\, Giancarlo Schiaffini and Natsuki Tamura.  Story Told By Sound a multi-media project with Elie Massias and Jimmy Weinstein. \nTo attend the talk in-person or online\, RSVP via our Google Forms.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/thinking-spaces-jimmy-weinstein-and-lilly-santon-building-a-safe-creativity-environment/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events,Thinking Spaces
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/09/IICSI_ThinkingSpaces_F24_September27—social.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240914T150000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240914T163000
DTSTAMP:20240806T211118Z
CREATED:20240806T205842Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240806T211118Z
UID:14639-1726326000-1726331400@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:KidsAbility Play Who You Are Ensemble - Final Performance at the Guelph Jazz Festival
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Saturday\, September 14 at 3:00 PM (ET) for a public performance by the “KidsAbility Play Who You Are Ensemble” at the Guelph Jazz Festival.\n \nThis performance will take place in person at TD Market Square\, Downtown Guelph. The event is free and open to everybody.\n \nMore About This Event:\nSince 2007\, KidsAbility and the International Institute for Critical Studies in Improvisation (IICSI) have partnered to bring award-winning musicians to support youth with varying developmental and physical needs. Play Who You Are includes a FREE series of musical improvisation workshops which culminate in a FREE public performance at the Guelph Jazz Festival. The KidsAbility Play Who You Are Ensemble will be facilitated by Ben Finley. \nThis year\, the workshops take place on August 12th (info session)\, 14th\, 19th\, 21st\, and September 4th from 7-8 pm at ImprovLab\, located on the University of Guelph Campus. The final culminating performance will take place at the Guelph Jazz Festival on Saturday\, September 14th. \nMore About the Facilitator:\nBen Finley is an experienced collaborative and solo performer\, composer\, singer\, improviser\, and writer grounded in creative acoustic and electric bass playing. He leads and co-leads several ensembles and grew up on a music festival farm – Westben! He is a current Ph.D. candidate in the Critical Studies in Improvisation program at the University of Guelph. \nThe KidsAbility Play Who You Are Ensemble will also be joined onstage by the IICSI Improvisers-in-Residence\, Jimmy Weinstein (drums\, piano\, guitar\, composer) and Lilly Santon (vocalist\, visual arts). \nFor more information\, and to register to participate in Play Who You Are\, contact Taylor Graham at improvce@uoguelph.ca.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/kidsability-play-who-you-are-ensemble/
LOCATION:TD Market Square\, Guelph\, ON\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/Play-Who-You-Are-2024.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240911T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240911T170000
DTSTAMP:20250421T172408Z
CREATED:20240808T175008Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250421T172408Z
UID:14689-1726045200-1726074000@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:2024 Guelph Jazz Festival Colloquium: "Sheets of Sound: Jazz\, Improvisation\, and Liner Notes"
DESCRIPTION:Please join us from Wednesday\, September 11–Saturday\, September 14 for the 2024 Guelph Jazz Festival Colloquium in Guelph\, Ontario\, Canada. \nThis year’s event\, titled “Sheets of Sound: Jazz\, Improvisation\, and Liner Notes\,” draws inspiration from jazz critic and historian Ira Gitler’s description of legendary jazz saxophonist John Coltrane’s 1958 recording Soultrane. Gitler famously coined the phrase\, “sheets of sound” to describe Coltrane’s playing. The event also takes its cues from Daphne Brooks’ recent work\, Liner Notes for the Revolution: The Intellectual Life of Black Feminist Sound\, highlighting the overlooked contributions of Black women in the history of popular music. Dr. Brooks\, one of the colloquium’s keynote speakers\, will present a compelling new work on Friday from 2:30–3:45 PM\, titled “Liner Notes for the Hurricane: Crate Digging for Porgy and Bess.” The other keynote speaker\, Ashley Kahn\, a prolific American music historian\, will deliver a presentation on Thursday from 3:45–4:45 PM\, titled “Liner Noting in the Time of Streaming.”\n \nThis colloquium will take place in person at ImprovLab (Room 108 MacKinnon Building) on the University of Guelph Campus. The event is free and open to everybody. \n\nMore About This Event:\nSince 1996 the Guelph Jazz Festival Colloquium\, co-presented by the University of Guelph in partnership with the Guelph Jazz Festival\, has brought together diverse communities of interest by providing a scholarly forum for dialogue among researchers\, creative practitioners\, arts presenters\, and members of the general public. \nThe focus of this year’s colloquium is “Liner Notes” \nIn what ways have liner notes shaped the way the music is received? To what extent do liner notes contribute to the ways in which we negotiate and construct meaning about the music\, how we understand history\, how and why we listen? In what ways have digital dissemination and streaming services disrupted our notions of liner notes? And how has this shifted listener/audience understanding about their favourite artists? \nThe learn more about this year’s presenters and to see a full schedule\, please follow this link to the colloquium web portal.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/2024gjfc-sheets-of-sound-jazz-improvisation-and-liner-notes/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/2024_JazzFestivalColloquium_Promo.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240911T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240911T170000
DTSTAMP:20250421T172408Z
CREATED:20240808T175008Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250421T172408Z
UID:14689-1726045200-1726074000@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:2024 Guelph Jazz Festival Colloquium: "Sheets of Sound: Jazz\, Improvisation\, and Liner Notes"
DESCRIPTION:Please join us from Wednesday\, September 11–Saturday\, September 14 for the 2024 Guelph Jazz Festival Colloquium in Guelph\, Ontario\, Canada. \nThis year’s event\, titled “Sheets of Sound: Jazz\, Improvisation\, and Liner Notes\,” draws inspiration from jazz critic and historian Ira Gitler’s description of legendary jazz saxophonist John Coltrane’s 1958 recording Soultrane. Gitler famously coined the phrase\, “sheets of sound” to describe Coltrane’s playing. The event also takes its cues from Daphne Brooks’ recent work\, Liner Notes for the Revolution: The Intellectual Life of Black Feminist Sound\, highlighting the overlooked contributions of Black women in the history of popular music. Dr. Brooks\, one of the colloquium’s keynote speakers\, will present a compelling new work on Friday from 2:30–3:45 PM\, titled “Liner Notes for the Hurricane: Crate Digging for Porgy and Bess.” The other keynote speaker\, Ashley Kahn\, a prolific American music historian\, will deliver a presentation on Thursday from 3:45–4:45 PM\, titled “Liner Noting in the Time of Streaming.”\n \nThis colloquium will take place in person at ImprovLab (Room 108 MacKinnon Building) on the University of Guelph Campus. The event is free and open to everybody. \n\nMore About This Event:\nSince 1996 the Guelph Jazz Festival Colloquium\, co-presented by the University of Guelph in partnership with the Guelph Jazz Festival\, has brought together diverse communities of interest by providing a scholarly forum for dialogue among researchers\, creative practitioners\, arts presenters\, and members of the general public. \nThe focus of this year’s colloquium is “Liner Notes” \nIn what ways have liner notes shaped the way the music is received? To what extent do liner notes contribute to the ways in which we negotiate and construct meaning about the music\, how we understand history\, how and why we listen? In what ways have digital dissemination and streaming services disrupted our notions of liner notes? And how has this shifted listener/audience understanding about their favourite artists? \nThe learn more about this year’s presenters and to see a full schedule\, please follow this link to the colloquium web portal.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/2024gjfc-sheets-of-sound-jazz-improvisation-and-liner-notes/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/2024_JazzFestivalColloquium_Promo.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240911T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240911T170000
DTSTAMP:20250421T172408Z
CREATED:20240808T175008Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250421T172408Z
UID:14689-1726045200-1726074000@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:2024 Guelph Jazz Festival Colloquium: "Sheets of Sound: Jazz\, Improvisation\, and Liner Notes"
DESCRIPTION:Please join us from Wednesday\, September 11–Saturday\, September 14 for the 2024 Guelph Jazz Festival Colloquium in Guelph\, Ontario\, Canada. \nThis year’s event\, titled “Sheets of Sound: Jazz\, Improvisation\, and Liner Notes\,” draws inspiration from jazz critic and historian Ira Gitler’s description of legendary jazz saxophonist John Coltrane’s 1958 recording Soultrane. Gitler famously coined the phrase\, “sheets of sound” to describe Coltrane’s playing. The event also takes its cues from Daphne Brooks’ recent work\, Liner Notes for the Revolution: The Intellectual Life of Black Feminist Sound\, highlighting the overlooked contributions of Black women in the history of popular music. Dr. Brooks\, one of the colloquium’s keynote speakers\, will present a compelling new work on Friday from 2:30–3:45 PM\, titled “Liner Notes for the Hurricane: Crate Digging for Porgy and Bess.” The other keynote speaker\, Ashley Kahn\, a prolific American music historian\, will deliver a presentation on Thursday from 3:45–4:45 PM\, titled “Liner Noting in the Time of Streaming.”\n \nThis colloquium will take place in person at ImprovLab (Room 108 MacKinnon Building) on the University of Guelph Campus. The event is free and open to everybody. \n\nMore About This Event:\nSince 1996 the Guelph Jazz Festival Colloquium\, co-presented by the University of Guelph in partnership with the Guelph Jazz Festival\, has brought together diverse communities of interest by providing a scholarly forum for dialogue among researchers\, creative practitioners\, arts presenters\, and members of the general public. \nThe focus of this year’s colloquium is “Liner Notes” \nIn what ways have liner notes shaped the way the music is received? To what extent do liner notes contribute to the ways in which we negotiate and construct meaning about the music\, how we understand history\, how and why we listen? In what ways have digital dissemination and streaming services disrupted our notions of liner notes? And how has this shifted listener/audience understanding about their favourite artists? \nThe learn more about this year’s presenters and to see a full schedule\, please follow this link to the colloquium web portal.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/2024gjfc-sheets-of-sound-jazz-improvisation-and-liner-notes/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/2024_JazzFestivalColloquium_Promo.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240911T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240911T170000
DTSTAMP:20250421T172408Z
CREATED:20240808T175008Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250421T172408Z
UID:14689-1726045200-1726074000@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:2024 Guelph Jazz Festival Colloquium: "Sheets of Sound: Jazz\, Improvisation\, and Liner Notes"
DESCRIPTION:Please join us from Wednesday\, September 11–Saturday\, September 14 for the 2024 Guelph Jazz Festival Colloquium in Guelph\, Ontario\, Canada. \nThis year’s event\, titled “Sheets of Sound: Jazz\, Improvisation\, and Liner Notes\,” draws inspiration from jazz critic and historian Ira Gitler’s description of legendary jazz saxophonist John Coltrane’s 1958 recording Soultrane. Gitler famously coined the phrase\, “sheets of sound” to describe Coltrane’s playing. The event also takes its cues from Daphne Brooks’ recent work\, Liner Notes for the Revolution: The Intellectual Life of Black Feminist Sound\, highlighting the overlooked contributions of Black women in the history of popular music. Dr. Brooks\, one of the colloquium’s keynote speakers\, will present a compelling new work on Friday from 2:30–3:45 PM\, titled “Liner Notes for the Hurricane: Crate Digging for Porgy and Bess.” The other keynote speaker\, Ashley Kahn\, a prolific American music historian\, will deliver a presentation on Thursday from 3:45–4:45 PM\, titled “Liner Noting in the Time of Streaming.”\n \nThis colloquium will take place in person at ImprovLab (Room 108 MacKinnon Building) on the University of Guelph Campus. The event is free and open to everybody. \n\nMore About This Event:\nSince 1996 the Guelph Jazz Festival Colloquium\, co-presented by the University of Guelph in partnership with the Guelph Jazz Festival\, has brought together diverse communities of interest by providing a scholarly forum for dialogue among researchers\, creative practitioners\, arts presenters\, and members of the general public. \nThe focus of this year’s colloquium is “Liner Notes” \nIn what ways have liner notes shaped the way the music is received? To what extent do liner notes contribute to the ways in which we negotiate and construct meaning about the music\, how we understand history\, how and why we listen? In what ways have digital dissemination and streaming services disrupted our notions of liner notes? And how has this shifted listener/audience understanding about their favourite artists? \nThe learn more about this year’s presenters and to see a full schedule\, please follow this link to the colloquium web portal.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/2024gjfc-sheets-of-sound-jazz-improvisation-and-liner-notes/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/2024_JazzFestivalColloquium_Promo.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240820T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240820T213000
DTSTAMP:20240815T134211Z
CREATED:20240814T143648Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240815T134211Z
UID:14764-1724182200-1724189400@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Ultra-Sonic Moth Songs
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Tuesday\, August 20 at 7:30 PM (ET) for “Ultra-Sonic Moth Songs” with Lucy Rupert\, Lisa Hirmer\, Christina Kingsbury\, and Ben Finley.\n \nThis performance will take place in person at the Moth Garder\, located at the Ignatius Jesuit Centre\, 5420 Highway 6 in Guelph. Attendees will meet at the Ignatius Farm Workshop parking lot at 7:30pm and walk out to the garden for the performance. The event is free\, although seating is very limited. Preregistration is required. Please book your ticket on the Moth Garden Eventbrite page.\n \nMore About This Performance\n\n\n\n\n\nJoin us at the Moth Garden. At dusk on August 20th\, experience improvised music and movement amoung the moths. Created by artists Lisa Hirmer and Christina Kingsbury\, the Moth Garden is dedicated to the often underappreciated\, yet vitally important nocturnal pollinators of our world. Did you know moths make music that human ears can’t hear? As the sun sets and the moths come out to play\, you are invited to experience dancer Lucy Rupert and bassist Ben Finley’s interpretation of ultra-sonic moth songs. \nWe will meet at the Ignatius Farm Workshop parking lot at 7:30pm and walk out to the garden for the performance. The garden is a 10-15 minute walk along a gravel roadway and then mowed grass paths which have some uneven surfaces and slight inclines. The walk is less than 1km. Please let us know if this is an access barrier as we can arrange to shuttle some folks to the garden if needed. There are several straw bales and blankets around the garden for informal seating. Please contact us if you have any other access needs that we can support with. \nBecause the garden and event are centred around meeting other beings in their own sensory worlds\, and to support human access considerations\, we ask that you avoid the use of insect repellents and other scented products. We will have bug suits available\, or let us know if you will bring your own. We also recommend long sleeves and pants to protect from the mosquitoes. \nThis workshop is part of the project Moth Garden by artists Lisa Hirmer and Christina Kingsbury. \nMore About the Performers\nLucy Rupert is a dancer\, choreographer\, art-science researcher\, and writer. She has performed with Fujiwara Dance Inventions\, Theatre Rusticle\, Nova Dance\, Anandam Dance\, Sashar Zarif Dance\, Puppetmongers Theatre\, Circus Orange\, and Chartier Danse\, among others. In 2004 Lucy founded Blue Ceiling dance\, an umbrella for her choreography and commissions\, performing throughout Ontario\, in New York\, Montreal and Stuttgart\, Germany. Her creations are inspired by cosmology\, biology and philosophy – anything from monsters to photons to the end of the universe. Lucy has a Joint Honours BA in Dance and Music (University of Waterloo)\, an MA in History (University of Toronto)\, and currently studies philosophy through Oxford University. She lives in Toronto with her husband and son\, and two feral cats\, in a magical neighbourhood full of coyotes and old trees. \nLisa Hirmer is an interdisciplinary artist who works in visual media\, especially photography; social practice; community collaboration\, and sometimes writing. Her work is focussed on collective relationships both in human communities and in human relationships with the more-than-human world. A lot of her recent work wrestles with what it means to be living inside the climate emergency and on the edge of planetary collapse. Her work finds home both in traditional gallery contexts and an expanded field of other public and semi-public spaces and is always created with a keen awareness that multiple realities exist alongside one another. \nShe has shown her work across Canada and internationally including at Art Gallery of Ontario\, Art Gallery of Guelph\, University of Lethbridge Art Gallery\, Cambridge Art Galleries\, Art Gallery of Mississauga\, Tom Thomson Gallery\, Art Windsor-Essex\, Doris McCarthy Gallery\, Peninsula Arts\, CAFKA\, Queens Museum\, and Flux Factory\, among others. She has done artist residencies with Arts House Melbourne\, the Santa Fe Art Institute\, the Robert Rauschenberg Foundation\, the Centre for Contemporary Art and the Natural World\, KIAC and Camargo Foundation\, and was the 2022 Waterfront Toronto Artist in Residence. She has received numerous grants including from the Ontario Arts Council and Canada Council for the Arts and has a Master of Architecture from the University of Waterloo. \nChristina Kingsbury’s (she/her) interdisciplinary art practice is inspired by histories of care and explores themes of place\, ecology and inter-species relationships. Her work takes the form of performance\, installation and social practice. Christina collaborates regularly with poets\, ecologists\, artists\, choreographers and the public-including ecological public – to create relational works that offer a quiet and radical challenge to the commodification of life. Her work is rooted (often literally) in the Grand River watershed and treaty lands of the Mississauga’s of the Credit and part of her practice works through relationships with land as a settler person. Her solo and collaborative work has been shown as public interventions and in curated exhibitions both locally and internationally. \nAt the age of 14\, Ben Finley plucked his first bass string. Everything changed! Immediately\, things fell still\, without worry\, in playful possibility. Miraculously\, that feeling remains. Ben Finley is a collaborative and solo performer-composer\, singer\, improviser\, and writer grounded in creative acoustic and electric bass playing. He leads and co-leads several ensembles that cross compositional boundaries\, drawing inspiration from chamber music\, song forms\, improvisational music making\, electronics and the sound worlds of local environments. He grew up on a music festival farm (Westben) where he witnessed many ways of making music\, entwined with land and creatures. Ben is the co-founder and creative director of the Westben Centre for Connection & Creativity’s Performer-Composer Residency\, which since 2018 has welcomed many diverse sound explorers to collaborate\, share creative music and exchange perspectives. He is also Westben’s Sustainability Coordinator\, working on various environmental care initiatives on the Westben grounds. He is a current Ph.D. candidate in the Critical Studies in Improvisation program at the University of Guelph\, studying music festivals and creative music practices as sites of eco-cultural regeneration. Please find more about Ben’s projects at benfinleymusic.com. \nBe sure to book your ticket on the Moth Garden Eventbrite page.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/ultra-sonic-moth-songs/
LOCATION:The Moth Garden (Ignatius Jesuit Centre)\, 5420 Highway 6\, Guelph\, Ontario\, n1h6j2\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/IICSI_MothGarden_Socials.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240816T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240816T180000
DTSTAMP:20240729T160614Z
CREATED:20240729T160614Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240729T160614Z
UID:14580-1723824000-1723831200@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:François Houle and MILE Camp Participants LIVE at the Musée culturel de Coin-du-Banc / Corner of the Beach Cultural Museum
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Friday\, August 16 at 4:00 PM (ET) for “François Houle and MILE Camp Participants LIVE at the Musée culturel de Coin-du-Banc / Corner of the Beach Cultural Museum.”\n \nThis performance will take place in person at the Musée culturel de Coin-du-Banc / Corner of the Beach Cultural Museum\, located at 294 route 132 est in Coin-du-Banc. Tickets cost $10 and will be available for purchase at the door (cash only). Please note that seating is limited. \nMORE ABOUT THIS EVENT:\nOn Monday\, August 12th\, at 8:00 PM (EDT)\, camp facilitator François Houle—improvising clarinetist extraordinaire—will perform a concert at the Musée culturel de Coin-du-Banc / Corner of the Beach Cultural Museum\, located at 294 route 132 est in Coin-du-Banc. The Vancouver-based musician is one of Canada’s most renowned and innovative improvisational musicians\, and his performance in this wonderful space is not to be missed. \nMORE ABOUT THE ARTIST:\nClarinetist François Houle has established himself as one of today’s most inventive musicians\, in all the diverse musical spheres he embraces. Inspired by collaborations with the world’s top musical innovators\, François has developed a unique improvisational language\, virtuosic and rich with sonic embellishment and technical extensions. He has worked with Dave Douglas\, Mark Dresser\, Joëlle Léandre\, Benoît Delbecq\, Evan Parker\, Samuel Blaser\, Gerry Hemingway\, Marilyn Crispell\, Myra Melford\, René Lussier\, Alexander Hawkins\, John Butcher\, Kris Davis\, Georg Graewe\, Håvard Wiik\, Guillermo Gregorio\, Eyvind Kang\, Hasse Poulsen\, and many of Canada and the International scene’s top creative music artists. \nHis extensive touring has led to solo appearances at major festivals across Canada\, the United \nStates\, Europe and Australia. A prolific recording artist\, he has released over twenty recordings as a leader\, earning multiple Juno Award and West Coast Music Award nominations. He is the founder of Afterday Audio\, a record label dedicated to the documentation and dissemination of his many musical projects and collaborations. In addition\, he has appeared on numerous recordings on the Songlines\, Red Toucan\, Leo Records\, Drip Audio\, PSI\, Between-the-Lines\, Nuscope\, Spool\, hat[now]ART\, Redshift\, and CRI labels\, among others. \nHe has been listed on numerous occasions in DownBeat magazine’s Readers and Critics’ Polls  as a “Talent Deserving Wider Recognition” and a “Rising Star”. \nFrançois studied at McGill University\, went on to win the National Debut competition\, and \ncompleted his studies at Yale University. He has been an artist-in-residence at the Banff Centre for the Arts and at the Civitella Ranieri Foundation in Umbria\, Italy\, and was a featured soloist in the International Clarinet Association’s 2007 and 2008 ClarinetFests. He is a faculty member at the Vancouver Community College School of Music\, and a former graduate clarinet studio instructor at the University of British Columbia. He served as Artistic Director of the Vancouver Creative Music Institute for five years. In 2008 he was appointed as “Associate Composer” of the Canadian Music Centre. \nFrançois Houle is a Backun artist and clinician. He plays Backun clarinets\, mouthpieces\, bells\, and barrels. He is also a Légère Artist\, performing on Signature European cut reeds. \nVisit François on-line at www.francoishoule.ca \nThese events at Musical Improvisation at Land’s End / Coin-du-Banc en folie are made possible thanks to the generous support of the Musagetes Foundation\, La société historique de Coin-du-Banc / Corner of the Beach Historical Society\, La MRC du Rocher-Percé\, La Ville de Percé\, the Vancouver Community College Faculty Association\, and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC).
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/francois-houle-and-mile-camp-participants-live-at-the-musee-culturel-de-coin-du-banc-corner-of-the-beach-cultural-museum/
LOCATION:Corner of the Beach Cultural Museum\, 294 route 132 est\, Coin-du-Banc\, Quebec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/MILEcamp2023_ConcertSocials_2024.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240812T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240812T213000
DTSTAMP:20240809T133118Z
CREATED:20240729T160143Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240809T133118Z
UID:14575-1723492800-1723498200@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:"Aerials" with François Houle LIVE at the Musée culturel de Coin-du-Banc / Corner of the Beach Cultural Museum
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Monday\, August 12 at 8:00 PM (ET) for “Aerials with François Houle at the Musée culturel de Coin-du-Banc / Corner of the Beach Cultural Museum.”\n \nThis performance will take place in person at the Musée culturel de Coin-du-Banc / Corner of the Beach Cultural Museum\, located at 294 route 132 est in Coin-du-Banc. Tickets cost $10 and will be available for purchase at the door (cash only). Please note that seating is limited. \nMORE ABOUT THIS EVENT:\nAerials is a set of improvisations exploring the clarinet’s uncharted territories. Developed during a five-week residency in Italy at the 15th century Castello Civitella Ranieri\, the music is complex and seductive\, taking the listener inside the instrument. Technically\, this project taps deeply into the clarinetist’s inclination for the unexpected\, from disembodied clarinets played simultaneously to flute-like melodies. Examining the way the instrument “reacts” to various acoustical spaces\, this program is virtuosity coupled with stunning lyricism. \nMORE ABOUT THE ARTIST:\nClarinetist François Houle has established himself as one of today’s most inventive musicians\, in all the diverse musical spheres he embraces. Inspired by collaborations with the world’s top musical innovators\, François has developed a unique improvisational language\, virtuosic and rich with sonic embellishment and technical extensions. He has worked with Dave Douglas\, Mark Dresser\, Joëlle Léandre\, Benoît Delbecq\, Evan Parker\, Samuel Blaser\, Gerry Hemingway\, Marilyn Crispell\, Myra Melford\, René Lussier\, Alexander Hawkins\, John Butcher\, Kris Davis\, Georg Graewe\, Håvard Wiik\, Guillermo Gregorio\, Eyvind Kang\, Hasse Poulsen\, and many of Canada and the International scene’s top creative music artists. \nHis extensive touring has led to solo appearances at major festivals across Canada\, the United \nStates\, Europe and Australia. A prolific recording artist\, he has released over twenty recordings as a leader\, earning multiple Juno Award and West Coast Music Award nominations. He is the founder of Afterday Audio\, a record label dedicated to the documentation and dissemination of his many musical projects and collaborations. In addition\, he has appeared on numerous recordings on the Songlines\, Red Toucan\, Leo Records\, Drip Audio\, PSI\, Between-the-Lines\, Nuscope\, Spool\, hat[now]ART\, Redshift\, and CRI labels\, among others. \nHe has been listed on numerous occasions in DownBeat magazine’s Readers and Critics’ Polls  as a “Talent Deserving Wider Recognition” and a “Rising Star”. \nFrançois studied at McGill University\, went on to win the National Debut competition\, and \ncompleted his studies at Yale University. He has been an artist-in-residence at the Banff Centre for the Arts and at the Civitella Ranieri Foundation in Umbria\, Italy\, and was a featured soloist in the International Clarinet Association’s 2007 and 2008 ClarinetFests. He is a faculty member at the Vancouver Community College School of Music\, and a former graduate clarinet studio instructor at the University of British Columbia. He served as Artistic Director of the Vancouver Creative Music Institute for five years. In 2008 he was appointed as “Associate Composer” of the Canadian Music Centre. \nFrançois Houle is a Backun artist and clinician. He plays Backun clarinets\, mouthpieces\, bells\, and barrels. He is also a Légère Artist\, performing on Signature European cut reeds. \nVisit François on-line at www.francoishoule.ca \nThese events at Musical Improvisation at Land’s End / Coin-du-Banc en folie are made possible thanks to the generous support of the Musagetes Foundation\, La société historique de Coin-du-Banc / Corner of the Beach Historical Society\, La MRC du Rocher-Percé\, La Ville de Percé\, the Vancouver Community College Faculty Association\, and the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (SSHRC).
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/francois-houle-at-the-musee-culturel-de-coin-du-banc-corner-of-the-beach-cultural-museum/
LOCATION:Corner of the Beach Cultural Museum\, 294 route 132 est\, Coin-du-Banc\, Quebec\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/MILEcamp2023_ConcertSocials_2024.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240720T220000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240720T230000
DTSTAMP:20240716T141837Z
CREATED:20240716T141837Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240716T141837Z
UID:14549-1721512800-1721516400@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:IICSI Co-Presents: The Messthetics and James Brandon Lewis - Hillside Festival 2024
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Saturday\, July 20 at 10:00 PM (ET) for “The Messthetics and James Brandon Lewis” at Hillside Festival 2024! \nThis performance will take place in person on Guelph Lake Island. Tickets are available on the Festival Website. \nMore About This Event:\nThe Hillside Community Festival is a not-for-profit music festival that celebrates creativity through artistic expression\, community engagement\, and environmental leadership. This year\, Hillside Festival runs from July 19–21. \nMore About the Artists:\nOne of the most iconic rhythm sections in modern music\, drummer Brendan Canty and bassist Joe Lally were the insistent engine of DC post-hardcore legends Fugazi for over 15 years. In 2016\, they formed Messthetics with guitar virtuoso Anthony Pirog\, and released two albums of turbulent\, propulsive\, groove-laden instrumental art rock. Drawing on jazz\, punk\, dub\, and free improv\, they’re equally at home in an expansive take on Sonny Sharrock’s “Once Upon a Time” as they are in blazing\, math-metal riff barrages. \nIn late-2021\, they were joined onstage by acclaimed saxophonist James Brandon Lewis\, and sparks flew. Lally recalls a full-throttle passage when Lewis and Pirog began trading solos. As the intensity escalated\, the bassist felt simultaneously challenged and exhilarated. “You’re just holding on and going\, it sounds great\,” he remembers telling himself. “Just keep going!” Thankfully for fans of next-level\, genre-defying music\, they have. Called “one of the modern titans of the tenor” by All About Jazz\, the ecstatic fervour of James Brandon Lewis’ playing points back to John Coltrane\, Pharoah Sanders\, and the rich tradition of the Impulse! label–a tradition that the combustive quartet is now a part of with their eponymous 2024 release. For his part\, Lewis relishes the chance to plug into the power of the Messthetics’ punk-adjacent milieu\, calling their provocative real-time musical conversation a “high point of musical bonding and purely unapologetic energy! When you hear the Messthetics by themselves\, that shit is cranking. And I’m always signing up to crank.”
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/iicsi-hillside-2024-the-messthetics-and-james-brandon-lewis/
LOCATION:Guelph Lake Conservation Area\, 7743 Conservation Road\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1H 6J1\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/07/The-Messthetics-and-James-Brandon-Lewis_Hillside24-1.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240626T203000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240629T223000
DTSTAMP:20240624T154758Z
CREATED:20240624T154650Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240624T154758Z
UID:14494-1719433800-1719700200@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:IF 2024: Silence-Producing Machine
DESCRIPTION:Our fifth annual Improvisation Festival runs from June 26–29\, 2024. \n\n\nIF 2024 will feature robust\, in-person programming inside the Fonoteca Nacional de México\, in Mexico City—our first international iteration—and folks around the globe can tune in online for a stream of live events. \nWatch Here! \nCentred on the theme Silence-Producing Machine\, IF 2024 will showcase legendary and emerging improvisational performers from “the territories of the ñ.” \nFor a full schedule and more information\, please head to the IF 2024 website! \nIF 2024 is a partnered project between the International Institute for Critical Studies in Improvisation (IICSI) in Guelph\, Ontario\, Canada\, and 17\, Institute of Critical Studies in Mexico City\, Mexico. \nMore About the Festival\nIF is an around-the-clock celebration of improvised arts. \nFounded by Dr. Ajay Heble (Founder and former Artistic Director\, Guelph Jazz Festival) and presented by the International Institute for Critical Studies in Improvisation\, IF (Improvisation Festival) is a 24-hour celebration of creative art-making showcasing new\, improvised works. Created in response to the early months of the COVID-19 pandemic\, this annual Festival is dedicated to showcasing an incredible array of new\, original performances by improvising artists of all disciplines\, for audiences residing around our home in Guelph\, Ontario\, as well as digital attendees from all around the world. \nSince the Festival’s inception in 2020\, IF has featured 400+ artists of all artistic disciplines hailing from over 25 countries. Through digital video livestreams and simultaneous international radio broadcasts\, IF has reached thousands of attendees from 55+ countries. \n\n\n 
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/if-2024-silence-producing-machine/
LOCATION:Fonoteca Nacional de México\, Francisco Sosa 383\, Barrio de Santa Catarina 04010\, Coyoacán\, Ciudad de México\, Mexico City\, Mexico
CATEGORIES:IF 2024
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/06/XXXVII-International-Colloquium.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240505T200000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240505T210000
DTSTAMP:20240502T144208Z
CREATED:20240502T144208Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240502T144208Z
UID:14456-1714939200-1714942800@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Live Music: Anne Bourne/Joe Sorbara/Ajay Heble Trio - ArtsEverywhere Festival
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Sunday\, May 5th\, from 8–9 pm (ET) for a live music performance by the Anne Bourne/Joe Sorbara/Ajay Heble Trio. The performance will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph. The event acts the finale of the ArtsEverywhere Festival. \nRefreshments will be served before the performance. \nMore About the Event\nFor this special closing night concert at the ArtsEverywhere Festival\, these three friends will come together to perform for the first time in a trio setting. Their music will be freely improvised and animated by deep and attentive listening\, joyful creative interaction\, meditative soundscapes\, and possible nods to various influences and traditions ranging from Pauline Oliveros to Indian ragas to free jazz and beyond. \nImprovLab is a physically accessible venue. For details on the festival’s accessibility\, please visit our general accessibility page.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/live-music-anne-bourne-joe-sorbara-ajay-heble-trio-artseverywhere-festival/
LOCATION:Ontario
CATEGORIES:IICSI events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Arts-Everywhere-Trio.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240505T160000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240505T190000
DTSTAMP:20240502T143606Z
CREATED:20240502T143457Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240502T143606Z
UID:14451-1714924800-1714935600@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Deep Listening: The Story of Pauline Oliveros - Film Screening - ArtsEverywhere Festival
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Sunday\, May 5th\, from 4–7 pm (ET) for a screening of  “Deep Listening: The Story of Pauline Oliveros.” The screening will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph. The event is part of the ArtsEverywhere Festival. \nA post-screening conversation with director Daniel Weintraub (remote)\, executive producer IONE (remote) and collaborator Anne Bourne will be moderated by Ajay Heble. \nMore Information about the Event\nDaniel Weintraub’s new feature-length film\, “Deep Listening: The Story of Pauline Oliveros“\, is a documentary that traces the life and work of visionary composer\, musician\, teacher\, technological innovator\, and humanitarian Pauline Oliveros (1932–2016). \nPauline was one of the world’s original electronic musicians\, the only woman amongst notable post-war American composers\, a master accordion player\, a teacher and mentor to musicians\, a gateway to music and sound for non-musicians\, and a technical innovator who helped develop everything from tools that allow musicians to play together while in different countries\, to software that enables those with severe disabilities to create beautiful music. \nProduced in collaboration with executive producer IONE\, Oliveros’ partner in life and work\, and the Ministry of Maåt\, Inc.\, the film combines rare archival footage\, live performances\, and unreleased music with appearances by Terry Riley\, Anna Halprin\, Ione\, Linda Montano\, Laurie Anderson\, Thurston Moore\, Alvin Lucier\, Claire Chase\, Miya Masaoka\, Morton Subotnick\, Tony Martin\, Ramon Sender\, and many more ground-breaking artists. \nPlease find a preview on the festival event webpage. \nImprovLab is a physically accessible venue. The Q&A portion of this event will feature live transcription and ASL interpretation. For details on the festival’s accessibility\, please visit our general accessibility page.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/deep-listening-the-story-of-pauline-oliveros-film-screening-artseverywhere-festival/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/05/Oliveros-PostDet-web-1024x656-1.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240502T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240502T150000
DTSTAMP:20240430T184155Z
CREATED:20240212T140523Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240430T184155Z
UID:13998-1714654800-1714662000@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:(Cancelled) ImprovLab Open House Sessions\, May 2
DESCRIPTION:Please join us for a schedule of Thursday afternoon (1–3 pm ET) ImprovLab Open House Sessions! The sessions will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph. Bring any instrument and be ready to improvise! \n\nThe full schedule is as follows: \nFebruary 8th (Electronic Music Session); immediately following Thinking Spaces: Colin Harrington \nFebruary 29th \nMarch 7th \nMarch 21st \nApril 4th \nApril 18th \nMay 2nd \nHope to see you there!
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/improvlab-open-house-sessions-may-2/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events,ImprovLab Open House Sessions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/IICSI_OpenHouse_W242.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240418T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240418T150000
DTSTAMP:20240212T141616Z
CREATED:20240212T135924Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240212T141616Z
UID:13996-1713445200-1713452400@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:ImprovLab Open House Sessions\, April 18
DESCRIPTION:Please join us for a schedule of Thursday afternoon (1–3 pm ET) ImprovLab Open House Sessions! The sessions will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph. Bring any instrument and be ready to improvise! \n\nThe full schedule is as follows: \nFebruary 8th (Electronic Music Session); immediately following Thinking Spaces: Colin Harrington \nFebruary 29th \nMarch 7th \nMarch 21st \nApril 4th \nApril 18th \nMay 2nd \nHope to see you there!
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/improvlab-open-house-sessions-april-18/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events,ImprovLab Open House Sessions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/IICSI_OpenHouse_W242.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240417T193000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240417T213000
DTSTAMP:20240410T121547Z
CREATED:20240319T134947Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240410T121547Z
UID:14368-1713382200-1713389400@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Live @ImprovLab: Susanna Hood Trio and Sarah Belle Reid
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Wednesday\, April 17 at 7:30 PM (ET) for the series premier of Live @ImprovLab\, featuring the Susanna Hood Trio and Sarah Belle Reid in an inspiring double bill. This performance will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph.  \nTickets are $15 or PWYC and available online through IICSI’s Eventbrite page. While tickets will be made available at the door\, attendees are encouraged to reserve tickets ahead of time. \nThe double bill will be preceded by a panel discussion moderated by Marie Zimmerman in which the artists will contextualize the work they will be presenting\, and share insights about the role that improvisation plays in what they do. \nMORE ABOUT THE EVENT:\nIICSI’s new Live @ImprovLab concert and performance series serves to showcase touring artists working in a variety of improvisatory idioms. Curated by IICSI Director Dr. Ajay Heble (Founder and former Artistic Director of the Guelph Jazz Festival and 2023 Killam Prize winner)\, the new series\, says Heble\, “aims to celebrate live improvised performances and to spotlight our beautiful new venue.”  \nTiohtià:ke/Mooniyang/Montreal-based bandleader and vocalist-dancer\, Susanna Hood\, along with the superb Tkaronto/Toronto-based musicians\, Tania Gill (piano) and Kayla Milmine (soprano saxophone) bring poet Judith Malina and composer Steve Lacy’s 1995 “Packet” suite to life through sound and movement. These audacious new arrangements blur the lines between what is heard and what is seen. Heart-felt\, yet unsentimental\, these eight songs hold no punches as they bring voice to a woman’s later life\, grappling with imperfection\, sexism\, paradox\, grit\, beauty\, regret\, invisibility\, death\, and love. \nIn Sarah Belle Reid’s improvisations and compositions\, musical notation is often experimental and graphical—an invitation to explore a new sonic universe. This spirit for exploration has led her to collaborate with musicians and artists of all genres\, including experimental electronic musician David Rosenboom\, thereminist Carolina Eyck\, and baroque-pop artist Julia Holter. Reid recorded trumpet and electronics on Holter’s 2019 record Aviary\, and recently wrapped up an extensive tour throughout North America\, Europe\, and Australia as a member of her band. Reid’s own compositions have been premiered and performed by a number of renowned musicians\, most recently pianist Vicki Ray and trumpeter Nate Wooley. In 2017 her composition “Flux” for amplified percussion quartet won the Grammy-nominated Los Angeles Percussion Quartet’s Next Wave Composer Initiative. \nMORE ABOUT THE PERFORMERS:\nSusanna Hood has devoted her career to synthesizing voice and movement\, creating intimate\, sensual and dynamic performances both in dance-theatre and improvised music contexts. Founder of her interdisciplinary performance company hum dansoundart (2000-2013) her work has been marked by significant collaborations with musical artists Nilan Perera (She’s Gone Away\, Shudder)\, John Oswald (Spinvolver)\, and Scott Thomson (The Rent – Musique de Steve Lacy\, The Muted Note – songs and dances setting the poetry of P.K. Page).  \nRecent creations (Music Is\, 2016\, and Impossibly Happy\, 2019) have been driven by her own musical compositions arranging voices\, instruments and movement. Other collaborations of note include Tortues Vapeur\, a duo with Montreal turntablist\, Martin Tétreault\, mixing turntables\, electronics\, synthesizers\, vocals and objects. (DAME’s Mikroclimat label\, 2019); a duo with Belgian bassist\, Peter Jacquemyn; and performances with the French trio Rrève Sélavy (Frédéric BBriet\, double bass; Nicolas Pointard\, drums; and Christophe Rocher\, clarinettes). Unpacked\, the first project with her trio with Toronto/Tkaronto musicians Tania Gill (piano) and Kayla Milmine (soprano saxophone)\, is a new arrangement and interpretation of the Packet suite by late American poet\, Judith Malina and late American jazz composer\, Steve Lacy. unPacked will be released as a recording in early 2024 on Quebec’s DAME label. Awards include the 1998 K.M. Hunter Emerging Artists Award in Dance\, 2006 Dora Mavor Moore Award for Outstanding Performance in Dance\, and the 2008 Canada Council Victor Martin Lynch-Staunton Award for Outstanding Achievement in the field of Dance. For more information\, please follow this link to Susanna’s website. \nKayla Milmine loves the new and under-explored sonic possibilities that only the soprano saxophone can offer. Her unique approach has the edginess and brashness of Anthony Braxton and Roscoe Mitchell yet also a warmth and thoughtfulness reminiscent of Steve Lacy. In 2019\, Milmine released a solo album called ‘Straight Horn Magick; a mixture of field recordings and solo soprano saxophone improvisations. She plays regularly in trio form with pianist Bill Gilliam and percussionist Ambrose Pottie\, and in duo form with guitarist/composer Brian Abbott in their band FASTER. In February 2019\, she was invited to record with celebrated bassist\, William Parker in a chamber-improv sextet in NY\, where she often travels to study with mentor/collaborator\, Sam Newsome. She is presently composing for her new project\, the ‘Kayla Milmine Quartet’ with aforementioned Sam Newsome\, and drummers Mark Ferber and Rachel Housle. She is co-founder of the Women From Space Festival in Toronto. \nToronto-based pianist and composer Tania Gill has spent over twenty years cultivating a singular but polymorphous musical approach. She has developed a distinctive improvisational language in jazz and improvised music\, playing in ensembles such as the Brodie West Quintet\, Chris Banks Trio\, The Titillators\, See Through Trio and Rebecca Hennessy’s Makeshift Island. Her own group\, the Tania Gill Quartet\, comprises leading Canadian musicians Lina Allemano (trumpet)\, Rob Clutton (bass)\, and Nico Dann (drums). Their acclaimed disc Bolger Station (2010\, Barnyard Records)\, was nominated for best debut album in the Village Voice jazz critics’ poll and was included among the Globe and Mail’s top ten albums of the year. The follow-up\, Disappearing Curiosities\, launched in 2022 and was included on best-of-2022 lists in the Wire. Gill’s unconventional versatility keeps her engaged in an eclectic array of styles. She was a member of Deep Dark United and the Flying Bulgar Klezmer Band\, and is a regular collaborator to vocalist Fides Krucker\, and singer-songwriter Kyp Harness. She has also shared the stage with Steve Reich\, Man Forever\, Gord Downie\, Mary Margaret O’Hara\, the Weather Station\, Margaret Atwood\, and Charles Spearin’s Happiness Project\, and she has performed with dancers including Peggy Baker\, Andrea Nann\, Heidi Strauss and Laurence Lemieux. Tania is a supportive and dedicated educator and currently teaches at Humber College and the University of Toronto. Fore more information\, please follow this link to Tania’s website. \nSarah Belle Reid is a performer-composer who plays trumpet\, modular synthesizer\, and an ever-growing collection of handcrafted electronic instruments. Her unique musical voice explores the intersections between contemporary classical music\, experimental and interactive electronics\, visual arts\, noise music\, and improvisation. Often praised for her ability to transport audience members through vivid sonic adventures\, Reid’s sonic palette has been described as ranging from “graceful” and “danceable” all the way to “silk-falling-through-space\,” and “pit-full-of-centipedes” (San Francisco Classical Voice). \nReid holds a Doctorate of Musical Arts from California Institute of the Arts\, with a research focus on the development of new electronic instruments and musical notation systems as interfaces for exploring temporal perception and co-creation. Her debut album for trumpet and interactive electronics\, “Underneath and Sonder\,” was released on pfMENTUM in October\, 2019. In March 2024 she released a tape-music inspired electroacoustic record titled “MASS”\, featuring trumpet\, voice\, electronics\, and amplified objects\, on Aurora Central Records. \nIn addition to her performance and compositional work\, Reid runs an online music education company dedicated to teaching sound synthesis and electroacoustic composition to professional and hobbyist musicians. She has mentored thousands of musicians from around the world in her online programs\, and is a frequent guest lecturer at notable institutions in the US and Canada including Stanford University\, University of Victoria\, California Institute of the Arts\, New York University (NYU)\, among others. For more information\, please follow this link to Sarah’s website.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/live-improvlab-susanna-hood-trio-and-sarah-belle-reid/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events,Live @ImprovLab
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/IICSI_LiveSeries_17April24—social.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240412T090000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240412T153000
DTSTAMP:20240411T180619Z
CREATED:20240402T171806Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240411T180619Z
UID:14406-1712912400-1712935800@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:IICSI Research Studio Session\, Featuring Dr. Rashida K. Braggs' "Amber in the City of Light"
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Friday\, April 12 at 9:00 AM (ET) for IICSI’s “Research Studio Session\, Featuring a Keynote Presentation by Dr. Rashida K. Braggs: Amber in the City of Light”  \nThe morning will begin with Dr. Braggs’ keynote\, followed by presentations of student work through the rest of the day. \nThis event will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph. The keynote presentation by Dr. Braggs will be streamed online via Zoom\, the student portion will be in person only.\n \nTo attend the Keynote Portion of our day of research\, please RSVP via our Google Forms. The studio session and keynote presentation are free and open to all!  \nMore About the Research Studio Session:\nThe idea is to encourage grad students in the IMPR program and students/researchers working as research assistants with IICSI to present short (3-5 minute) descriptions of their improvisation-related research or work at an end-of-semester gathering of other students\, as well as IICSI team members\, staff\, and invited guests. \nInspired\, in part\, by the “Three-Minute Thesis” competition for grad students\, we hope that participants will respond to the challenge to present their work and its wider impact and implications in plain language in five minutes or less.\n \nKicking off the Research Studio Session will be a keynote presentation by Dr. Rashida K. Braggs (Africana Studies\, Williams College\, USA)\, entitled “Amber in the City of Light” which will begin around 9:00 AM (ET). Dr. Braggs’ presentation will be streamed online via Zoom. \nMore About The Keynote Presentation:\nDr. Rashida K. Braggs will screen and discuss Amber in the City of Light\, a solo multimedia performance that shares and re-envisions the experiences of Black African diasporic women jazz artists who have migrated to Paris\, France. Culling original interviews\, field notes and archival research\, Dr. Rashida K. Braggs enacts multiple narratives through an embodied performance that merges original song\, dance\, poetry and theatre. \nMore About The Presenter:\n\nDr. Rashida K. Braggs is a scholar-performer who acts\, dances\, sings\, composes music and performs spoken word. Jacob’s Pillow\, Williams College Museum of Art\, the Tapir Art Gallery and the United Solo Theatre Festival have featured her performances. She is also a Professor of Africana Studies at Williams College (Williamstown\, Massachusetts)\, a Fulbright Global Scholar\, and a co-recipient of a National Endowment of the Humanities Fellowship. The author of Jazz Diasporas: Race\, Music and Migration in Post-World War II Paris\, Rashida has also published in such journals as the Nottingham French Studies\, the Journal of Popular Music Studies and The Black Scholar. \n\nSchedule of Events:\n9:00 KEYNOTE: Rashida K Braggs (Africana Studies\, Williams College\, USA)\, “Amber in the City of Light” \n10:00 – 10:30 BREAK \n10:30 Nick Fraser\, “Smooth Operations: Composing Music for (Free?) Improvisers” \n10:45 Rachelle Myrie\, “‘The Spirit of the Thing’: Music\, Improvisation\, and Human Flourishing in African\, Caribbean\, and Black Communities” \n11:00 Taylor Graham (School of English and Theatre Studies\, University of Guelph)\, “The Blyth Festival Theatre and the Imagined Community of Rural Canada” \n11:15 Matthew Endahl\, “Holding Space for/in Ensemble Creativity” \n11:30 Kathryn Cobbler\, “Growing Intimate Conversations: Examining the Performer-Composer Connection of Music Improvisation” \n11:45 Jordan Zalis (Ethnomusicology\, Memorial University of Newfoundland)\, “Clouds of Probability: Improvisation as Effectuality in Spectacular Sports Theatre” \n12:00 noon – 1:00 lunch \n1:00 Aimée Dawn Robinson\, “Full Circle” \n1:15 Michael Bergmann\, Improvnetics: Post-anthropocentric performance and improvisational modes for human-AI play\, or: What we talk about when we talk about Intersentient empathy” \n1:30 Mike Hansen\, “When Does Noise Become A Sound?: Redefining Through Participatory Sound Art Practices” \n1:45 Sofia Boz (Pedagogical\, Educational and Instructional Sciences\, University of Padua\, Italy)\, “Jazz’n School” \n2:00 Bob Wiseman\, “The Black Box” \n2:15 Brent Rowan\, “Critical Hardware\, Software\, and Infrastructure Considerations for Telematic Musicking” \n2:30 annais linares\, “Arts-Based Kin Making: Co-creative Multispecies Accompaniment” \n 
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/iicsi-research-studio-session-2-0-featuring-dr-rashida-k-braggs-amber-in-the-city-of-light/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/IICSI-Research-Studio-Session.jpg
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240406T140000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240406T153000
DTSTAMP:20240319T145055Z
CREATED:20240319T145055Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240319T145055Z
UID:14380-1712412000-1712417400@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Pop Up Concerts @ ImprovLab - VoI. III: AJAY\, EMMA\, KATHRYN and jashen
DESCRIPTION:Please join us Saturday\, April 6th\, at 2:00 PM for the third in a series of small-scale\, largely acoustic Pop Up Concerts @ ImprovLab. \nVol. III:\nAJAY\, EMMA\, KATHRYN\,  and jashen \n(piano\, electric guitar\, loop pedal viola\, and trumpet) \nSubsequent ‘Pop Up Concerts’ will take place the first Saturday of each month\, @ ImprovLab (108 MacKinnon Building\, University of Guelph Campus)—the best sounding room in Guelph! \nAs always\, entry is free and our Pop Up series will remain low-key.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/pop-up-concerts-improvlab-voi-iii-ajay-emma-kathryn-and-jashen/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events,Pop Up Concerts @ ImprovLab
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/Pop-Up-Series-Vol-III-scaled.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240405T103000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240405T120000
DTSTAMP:20250415T185939Z
CREATED:20240403T120838Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20250415T185939Z
UID:14412-1712313000-1712318400@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Thinking Spaces: IICSI Postdoctoral Researchers\, "Same Place\, Same Time\, Different Stories: Creative Interpolations"
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Friday\, April 5\, at 1p:30 AM (ET) for Thinking Spaces: “Same Place\, Same Time\, Different Stories: Creative Interpolations” with IICSI Postdoctoral Researchers\, Rebecca Barnstaple\, Shelby Bohn\, and jashen edwards.  \n\nThis presentation will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph\, as well as online via Zoom. As always\, our Thinking Spaces events are free! \n\nMore about this talk:\nIn this improvisational play session\, current IICSI postdoctoral students (Rebecca Barnstaple\, Shelby Bohn\, and jashen edwards) will demonstrate and discuss ways their research intersects to inform new ways of sensing\, knowing\, and being. Weaving a tapestry of dance\, science\, and music\, our presentation will elucidate how multisensory perceptions may be formed and (re)formed via multidisciplinary approaches to creative arts. \nMore about the speakers:\nRebecca Barnstaple (PhD Dance Studies; Graduate Program in Neuroscience 2020\, York University) is the Manager of Community Initiatives\, Research and Innovation at Centre Communautaire Chigamik Community Health Centre\, Midland\, Ontario\, and an IICSI Postdoctoral Fellow\, University of Guelph. A graduate of the National Centre for Dance Therapy at Les Grands Ballets Canadiens (2015)\, she provides education and training in dance therapy and associated research globally. She has been involved in the development and delivery of improvisational arts and health initiatives in the United States (IMPROVment\, Wake Forest University) and Canada (SingWell\, Toronto Metropolitan University; Piece of Mind\, McGill; Dance for Health\, Nova Scotia) and serves in a leadership capacity for professional organizations including the Dance Movement Therapy Association of Canada (Accreditation and Certification Committee)\, the American Dance Therapy Association (Research and Practice Committee)\, and the International Association of Dance Medicine Science (International Benchmarking Standards Task Force\, Dance for Health Committee). Rebecca directs the Research to Practice Lab for ZOE School of Dance Movement Therapy in Basel\, Switzerland. \nDr. Shelby Bohn\, a post-doctoral researcher at #UofG and lead artist behind College Royal’s 100th-anniversary mural\, aims to bridge the gap between two disciplines that don’t often communicate with each other.\n \njashen edwards‘ research centers around students’ sonic lifeworlds – sound currents streaming at home\, school\, on the streets and cyberspace –examining how sonic encounters may be a conduit and catalyst for creative critical consciousness. Drawing upon the fields of archaeoacoustics\, sound studies\, and sensuous scholarship\, his work seeks to draw connections between music education and social justice arts education through the phenomenon of sound. He has worked in PK-12 schools\, colleges and universities\, juvenile detention centers and homeless shelters in San Francisco\, Oakland\, Chicago\, Berlin\, Deutschland and London\, ON. jashen has published and presented his research internationally and is co-founder of Sound\, Meaning\, Education (SME). Presently\, jashen is a in post-doctoral fellow at the International Institute for Critical Studies in Improvisation (IICSI). He has earned a Ph.D. in music education from Western University\, an MA in music education from Northwestern and a BA in music (composition) from the University of California\, Berkeley. \n\n\nTo attend the talk in-person or online\, RSVP via our Google Forms.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/thinking-spaces-iicsi-postdocs/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events,Thinking Spaces
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/jpeg:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/04/Thinking-Spaces-postdocs.jpg
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BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240404T130000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240404T150000
DTSTAMP:20240212T141427Z
CREATED:20240212T135727Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240212T141427Z
UID:13994-1712235600-1712242800@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:ImprovLab Open House Sessions\, April 4
DESCRIPTION:Please join us for a schedule of Thursday afternoon (1–3 pm ET) ImprovLab Open House Sessions! The sessions will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph. Bring any instrument and be ready to improvise! \n\nThe full schedule is as follows: \nFebruary 8th (Electronic Music Session); immediately following Thinking Spaces: Colin Harrington \nFebruary 29th \nMarch 7th \nMarch 21st \nApril 4th \nApril 18th \nMay 2nd \nHope to see you there!
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/improvlab-open-house-sessions-april-4/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events,ImprovLab Open House Sessions
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/02/IICSI_OpenHouse_W242.png
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=America/Toronto:20240403T133000
DTEND;TZID=America/Toronto:20240403T150000
DTSTAMP:20240319T151108Z
CREATED:20240319T151108Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20240319T151108Z
UID:14342-1712151000-1712156400@improvisationinstitute.ca
SUMMARY:Campus Friends and IICSI present: "Sounds Like Us" - Final Performance
DESCRIPTION:Please join us on Wednesday\, April 3 at 1:30 PM (ET) for “Sounds Like Us” a Final Concert Performance by Campus Friends and IICSI.  \nThis performance will take place in person at ImprovLab\, MCKN 108 at the University of Guelph. This special concert event is free and open to all! \nMORE ABOUT THIS EVENT:\n“Let’s make it up as we go along!” \n“Sounds Like Us”—presented by the International Institute for Critical Studies in Improvisation (IICSI) and the Campus Friends (CF) program—brings professional musicians into collaboration with community members of varying developmental and physical needs through a series of fun and playful improvisation-based workshops.  \nThis event celebrates a semester of music and community making with a final public concert!\n \nMORE ABOUT THE PERFORMERS:\nCampus Friends is an initiative that offers post-secondary experiences on the University of Guelph campus to adults with varying developmental and physical needs. \nA partnership between Community Living Guelph Wellington and U of G’s Experiential Learning Hub\, this program has run on campus since 2016. Twelve participants take part each year\, along with more than 20 mentors. \nTypically\, students attend Campus Friends one day per week during the year for up to three years. They take part in activities including academic and learning opportunities\, volunteering\, athletics and special events. \n“Sounds Like Us” draws upon IICSI’s 12+ years of co-running “Play Who You Are” workshops with KidsAbility that have offered all participants—from new musicians to the very experienced; from music afficionados and scholars to first-time listeners—revelations about the links between music and community-making\, improvisation and individual/community well-being\, sound and self-expression.
URL:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/event/campus-friends-and-iicsi-present-sounds-like-us-final-performance/
LOCATION:ImprovLab\, MacKinnon Room 108\, 87 Trent Lane\, University of Guelph\, Guelph\, Ontario\, N1G 1Y4\, Canada
CATEGORIES:IICSI events
ATTACH;FMTTYPE=image/png:https://improvisationinstitute.ca/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/IICSI_SoundsLikeUs_24—social.png
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