Charlotte Hug and Guillermo Galindo: LIFT
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Practical Information:
Location:
730 Montgomery Street, San Francisco, CA 94111
Cost:
Free but RSVP required
After noted collaborations with NEXMAP and swissnex San Francisco in 2008, viola improviser Charlotte Hug, a Zurich-based mainstay of music's global avant-garde, returns to San Francisco this May to perform in the ROVA Saxophone Quartet's "Rovaté 2009" at the San Francisco International Arts Festival. In addition, Charlotte will celebrate the release of her duo album "LIFT", recorded last year in the Bay Area with Mexican composer, performer and sound architect Guillermo Galindo, with an exclusive concert performance by the Hug and Galindo duo at swissnex San Francisco. Schedule:
7:00pm Doors open 7:30pm Duo performance Charlotte Hug - Guillermo Galindo 8:45 - 10:00pm Mixer Digging into their respective cultural roots in an era of global culture, disconnection and constant migration, Hug and Galindo have acquired very distinctive but complementary musical vocabularies. This event is part of swissnex San Francisco's ongoing series of encounters at the crossroads of art and technology, made possible thanks to the support of the Swiss Arts Council, Pro Helvetia.
A virtuoso violist, visual artist and composer, she maximizes the use of extended performance techniques. Her 'soft-bow' (a viola bow whose hairs have been rendered completely slack) allows Hug to produce up to eight separate voices in her instrument at a given time, and is only one of many tools and techniques Hug uses to bring out the most in her instrument. Charlotte Hug also specializes in mixing the sounds of viola and voice to create her own unmistakably musical language: her unique singing style gathers a collection of regional European chants and blends with her string playing, as she mutters in tongues in an extremely personal and indistinguishable, invented language.
Guillermo Galindo's artistic work spans a wide spectrum of expression, from symphonic composition to the domains of musical and visual computer interaction, via electro-acoustic music, opera, film music, instrument building, three-dimensional installation work, live performance and sound design. His music has been performed and his works shown at major festivals and art exhibitions throughout the United States, Latin America, Europe and Asia. A composer by training, Galindo has over the years developed his own interactive - "cybertotemic," as he puts it - sonic device to channel his musical experiments. "MAIZ" is a cinetic sonic structure made from hybrid recycled industrial materials and found objects, sonorous bodies controlled by computerized means. A syncretic cyber sonic talisman, and a post-Native American instrument, it proposes an alternative approach to concrete music and the theories of qualitative listening proposed by French concrete music composer Pierre Schaeffer. |









