oto (again) @ {open} (again), with Chase Pagan, June 3, 2007

Posted on Thursday 7 June 2007

By Greggory Moore

I’ve already written two stories about oto for these pages (and one for the Gazettes), so scroll down for a fuller description (or just go to www.otosound.net or myspace.com/otosound to hear them for yourselves). On this night, it was Hiro (guitar), Boon (drums, guitar), and Tai (xylophone, melodica, percussion); with Rie currently taking on Japan-based Takeshi’s vocals/melodica/percussion (and ably—especially being that this was her first show!), and Chris taking on more percussion duties than ever. They were even joined by an additional guitarist for one number. As always, they were excellent; and the three new songs they played were perfect additions. oto has two shows Saturday (June 9th), an early-afternoon performance at the Long Beach Voices Festival (about which I know nothing), and an 8 p.m. set at Viento y Agua (4007 E. Fourth St.; (562) 434-1182)). These shows are free, and the band sells a four-song sampler for $2. Are you kidding me? Check them out—for them, for yourself.

I don’t know a lot of technical musical terms, so I don’t know if Chase Pagan is a soprano or not, but he’s got a really high voice that he employs with expressiveness and dexterity. He accompanied himself by turns on guitar and a piano-sounding keyboard, playing songs that are accomplished meldings of rock and showtune sensibilities to original effect. I don’t know if that’s a very good sentence, and I know this isn’t a great description. That’s partially because I lack anything to compare Pagan to. I do know Pagan is signed to Militia Group, and that if you go to www.chasepagan.com or myspace.com/chasepagan, you’re likely to hear something new.

{open} awaits you at 2226 E. Fourth St., www.accessopen.com, (562) 499-OPEN.

Greggory @ 4:54 am
Filed under: Uncategorized
Free Moral Agents @ {open} (2226 E. Fourth St.)

Posted on Friday 1 June 2007

By Greggory Moore

May 26 was {open}’s grand opening at its new location. The evening’s official start time was 7 p.m. At that time you couldn’t tell anything had started; there was just a small number of people milling about, hunched over books, etc. But soon DJ Pur One was set up and spinning, and a steady trickle of people was drip-dropping in from outside.

It got pretty damn social. It got packed. At some point Free Moral Agents was/were set up on a floor-level stage area.

The floor plan of this incarnation of {open} allows for more people too see a performer at one time. Good thing on this night.

This was the first time I’d heard the sextet; unless I die very soon, it is unlikely to be the last. Their original brand of echoic, organic trip-hop pleasantly heavy with effect-laden keys and guitar topped off with an ethereally moaning female voice is just a coolly textured groove. The songs all have a nice movement and get into extended jams (not solos) that never seem meandering. Their MySpace site (myspace.com/freemoralagents) lists as influences Massive Attack, Blonde Redhead, and Portishead, among others. This isn’t misleading, but you need to take into account a couple of those just-alluded-to (if you were fucking paying attention) others—Sonic Youth and Pixies—to get a fuller picture (even though they’re in no way reminiscent of these). Mix in a little reggae syncopation, and there you have it. Listen, never mind what I’m saying here—just check them out for yourself. There’s a new album coming out, apparently—don’t ask me. I said to check it out for yourself. If you’re too cool or uncool for MySpace, try www.freemoralagents.com.

{open} is doing what {open} always did. Get on their mailing list, poke your head in—why the hell wouldn’t you? They’re at 2226 E. Fourth St. (just west of Junipero and Portfolio). Online they’re at www.accessopen.com.

Greggory @ 4:37 am
Filed under: Events andMusic andReviews
Attention Given to the Result: A Conversation With Monica Fleming

Posted on Tuesday 29 May 2007

by Sander Roscoe Wolff

From her days playing drums on tour with 2 Unlimited (their big hit was Get Ready For This), music has always had an important role in the life of Monica Fleming. Right now, she’s preparing for her first solo gallery exhibition, titled Colour Music, which opens this Saturday, June 2nd, at the Steven Janssen Artspace in Palm Springs.

LBC: If you don’t mind, lets start with the show in Palm Springs. Can you tell me how this opportunity presented itself?

Monica: I had done a previous show with an artist I was impressed with, at a gallery on Melrose, a few years back and I was curious what he was up to so I ‘googled’ him and found out he was showing at the Janssen Artspace in Palm Springs. It looked like a compatible gallery, and opportunity, so I sent the gallery a link to my site.

LBC: Tell me about the show.

Monica: This is a really exciting show for me because, in this one, I am allowing my love of music to be presented as the main inspiration for why and how I do what I do. I can’t help but feel tremendously optimistic about the show. Steven Janssen has been so easy to work with, plus I get to ‘solo show’ my way into a new fresh market with some pieces I’m really excited about. I’ve been working since February on this show so I’m excited to share it.

(more…)

Sander Wolff @ 4:48 pm
Filed under: Art andCenterStage andEvents andPainting andPreviews
Everything Happens For A Reason: A Conversation with Joy Pearson of Neverwonder

Posted on Wednesday 2 May 2007

by Sander Roscoe Wolff

With a background in dance and musical theater, Joy Pearson is a natural and dynamic performer on stage. Her band, Neverwonder, has received critical acclaim, winning OCMA and SBMA awards, honors from Rockwired, and was included in Music Connection’s “Hot 100 Unsigned Artist” list. They’ve self-produced and released two full length CDs, and play ceaselessly. Not bad for a group that’s only been together for three years.

Joy: I really started to sing in college. I was a dancer growing up, but had injured my back touring in China and was looking for an option of performance that wouldn’t be as hard core on my body. I liked to sing in general and did a few musicals, so I started taking voice lessons and wound up getting a scholarship for college in musical theatre.

LBC: What were you doing exactly to tour in china?

Joy: I was a ballet dancer. I had been all my life. When I was 16 I auditioned for a tour that went to China, and was the youngest member to perform, along with some of the best dancers around the world. [It was a] very cool experience but, as I said, I fell and permanently injured my back.

(more…)

Sander Wolff @ 1:47 pm
Filed under: CenterStage
The Complete oto Live @ Portfolio (April 14, 2007)

Posted on Sunday 15 April 2007

By Greggory Moore

The band oto (scroll down a couple of stories for background) is a quartet, but only three members—Hiro, Boon, and Tai—live in the U.S. However, fourth member Takeshi is visiting from Japan this month to record and get in a few shows; and this night at Portfolio (a favorite performance space for oto) was the first.

These current shows are a rare chance to hear some of oto’s songs in fully-fleshed-out form, as Takeshi is the band’s primary vocalist (the Stateside trio generally eschew the vocals (the songs still work)); plus, his presence allows for dual keyboards/keyboard + xylophone when a song calls for it, as in his absence Tai can obviously do only one or the other (while Hiro plays guitar and Boon switches off between guitar and percussion).

oto is always very down to business: there’s no faux-witty stage banter, no attempts at “showmanship”; it’s just well-performed, elegant, airy music. The sound is always organic, from the human breath necessary to evoke sound from melodicas to the slap of Boon’s hands on the rattling box he uses for a stool. Takeshi’s presence led to more talk from the stage than ever—though from a band this lacking in garrulousness amounted to little more than mentions of their Websites and upcoming shows in San Diego (April 21 at Vinbladh’s, 4651 Park Blvd.) and Santa Ana (May 1 at the Gypsy Den, 125 N. Broadway).

For a couple of songs on this night they got a little extra help on percussion from friend Chris, who hosts a weekly Webcast radio show on KBEACH.org (Tuesdays 11 a.m.–1 p.m.; click on the “Listen Live” icon) and plugged the fact that he will be playing some oto this week.

As for oto themselves, do yourself a favor and go to www.otosound.net and/or myspace.com/otosound.

Greggory @ 2:32 am
Filed under: Uncategorized
{open}’s Soft Open: a Night in a New Space

Posted on Monday 9 April 2007

April 8th, 2007, 7–11 p.m. @ {open} (2226 E. Fourth St.)

By Greggory Moore

Perhaps simply powerless to resist the chance to ride “Resurrection” terminology, {open} held their soft opening April 8th, and apparently a lot of people in Long Beach felt that being there would be a good way to spend the end of Easter. Music, verse, the blood of Christ, communion, freshly-shelved books, &c.

The Blank Tapes (on this night, at least) was Matt Adams on ukulele and (then) guitar. His songs are straightforwardly presented and lack any sort of ostentation (thus giving the impression of there being even more simplicity than there actually is). His pop structures frame an understatement in the (more) airy (than breathy) vocal delivery, and the overall tunefulness is the kind of thing that would make it a surprise every single time you came across someone who didn’t find The Blank Tapes at the very least palatable. This is what the Top 40 might sound like if stripped-down music were king and affectation didn’t sell.

(Hear and find out about The Blank Tapes at www.theblanktapes.minus-world.net and/or myspace.com/theblanktapes.)

Derrick Brown can read his ass off. It would be very possible to find yourself enjoying his reading of a poem that you wouldn’t like on the page. (But since he can write, too…) Part of the reason why is that Brown stays in the moment; what comes out of his mouth is structured by the open book in front of him, but his words and eyes are often elsewhere—on where he is and what’s happening there. He’s in the room and not just a mouthpiece for channeling that abstract realm of “art” (you know, that “place” where idea(l), incorporeal versions of individual poems (etc.) would coexist with Platonic eidos). He’s not afraid to screw up, and he revels in the chance to gloss a line or strike upon a natural digression. Stopping just a few phrases into his second piece of the night, Brown didn’t make any effort to hide his delight in realizing, “I’m gonna have a lot of non sequitirs in [the reading of] this poem!” During one that was interrupted by someone having neglected to turn her cell to vibrate, after a failed attempt to get the caller on the line and on mic, Brown quickly recapped what he’d read and picked up just where he’d left off (something made workable by the fact that his poems are meaty, vivid, and compact enough that you’re actually taking in what he says). The first and last passages of Brown’s performance were sung, natural progressions to and from his spoken words, his low-key Chris Martin vocals emitting a wistfulness present in many of his lines (e.g., “I don’t know if I’m possibly in love / But I know that I love possibility”).

(Yes, it’s not a live reading, but still you may find it worthwhile to check out www.brownpoetry.com (wow, someone got lucky with his Web address); and everyone’s got a MySpace page (don’t you?), so there’s also myspace.com/brownpoetry.)

{open} has a new locus, but it appears it’s going to be business as usual—so, beginning April 17th, avoid the general area of Junipero and 4th (just a couple of doors west of Portfolio) if you detest an independent business ethos, music and words, an easygoing atmosphere, and artsy types. If you’re scared but curious, you can call (562) 499-OPEN for more info (or hang up if it’s too big a first step), or you can go to www.accessopen.com (or, of course, myspace.com/open) and get on their mailing list.

Greggory @ 5:22 am
Filed under: Uncategorized
All About oto (@ Viento y Agua on Sat., March 24)

Posted on Thursday 22 March 2007

By Greggory Moore

Perhaps you’ve had occasion to be out somewhere with no intention of hearing live music — instead just wanting to read, work, indulge in coffee and conversation — and to have felt that pang of annoyance when you realized a band was about to play. If you’ve been lucky, at least a few of those pangs have been pushed aside by the pleasure of a new discovery, a new shade finding a place in your personal musical spectrum.

It was one night near the end of 2006 while at Portfolio that the band oto (who plays Viento y Agua on March 24) afforded me such an experience. Three young men took to the stage with acoustic guitars, a tiny drum set, a decrepit portable organ, a melodica, and a xylophone. With their brand of quiet, spacious, tastefully simple artistry they sent an airy musical breeze throughout the coffeehouse that in a mere half-hour had blown through and blended back into the silence that is ever-present in the band’s compositions.

“(The name ‘oto’) doesn’t mean anything,” Hiro confesses, “it just looks nice.” oto formed less than 18 months ago — amusingly enough (if you’ve got a penchant for nerdy linguistic humor), from the remains of a band called “soto.” Hiro and Boon, along with Takeshi (who is still a member of oto, though he’s back in his native Japan), decided to change the sound from soto’s “more instrumental post-rock (to) more organic sounds.”

Hiro, 25, has lived in North America for the majority of his life, growing up in Ottawa before eventually graduating from UC Irvine with a degree in Computer Science.

Boon, 26, found himself enrolled in one of New York’s music universities even before he spoke much English. But the language barrier was not the one he found insurmountable. “College life was great,” he recalls, “but musically I had a hard time getting along with New Yorkers. … They had a different attitude and behavior toward artistic (things).” Since graduating and a return trip to Japan, he’s lived in Long Beach for the last two years, attending CSULB and majoring in Microbiology.

Tai, 21, made his way to Irvine Valley College straight out of middle school with almost no English. When Takeshi had to leave in September, Hiro recruited Tai to fill in. Tai’s musical experience had been limited to the melodica (an instrument that “every Japanese elementary-school student has to learn to play,” he reports), but he was thrilled with the opportunity, as he was a big fan of oto’s music. The lineup clicked, and oto soldiered on without missing a beat. Hiro says that the ideal live situation would be for Takeshi to return and for the band to perform as a quartet, but as it is Takeshi partakes in trans-Pacific electronic recording sessions (and in fact will be enjoying a short stay in the U.S. in April for more recording and possibly one of those ideal performances); and the three Stateside members are well able to execute oto’s delicate and haunting soundscapes.

The boys in oto seem almost painfully shy (“We don’t have many friends,” Hiro laughs. “I think we’re lacking social skills”), and so the band had no luck getting shows until they joined MySpace at the beginning of 2006. That, along with exposure on Internet music label creation-centre.com, paid immediate dividends, as venues began to seek oto out. Still, although they have played steadily since then (mostly in L.A. art galleries), they have taken gigs sparingly; and only now are they beginning to think about seriously seeking out a record label. The first step will be to add three finished studio tracks to the three they’ve completed, which will give them a six-song demo to shop around.

In the interim, oto is likely to continue to gain fans where-/whenever they play — a phenomenon to which Shea Gauer, who has featured oto at {open} (and hopes to do so again at the bookstore’s new location), enthusiastically bears witness. “It was one of those things where all these people kept telling me about (oto), because they were so surprised at how good the band was,” he says. “They would say, ‘Man, I saw this group at Portfolio — they were amazing!’ … I still get people telling me about how they happened to see this band that was really good: ‘They’re these Japanese guys…I didn’t catch their name or anything, but I love their sound.’ They’re like an unknown band, but they’re really coming up right now, which is exciting. … All these people around know who they are. … I play (their music) all the time in the shop. It’s one of those (discs) that stays in the CD changer, and I just put other things in around it.”

At 7:30 p.m. on Saturday, March 24, oto will play Viento y Agua (4007 E. Fourth St.; (562) 434-1182) — an intimate space for intimate music, something you should not miss. To get yourself in the oto loop, visit www.otosound.net and myspace.com/otosound.

(Note: this piece was originally printed in the Gazette Newspapers.)

Greggory @ 4:40 am
Filed under: Uncategorized
Underlying Consistencies: A Conversation With Betsy Lohrer-Hall

Posted on Friday 9 March 2007

Betsy Lohrer-Hall

by Sander Roscoe Wolff

Whether she’s breaking egg shells on the sidewalk or weaving used clothing into huge billowing shapes, Betsy Lohrer-Hall is constantly exploring her relationship with environment and community, and gently encouraging those who experience her work to examine their own ideas about things. Often process oriented, her work does not fit neatly into narrow categories, moving fluidly from conceptual to installation, from sculptural to collage, and even into video and performance.

Sander: Tell me about your contribution to Quiet Life: The Botanical World (at Santa Ana College at Santora).

Betsy: I have always been a nature lover and have made work over the years with and about plants, so sometimes people think of me when they are going to have an exhibition about plants. This time, Mayde Herberg contacted me about the show and I realized that my current life, sadly, is pretty distant from the natural world. I haven’t even gone camping in the last year or two. My project for the show is really about this distance that I feel between myself (all of us, really) and the natural world sometimes, and this can cause a lot of problems.

One of the things I do to make money is paint murals in peoples homes. I got to thinking about how we surround ourselves with symbols of the natural world (I often paint flowers and landscapes)… while we are decorating with natural images (on curtains, sofas, clothing, etc). In many ways the distance between cause and effect of our impact on nature is becoming increasingly obscure in our consciousness. A friend of mine recently noted that if we knew the true price of oil, we would realize that we couldn’t afford it – financially, morally, or environmentally. So, all this being said, my piece is called “Phytoplankton: My Deep Understanding and Intimate Experience with the Tiny, Tiny Plants of the Sea” and it is large scale, quite-probably-incorrect depictions of phytoplankton on shower curtains.

Sander: How does this relate to the feelings of distance?

(more…)

Sander Wolff @ 4:14 pm
Filed under: Art andCenterStage andMixed Media andVisual Art
Rare Local Performance of Female Tuvan Throat Singers

Posted on Wednesday 14 February 2007

Tyva Kyzy all-women throat-singers of Tuva Performing at Woodruff Community Church

Time and Date: 7:00 pm, Friday February 16th, 2007

Location: 3908 Woodruff Ave, in Long Beach, California

Admission: $10.00 to $20.00 (sliding scale at the door – no one turned away)

http://www.churchdog.org

Tyva Kyzy (Daughters of Tuva) will present a special Shagaa (Tuvan New Year!) celebration performance on Friday February 16th in Long Beach, CA.

These one of a kind musicians are the only all-female Tuvan folk ensemble in the world that perform the extraordinary art of throat-singing. The Republic of Tuva is located in extreme southern Siberia, and has been claimed by both China and the USSR simultaneously. Their distinctive music brings female harmonic vocal techniques together with the exhilarating and evocative sounds of throat-singing and traditional Tuvan instruments which imitate the sounds of nature. Their vividly textured songs fill audiences with energy and emotion and bring to life the traditions, stories and sonic landscapes of Tuva with humorous joy, nurturing sweetness and thundering power! Tyva Kyzy brings a breath of fresh air to the overtone rich melodies and natural rhythms of today’s Tuvan music; bringing a vital update to the vast and sacred culture of the Tuvan people and their intimate relationship with this earth and its sprit. Please support this wonderful group! and enjoy and evening of celebration and honoring prayer through music.

To learn more about Tyva Kyzy please visit them on the web:

www.tyvakyzy.com

For more information contact Gabrielle Weeks at 562-252-4196, or Richard Madeira of our LB Sister City Program, or Devan Miller @ 360-477-5445 , P.O. Box 515 , Port Angeles, WA 98362.

Sander Wolff @ 12:53 pm
Filed under: Culture andEvents andMusic andPreviews
New Local On-Line Media Outlet

Posted on Wednesday 14 February 2007

In what seems to be an endless parade of new websites dedicated to our fair city, The Long Beach Post has thrown their hat into the ring and, from the start, seem to have put together an interesting and diverse team of writers. For example, Josh Lowenthal penned a rather loving feature about the legendary and occasionally controversial John Morris, best known for Legends, Mums, and now Smooths.

Failed mayoral candidate Frank Colonna offers his insights into the inner workings of local politics, and wonders why our town can’t be the safest in California. Of course, law enforcement is his answer, rather than a substantive examination of the cause of local crime: poverty.

Failed 2nd District Council candidate Bry Myone contributes a spirit of political advocacy and tenacious watch-dog spirit to the Post, and Sé Reed, past EVAD president and co-owner of {open}, is the cultural operative, ready to shed light on the murky back-waters of arts and culture in her column All Together Now.

Co-publishers Robert Garcia and Shaun Lumachi bring a fresh and forward-looking energy to the Post. Garcia is on the faculty at CSULB where he teaches communication and mass media, and serves on the board of Children Today, an organization that raises funds to pay for day care for homeless children. Lumachi is the president of Chamber Advocacy, a professional consulting firm. Both are contributors to the Post.

The initial offering is a bit light, more of an introduction, really. If they can really get these folks to contribute substantive material on a regular basis, it may be just the thing our community needs. Here’s hoping.

Sander Wolff @ 12:08 pm
Filed under: Local Web Resources andMedia