#Florian Stoffner
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diyeipetea · 6 years ago
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INSTANTZZ: Seis Dúos (II), Albert Cirera & Florian Stoffner, Tom Chant & Paloma Carrasco López i Yasmine Azaiez & Sarah Claman (Can Balmes, MontMusic Festival 2018 -Les noves músiques al Montseny- Santa Maria de Palautordera -Barcelona-. 2018-10-20 y 21) [II] [Galería fotográfica]
INSTANTZZ: Seis Dúos (II), Albert Cirera & Florian Stoffner, Tom Chant & Paloma Carrasco López i Yasmine Azaiez & Sarah Claman (Can Balmes, MontMusic Festival 2018 -Les noves músiques al Montseny- Santa Maria de Palautordera -Barcelona-. 2018-10-20 y 21) [II] [Galería fotográfica]
Por Joan Cortès.
Fecha: Sábado, 20 y domingo, 21 de octubre de 2018
Lugar: Can Balmes (Santa Maria de Palautordera -Barcelona- )
Grupos: Albert Cirera & Florian Stoffner (sábado) Albert Cirera, saxo tenor y soprano Florian Stoffner, guitarra Tom Chant & Paloma Carrasco López (domingo) Tom Chant, saxo tenor y soprano Paloma Carrasco López, violoncello Yasmine Azaiez & Sarah Claman (domingo) Yasmine…
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osanecif · 6 years ago
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Paul Lovens & Florian Stoffner no Museu Machado de Castro
FOTO DR – JOÃO DUARTE
Paul Lovens & Florian Stoffner assinalam amanhã (dia 30 de abril) o Dia Internacional do Jazz em concerto no Museu Nacional de Machado de Castro (MNMC), uma parceria com o Jazz ao Centro Clube (JACC). A atuação realiza-se pelas 19H00, neste museu.
Paul Lovens (baterista) e Florian Stoffner (guitarrista) mantêm uma ligação musical há mais de 10 anos, com percursos paralelos reconhecidos no jazz europeu.
O concerto insere-se nas comemorações do 16º aniversário do JACC; é co-organizado pela Casa Municipal da Cultura, Clube UNESCO Coimbra: Arte, Património e Comunidade, Conservatório de Música de Coimbra e Museu Nacional de Machado de Castro.
A entrada é livre.
O conteúdo Paul Lovens & Florian Stoffner no Museu Machado de Castro aparece primeiro em Diário As Beiras.
Paul Lovens & Florian Stoffner no Museu Machado de Castro
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freethejazzblog · 6 years ago
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Free The Jazz #87 [for Campbell Kneale]
1 - Mette Rasmussen / Tashi Dorji - Cattail Horse / Bull Rush (from "Mette Rasmussen / Tashi Dorji", 2018 Feeding Tube)
2 - Friends & Neighbors - Triste Anno 06 (from "No Beat Policy", 2011 Øra Fonogram)
3 - Bad Luck - Bends (edit) (from "Four", 2018 Origin)
4 - Hearts & Minds - Electroradiance (from "Electroradiance", 2018 Astral Spirits)
5 - Fredrik Nordström - Fake Face (from "Needs", 2018 Clean Feed)
6 - Kawabata / Nakatani / Chou - Punam (from "Perigee", 2017 Astral Spirits)
7 - Hideto Kanai Group - April Song For Kanai, Zui-Zui-Zui-Du-Tubadaba (edit) (from "Q", 1971 Three Blind Mice)
8 - Kahil El'Zabar - Magg Zelma (edit) (from "The Ritual", 1986 Sound Aspects)
9 - Florian Stoffner / Albert Cirera - Irma VIII (from "I'm A Resonant Aircraft", 2018 Creative Sources)
10 - José Lencastre Nau Quartet - I (from "Eudaimonia", 2018 FMR)
11 - Merzbow / Balázs Pándi / Mats Gustafsson / Thurston Moore - Cuts Out (edit) (from "Cuts Up Cuts Out", 2018 RareNoise)
Hear it first on 8K Sundays 11amNZT (Saturdays 10pmGMT)
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65fenmusicseries · 8 years ago
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Summer 2017 Hiatus
Dearest friends of 65Fen Music Series. We will be taking the summer of from our Monday night curation as we relocate to a new venue. The current space at 65 Fenimore Street will not be able to host shows after May 15, so we have a search on our hands to continue the series. Michael & Teddy at 65 Fenimore have been awesome and nothing but supportive along the way, and we cannot thank them enough for all they’ve done for us. We fully intend to return in September as good as new. Thank you for the amazing support over the last 2+ years--the series has grown beyond our expectations thanks to a ver supportive fan base. There are still FOUR great shows in the current space, so please come out and support. It would be great to play for all of your smiling faces. Here’s what we have lined up:
April 24 2017 (curated by Jean Rohe)
9:00pm: Anna Roberts-Gavalt Solo (voice/guitar/banjo)
10:00pm: Bev Grant (voice/guitar)
May 1 2017 (curated by Adam Hopkins)
9:00pm: Mears / Tolimieri Duo -Jason Mears (reeds) -Quentin Tolimieri (keyboard)
10:00pm: Roberts / Hoffman / Hopkins Trio -Hank Roberts (cello) -Christopher Hoffman (cello) -Adam Hopkins (bass)
May 8 2017 (curated by Caroline Davis)
9:00pm: Maria Neckam (voice)
10:00pm: Loosh -Lucia Stavros (harp/vocals)
May 15 2017 (curated by Jake Henry)
***PLEASE NOTE: this will be our last show at 65 Fenimore Street, and we will be on hiatus for the summer. Returning in the Fall in a new location.
9:00pm: Elgar -Florian Stoffner (guitar) -Hans Koch (baritone saxophone) -Lionel Freidl (drums) -Leila Bordreuil (guest, cello)
10:00pm: Henry / Ali Duo -Jake Henry (trumpet) -Sean Ali (bass)
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dustedmagazine · 20 hours ago
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Dust Volume 10, Number 11
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Photo of Alan Licht by Stu Lax
One of the oddest, most disturbing developments in recent years is the devaluation of expertise. If a souped up auto complete program can write a screenplay, who needs writers? If scientific guidelines about how to stave off a plague make us angry or confused, who wants them? Anybody can be anything, given enough cash in their pockets, thought, evidence and fact be damned. So, it is somewhat unfashionable that Dusted continues to seek out artists who are good at what they do, whether they are conservatory trained or DIY, steeped in historical tradition or trying something new. Our monthly Dust highlights another batch of them. Bill Meyer, Andrew Forell, Tim Clarke, Jennifer Kelly, Jonathan Shaw, Ian Mathers and Bryon Hayes contributed.
John Butcher / Florian Stoffner / Chris Corsano — The Glass Changes Shape (Relative Pitch)
This autumn, English saxophonist John Butcher celebrated his 70th birthday. For the occasion his fellow musicians donned t-shirts proclaiming, “You can only trust yourself and the first ∞ John Butcher albums.” Yes, he puts out quite a few, and no, I’m not up to date. The completist’s task is even more daunting when one considers just how much music is packed into each of the nine improvisations on this concert recording, his second with guitarist Florian Stoffner and percussionist Chris Corsano. Timbres, volumes and modes of attack change from second to second, living up the album’s title; not even the music’s form I fixed. No one’s resting on laurels here. Corsano plays with rare spaciousness, and Butcher often seems to be playing up the contrasts between his horns’ tonal fluidity and the jagged edges of Stoffner’s contribution. Pardon the paradox, but each track is a subdivision of ∞, and there’s no end to the time you could spend getting profitably lost in one.
Bill Meyer
Cybotron — Parallel Shift (Tresor)
in 2019, legendary Detroit producer Juan Atkins rebooted his 1980s electro project Cybotron with Laurens van Oswald (nephew of Basic Channel founder Moritz) and Tameko Williams (Detroit In Effect). Atkins takes the technological matrices of his hometown’s now largely defunct manufacturing plants and Kraftwerk’s “Autobahn” and twists them through an afro-futurist wormhole. The trio’s latest 12” single “Parallel Shift” sets Atkins’ robotic vocals and lockstep machine beats against melodic synths and warm bass tones. As Atkins insists on a “parallel shift”, smuggled elements of Clintonesque funk and drifting reverie suggest subversion of strictly linear time. The B-side “Earth” is a more straightforward piece of electro with the emphasis on syncopation. The track flickers with sci-fi synths as Atkins posits human rhythms as a form of cosmic consciousness. Volume up and eyes closed, you will be transported.
Andrew Forell
Dean Drouillard — Mirrors and Ghosts (self-released)
This instrumental solo album by Canadian guitarist Dean Drouillard is a series of hazy noir scenes. At its brightest and most melodic, as in “Portland” and “Gorgasuke,” it’s reminiscent of the vivid, playful miniatures of Opsvik & Jennings’s A Dream I Used to Remember. Elsewhere, the album is decidedly more atmospheric and ambient, akin to the widescreen explorations of Daniel Lanois’s Flesh and Machine. The album’s largely introspective nature is no surprise when you learn Drouillard played and recorded all the instruments himself. His guitar playing in particular is evocative and tastefully restrained. At once intimate and widescreen, Mirrors and Ghosts feels both eerily melancholic and gently uplifting.
Tim Clarke
Fievel Is Glauque — Rong Weicknes (Fat Possum)
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Though Fievel Is Glauque are technically a duo — songwriters Zach Phillips (Blanche Blanche Blanche) and Ma Clements on keys and vocals, respectively — for new album Rong Weickes they assembled a crack team of six other players. Musicians on drums, bass, electric guitar, woodwinds and brass flesh out a dizzyingly complex and gratifyingly daft soundworld. Think 1970s prog-folk; think Napoleon Murphy Brock–era Frank Zappa; think Julia Holter spiraling down a jazz-fusion black hole. Rong Weicknes is a LOT. Tellingly, many of the album’s most accessible songs, including singles “As Above So Below” and “Love Weapon,” plus the beautiful and relatively calm “Toute Suite,” arrive early in the track list. Opener “Hover” is perhaps the best example of the band’s bonkers “live in triplicate” working method, in which multiple takes are stacked one on top of another, then chiseled down to reach a final mix. It’s chaotic, like multiple candy-colored Escher staircases spiraling off in different directions at once. In this realm of music-making, too much is never enough, and the line between virtuosic brilliance and over-the-top absurdity bends and blurs. Given the chaos is cumulative, listening to the album from front to back tends to result in ear fatigue during the second half, no matter how many brave attempts it takes to tackle it all in one go.
Tim Clarke
Helena Hauff — Multiplying My Absurdities (Tresor)
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Hamburg DJ and producer Helena Hauff’s debut EP for Tresor is three tracks of full-on throwback acid trance. Expertly structured over 22 minutes of build, crescendo and release, Hauff combines thumping beats and bass tones with a detached darkwave cool and a healthy smear of analogue soot. Think Roland drum machines & 303 bass, squelching synths, arpeggio runs and all nature of odd grimy ghosts grumbling in the machines. Hauff reaches her apotheosis on “Punks in the Gym”, named for an Australian rock climb known as the hardest in the world (and now closed as an Indigenous Heritage site). It starts hard, with the bass in the red zone and the drums not far behind, and arpeggiated synths screaming like a drill sergeant. The plateaus, when they come, are mere toeholds for the next ascent. It’s a relentless, punishing piece. And when, near the end, Hauff drops everything but the kickdrum, it’s like watching the sun rise at an outdoor rave to, hearing nothing but your beating heart.
Andrew Forell
Rafael Anton Irisarri — Façadisms
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Rafael Anton Irisarri creates music with the grandeur of a vast, wasted landscape. He brings his experience as a mastering engineer to bear on all his recordings, rendering them dense and immersive, stacked high with thick waves of guitar and synthesizer tone. Façadisms is no exception and features two highlights. “Control Your Soul’s Desire For Freedom” features searing cello from Julia Kent and angelic vocals by Hannah Elizabeth Cox, and “Forever Ago is Now” features string arrangements from T.R. Jordan, which carry the album’s most anthemic chord progression. Façadisms’ blasted textures are never less than compelling, but these tracks are twin peaks within the record’s glowering sonic geography.
Tim Clarke
Charlotte Jacobs — Atlas (New Amsterdam)
Charlotte Jacobs’s songs are a little shy. They lurk in corners and grow up from cracks. They venture fluidly out of empty space, eddying and cascading through echoing caverns, with just a little glitch beat or a surge of synth tones to ground them. Jacobs is a conservatory Belgian composer and singer here making her first solo album. Her voice comes in breathy flutters, a little like Mirah at her most acoustic and spare, but she hedges that fragile bloom in masses of digital sound. A devotee of Ableton, she makes the synth sound like all kinds of instruments, a quacking oboe in “Celeste,” a ghostly choir in CYTMH.” Records seldom sound simultaneously this bare and this layered. There are many elements in play, but all scrubbed clean and hemmed in by silence.
Jennifer Kelly
Alan Licht — Havens (VDSQ)
With Havens, Alan Licht flips the attack-decay-sustain-release envelope of the guitar on its head, folding notes and chords over each other in waves. He does this with a heft to his tone, so that chord progressions become waterfalls and melodies emerge like vine-like shoots, growing in many directions simultaneously. Licht’s songs mesmerize with repetition, but the tones resonate such that they fold back on themselves, creating entirely new patterns for us to discern. The cover art reflects his steel string sorcery, as a dull-colored house surrounded by twilit swirling clouds emits beams of red, yellow, and orange light from its many orifices. A variety of energy levels and frequencies are represented here, and they reveal themselves in surprising ways. Throughout his career, Licht has straddled the worlds of indie rock and the avant-garde, and Havens tugs at both sides, creating a new universe entirely: one where resonance rules over everything else.
Bryon Hayes
Longobardi + Cecchitelli — Maloviento (LINE)
Italian sound artists Ernesto Longobardi and Demetrio Cecchitelli create minimalist environmental works built from droning sub-oscillations that emerge from a haze of white noise. The four pieces on Maloviento, titled by duration, are arctic. Slow, evocative of shifting ice and wind swirling across bleak landscapes.. 14’24” is frigid amalgam of staticky cracks and sheets of white noise that rise and fall with increasing intensity. The duo intersperses these with sounds of dripping stalactites and pings of some distant beacon signaling into the abyss. It immerses the listener in an alien and alienating environment in which you find yourself clinging to these noises as the only way to get your bearing. 21’18” is slightly kinder. More recognizably human sounds emerge. Breath labored by cold, a trudge of footsteps and a muttering voice culminating in the introduction of a flute. Tentative at first, it gathers strength and warmth before being absorbed into the ice. Riveting stuff.
Andrew Forell
Man/Woman/Chainsaw — Eazy Peazy (Fat Possum)
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Young London sextet Man/Woman/Chainsaw emerged from the scene that includes bands like Black Midi and Black Country, New Road with whom they share a similar omnivorous musical DNA. Vocalists, bassist Vera Leppanen and guitarist Billy Ward have been playing together since they were 14. Now approaching 20, and joined by contemporaries Emmie-Mae Avery on keys, violinist, Clio Harwood violin, Ben Holmes on guitar and drummer Lola Waterworth, M/W/C play punk infused theatrical rock, not quite as knotty as their near contemporaries, but fully embracing the chaotic energy of musicians pushing themselves to fit all their ideas into songs that dance delicate and furious. The acutely observed kitchen sink dramas of “The Boss” and “Sports Day” burst from the speakers, withering in word, and balanced by Harwood’s sawing violin and Avery’s delicate keys. Leppanen a powerhouse on the former, Ward all snarling self-deprecation on the latter. In contrast “Grow A Tongue In Time” is almost dainty with its curlicue of violin, bass, and keys tempered by Leppanen’s rasp that speaks of a desperate frustration echoed in the washes of cymbals that swarm towards the end. A band with space to grow and one to watch out for.
Andrew Forell
The Modern Folk — Primitive Future III (Practice)
This expansive collection spans 20 songs and nearly as many years for the folk centric but ambi-curious guitarist Joshua Moss (who, full disclosure, recently started writing for Dusted). His music here takes many forms, from the blues rock chug of “Shiver Shaker,” which could pass for an alternate universe outtake from Jon Spencer’s Heavy Trash to the cosmic twang of “Hippy Sandwich,” running closer to Ripley Johnson’s Rose City Band or the Heavy Lidders or whatever Matt Valentine is doing this week. There’s room, too, for lucid, radiant blues-folk picking, twined with bowing in “Braided Channels” or abetted in shimmery gossamer by Jen Powers on dulcimer on “You’ll Have That,” or left to strike out unadorned on luminous (and aptly titled) “Subdued.” Some artists try something different to prove they can. Moss lets the change grow out of old roots, supple, green and lovely. One other item of note: all proceeds are earmarked for hurricane relief.
Jennifer Kelly
Paprika — S/T (Iron Lung)
Paprika had already released the excellent, caustic Let’s Kill Punk LP this year, so this new EP is an unexpected November surprise. Are you thankful? It’s pungent and nasty stuff — Paprika sounds like the grittiest elements of NYC punk rawk, c 1976, partying with the hepped-up hardcore of Government Issue or Dirty Rotten EP-period DRI. If that sounds like fun, it sort of is, if you can listen past the nihilistic sentiments expressed in tunes like “Catatonic Pisser” and “Wasting Time.” This reviewer especially likes the self-lacerating qualities of “Supply Chain Wallet,” which explores the ways in which even filthy, greasy punks have a variety of fashion sense, implicating them in capital’s machinery. The band is more direct: “I’m chained to my wallet / Don’t you fuckers know? / Money is dirt.” Word.
Jonathan Shaw
Rock Candy — Swimming In (Carbon)
Rock Candy is Krysi Battalene (Mountain Movers, Headroom) and Emily Robb. Both are guitarists of just renown who, if they decided to open up an optical shop, would specialize in third-eyewear. Together, they refrain from six-string calisthenics in order to focus on nuanced expressions of motion. “Swimming In” is all about drift, albeit with enough surface tension for a stuttering guitar figure to loom over the undulating organ-scape. “Across A Mirage” sets slide vs. reverb, each fighting for footage on a mechanical Clydesdale beat. The cost of vinyl being what it is, some folks might question the point of picking up singles. This year, Rock Candy is the angle that dispels such faithless notions.
Bill Meyer
Sif — Aegis of the Hollowed King (self released)
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If you were going to make solo instrumental doom metal about video games, Dark Souls is certainly one of the few that feels like it actually fits. What makes the second LP from New Orleans-based Sif work as well as it does, though, is how much Aegis of the Hollowed King engages with what’s actually compelling about the FromSoftware series beyond any surface level trappings of swords, monsters and boss fights. Here focusing on what even they admit is an “understandably maligned masterpiece,” Dark Souls II, these four tracks don’t try to overwrite the game’s fantastic actual soundtrack (by Motoi Sakuraba and Yuka Kitamura). Instead they invoke how much of the experience of painstakingly making your way across Drangleic is suffused with melancholy horror (yes, occasionally leavened with moments of brutally-won success). That atmosphere has been translated into a doom metal idiom, but that just means even the most elegiac elements here continue to crush.
Ian Mathers
Sulida — Utos (Clean Feed)
The phrase “good old-fashioned free jazz” could be applied to this Norwegian trio’s album, no disrespect intended and none dealt. Marthe Lea’s gruff tenor sax balances the unbridled emotion and considered poise of Ayler and Tchicai, and Jon Rune Strøm and Dag Erik Knedal Anderson negotiate points of structure vs. flow in ways that would do Hopkins and McCall proud. There are also moments that bring to mind Don Cherry if he had given full allegiance to the Swedish woods instead of the world. And yet, the character of each musician shines through, so that this music feels alive rather than merely reanimated. Ready to rumble by unfailingly lyrical, Utos is a friend in unfriendly times.
Bill Meyer
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diyeipetea · 7 years ago
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INSTANTZZ: Duot + Florian Stoffner (Cicle de Música Improvisada, Espai Eat Art / Fundació Lluís Coromia, Banyoles -Girona-. 2017-11-19) [Galería fotográfica]
INSTANTZZ: Duot + Florian Stoffner (Cicle de Música Improvisada, Espai Eat Art / Fundació Lluís Coromia, Banyoles -Girona-. 2017-11-19) [Galería fotográfica]
Fecha: Domingo, 19 de noviembre de 2017
Lugar: Espai Eat Art / Fundació Lluís Coromina (Banyoles –Girona-)
Grupo: Duot + Florian Stoffner Albert Cirera, saxos tenor y soprano Ramon Prats, batería Florian Stoffner, guitarra
Tomajazz: Joan Cortès, 2018
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diyeipetea · 7 years ago
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DUOT + Florian Stoffner: gira España - Suiza (Noviembre 2017) [Noticias]
DUOT + Florian Stoffner: gira España – Suiza (Noviembre 2017) [Noticias]
Gira DUOT (Albert Cirera y Ramon Prats) con el guitarrista suizo Florian Stoffner. Del 16 al 23 de noviembre de 2017 Fechas y lugares. Jueves 16. Juan Sebastian Bar, Huesca. España, 22:30 Viernes 17. La Bastida, Igualada, Cataluña – España, 22:30 Domingo 19. Espai Eat Art, Banyoles, Cataluña – España, 18:30 Lunes 20. Robadors 23, Barcelona, Cataluña – España, 20:00 Martes 21. Misterioso Jazz…
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diyeipetea · 7 years ago
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HDO 337. Improvisando aquí y allá... Léandre - Minton, Freenetics, Noble - Silver, Gallardo... [Podcast]
HDO 337. Improvisando aquí y allá… Léandre – Minton, Freenetics, Noble – Silver, Gallardo… [Podcast]
La entrega 337 de HDO está centrada en propuestas cuyo factor común es transitar por terrenos de la improvisación. Suenan Léandre – Minton (Joëlle Léandre – Phil Minton; FOU Records, 2017); Underground PM (Freenetics: Ferrán Besalduch, Joan Antoni Pich, Pep Mula; Discordian Records, 2017); Home (Steve Noble, Yoni Silver; Aural Terrains, 2017); imatges (Jesús Gallardo; Liquen Records, 2017); Mein…
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