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New Works Calgary Artistic Director & friend of the show Rebecca Bruton stops by to discuss the upcoming New Works Calgary x Bug Incision co-production on October 27th at Highline Brewing featuring The Jessica Ackerley Trio, Cloud Circuit, and Nia Devetzis (playing Sarah Hennies)!Playlist: Geordie Greep - Through a WarMortimer, Be Quiet. - Half My Heart Left For St. John'sThe Bad Plus - French HornsJessica Ackerley - The dots are the connectionsCloud Circuit - Dream StreamZack Foley - Turn Out the StarsAstrocolor - Time InternalKim Gordon - Bangin' on the FreewayUnderground Wires - Dark ParkadeThe Brodie West Quintet - EntrainmentGoogle Earth - deep sea leaksSarah Hennies - Spectral MalsconcitiesHiatus Kaiyote - Cinnamon Temple
Shape+ is a series of mixtapes from artists of the international Shape Network. First episode comes to you from swedish based artist John Chantler. John shares some of his own recent work alongside a wide-ranging scan of Edition Festival festival archives with short excerpts from longer performances from each annual edition. The programme also includes releases from Fönstret, the label set up by the festival to formally surface material from the archives and promote local artists such as Lisa Ullén and Isak Hedtjärn. Tracklist: John Chantler — Small Fires (Version) John Chantler — Eli Licking Ice Marja Ahti — Touch This Fragrant Surface of Earth Ellen Fullman & Okkyung Lee — The Air Around Her Pt I Uday Bhawalker — Raga Jog Marginal Consort — Live Annea Lockwood — Immersion (performed by Sarah Hennies & Henrik Olsson) Joe McPhee & Graham Lambkin — Live Lisa Ullén — Fragrance John Chantler / Steve Noble / Seymour Wright — Day Two Edit Ikue Mori & Steve Noble — Live Isak Hedtjärn — Kvarplek Éliane Radigue — Occam Hexa IV Kommun — Ephemeralds [Ahmed] — Rooh (The Soul)
Episode 689: May 4, 2024 playlist: Chris Corsano, "I Don't Have Missions" (The Key (Became the Important Thing [and Then Just Faded Away])) 2024 Drag City Sarah Hennies, "Zeitgebers (performed by ensemble 0: Stephane and Julien Garin)" (Motor Tapes) 2024 New World Records Melt-Banana, "BuZZer #P" (Scratch or Stitch) 2022 Skin Graft Kristen Gallerneaux, "Bird Beat" (The McClintic Chorus) 2024 Shadow World Carlos Giffoni, "Saltos" (Dream Walker) 2024 Idiologic Organ Zola Jesus, "Into The Wild (live at the Bezirhane Chapel, Cappadocia, Turkey)" (Alive in Cappadocia) 2022 Sacred Bones Naemi, "Milau (with Zoe Darsee)" (Dust Devil) 2024 3 X L Pollution Opera, "Crisp Heart" (Pollution Opera) 2024 Danse Noire Weston Olencki, "I Went to the Dance (feat. Jules Reidy) excerpt" (I Went to the Dance (feat. Jules Reidy)) 2024 Long Form Editions Drumloop, "Limiting Mindset (excerpt)" (Limiting Mindset) 2024 Psychic Liberation Email podcast at brainwashed dot com to say who you are; what you like; what you want to hear; share pictures for the podcast of where you're from, your computer or MP3 player with or without the Brainwashed Podcast Playing; and win free music! We have no tracking information, no idea who's listening to these things so the more feedback that comes in, the more frequent podcasts will come. You will not be put on any spam list and your information will remain completely private and not farmed out to a third party. Thanks for your attention and thanks for listening.
On this episode of the Foxy Digitalis Podcast, sonic magician Valerio Cosi stops by from his studio in Southern Italy. His latest album, “The Aqueduct Walk,” is such a trip - across 40 minutes, it takes us into so many new worlds. It's such a delight, and I was thrilled to chat with him about it. It's out now Longform Editions. There's one hell of an album of the week from Batoh's new project, nehan. Plus love for the incredible collaboration from Mali Obomsawin and Magdalena Abrego, appreciation for Bobby Conn via Sarah Hennies' episode of Songs of Our Lives, new joints on The Jewel Garden, and more. Oh, and don't let me be such a downer, alright?! Alright.Album of the Week: an evening with nehanThis Week's Links:Valerio Cosi “The Aqueduct Walk”Valerio Cosi BandcampSarah Hennies on Songs of Our LivesMali Obomsawin & Magdalena Abrego “Greatest Hits”QNDFK on The Jewel GardenThe Capsule Garden, Vol 3.3: January 24, 2024Foxy Digitalis is an online music resource and organization promoting music in the margins with the idea that sound is for everyone. Originally founded in 1996 by Brad Rose, it has existed in multiple formats for nearly 30 years. Currently, it is an online music magazine, podcast network, and events producer based in Tulsa, Oklahoma.Send a voicemailFollow Foxy Digitalis:WebsitePatreonInstagramTwitterBlueskyMastodonThe Jewel Garden
For this episode of Songs of Our Lives, I invite Sarah Hennies on the show. We talk a bit about a couple of the many projects Sarah's working on right now - performances of Michael Ranta pieces and her duo with Tristan Kasten-Krause. I'm not sure there are many people with more happening! Once we get into the songs, the laughs start early and never stop as we talk about the Duke of Dukedom himself, Ivor Cutler's excellent use of fart noises, how Acetone was hiding in plain sight, the genius and divisiveness of Bobby Conn, how Daniel Romano avoided the Sub Pop curse, finally unlocking Arthur Russell, Souled American being the absolute greatest, and so much more!Listen to all of Sarah's picks HEREVisit Sarah Hennies' websiteThe Music of Michael Ranta & Sarah Hennies - Live at Roulette (Video)Metaphon website (for Michael Ranta recordings)Songs of Our Lives is a podcast series hosted by Brad Rose of Foxy Digitalis that explores the music that's made us and left a certain mark. Whether it's a song we associate with our most important moments, something that makes us cry, the things we love that nobody else does, or our favorite lyrics, we all have our own personal soundtrack. Join Foxy Digitalis on Patreon for extra questions and conversation in each episode (+ a whole lot more!)Follow Foxy Digitalis:WebsitePatreonInstagramTwitterBlueskyMastodonThe Jewel Garden
For this episode of Songs of Our Lives, I invite Sarah Hennies on the show. We talk a bit about a couple of the many projects Sarah's working on right now - performances of Michael Ranta pieces and her duo with Tristan Kasten-Krause. I'm not sure there are many people with more happening! Once we get into the songs, the laughs start early and never stop as we talk about the Duke of Dukedom himself, Ivor Cutler's excellent use of fart noises, how Acetone was hiding in plain sight, the genius and divisiveness of Bobby Conn, how Daniel Romano avoided the Sub Pop curse, finally unlocking Arthur Russell, Souled American being the absolute greatest, and so much more!Listen to all of Sarah's picks HEREVisit Sarah Hennies' websiteThe Music of Michael Ranta & Sarah Hennies - Live at Roulette (Video)Metaphon website (for Michael Ranta recordings)Songs of Our Lives is a podcast series hosted by Brad Rose of Foxy Digitalis that explores the music that's made us and left a certain mark. Whether it's a song we associate with our most important moments, something that makes us cry, the things we love that nobody else does, or our favorite lyrics, we all have our own personal soundtrack. Join Foxy Digitalis on Patreon for extra questions and conversation in each episode (+ a whole lot more!)Follow Foxy Digitalis:WebsitePatreonInstagramTwitterBlueskyMastodonThe Jewel Garden
When composer Sarah Hennies learned about a neurological theory called “motor tapes” from Oliver Sacks' book Musicophilia, the concept stuck with her for years. The theory comes from neuroscientist Rodolfo Llinás, who posited that many of our thoughts, memories, and physical movements operate via a series of “looping tapes,” with the goal of reducing the amount of energy the brain uses while doing common, repetitive tasks.The concept resonated with Hennies, who is also a visiting assistant professor of music at Bard College. Most of her compositions use heavy amounts of repetition, and Llinás' theory fit with how she experienced her own memories and the evolution of her identity. Her piece “Motor Tapes” premiered in early August, performed by Ensemble Dedalus.Hennies joins guest host and musician Dessa to talk about repetition in music, how to translate neuroscience into art, and what that pairing can reveal about our bodies and the world around us.Universe of Art is hosted and produced by D. Peterschmidt, who also wrote the music. Our show art was illustrated by Abelle Hayford. Support for Science Friday's science and arts coverage comes from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. Do you have an idea for a future episode of Universe of Art? Send us an email or a voice memo to universe@sciencefriday.com.
The Science Behind The Placebo EffectEarlier this month, a Food and Drug Administration panel concluded that a common decongestant ingredient used in drugs like Sudafed and NyQuil doesn't work. The panel agreed that while the ingredient, called phenylephrine, isn't dangerous, it doesn't work any better than a placebo.That made us wonder: How well do placebos work? And why do they work even when people know they're getting a placebo?Ted J. Kaptchuk, professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School and director of the Program in Placebo Studies and Therapeutic Encounter at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, joins guest host and musician Dessa to talk about what's new in placebo research. They discuss the benefits placebos can offer for chronic illness management, and when doctors might start using them in treatments. Where Technology Meets AbleismWith all the bad news on our feeds, a feel-good story can be a welcome reprieve. But what happens when that story comes in the form of coverage of disability technology?You might've seen the videos online of a person with a physical disability being fitted with an exoskeleton, essentially “wearing” a robot, to help them walk. Onlookers cheer in the background, dramatic music swells, and we get the sense we're watching something inspirational and empowering—a victory of the human spirit.This might seem like a triumph of scientific innovation, but our guest asks us to look again at what's actually going on in narratives like this one.Dr. Ashley Shew, associate professor at Virginia Tech, studies the intersection of disability and technology and how our collective fixation on these fancy, supposedly transformative gadgets could be doing more harm than good. In her new book, she coins the term “technoableism” to get to the heart of the matter.Guest host and musician Dessa talks with Dr. Shew about her book Against Technoableism: Rethinking Who Needs Improvement, about what disability technology is, what the future should look like, and even how disability intersects with space travel and climate change. Sour Times For Florida's CitrusFlorida is known for citrus, particularly its fresh-squeezed orange juice. But citrus trees in the state are struggling. For the last two decades, crops have been struck with a devastating disease called “citrus greening.” And Florida orange production has dropped some 94% over that period. Citrus greening is caused by an invasive insect, the Asian citrus psyllid, which is threatening to wipe out the citrus industry in the state. One of the effects of the disease is a bitter, acidic fruit. Scientists are hard at work devising possible solutions to save Florida's crop.Guest host and musician Dessa talks with Dr. Yu Wang, associate professor of food science at the University of Florida's Citrus Education and Research Center, about her recent advances in making infected orange plants sweeter. Making Neuroscience Into MusicWhen composer Sarah Hennies learned about a neurological theory called “motor tapes” from Oliver Sacks' book Musicophilia, the concept stuck with her for years. The theory comes from neuroscientist Rodolfo Llinás, who posited that many of our thoughts, memories, and physical movements operate via a series of “looping tapes,” with the goal of reducing the amount of energy the brain uses while doing common, repetitive tasks.The concept resonated with Hennies, who is also a visiting assistant professor of music at Bard College. Most of her compositions use heavy amounts of repetition, and Llinás' theory fit with how she experienced her own memories and the evolution of her identity. Her piece “Motor Tapes” premiered in early August, performed by Ensemble Dedalus.Hennies joins guest host and musician Dessa to talk about repetition in music, how to translate neuroscience into art, and what that pairing can reveal about our bodies and the world around us. To stay updated on all-things-science, sign up for Science Friday's newsletters.Transcripts for each segment will be available the week after the show airs on sciencefriday.com.
In this episode Alec & Nick revisit the periodic Musician's Friend series with a Drum Edition. Considering “drum” as an instrumental category that encompasses much of contemporary musical sound, aesthetics and cultural orientation, the episode navigates various histories and practices across a spectrum of percussive sound, recording and musical philosophy and inquires into the meanings of percussion in the 21st century. Topics include global historical reckonings with resonance, Sarah Hennies' composition and notion of queer percussion, James Tenney's “klang” concept, Stravinsky's Rite of Spring, exoticism in Western art music, the rhythmic properties of harmony, sample packs, electronic drumming workflows and more.
Seth Lorinczi returns! Sarah Hennies discusses persistence of vision and her reluctance to fully appreciate Kissing! Things quickly go ff the rails and into the unknown!
How we perceive sound on a psychological level as it unfolds over time is key to the sonic experiences that Sarah Hennies creates. Despite the extremely broad stylistic range of her output, everything from her early collaborative work as part of an experimental rock band to a multimedia documentary to extended duration solo and chamber music compositions for various instrumental combinations, it all shares a concern for extremely precise sonic gestures and involves a great deal of repetition. While Sarah Hennies prides herself on scores that are extremely economical (a score for a nearly 34-minute piece is a mere two pages), the sonorities feel extremely generous.
We listen back to an interview with Sarah Hennies, the composer of a piece called "Contralto." It's part music, part documentary, and it features the voices of transgender women.
The Brazilian variant of COVID-19, which caused a deadly spike in cases in that country, has been found in San Diego. Plus, California assemblyman Rob Bonta has been chosen to become the state’s next attorney general. Upon his appointment, Bonta would be the first Filipino American to occupy the position. And some doctors are seeing a disturbing spike in lethal alcoholic liver disease, especially among young women. Then, the pandemic has restricted the number of clinical placements available to nursing students in hospitals, forcing them to practice their skills instead on mannequins, virtual patients, or at home with relatives and even stuffed animals. Plus, "Contralto," is a groundbreaking work of experimental documentary filmmaking and music by composer and UC San Diego music alum Sarah Hennies. Finally, a new summertime anthem about Southeast San Diego was just released called “Southeast Summers.”
The first episode of the new year features new music from Kuzu (Dave Rempis, Tashi Dorji, Tyler Damon), the Cheater Slicks' Dana Hatch, Sarah Hennies & Andy Meyerson, Allen Ravenstine and much more...including a critical reassessment of the late Leonard Rossiter's television career. OK, not so much a critical reassessment as a gratuitous name-drop. I'm not being paid to talk.
Shahid shares his research on the amazing Sarah Hennies: a trans performer, composer, and filmmaker, with a studious and ready-to-learn Alice! Join us as we learn about her upbringing, as well as a few of her works and words on the intersectionality between her music and queer identity. Please go check her website out at sarah-hennies.com Works Discussed (all by Sarah Hennies): Contralto The Reinvention of Romance Falsetto Humming Suite Theater Piece Reservoir 2 ------------------------------------ Classical Queeros is a podcast that aims to spotlight queer composers and make classical music more accessible. Follow us on Instagram @classicalqueeros and Twitter at @classicalqueero! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/classical-queeros/support
Enjoying the show? Please support BFF.FM with a donation. Playlist 0′00″ Untitled by Arthur Russell on First Thought Best Thought (Audika) 2′06″ Ashioto by Tatsuhisa Yamamoto on Ashioto (Black Truffle) 23′08″ Al Cancello by Silvia Tarozzi on Mi specchio e rifletto (Unseen Worlds) 27′31″ The Reinvention of Romance (Sample 1) by Sarah Hennies on The Reinvention of Romance (Astral Spirits) 33′26″ River Dreams by Beverly Glenn-Copeland on Transmissions: The Music Of Beverly Glenn-Copeland (Transgressive Records) 37′39″ Music for "Lester" by Charles Curtis on Performances & Recordings 1998-2018 (Saltern) 40′52″ Oktober by Ellen Arkbro & Kali Malone on XKatedral Volume III (XKatedral) 54′53″ Everybody's Gotta Live by Love on Reel to Reel (High Moon ) Check out the full archives on the website.
Die Brainwashed - Radio Edition ist eine einstündige Show mit Musik von den Künstlern und Labels auf Brainwashed.com. 1. mHz, "Function 02" (Function) 2020 Important 2. Diane Cluck, "I Love You This Much" (Common Wealth) 2020 self-released 3. Beak, "Wulfstan (Live 2010)" (Wulfstan EP) 2010 self-released 4. Teleplasmiste, "Possessors of the Orb" (To Kiss Earth Goodbye) 2020 House of Mythology 5. Sally Anne Morgan, "Thread Song" (Thread) 2020 Thrill Jockey 6. David First and The Western Enisphere, "Scene 5" (The Consummation of Right and Wrong) 2020 Important 7. Nihiloxica, "Mukaagafeero" (Kaloli) 2020 Crammed Discs 8. Severed Heads, "Tiny Fingers" (Clean) 1981 Dogfood Production System / 2020 Dark Entries 9. Machinefabriek with Anne Bakker, "Schim" (Oehoe) 2020 Where To Now? 10. Sarah Hennies, "Lake (pianet version)" (Lake (Live in Toronto)) 2019 self-released * Sendung vom 14. Juni 2020 == Brainwashed - Radio Edition Email podcast at brainwashed dot com to say who you are; what you like; what you want to hear; share pictures for the podcast of where you're from, your computer or MP3 player with or without the Brainwashed Podcast Playing; and win free music! We have no tracking information, no idea who's listening to these things so the more feedback that comes in, the more frequent podcasts will come. You will not be put on any spam list and your information will remain completely private and not farmed out to a third party. Thanks for your attention and thanks for listening. * http://brainwashed.com
Seeming's frontman Alex Reed and I chat about the upcoming album, the making of it, and what avant-garde composer Sarah Hennies brought to the table by co-producing it with Alex. Alex is an extremely interesting individual to talk to: he has a PhD and teaches a variety of music related courses in Ithica, NY; He composes music for film, commercials and video games AND he's written two books. So, the guy is smart, and quite accomplished. SEEMING Instagram | https://www.instagram.com/seemingmusic/ Spotify | https://spoti.fi/3g9yAml
Episode 471: June 14, 2020 playlist: mHz, "Function 02" (Function) 2020 Important Diane Cluck, "I Love You This Much" (Common Wealth) 2020 self-released Beak, "Wulfstan (Live 2010)" (Wulfstan EP) 2010 self-released Teleplasmiste, "Possessors of the Orb" (To Kiss Earth Goodbye) 2020 House of Mythology Sally Anne Morgan, "Thread Song" (Thread) 2020 Thrill Jockey David First and The Western Enisphere, "Scene 5" (The Consummation of Right and Wrong) 2020 Important Nihiloxica, "Mukaagafeero" (Kaloli) 2020 Crammed Discs Severed Heads, "Tiny Fingers" (Clean) 1981 Dogfood Production System / 2020 Dark Entries Machinefabriek with Anne Bakker, "Schim" (Oehoe) 2020 Where To Now? Sarah Hennies, "Lake (pianet version)" (Lake (Live in Toronto)) 2019 self-released Email podcast at brainwashed dot com to say who you are; what you like; what you want to hear; share pictures for the podcast of where you're from, your computer or MP3 player with or without the Brainwashed Podcast Playing; and win free music! We have no tracking information, no idea who's listening to these things so the more feedback that comes in, the more frequent podcasts will come. You will not be put on any spam list and your information will remain completely private and not farmed out to a third party. Thanks for your attention and thanks for listening.
Toronto-based pianist Cheryl Duvall has established herself as one of Canada's foremost contemporary music interpreters. A dynamic soloist and in-demand collaborator, Duvall has immersed herself in a wide variety of compositional aesthetics and collaborative endeavours.In 2012, she co-founded the “adventurous and smartly programmed” (Musicworks Magazine) chamber group Thin Edge New Music Collective, commissioning over 70 works, mounting multidisciplinary productions, touring worldwide, and collaborating with leading artists including Sarah Hennies, Linda Catlin Smith, and Ensemble Paramirabo.She has also worked with the likes of choreographer Peggy Baker, cellist Paul Pulford, film composer Darren Fung, and Essential Opera, and is currently commissioning new solo repertoire from several Canadian composers.Her new CD, Harbour (Red Shift Records) is devoted to the complete solo piano music of Canadian composer Anna Höstman. Order it here.Excerpts from the CD included in this podcast (in order):Harbour (2015) and Late Winter, for the left hand (2019).Cheryl Duvall's websiteMore about Anna Höstman**ORDER MY NEW CDIridescent NotationSUPPORT THIS PODCASTPatreonDonorboxLINKSYouTube channelOfficial WebsiteTwitterInstagramEdition Impronta, publisher of Samuel Andreyev's scoresEPISODE CREDITSSpoken introduction: Maya RasmussenPodcast artwork photograph © 2019 Philippe StirnweissSupport the show (http://www.patreon.com/samuelandreyev)
Max Richter; Carl Stone; Aidan Baker; Pan*American; Sarah Hennies; Julia Kent; Aidan Baker / Gareth Davis; Julia Kent; C-Schulz; Pole; Meemo Comma; Pulse Emitter; A Wingerd Victory for the Sullen; Vancouver Women's Ambient Music Collective; Torngat; Gavin Russom; Ela Orleans; Brasstronaut; Cold Specks; Makaya McCraven; Badge Epoque Ensemble; Pheyownah; Jacques Greene & Jeff Parker.
Discovering secret treasure, making 183 of something, songs of gender transition. The percussionist and composer discusses three important albums.
Editions Blume is an obscure Milan based record imprint that publishes avant-garde gems packed in a radical monochromatic color coding. The label's laconic website declare, in a form of manifesto: "Blume explores the relation between performers and solo instrument. Solely sound and color. One." The episode features: Bruce Nauman, John Butcher, Jocy de Oliveira, Mary Jane Leach, Sarah Hennies and Julius Eastman.
For episode 192 we are joined by Sarah Hennies, a percussionist and composer born and raised in Louisville KY, now living in Ithaca, NY. Her work is concerned with a variety of musical, sociopolitical, and psychological issues including queer & trans identity, love, intimacy, psychoacoustics, and percussion. She has performed around the world and her recent composition “Contralto” continues to see performances at a variety of venues and festivals including Bent Frequency (Atlanta), La Sobilla (Verona), Monday Evening Concerts (Los Angeles), MOCA Tucson, Time-Based Art (Portland, OR), and the Toronto International Film Festival's Bell Lightbox Theatre. Sarah is as deep as they come and this is a good talk.
Carlos is back on co-host duty as we discuss the Feed Me Weird Things concert series with its director, Chris Wiersema! Chris brings avant-garde and experimental musicians from all over the country to Iowa City and pairs them with equally adventurous local acts, many of which have also played at our concerts and/or been featured on this radio show. Like the FMWT facebook page to keep up with their current season of shows, which started last month and will continue into the Fall: https://www.facebook.com/feedmeweirdThis episode features music by:Will Huff (https://www.huffcomposer.com / https://soundcloud.com/willhuff / https://www.youtube.com/user/TwitchSalivate / https://www.facebook.com/huff.composer / https://twitter.com/Monodreams)Vero Rose Smith (http://verorosesmith.com / https://www.facebook.com/verorosesmithart / https://verorosesmith.bandcamp.com / https://twitter.com/verorosesmith / https://www.youtube.com/user/Cisoma)David Clair (https://davidclair.bandcamp.com / https://soundcloud.com/david-clair-1)Our intro music is from the new JCϟjp album (relics)! Stream and download it at jc-jp.com and check out the companion museum at museum.jc-jp.com!Check out this Thursday's FMWT concert, where friend of iHearIC Ramin Roshandel (http://soundcloud.com/ramin-roshandel) opens for percussionist Sarah Hennies: https://www.facebook.com/events/192868274686081If you're in or near Cedar Rapids and want some free weekly entertainment, check out the Cedar Rapids Municipal Band: crmuniband.orgDirect mp3 link: https://archive.org/download/20180603Ihearic26/2018-06-03%20ihearic%2026.mp3http://ihearic.comhttps://www.facebook.com/ihearichttps://twitter.com/ihearichttps://youtube.com/ihearichttps://www.gofundme.com/ihearichttps://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/ihearic/id1332224527https://play.google.com/music/listen?u=0#/ps/I72sphfyva37bupflw5xx7cc72ehttps://www.mixcloud.com/iHearIC/https://www.soundcloud.com/ihearichttps://ihearic.blogspot.com/http://iowamusicshowcase.blogspot.com/search/label/IHearIC%20podcastsRSS: http://feeds.feedburner.com/ihearic
This podcast features a live set by local artist, composer, and concert curator Morgan Evans-Weiler. In addition to his solo work, Morgan is a founding member of the experimental music ensemble Ordinary Affects and organizes the Standing Waves performance series. His latest CD, Unfinished Variations (for Jed Speare) is out next week on Sarah Hennies’ Weighter label. Podcast 63: Morgan Evans Weiler Live on Rare Frequency, August 10, 2017
Sarah Hennies walks us through her composition, "Cast and Work." Find an excerpt of the piece here: https://soundcloud.com/hhhhhennies/cast-and-work-excerpt Buy the album, "Duets For Solo Snare Drum": http://www.weighterrecordings.com
Percussionist and Composer Sarah Hennies talks about the her musical roots, the physicality of percussion, and meditation. Sarah's Pieces used in the scoring of this episode: "Cast and Work"; https://soundcloud.com/hhhhhennies/cast-and-work-excerpt "Settle"; http://www.sarah-hennies.com/work "Silver Streetcar for Orchestra" by Alvin Lucier (performed by Sarah Hennies) Other pieces: Weary by Cerce Kool Thing by Sonic Youth Love in an Elevator by Aerosmith Prasselnd - Kraechzend by Karlheinz Stockhausen