Euphonic Productions - Atlanta, Georgia

Euphonic Productions - Atlanta, Georgia

Fri, 18 November 2005

GFEEuphonic Productions presents:
GFE and friends

9pm, Fri, Nov 18
Eyedrum
290 MLK Jr. Drive, Suite 8
404-522-0655
www.eyedrum.org
(experimental)


GFE lets their guard down and invites friends to join in their collective spontaneous compositions tonight...scheduled to appear: Stan Taylor, Omar Khalid, Bill Nittler, R. Walter Riley, Jamie Shepherd, Stewart Voeghtlin & Stan Woodard & more??

Jeff Bradley - double bass
Scott Burland - pedal steel, keyboards, theremin, bass, electronics
Rob Cheatham - saxophones, keyboards, theremin
Bob Hulihan - electronics, guitar, theremin, etc.
Milton Jones - percussion, etc.

http://tk-jk.net/euphonic/GFE1.html

"Boom! Boom! Wow!"
- Iva Keranova

"They sound like an orchestra tuning up."
- Martha McCall

"Here comes a charging, wild rhino. If you want to listen, fine. Either way. This rhino stops for no one."
- R. Walter Riley

"Practice makes perfect, or so the adage says. For local electro-acoustic improvisational act Gruppe Freie Elektronisch, perfection is a matter of silent communication. "We never practice," laughs percussionist Milton Jones, and upon witnessing the group's stirring live performances, it becomes obvious that practice is beside the point.

"Jones -- along with Jeff Bradley (double bass), Scott Burland (pedal steel, keyboards, electronics, guitar), Robert Cheatham (saxophones, keyboards) and Bob Hulihan (electronics, guitar) -- has only played three shows since forming the group in 2003. A mutual appreciation for experimental music and long-standing friendships -- some lasting more than 15 years -- give GFE an insight not achieved by many acts. The slow and surging sound is a slanted journey into intangible tones. "The group is less about rhythms and jamming as it is about creating textures, colors and shapes," says Jones. "I'd like to see it move toward more structure, but that would require some practicing.  We're like old friends communicating when we play," adds Jones. "It's not practiced. It's not rehearsed. It just has a life of its own."
- Chad Radford, Creative Loafing

" Last Friday night, I tore myself away from A&E's two-hour biography of the Bee Gees long enough to visit Eyedrum's Improv Festival, a gathering of improvisational musicians and their music. Recommended by a friend, the group I came to see is a local ensemble called GFE. GFE stands for Gruppe Freie Elektronische.

Incidentally (or perhaps intentionally), GFE also is a term used by the escort industry that means "Girlfriend Experience." Needless to say, Googling the phrase "GFE Atlanta" to try to gather info about the band was an interesting way to kill 20 minutes.

GFE plays anti-melodic, anti-rhythmic, highly abrasive music using traditional instruments (bass, drums, sax, keys) augmented by electronics (sampled dialogue, a theremin). Eyedrum's website quotes one person describing the band's music as the sound of an "orchestra tuning up."

That's a funny description, but not quite right because it implies formlessness and aimlessness. GFE's piece, titled "The Black Abyss Around Your Heart, I Hate You" was free-form, but it wasn't formless. It wasn't pretty, but it was pure sound that, like meditation, is supposed to erase all thoughts and worries from my mind - resulting in a blissful state that I quickly ruined by rushing home to watch more A&E."
- Andisheh Nouraee, Creative Loafing
(Read the whole article.)

Eyedrum’s programming is supported in part by the City of Atlanta Bureau of Cultural Affairs.

http://tk-jk.net/euphonic/GFE1.html

http://tk-jk.net/euphonic/

Home


Euphonic Productions, dedicated to presenting diverse perspectives in music.
Copyright (c) 2002 - 2007 Euphonic Productions. All rights reserved.