Category Archives: Events

Freelance Cafe West gathering March 31 and NEW peer learning exchange

Hey Bay Area folks. Lots of exciting happenings on the horizon. First, the next monthly gathering is March 31 at 6:30 pm. 2374 Eunice St. in Berkeley. Here's the Facebook invite.

Second, FC member Luisa Beck has an idea for a Bay Area peer learning exchange. So cool! See her note below.

And finally, I'm coming for a visit and would love to see the FC West crew. Join me on April 17 for a screening of Sam Grant's documentary, A Fragile Trust at the Roxie in SF at 7pm, followed by drinks at a nearby location TBD. Get tickets early because the show will sell out!
From FC West member Luisa Beck:
Hey freelancers, 
At the last Freelancer Cafe gathering, we had this idea of setting up a peer learning exchange. As freelancers, we've all gathered these bits of knowledge from the many projects and jobs most of us have had to juggle. As a result, we probably all have expertise in different software, grant writing, website design, recording techniques, etc. etc. So what if we found a way to match freelancers by skill and learning goals?  
To do this, I set up a google spreadsheet with a list of names, skills people can teach and want to learn, and hours taught.The idea is that if you teach a certain number of hours, you can take those hours and learn from anyone else in the learning exchange network. So for example, I can teach someone how to customize a WordPress site. And I want to learn more about sound design. But the person I'm teaching WordPress to doesn't know anything about sound design. So I basically rack up "teaching currency" when I teach WordPress for two hours. And then I can go to someone else who knows more about sound design and and use my two hours of "teaching currency" to become a sound master. And that person can then go to someone else in the network and learn about what they want to learn, etc. 
So sign up if you're interested! There's also a column F for a "draft feedback exchange", which is basically for people who are interested in sending each other's drafts of what they're working on and getting feedback. 
Ok, now quick, sign up! Or shoot us a note about ways to make a learning exchange even better. 

Live? Die? Kill? performance documentary event in Beacon, NY, April 25-27

My friend and colleague has an upcoming event for her long-running project Live? Die? Kill? in Beacon, NY, April 25-27. This one focuses on Native Americans in the Southwestern US. Should be a great show. Any NYC/Hudson Valley folks want to join me? Details below. Both evening performances work for me. -Mia

+++++++++++++++++

 
LIVE?DIE?KILL?: 4 CORNERS 
A Performance Documentary 
by Karen Michel 
 
Exhibition and Fundraiser: Second Saturday, April 12, 2014: 6:00 – 9:00 pm 
Performances: April 25 – 26, 2014: 8:00pm 
Matinee: April 27, 2014: 3:00pm 
All events take place at Beacon Yoga Studio, 464 Main Street, Beacon NY 12508 
Exhibition and Fundraiser is open to the public 
 
Performances: $15 suggested donation includes a glass of wine or seltzer 
Two evenings and one afternoon of text, sound, and visuals primarily from Native Americans in the Southwest of the United States, reflecting on issues of life and death. 
On the morning of September 11, 2001, Karen Michel woke up in her Brooklyn apartment to the sound of the first plane hitting the  Twin Towers. “As the sky blackened, I was sure the world had come to an end. And I was acutely aware, for the next days and weeks, that I was breathing the DNA of dead people.” In the weeks that followed, the country began the long and difficult process of healing, seeking answers to questions for which there was no one or right response. These are the questions came to Michel, in what she refers to as an “aural vision”: 
What do you live for? What would you die for? What would you kill for? 
For the following decade, Karen Michel traveled from urban Los Angeles, New York and Boston, to the rural Southwest, Florida, North Carolina, Montana and the Badlands asking strangers these three questions. The simple syntax belies the pinpointed directness. The questions ask much more than “what” and answers reveal even more. In 2010, Michel visited Navajo, Hopi and Ute Reservations in the Four Corners region of the Southwest to discover what answers might be there. Her performance will speak of the consciousness of a people and how place and family ties affect a community. These form the basis of her April 25, 26, 27 performances in Beacon, NY. 
In radio programs and live performances, Michel weaves a story-documentary of the places she’s traveled to and the people that agreed to answer the 3 questions. She has an innate talent of pulling the words, the truth, out of the interviewed. Most are curious and willing. Some answer with surprising depth in a poetic voice; some unwittingly fall, crying, into stories of personal tragedy; some, become forcibly angry at the very thought of engaging with a stranger. Or themselves. Michel curates all of this information into an entertaining and thoughtful performance: an anthropologist’s collection of detritus and treasure, images of places, people, and the sounds of someone’s voice intertwined with Michel’s astute observations. 
The Exhibition and Fundraiser on April 12, Second Saturday in Beacon, will display archival “mug shot” prints of those she has interviewed. Prints will be for sale. 
Karen Michel is an award-winning radio producer, documentarian, artist, and educator. A long-time contributor to NPR's daily newsmagazines, she got her start in radio at the age of 5 as a guest on Art Linkletter's "Kids Say the Darnedest Things." She honed her adult skills on Alaska Public Radio. Before moving to the Hudson Valley, she lived in Brooklyn; after 9-11 she began the project that's become the radio and performance documentary series/obsession: "Live?Die?Kill?: 3 Questions in Various Geographies." Karen Michel currently resides in Pleasant Valley, New York with her husband, Bob, and their dog, Yomo. 

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upcoming events from the NY Press Club, esp Tax Prep for journos, March 6

Highlights from the NY Press Club Newsletter: Tax Prep for journos info session on 3/6. And a look at the evolution of food journalism on 4/2. Both events at CUNY j-school, NYC. 

 
 
Tax Prep For Journalists
GRAPHIC   Thursday, March 6th
CUNY Graduate School of Journalism
219 W 40 Street (7th & 8th)
6:30 p.m. refreshments/schmoozing
7:00 p.m. program
The New York Press Club will again provide helpful information this year for journalists and journalism students who must prepare tax returns.

Press Club member (and CPA), John Lieberman of Perelson Wiener LLP, and colleagues, will once again conduct a discussion and answer your questions about filing your 2013 returns. They will also provide up-to-date information about pertinent changes in tax law. John is a New York City-based certified public accountant and personal financial specialist with nearly 30 years experience. A number of high profile sports and entertainment figures are on his impressive client list.

John and his colleagues will gear their presentation to situations unique to journalists along with updated information concerning the new world of digital media.

Free for New York Press Club members, CUNY J-School students and alums: RSVP required. Non-members, $15: Please RSVP here.

 
 
The Evolution & Future of Food Journalism
GRAPHIC   Wednesday, April 2nd
CUNY Graduate School of Journalism
219 W 40 Street (7th & 8th)
6:30 p.m. refreshments/schmoozing
7:00 p.m. program
Renowned local and national editors and writers will discuss food journalism as it has been practiced over the past decade or so and will look ahead to the future of this popular journalistic niche.

Details are only half-baked at the moment but our chef is working overtime to prefect them. When complete, the evening will definitely be a feast of useful information for those culinarily inclined.

Free for New York Press Club members, CUNY J-School students and alums: RSVP required. Non-members, $15: Please RSVP here.

 

Freelance Cafe West meeting TONIGHT! Feb 24, 6:30pm, Oakland

From our fabulous west coast leader:  


Hello everyone, 

Just a little reminder that our monthly meeting is tonight at The Trappist, 460 8th St. in downtown Oakland. We'll be gathering around 6:30, hope to see you there!

Happy Monday

Ana

And for you east coast folks, I'm working on arranging a meeting (the first in awhile) for Thursday, March 13, somewhere in the Hudson Valley. Mark your calendars! Details TK.

next Bay Area FC gathering, Monday Feb 24, 6:30pm, Oakland

Attention Bay Area freelancers: join us for the next gathering of Freelance Cafe.

Monday, February 24
6:30 PM
460 8th StreetOakland, California 94607

We had a great turnout last month and expect another great one this time. Join us! 
Contact Ana Adlerstein <anaupatree@gmail.com> o(207) 807-6152 if you can't find the group or if you want to get more involved. We've got big ideas for the FC of the future and welcome anyone who wants to contribute in any way, shape, or form.
And follow along on Facebook or Twitter.

Unheard America storytelling series debuts at UnionDocs, NYC, Feb 23, 7:30pm

I saw the premiere of this show a couple weeks ago – a super-interesting mashup of portraiture, music, and radio storytelling. It was especially interesting to hear producer Emile Klein talk about his process. Definitely worth a visit to UnionDocs for the NYC debut! Feb 23, 7:30pm. Details below.


Here's teaser link: http://ow.ly/tMQ7u
And the event:  http://ow.ly/tMQ39


Get tickets while you still can! uniondocs.org/02-23-2014-unheard-america/

UNHEARD AMERICA, A NEW SERIES COMBINING RADIO STORYTELLING WITH ORIGINAL MUSIC, DEBUTS AT UNIONDOCS, BROOKLYN, NY, – Sunday, February 23th, 7:30pm, at UnionDocs, 322 Union Ave, Williamsburg, Brooklyn, NY, 11211. For one day only UnionDocs (UnDo) and national arts organization You’re U.S. come together, presenting seven stories that took a nation to create, each told in a mixture of radio and music. The event includes a Q&A with the artists, followed by a reception. Admission: $9 suggested donation

The stories, which tackle religion, race, family, and environment, were produced by Jeff Emtman and Emile Klein, who have embraced the musical concept of the ”mashup.” A children’s choir sings odes to a Virginian nun, an off-the-grid survivalist speaks over a Miami DJ’s peppy beats, a Hmong North Carolinian defines the nation within an ambient soundscape. Each story walks the line between the personal and the foreign, exploring America’s cross-cultural harmony.

Musical collaborators for UNHEARD AMERICA include the iSing choir/ Karen Linford/ Jungmee Kim (choral), the Blind Willies (folk), Phantom Fauna (ambient), Gabriel Zucker (orchestral), Zack Varland-Hopkins (down-tempo), Richard Haig (electronic), and JJ Beck (classical).

6 stories

Q&A w/ Klein, Emtman, MC Paul Barman, and select musical collaborators

Total Time: 95­ minutes

Radio Operas in NYC, Feb 28 and March 1

Awesome NYC event – Feb 28 and March 1. I'm thinking about going on Feb 28 if any NY folks want to join me. Here's a link to the Facebook event page.  

EXPERIMENTS IN OPERA: 
RADIO OPERAS

February 28, 2014 – March 1, 2014 
8:00 PM 
Underground Theater

TICKETS: $20.00

BUY TICKETS

title

Opera in Dialogue #2
March 1 | 5pm
Free

Experiments in Opera returns to Abrons to premiere Radio Operas – a collection of six 10-15 minute works that explore a wide range of stories highlighting the composers’ interests in Modern abstractionism, science fiction, melodrama, satire, hallucinatory experiences, scientific discoveries, and pop culture icons.

These are not nostalgic homages to the radio plays of yesteryear. EiO’s Radio Operas are daring new operatic works created by some of the premiere experimental composers of today and designed specifically with this format in mind. Rather than prioritizing stage design and visual storytelling, these opera vignettes feature sound effects performed live by a foley artist, spoken text, music and singing and will rely on the imagination of the listener to create the image of the stories.

Additionally, in partnership with CultureBot.org, composers and collaborators featured on Radio Operas will take part in a free public discussion – Opera in Dialogue #2 on Saturday, March 1 at 5pm in the Abrons Underground Theater – exploring the ideas behind this innovative program.

The six RADIO OPERAS:

Scored for soprano, percussion, viola and electronics, ‘Ping’ by John King is an adaptation of a Samuel Beckett short story written in a stream of abstract imagery and thoughts. This performance uses musical substitutions to punctuate the flow of the spoken text and will feature soprano Joan LaBarbara and electronics by John King.

‘The Mutt’ by Matthew Welch, takes as its subject freestyle skateboarder Rodney Mullen, who invented the vocabulary of modern skateboarding, endured family abuse in his youth, led a double life as a burgeoning biomedical engineer, and now is an established inventor. The music will feature James Moore and Taylor Levine, from the Dither electric guitar quartet, Matthew Welch on spoken word, and will involve electro-acoustically sequenced “Foley” skateboarding sounds by Steve Brush.

‘Thomas Paine in Violence’ by Paul Pinto is a mad psychedelic depiction of the final days of the American founding father's life. Paine—portrayed by a soprano spurting speech, operatic vignettes and a number of extended vocal techniques—transports “herself” through space and time, including on “her” deathbed in 1809, the Stock Market of 2008, and the future. Scored for soprano, electronics and drums and featuring soprano Joan LaBarbara, and foley artist Steve Brush.

In ‘The Collector’ by Aaron Siegel, a character delivers a wild and delusional monologue detailing his dangerous obsession with stamp collecting. The natural rhythms of the spoken text are mimicked in increasing accuracy by the instruments in the ensemble. The Collector is scored for piano, soprano, vibraphone and actor and will feature pianist Karl Larson, percussionist Matt Evans, soprano Erin Flannery and Aaron Siegel as the collector.

‘I Need Space’ by Jason Cady and Ann Heppermann tells the story of a couple moving to a Martian colony but breaking up on the way there. It is set in an alternate present: 2014 as it had been imagined by science fiction writers in the 1950s. I Need Space is scored for two voices, guitar, piano, synthesizer and Foley artist and features tenor Vince B. Vincent, soprano Erin Flannery, guitarist Mary Halvorson, pianist Karl LarsonJason Cady on modular synthesizer and Foley artist Steve Brush.

'These Walls Can Talk (Working Title)' by Jonathan Mitchell tells the story of a guy who has figured out a way to extract sounds from objects. By inserting a needle into a wall (for example), he can measure the microscopic effects of variations of air pressure over time, and hear conversations that took place in that room. He can do the same thing with stones from Egypt, or the Great Wall of China.


The theme of ‘Radio Operas’ emerged from EiO’s interest in genre-oriented performance and innovative frames for short-form operatic works.

This inversion of standard operatic presentation will be made complete when the six featured works are recorded at the studios of Q2 Music for world premiere webcasts and on-demand streaming. Q2 Music will share one opera on consecutive nights Monday through Saturday at 8 pm during a special week in March.

TransX Transmission Art Symposium call for presos, deadline Feb 28

Call for papers and performances from the TransX Transmission Art Symposium. Deadline Feb 28.
+++++++++++++++++

New Adventures in Sound Art (NAISA) is pleased to announce the 2014 edition of the TransX Transmission Art Symposium
with Keynote speakers Anja Kanngieser and Jessica Thompson
May 22 – 25, 2014

We are now inviting proposals for papers, presentations and performances
For More Information http://naisa.ca/opportunities/calls-for-submissions/trans-x-call-for-submissions/
To Submit: https://naisa.ca/trans-x-submission-form/

The proceedings from the 2013 TransX Transmission Art Symposium are here: http://naisa.ca/symposia/trans-x/transx-2013-proceedings/
To listen to the presentations from the 2013 TransX Transmission Art Symposium go to:http://naisa.ca/media-archive/audio-archives/

NAISA is now inviting submissions for papers and performances:

Rooted in the earliest experiments with radio, Transmission Art has continued to flourish into the 21st Century with experiments using wireless communications technology over the past 100 years, including the exploration of a variety of mobile-based platforms and lesser-known forms of transmission, such as VLF. The terrain of transmission art is dynamic and fluid, always open to redefinition.

The TransX Transmission Art Symposium, part of the Deep Wireless Festival of Radio & Transmission Art, will focus on Transmission Art, with particular interest in contributions that summarize, examine or reframe traditions and histories of transmission art practices, technology, education and pedagogy. Additionally, we are very interested in presentations that go beyond the local contingent to give a sense of how new technologies of international transmission activity might be experienced. Proposed presentations and performances that combine the themes of Transmission Art and “Undo/Redo” are also especially welcome.

All symposium contributions will be webcast live, and text proceedings will be published after the symposium on the NAISA web-site. Please go to http://naisa.ca/opportunities/calls-for-submissions/trans-x-call-for-submissions/ for specific guidelines on paper and performance submissions.

We look forward to seeing you, your colleagues, collaborators and students in Toronto in May!

Important Information
28 Feb Deadline for receipt of proposals @ 11:59 PM EST
21 March Notification of acceptance
15 April Attendance confirmation
22 April Symposium registration and submission of final materials.
22 May Symposium opening reception and performances
22–25 May Symposium sessions
23–24 May Deep Wireless Festival performances

Fees
Symposium registration fees (General): $70
Symposium registration fees (Student): $40
(both rates include admission to all performances)

Questions and requests for further information can be directed to:
Nadene Thériault-Copeland – transx@naisa.ca

Review Committee:
Steve Bates, Independent artist
Anna Friz, post-doctoral fellow, School of the Art Institute of Chicago
Heidi Grundmann, Kunstradio
Galen Joseph-Hunter, Executive Director Wave Farm
Katie Kehoe, artist
Dan Lander, artist
David Ogborn, McMaster University
Tetsuo Kogawa, Radioartist, Media Critic, Director of Goethe Archive Tokyo
Jim Ruxton, Director of Programs, Subtle Technologies Festival
Don Sinclair, York University
Debashis Sinha, Sound Artist
Jessica Thompson, University of Waterloo
Helen Thorington, Co-Director of New Radio and Performing Arts, Inc
Gregory Whitehead, radio artist / co-editor of Wireless Imagination
Elisabeth Zimmermann, Kunstradio
___________________________________________________________
NAISA Inquiries & general information:

Nadene Thériault-Copeland
Executive Director
New Adventures in Sound Art
Address: Artscape Wychwood Barns, 601 Christie St #252, Toronto, ON M6G 4C7
Tel 416 652 5115
www.naisa.ca

NAISA current/upcoming events:

TransX Transmission Art Symposium
Call for Papers & Performances
Deadline February 28, 2014

For More Information http://naisa.ca/opportunities/calls-for-submissions/trans-x-call-for-submissions/
To Submit: https://naisa.ca/trans-x-submission-form/

Toronto International Electroacoustic Symposium
Call for Papers & Performances
Deadline February 24, 2014

For More Information http://naisa.ca/opportunities/calls-for-submissions/ties-call-for-submissions/
To Submit: http://naisa.ca/ties-submission-form/

Currently @ the NAISA Space "Flash Orchestra" by Eric Powell http://naisa.ca/naisa-events/arts-birthday/installations/

Follow us on:
Facebook www.facebook.com/NAISASoundArt
Twitter www.twitter.com/NAISASoundArt
You Tube www.youtube.com/user/NAISAtube
Soundcloud www.soundcloud/NAISA
NAISA Radio www.naisa.ca/webcast

FC West gatherings are back in 2014! Beginning Jan 27, 6:30pm, Oakland

I am THRILLED to announce that the monthly Freelance Cafe gatherings will return in 2014 – beginning on Jan 27, 6:30pm, at our old stomping ground, Pacific Coast Brewing Company. A special thank you to new member Ana Adlerstein who has enthusiastically offered to take the reigns for these meetings. See her message below. And if all the stars align, I may be able to attend the April meeting. (fingers crossed!)

Wishing you all the best for a happy, healthy, and productive 2014.
Best,
Mia

Hello Freelance Cafe community,

I am excited to announce that the Freelance Cafe meetings are back! We will be getting together the last Monday of the month, and I will be acting as the new point person for any questions regarding our gatherings. My phone number is (207) 807-6152 in case you can’t find me at the brewery.

The details for the next meeting are:

JANUARY 27th
Pacific Coast Brewing Company, 906 Washington Street, Oakland.
6:30PM
I look forward to meeting many of you there!

TransX Transmission Art Symposium Call for Submissions, deadline Feb 28

Experimental radio at its best; send your ideas for papers and performances by Feb 28. Details below.
+++++++++++++++TransX Transmission Art Symposium
Call for Papers & Performances
Deadline February 28, 2014
For More Information http://naisa.ca/opportunities/calls-for-submissions/trans-x-call-for-submissions/
To Submit: https://naisa.ca/trans-x-submission-form/

New Adventures in Sound Art (NAISA) is pleased to announce the 2014 edition of the TransX Transmission Art Symposium
with Keynote speakers Anja Kanngieser and Jessica Thompson
May 22 – 25, 2014

The proceedings from the 2013 TransX Transmission Art Symposium are here: http://naisa.ca/symposia/trans-x/transx-2013-proceedings/

To listen to the presentations from the 2013 TransX Transmission Art Symposium go to: http://naisa.ca/media-archive/audio-archives/

NAISA is now inviting submissions for papers and performances:

Rooted in the earliest experiments with radio, Transmission Art has continued to flourish into the 21st Century with experiments using wireless communications technology over the past 100 years, including the exploration of a variety of mobile-based platforms and lesser-known forms of transmission, such as VLF. The terrain of transmission art is dynamic and fluid, always open to redefinition.

The Trans-X Transmission Art Symposium, part of the Deep Wireless Festival of Radio & Transmission Art, will focus on Transmission Art, with particular interest in contributions that summarize, examine or reframe traditions and histories of transmission art practices, technology, education and pedagogy. Additionally, we are very interested in presentations that go beyond the local contingent to give a sense of how new technologies of international transmission activity might be experienced. Proposed presentations and performances that combine the themes of Transmission Art and “Undo/Redo” are also especially welcome.

Review Committee:
Steve Bates, Independent artist
Anna Friz, post-doctoral fellow, School of the Art Institute of Chicago
Galen Joseph-Hunter, Executive Director Wave Farm
Katie Kehoe, Maryland Institute College of Art
Dan Lander, artist
David Ogborn, McMaster University
Tetsuo Kogawa, Radioartist, Media Critic, Director of Goethe Archive Tokyo
Jim Ruxton, Director of Programs, Subtle Technologies Festival
Don Sinclair, York University
Debashis Sinha, Sound Artist
Jessica Thompson, University of Waterloo
Helen Thorington, Co-Director of New Radio and Performing Arts, Inc
Gregory Whitehead, radio artist / co-editor of Wireless Imagination
Elisabeth Zimmermann, Kunstradio
___________________________________________________________
NAISA Inquiries & general information:

Nadene Thériault-Copeland
Executive Director
New Adventures in Sound Art
Address: Artscape Wychwood Barns, 601 Christie St #252, Toronto, ON M6G 4C7
Tel 416 652 5115
www.naisa.ca

NAISA current/upcoming events:

NAISA’s Art’s Birthday celebration at the Barns, January 17 – 19, 2014
http://naisa.ca/naisa-events/arts-birthday/

TransX Transmission Art Symposium
Call for Papers & Performances
Deadline February 28, 2014
For More Information http://naisa.ca/opportunities/calls-for-submissions/trans-x-call-for-submissions/
To Submit: https://naisa.ca/trans-x-submission-form/

Follow us on:
Facebook www.facebook.com/NAISASoundArt
Twitter www.twitter.com/NAISASoundArt
You Tube www.youtube.com/user/NAISAtube
Soundcloud www.soundcloud/NAISA
NAISA Radio www.naisa.ca/webcast