PVC

Showing posts with label Video. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Video. Show all posts

Thursday, 23 October 2014

GPC Super-8 film from 1983


This wonderful Super-8 film by Colin Fancy was shown at the Greenwich Performance Collective reunion gig last December. At the time, it was played on a Super-8 projector while we played X-Amount tracks to go along with it. It has now been digitised and Colin sent us the footage. We have edited the X-Amount tracks to fit (although we didn't need to do much) and it works well.

A rather lovely glimpse into a radical past in South London.

Colin Fancy says: "At last! here is the 1983 super 8 cinema veritie film of GPC out and about at local festivals doing their stuff etc. all the faces from those days are there for you to spot big thanks you to Paulo Sanhueza who offered at the reunion to digitise this and to Simon Birch and Andrew Panayi for the X-Amount soundtrack"

More from the GPC including info, links & downloads:
https://www.facebook.com/gpclpc

Monday, 21 October 2013

Performance for the Misty Moon Film Festival this weekend



This weekend we will be giving a very special live performance for The Misty Moon Film Festival at The Ladywell Tavern in South London.

We will produce an improvised soundtrack to an edit of the 1963 Czech sci-fi film "Ikarie XB1".

It's an obscure black & white masterpiece of a film that is said to have partly inspired Kubrick's 2001 - A Space Odyssey.

Here is an excerpt from the original film:




Hopefully we will do something that suits this amazing movie..

The performance will last for an hour and will be part of an interesting evening of film and art, the opening night of the Misty Moon Film Festival. You will also be able to view the current Halloween Exhibition in The Misty Moon Gallery (which includes some photography by myself).

Please come and join us this Saturday the 26th of October from 7pm at The Ladywell Tavern, 80 Ladywell Road, South London. SE13 7HS. Entrance is free and because of the refurb that is in progress at the Tavern, it will be a cash only bar.

The nearest station is Ladywell, and this is probably the best way to travel there as parts of Ladywell Road are closed for major roadworks - please take this into account when travelling.

Hope to see you there!

UPDATE: We must thank the kind people at Second Run DVD for granting us permission to do this performance. Here is a link to their site where you can buy a newly restored version of Ikarie XB1:

Wednesday, 12 June 2013

New Video for "Wax" - released on Experimentalist June 17


X-Amount - Wax from Simon Birch on Vimeo.

Here is a new video for "Wax".

"Wax" features vocals by May Mujagic (E333) and is released by Experimentalist Recordings on June 17th.

http://www.experimentalistrecordings.com

The video was made from kaleidoscopic clips we put together for a recent live performance, and was shot on an iPhone with an added macro lens.

Tuesday, 28 May 2013

A video for "Fat Deluge"


X-Amount - Fat Deluge (Refried Mix) from Simon Birch on Vimeo.

The footage for this was made for a recent live performance. It was generated using an iPhone with an added macro lens and an app called "Videoscope". The images are macro shots of rust and flaking paint.
The track "Fat Deluge" appears on our 2012 album "Six Months Of Community Service" which you can get here: x-amount.bandcamp.com/album/six-months-of-community-service

Monday, 27 May 2013

A new video for "PVC"


X-Amount - PVC from Simon Birch on Vimeo.


The footage for this was shot on an iPhone using "Videoscope", which is an app that will shoot kaleidoscopic footage. Most clips were shot from train windows or in train stations. You may spot Battersea Power Station and Battersea Bridge, Waterloo Station and other places. The downside (or upside, depending on how you look at it) with the app is that it only shoots for 29 seconds at a time. Originally, we shot 130 or so clips for a recent live performance, and this is just one of the tracks from the performance (others will follow). Some re-editing was done for this version.
You can get the track "PVC" by X-Amount here for just 50p:

Monday, 26 March 2012

New videos: Circular Spectrograms





I have been playing with Circular Spectrograms. I found that our track "I Told You Not To Eat That" worked well with it. It was done using a (Mac only) application by Andrew Ohlman. You can download it here: Circular Spectogram

What you are seeing is the bass frequencies at the bottom of the circle, the high frequencies toward the centre. Amplitude (volume) is represented by brightness, blue represents the left and red represents the right channel of the audio.


This Quartz Composer based app is based on Musical Spectrum Analysis work by Jon-Kyle Mohr and Lee Martin and you can see more here: http://spectrogr.am/

Don't watch it too many times though..when I was working on it I looked out of the window at one point and got the spiral "motion after effect" - the buildings went all bendy and started moving about!


Here is a second one. This time for "Wire Frame Ghost". The parameters are the same, except this time the right channel is in yellow.


Its interesting how different it looks compared to "I Told You.." and also in this one how the Morse Code present in the shortwave samples is represented. Also, the presence of sonar makes it look like an old radar screen.


Saturday, 27 August 2011

Jump Starter



Our first video. This new track "Jump Starter" is from the new album "Degraded".


Thursday, 18 August 2011

Stealth Gigs


Andi and I have talked a lot about doing live shows. At first we thought we would just use the laptops and improvise just like we do when we create a new track, except in front of an audience. This could work, and might be ok, but we thought that it would be really boring to watch. All you would see is the tops of two old gits' heads behind laptop screens.

Also, both of us like to play instruments live. For Andi, its the drums and for me it can be guitar, keyboards or the mixing desk. Andi has a Roland V-Drum kit, so it will be easy for him to trigger our samples and recordings from the kit as well as playing drum sounds.

For me its not as straight forward. It is possible for me to trigger sounds from the keyboard or even the guitar, but I think I shall remain behind the laptop as I can combine my live mixing with improvisation using our loops as well as warping what Andi does on the kit.

We have asked our old mucker Tack (from Head To Head) to play the bass parts live. This combination should work well. We are hoping to get into the rehearsal studio soon.

We want to add a visual element to what we do as well. Our initial ideas (when we were discussing what to do as a duo) were to perform somewhere where the audience could not see us at all. Then we would have an empty stage lit only by  fluorescent lights with broken starter motors, so that they would come on intermittently at random. A bit like a David Lynch scene, but done with a Deptford (as opposed to a Hollywood) budget. This would suit our music well.

We then thought.. where could we get some broken lights from? I then suggested we film some in an alley or something and project the image at the gig instead. Better. Which of course introduces the idea of video into our live show.

Both Andi and I have had plenty of experience with video and live performance. I remember Andi performing live with a band in front of films by Andrew Kötting at Ravensbourne College back in the 1980's. He did a lot of good work with Kötting. I was making films myself at the time, and went on to do installations at Club Dog in London and Rhythmicon in Salisbury. I also made a video for Perennial Divide (later Meat Beat Manifesto) and worked with George Barber. Andi has been making some great time-lapse sequences and other mad things for years now. So an audio/visual performance makes complete sense.


Kaleidotree from Simon Birch on Vimeo.

Using the laptops for live improvisation with music easily links with live video. We have been looking into ways of having the live effects processing being linked to live effects on the video feeds. So for example, when I move an audio effect it can simultaneously move a video effect. In theory anyhow..

At the moment most of our focus is on getting the "Degraded" album out, but following that we will be straight into getting this live thing built and working and booking some gigs. If anyone will have us that is.




Fwd: Canteen from Andrew Panayi on Vimeo.

Its difficult to think of the right venue. We had this idea of doing "stealth gigs". This would be where we are not strictly booked in, but appear in-between bands at a gig, not actually onstage, not announced, but with the visuals projected and sounds played out. We could also invade parties. Then we thought we could play uninvited through various tannoy systems: shopping centres, trains, boats, airports, offices and radio stations.

We would be playing the sounds we have recorded right back at the places we got them from.

Audio rioting!