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Borderline Ballroom

Auricle Events!

For all future CSSA events please see our sonic arts gallery site The Auricle.

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Borderline Ballroom

Mr Sterile Assembly

Mr Sterile AssemblyMr Sterile Assembly (Wellington)
Regressor
The Bullitts

Darkroom, 336 St Asaph St, Christchurch NZ, Friday 13 September

The last time mr sterile Assembly attempted to play in the Garden City, March 11 2011, the show became cancelled as forces much to great to control intervened. The world change shape and minor plans were shelved. Life was altered and more important matters needed to be attended to.

Time passes. And hopefully this is an opportunity for minor things to happen once again.

mr sterile Assembly is a two-piece musical unit from the tectonic sister-city of Wellington. The band delivers an assertive and playful drums & bass foundation for stories to swing and soar from. The sounds can dance from tight composition to ecstatic splatter, often within moments of each other.

Well into the second decade of the band’s life, this lineup continues the storytelling after many years of conscious diversification and play. We are very excited to return to Christchurch (and Timaru on the Saturday night) bringing new reinterpretations of older songs, and a number of newer ones to fill in the Cantabrian airways if only just for a hair’s breadth.

mr sterile Assembly will be supported by Regressor’s electronic expressionism and improv outrage (and great hairstyling) from The Bullitts.
Regressor is the solo project of Alex Donnithorne. The Bullitts are Rory Dalley, Peter Wright, and David Khan.

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Borderline Ballroom News

The Borderline Listening Post

The Borderline Listening Post is a public sound installation in Lyttelton, NZ’s Civic Square curated by the local Borderline Ballroom music collective. It features works contributed by local, national and international sonic artists. Some have responded directly to the space, while others have been inspired from afar to create works that range from soundscapes using the local environment as their source to electronic pieces and electroacoustic compositions.  The programme (below) changes every Week. Scroll down for more information about the artists and their works.

Week 1: 20-28th June

The Lyttelton Timeball 1:23
Recorded by Stanier Black-Five

EcoTechno experiments at the Timeball 15:47
Artists: John McCallum & Nick Guy

Moments of Silence 9:16
Artist: Luke Munn (Auckland, NZ)

Right to Protest 11.22
Artist: Welcoming Dusk (Christchurch)

Week 2: 29 June-5th July

ephemeris 12:42
Artist: Stanier Black-Five (Lyttelton, NZ)

Outside perspective 0:37
Artist: Claire Pannell with Rob Haakman.

Exquisite Garden 4:45
Artist: Mela (Lyttelton,NZ)

Week 3: 6-12 July

Hidden Voices 8:45
Artist: Brent Holt (Auckland,NZ)

Whitenoise 01 2:16
Artist: Sophia Schön (Auckland/Berlin)

Seven 0:31
Artist: Mela (Lyttelton,NZ)

Week 4: 13-19 July

Untitled 3:42
Artist: Funes (Lyttelton, NZ)

After Bronowski 23:13
Artist: Jimmy Currin (Dunedin,NZ)

Week 6: 31st July – 6th August

Fremantle Port 24:52
Artist: Malcolm Riddoch (Lyttelton, New Zealand).

Coming down with technical failures 1:53
Artist: Furchick (Perth, Australia)

Week 7: 7-13 August

The Perpetual Cloister 4:32
Artist: The Rothko Chapel (Melbourne/Canberra, Australia)

Iron Pebbles and Gold Dust 12:19
Artist: Chris Cree Brown (Christchurch)

Avis Interregnum 4:00
Artist: Kate Cosbey Belton

Week 8: 14-20th August

Continuum 20:43
Artists: Reuben Derrick and Chris Reddington (Christchurch, NZ)Sunlit Electrical Storm. 11:58

Week 9: 21-28th August

Artist: Dark Passenger (Melbourne, Australia)

Research into Incompatibility Symptoms 10:34
Artist- JA (Christchurch, NZ)

109 1:09
Artist: Blair Parkes (Christchurch, NZ)

28th August onwards – mixed programme

Artists and Works

Avis Interregnum 4:00
Artist: Kate Belton

(Audio montage of boys’ whistles.)

Immediately after the February earthquake the city was shrouded in a spooky silence that blanketed the city. The liquefaction that came up from beneath the city’s water-table spewing its way through every crack and crevice, seemed to suffocate any sign of nature like a damp and deadly carpet. Avis Interregnum celebrates the reassertion of nature in the ruins of the CBD. Nature reclaims the space. Weeds push through paving stones and cracked cement, vines crawl up the remnants of walls and birds have returned to the city. Looking through the hurricane fences and past the security signs into what remains of the red zone, is like looking into a giant industrial themed avery and is evidence that ultimately, nature triumphs.

Kate is an artist who works in sculpture and installation. She teaches Art at Christ’s College and is currently studying toward her MFA.

Iron Pebbles and Gold Dust 12:19
Artist: Chris Cree Brown (Christchurch)

Electroacoustic work

After Bronowski 23:13
Artist: Jimmy Currin (Dunedin,NZ)

After Bronowski reconstitutes some of the writings of the great science educator Jacob Bronowski (1908-1974). I had been thinking about a world where lively, reasoned, intelligent, open-ended discussion could be had on any street corner. Since the listening post is permanently out on the street, the notion that one could run into Bronowski in the middle of the night – and that he might even be speaking in the same slurred, slightly pissed drawl as (conceivably) myself – was an attractive one.

Jimmy Trees Currin has been a folk, rock’n’roll and improvising musician in Three Forks, Khomet, Ray Off, Group Eight, Laps and many others. He is also a playwright, theatre director and actor, and co-created the award-winning shows Moth Hearts In The Night House and Once Was. He is the theatre and dance writer for POINT magazine and lives in Dunedin.

Sunlit Electrical Storm. 11:58Artist: Dark Passenger (Melbourne, Australia)

An improvised piece of guitar, electronics and metallic drones.

Continuum 20:43
Artists: Reuben Derrick and Chris Reddington (Christchurch, NZ)

A field trip on a still yet busy night was made to Lyttelton port during May to record explorations, discoveries, interactions, responses and reflections. This material has been worked into a succession of sonic atmospheres which gradually unfold through interactions with changing spatial and temporal perspectives.  A variety of interventions can be heard through both involuntary human activity, and the intentional use of found objects and instruments brought to the session.

Untitled 3:42
Artist: Funes (Lyttelton, NZ)

The work is actually from 2004 but it holds a certain significance for me in relation to our town centre. Three sound sources make up the piece: recordings of earthquakes, the echo of a man’s voice in a place of worship and the harmonics of a wooden flute. At the time I put the work together I was fascinated by the concept of the ‘sound’ of earthquakes as this was something that, at that time, I had experienced only fleetingly. I was also interested in the idea of sound that was, to a degree, separated from its source: the ghost of a person’s voice lingering as reverberation after they have ceased vocalising, or the very high frequency and perhaps unintended harmonics of a low register instrument whose fundamental is relatively distant. Finally, I was preoccupied with the concepts of omnipotence and lack of real control over one’s surroundings.

I had pretty much forgotten about this work but was drawn to it again following the September 2010 earthquake. This was just as much to do with the experience of being at the mercy of a faceless, seemingly omnipotent force that was beyond control or rationalisation, as it was to do with the earthquake samples themselves. I have a very vivid memory of standing outside of our home at the time at the bottom of Oxford Street, in the blue darkness of that morning, the only light source being the clouds and moon, hearing that same low rumbling that signalled that another aftershock was coming. The buildings in that area that we have since lost – the ballroom, those on the corners of London and Oxford Streets and the Harbourlight Theatre – form the backdrop of my memories of that morning. The façades of these buildings generally come to mind listening to this work. They are not dark or menacing memories by any means, just memories.

Coming down with technical failures 1:53
Artist: Furchick (Perth, Australia)

An exploration of the voice from a place of discomfort, fear and uncertainty. The piece represents an attempt to make something beautiful, peaceful and calm, but when life is disrupted by calamity, but the darkness of the experience is never truly at rest again.

Furchick is an Australian ex-pat of New Zealand who currently resides in Perth. She is working on a sound score for Jukstapoz, a contemporary dance company based in Athens, Greece for premier in February 2014. She has a collaborative sound project with Amy Church called iambe, and usually performs solo with an experimental live sound at the crossover between art and science. She toured to NZ in January 2013, playing in Auckland and Wellington and both islands in 2011, including in Christchurch post earthquake while the damage was still fresh and the aftershocks were significant. Other recent significant achievements have included a water based sound installation at The Mart contemporary art museum in northern Italy, performing at  Sound Summit in Newcastle, Australia, and at the International Noise Conference in Sydney and Melbourne. https://soundcloud.com/furchick

Hidden Voices 8:45
Artist: Brent Holt (Auckland,NZ)

This work uses environmental sound sources recorded around city streets and other locations, originally with the idea to use mechanical engine noises to create the theme for the work. Once I began to edit and abstract new sounds from the source recordings, I was struck by the melodic and rhythmic quality that seemed hidden in both natural and mechanical sound sources. I have tried to create a sound world that brings out the hidden voices and song within the sound of everyday life. From the sound of crickets and rain, musicians practicing their instruments mixed with a passing train and airport soundscapes, to create a new perspective from which to listen to the music in the “noise” of everyday life.

Brent Holt – Born 1966 in Rotorua, has lived in Auckland since 1986. A keyboard player, sound engineer & composer mainly involved with producing children’s music for CD, TV and radio. “Hidden Voices” was as part of a sonic arts portfolio composed in 2010 while completing a Bachelor of Music at The University of Auckland.

Research into Incompatibility Symptoms 10:34
Artist: JA (Christchurch, NZ)

A is a set of recordings from 2008-2010 put to together to create a mess of sound flying everywhere and crashing into walls (some even went out the window)!
http://toxicrecordsarefun.blogspot.co.nz/
http://jamusic6.bandcamp.com/

EcoTechno experiments at the Timeball 15:47
Artists: John McCallum & Nick Guy

Remixed found sounds from the port and timeball escapement, live  in the clock room Dec 2000 at the opening of High St Project 172 43′ exhibition. Sound by Marcus Winstanley

Exquisite Garden 4:45
Artist: Mela (Lyttelton,NZ)

The exquisite garden is and always will be a work in progress.

Seven 0:31
Artist: Mela (Lyttelton,NZ)

Part of a series of recordings that uses music boxes and distressed hard-drives. Seven is a frantic music box dance that piles up on itself.

Mela is a Lyttelton-based sound artist who generates a mellifluous musical microclimate using obsolete and discarded sound sources.

Moments of Silence 9:16
Artist: Luke Munn (Auckland, NZ)

Found video and audio recordings of moments of silence, taking place at vigils , government assemblies, sports games, and private remembrances.

Luke Munn is a conceptual artist based in Berlin, using the body and
code, objects and performances to activate relationships and
responses. His projects have featured in the Kunsten Museum of Modern
Art, the Centre de Cultura Contemporània de Barcelona, Fold Gallery
London, Causey Contemporary Brooklyn and the Istanbul Contemporary Art
Museum, with commissions from Aotearoa Digital Arts, Creative New
Zealand and TERMINAL and performances in Paris, Dublin, Chicago,
Berlin, Auckland, and New York. http://www.lukemunn.com/

Outside perspective 0:37
Artist: Claire Pannell with Rob Haakman

An outsider will never fully know what it was like …… we found ourselves following the aftermath of the earthquake from afar, viewing it from the perspective of a voyer, not quite comfortable with this position, wondering how people cope. This track was created from field recordings of everyday sounds from Ubud in Indonesia and a conversation that was unknowingly recorded. The sounds are from the perspective of a fascinated outsider, sounds that a local may not realise are so unique. Each place has its own sounds, smells and visions. Listening to this takes us back to Ubud, but we never really got to know the place.

109 1:09
Artist: Blair Parkes (Christchurch)

109 seconds recorded in the backyard
109 Oram Ave, New Brighton
14th February. 2011
25th February, 2012

Blair Parkes is a 46 year old artist living and working in New Brighton, Christchurch, New Zealand. He makes music with saturations, range and the l.e.d.s. His art includes painting, video, image manipulation and drawing. For more please see  www.blairparkes.wordpress.com

Fremantle Port 24:52
Artist: Malcolm Riddoch (Lyttelton, New Zealand)

A soundscape based on an afternoon’s field recording from five locations around the port of Fremantle in Western Australia. The recording’s intended purpose is to play with and hopefully blend into the live environmental soundscape of the port of Lyttelton in South Island New Zealand.

The Perpetual Cloister 4:32
Artist: The Rothko Chapel (Melbourne/Canberra, Australia)

The piece is more of an imagined perspective of potential and reality; even more so as we have not visited Lyttelton since the Week before the February 2011 earthquake. The theme of  ‘cloister’ relates to the imagined space; a place of contemplation, a focus of community activity, a gallery of mutual support and refuge, a site that provides a position of strength – The Perpetual Cloister being so much more than just a pinpoint on the map – a forum, a platform for transition to the future.

It has two movements spanned by a transition phase. They reflect the relatively newfound changeability of the region’s geography; it’s effect on the people – a dark time followed by a time of renewal and healing – landscape and urban environment. The listener can engage with each phase of the piece as it passes and be reminded about various aspects of the events of the last three years. The piece gently encourages the listener to invest in a few minutes to reflect on sometimes-punishing situations and the burdens that follow but are then able to explore and imagine possibilities as life moves forward in the context of a more optimistic atmosphere.

The Rothko Chapel was established in 2012. It is an ongoing collaborative guitar noise project helmed by Pete Dowd (Singlecoil) and Charles Sage (Hessien, y0t0), incorporating multiple participants. It is open source, loud and without boundary. In April 2013 The Rothko Chapel released its first track, ‘The Carrefour Plane’, on UK label Tessellate Recordings’ compilation, ‘Earthtones’. http://therothkochapel.tumblr.com/ http://tessellaterecordings.bandcamp.com/ http://tessellaterecordings.wordpress.com/

Whitenoise 01 2:16
Artist: Sophia Schön (Auckland/Berlin)

The work is an investigation into the operation and failure of language and how silence takes an active role. It aims to draw awareness to the listeners’ surroundings, and sense of self. It uses white noise, the sound generated through everyday activities that is in our constant oral periphery. It fades in and out, like a breath, rising and falling, thus drawing attention to the lack of language, the silence in between the noise and our presence in the space. This echoes the spaces left behind and carefully draws attention to new ones created in the Lyttelton Civic Square. It also does not use language, as often when such life changing events occur, we surpass language and connect, heal and communicate in silence.

Sophia Schön is an artist living and making work in Auckland. She was born in Berlin, and since moving to Auckland has studied a Bachelor of Visual Art at AUT followed by a Postgraduate Diploma. She is interested in the way language operates and how silence takes an active role, extending to a wider relationship between art and viewer. She has exhibited at ST Paul Street Galleries.

ephemeris 12:42
Artist: Stanier Black-Five (Lyttelton, NZ)

“Un port retentissant où mon âme peut boire
À grands flots le parfum, le son et la couleur”

Created from recordings made between 2009 and 2012 in and around the Port of Lyttelton.

For the last two decades Stanier Black-Five has been actively involved with experimental music and sound art in the UK, Europe and New Zealand. Her audio work is largely based on the manipulation of her own environmental recordings, which she uses to create dense soundscapes that use sources from the pounding rhythms of trains to more recently the sounds of the earthquakes that have shaken her city. She performs and has had her music released in New Zealand and internationally, with forthcoming releases on the Entr’acte label later in 2013. http://stanierblackfive.com

Right to Protest 8:18
Artist: Welcoming Dusk (Christchurch)

A low fi electronic soundscape that written after hanging out at the port one evening.

Behind the lattice windows of a St Albans flat, velvet curtains hide the glittering lights of analogue synths, reverb units and filters. New-born sounds drift upwards as plaster dust falls. This first offering from Welcoming Dusk (Evan Schaare and Rachel Cullens) draws from Lyttelton’s aural landscape.

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Borderline Ballroom News

Borderline Listening Post Launch

ear 4 fbThursday 20th June

Lyttelton Civic Square: Cnr London & Canterbury Streets, Lyttelton

Tin Palace Gallery: 13A Oxford Street, Lyttelton

8-10pm

The Borderline Ballroom invites you to an exciting evening of sonic art to celebrate the official launch of the Borderline Listening Post in Lyttelton’s transitional Civic Square. Celebrations commence at 8pm sharp by the Listening Post, for the sound installation’s resonant inauguration.

The event then shifts to the Tin Palace at 8.15pm for live performances by local artists Memory Burn, Teen Haters and Zeug Gezeugt, interspersed with the sonic component curated by the Borderline Ballroom of the “Illuminate” light and sound exhibition running at the gallery on evenings between 20th and 23rd June.

Free event/donations welcome

The Borderline Listening Post is a public sound installation in a corner of Lyttelton’s Civic Square, featuring works contributed by local, national and international sonic artists. Some have responded directly to the space, while others have been inspired from afar to create works that range from soundscapes using the local environment as their source to electronic pieces and electroacoustic compositions. It will be playing 24 hours from June 20th onwards.

Artists featured in the initial programme include: Chris Cree Brown (Christchurch) – Jimmy Currin (Dunedin) – Dark Passenger (Melbourne) – Reuben Derrick & Chris Reddington (Christchurch) – Funes (Lyttelton) – Furchick (Perth) – Brent Holt (Auckland) – JA (Christchurch) – Luke Munn (Berlin) – Claire Pannell &  Rob Haakman (Perth) – Blair Parkes (Christchurch) – Malcolm Riddoch (Lyttelton) – The Rothko Chapel (Melbourne/Canberra) – Sophia Schon (Auckland/Berlin) – Stanier Black-Five (Lyttelton) – Welcoming Dusk (Christchurch)

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Borderline Ballroom

Zac Keiller (Aus) & Peter Wright (Lytt)

bbkeilorSunday, April 14, 2013
8:00pm in UTC+12

The Borderline Ballroom presents
an evening of avant-guitars with

Zac Keiller is an Australian musician discovering new and unique sonic textures from one of the most overused and unimaginatively approached instruments in Western music: The guitar. The majority of his previous releases saw him working with ambient textures or electroacoustic improvisation. More recent efforts have seen him limiting the use of pedals, attempting to find a kind of transcendence through stark purity of tone. Coaxing rawness and purity, where the pickups hum and the blemishes become the highlights with Keiller using the entire guitar, attempting to make it breathe with no smoothing out of the rough edges or slick over processing. His compositions vary and grow to tell stories and create mood, with an atmosphere in parts epic wall of sound, while at others minimal and sublime.
https://soundcloud.com/zac-keiller

Peter Wright’s sound works are predominantly based around drones and repetition, layering fragments of guitar in mesmerising fields of drift, conjuring up aural landscapes that place emphasis on sub-conscious memories and dreams. Weaving amongst this dense undergrowth are a myriad of tonal shifts, environmental recordings, and electronic effects, which evoke alien spirits at the periphery of sleep.
http://distantbombs.bandcamp.com/

8pm sharp start – this is an early evening gig

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Borderline Ballroom

ALEXANDER TUCKER w/Delaney Davidson, Rangi Ranga

bbtuckerThursday, December 13, 2012
8:00pm in UTC+13

The Borderline Ballroom recommends:

ALEXANDER TUCKER (UK)

Hailed by The Wire as an ‘avant folk genius’, psychedelic outsider artist Alexander Tucker has been creating his distinctly British song cycles for many years, released firstly on ATP Records and more recently on Thrill Jockey. His music is an intensely personal world of dream-logic narratives and out-of-focus scenes, as much heavy and sonic as it is gentle and acoustic.

Tucker’s sound has developed over the years since his first self-titled solo album, which featured acoustic finger-picking, experimental electronics and was released on Jackie O Motherfucker’s U-Sound Archives label. He went on to combine compositional song structures, drones, layered vocals and improvisations on his 2005 album Old Fog released on ATP Recordings. This collection of spectral moods, eerie landscapes and fragile emotions was followed by Furrowed Brow (2006) and Portal (2008), where the songs and melodies became more pronounced, whilst infecting the tracks with underlying drone currents, traditional finger-picking, doom riffs and David Crosby inspired harmonies. In the past three years Tucker has signed with the US label Thrill Jockey, releasing two albums Dorwytch and 2012’s Third Mouth, both of which tend more toward psychedelic songs structures, rudimentary beats and layered instrumentation.

Tucker collaborates regularly with members of Sunn O)))) and Circle and forms half of Imbogodom with NZ’s Daniel Beban. Equally active as a visual artist, Tucker’s drawings and experimental films will be exhibited at venues during the tour. Heavily influenced by NZ psych and noise music, Tucker’s visit is an eagerly anticipated musical pilgrimage.

http://www.thrilljockey.com/thrill/Alexander-Tucker/

TOUR DATES – ALEXANDER TUCKER
7/12 – Wellingon @ Puppies as part of the Rising Tides Festival
13/12 – Lyttelton @ Wunderbar w/Delaney Davidson, Rangi Ranga
15/12 – Dunedin @ Crown Hotel w/Murderbike, Wolfskull
21/12 – Auckland @ Whammy Bar w/Orchestra of Spheres, Pumice

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Borderline Ballroom

IMBOGODOM (NZ/UK)

bbimbogWednesday, December 12, 2012
8:00pm in UTC+13

‘Imbogodom’s music can feel like walking inside a strange house at night and finding yourself momentarily startled by the sound of your own breath. Equal parts psych-folk songsmithery and musique concrète’ – Pitchfork

Imbogodom is the duo of Alexander Tucker and NZ’s Daniel Beban (Orchestra of Spheres, Siign of the Hag). The group started when Beban was working night shifts as a sound engineer at the BBC World Service in London. The two would spend endless nights deep in the basement of the World Service headquarters, Bush House, dusting off old reel-to-reel tape machines, conducting tape loop experiments and creating eerie sound worlds with foley devices, found objects and instruments. Rekindling the almost extinguished flame of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop (think Dr Who theme), the duo’s sound was formed by the limitations of the outdated equipment and ghostly, subterranean atmosphere of Bush House.

Imbogodom have released two albums on Thrill Jockey, The Metallic Year, and They Turned Not When They Went. Both albums display the duo’s fascination with sound experiments and songwriting and have received much critical acclaim. For this NZ tour they are recreating the BBC sound studios kiwi style, complete with old reel-to-reel machines, foley objects and psychedelic atmospheres. Included in their tour is a special show in the immensely resonant entrance hall of the Wellington Train Station.

‘Imagine the cracked surface of an uninhabited planet. Imagine the red sky. Imagine that the wind there carries sounds along with bits of celestial dust — dreamy sounds, haunted sounds, maybe even tragic sounds. Surreal? Absolutely, and so are the soundscapes of Imbogodom’ – Tiny Mix Tapes

http://www.thrilljockey.com/thrill/Imbogodom/

TOUR DATES : IMBOGODOM
12/12 – Christchurch @ Physics Room w/Adam Willetts
14/12 – Dunedin @ None Gallery w/Gate
19/12 – Wellington @ Wellington Train Station w/Jonny Marks
22/12 – Auckland @ Audio Foundation

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Borderline Ballroom

This is not Keith

bbkeithSaturday, November 17, 2012
8:30pm in UTC+13

In the absence of Keith Fullerton Whitman, who cancelled his tour due to visa delays caused by Hurricane Sandy, Altmusic and The Borderline Ballroom in conjunction with the Physics Room, will be throwing a party featuring some fine local acts:

Adam Willetts
Regressor
with DJs I Rory and Toshi

It’s FREE
It’s BYO

Come and celebrate the resurgence of the Christchurch experimental scene this long weekend

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Borderline Ballroom

Borderline Basement 2.0

bb2Friday, June 8, 2012
8:00pm in UTC+12

The Roastery

Come celebrate our 5th birthday at the Roastery. It’s also the Lyttelton Festival of Lights so there’ll be fireworks, mulled wine, and food around to accompany our sonic revelry.

Your noise-makers for the night are: Scythes / Oscillaterals / No No No

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Borderline Ballroom

Old Growth Cola (Bris)/Van Halo (Chch)/ Teen Haters (Lytt)

bbteenSaturday, February 11, 2012
8:00pm until 11:00pm

The Borderline Ballroom presents

Old Growth Cola (Bris)/Van Halo (Chch)/ Teen Haters (Lytt)
& Borderline DJ Stanier Black-Five

Free

Old Growth Cola
Brisbane based Old Growth Cola bring their whimsical brand of experimental psych pop to Christchurch’s Borderline Ballroom. The date is part of a New Zealand tour that coincides with the release of a live cassette courtesy of Breakdance the Dawn and limited edition 7” lathe cut.
http://oldgrowthcola.bandcamp.com/

Van Halo
Christchurch duplexicon of many free-time associations and witchuals observed. Burns holes in woven dependencies, free for all. All for none. Rugcore dialectics weave from library returns to nightwalker revelations. A tableau of auxiliary gains accumulating rust, hoarded from excoriated vocals, primordial percussives, jammed tapes, and room tone returns.

Teen Haters
A new collaboration between Mela and Peter Wright, Teen Haters fuses the mournful swell of decaying cello with the burp and whine of unearthed electronic flurries, trailing arcs of disrhythmia like a blackout dose of narcotics, to irreversibly tarnish the city that shines.

Plus sonic segues of psych noise and perplexing pop from Stanier Black-Five.