experimedia bootlegs surfacing

November 10th, 2008

Some illegal digital bootlegs of some Experimedia releases are starting to surface around the outer regions of the internets!  Flattering in a way.  So if your one of those people who dont like to support artists directly or you think $10 is too expensive for a nice custom packaged CD (with free bonus download when ordering through experimedia.net) or $5 is too much for a digital download or you want more for free than the free releases we already have available (on resting bell and experimedia)….there is now an alternative for you!

review of Vryashn by Stephen Fruitman for sonomu.net

November 10th, 2008

Review of Vryashn by Stephen Fruitman for sonomu.net

The present reviewer must confess to having no idea of this duo´s
track record, but artistically at least it looks like a case of the old
ketchup-effect: nothing, nothing for a long time and then suddenly,
splat! Five releases on three different labels, including their own, in
a matter of a few short months.

Vryashn is presented as an “avant-garde sound experience” intended
for deep listening. A tad generic as a description, but then the two
extended pieces on this album really need no further introduction or
setting of the scene. What Bible and Henry have created speaks for
itself, and it does so softly and with great authority.

I fell for the first piece directly. In its slow, organic growth it
displays compositional maturity and dexterity. Vast grainy spaces shift
as viola and cello sway back and forth, the elements become integrated
and build a perfect whole. I am almost sad to have it come to an end.
It is a space for quiet contemplation and reflection, as sparse and
sacral as a Zen garden.

Initially I found myself indifferently disposed toward the second,
half-hour long piece, which would seem to be an altogether different
animal than its predecessor. Instead of floating in glorious statis, it
is more of an off-kilter collage; this must be the “avant-garde” bit
promised by the press release. I´m still not really enjoying myself -
until around the seventeenth minute when what sounds like an orchestra
schooled in nothing but holy mininalism begins to swell and we are back
in territory much more familiar and, to be honest, much more worthwhile
your time.

Having also recently heard Bible and Henry´s “Marker” on
Gruenrekorder, I know they are dedicated field recordists, but I prefer
their talent at creating mood, sustaining techniques, sounds bleeding
into one another, shifting colour. And the first seventeen minutes of
that second track simply seem out of place on Vryashn. Excise it and
you have what in my opinion is one of the most polished musical moments
of a year quickly approaching its end.

Textura.org : Ten Favorite Labels of 2008 and Reviews

November 6th, 2008

This months issue of e-zine Textura.org features spotlights Experimedia as pone of its Ten Favorite Labels of 2008.  Other labels include 12k, Hyperdub, Hypnos, Infraction, Kning Disk, Mismah, Schole, Spekk, and U-Cover. (Two labels from Stark County Ohio!!) There are also reviews of Experimedia releases by Asymmetrical Head, Koen Park, and Illusion of Safety.
Read it here. textura.org

Marker review by Tobias Bolt for Quietnoise (German)

October 29th, 2008

Can anyone translate for us by any chance?
A review by Tobias Bolt on Queitnoise.org
2008-10-21 - Review - Jeremy Bible & Jason Henry
Jeremy Bible & Jason Henry - »Marker« (Gruenrekorder)

Field
Recordings und akustisches Instrumentarium sowie deren ausgiebige
Bearbeitung bilden das Fundament für »Marker«, dem vorliegenden ersten
Part eines zweiteiligen Albumkonzepts auf Gruenrekorder. Dessen Urheber
sind Jeremy Bible & Jason Henry, ein, milde ausgedrückt,
veröffentlichungs- freudiges Tonkünstlerduo aus Ohio, deren zu Beginn
etwas distanziert wirkenden Klangraumentwürfen man sich idealerweise
mit Kopfhörern und viel Aufmerksamkeit nähert.

Denn gleich die
ersten drei der insgesamt fünf Stücke umfassenden CD präsentieren sich
als jeweils knapp viertelstündige, ziemlich spröde Skizzen. Diese
machen es, düster pointiert und oft mit ein wenig zu auffällig
arbeitenden rhythmischen Loops durchsetzt, einem nicht immer leicht,
fokussiert zu bleiben. Nur allzu schnell verliert man sich in den
weitläufigen Nebenhöhlen aus bis zur Unkenntlichkeit herangezoomten
Sounds, tackernden Rhythmen und Field Recordings von Alltagsgeräuschen.
Eine merkwürdig faszinierende, ausgedehnte Klangschattenwelt, die
langsam vorbei zieht und erst mit dem vorletzten Track »Glacr«
emotional greifbarer wird.

Dieser bietet fein geschwungene,
hypnotische Ambientflächen mit sanften Geräuschbruchlinien.
Gletscherspaltenmusik, die mit unverhohlenem Hang zum Symphonischen
angenehm an die besten Momente von Biospheres Breitwandepos »Substrata«
zu erinnern vermag. Versöhnlich schließlich auch der Ausklang, in dem
sich bereits zuvor verwendete Ausschnitte aus Talkshows zwischen
melancholisch verkatertem Gitarrengeplonker verflüchtigen. Ich sag es
mal so: ein seltsames Album, bei dem es sich durchaus lohnen kann, über
gewisse anfängliche Unnahbarkeiten hinwegzuhören.
//
English Translation//
Field
recordings and acoustic instruments as well as extensive treatment
thereof are the groundwork for »Marker«, the first part of a two-piece
album concept for German label Gruenrekorder. Creators are Jeremy Bible
and Jason Henry, a duo from Ohio. At first their sounds act a bit
reserved so earphones and a high attention level are definitely
recommended when the first three of overall five tracks present
themselves as roughly 15-minute long brittle outlines. With their
sometimes gloomy punchlines and slightly predominant working
rhythm-loops it’s not always easy staying focused. Quickly one can
loose oneself in the spaciously burrows built of nearly unrecognisable
sounds, rattling rhythms and field recordings of everyday-sounds. A
strangely fascinating sound-twilight-zone is passing by and it is not
until the fourth track that it becomes more emotional tangible. This
one features delicately carved hypnotic ambient surfaces with gentle
rupture lines of distant noises and an avowedly disposition to the
symphonic - which reminds of the best moments of biospheres epic work
»Substrata«. Eventually the album closes in a relaxed conciliatory
atmosphere where details from talk-shows dissolve between melancholic
hung-over guitar-chords. Let me put it that way: a strange and
beautiful album, that definitely will reward a closer examination.

multiple jbjh reviews in textura (october)

September 30th, 2008

The October issue of Textura features reviews of three recent albums by Jeremy Bible & Jason Henry. Also if you are on the Textura mailing list there are some Experimedia triva questions with Experimedia releases as prizes. Keep an eye on Textura next month as well for further exciting Experimedia coverage.

“Vector, Shpwrck, and Marker are naturally complementary recordings from Ohio-based sound artists Jeremy Bible and Jason Henry that fuse found, acoustic, and electronic sounds into abstract material of pointedly evocative design. The Experimedia releases are distinctive on a visual level too, with the releases’ discs tucked away in tall, three-panel packages whose photographic imagery parallels the duo’s sonic approach by magnifying natural imagery to degrees of near-abstraction (leaves on Vector, charred wood on Shpwrck); though more conventional in dimensional terms, Marker’s cover imagery is similar in tone to the Experimedia packages. The concept even extends to the releases’ allusive and distancing song titles (e.g., “Alska,” “Rtn,” “Vctr,” “Glacr”).

Four of Vector’s six pieces are in the twelve-to-fifteen-minute range, so the material has ample opportunity to develop. Apparently, acoustic sounds such as piano, cello and voices comprise part of Vector’s sonic palette but, true to genre form, the processing manipulations are so thorough they lessen the recognizability of said elements. The gloomy dreamscape “Alska” wends through Philip Jeck territory when sounds of gouged vinyl and industrial noise loop incessantly alongside phantom winds and sheets of distorted noise. It’s followed by “Fndt,” an industrial mass of metallic, static-soaked rumble that writhes and heaves for a queasy fifteen minutes, and “Flck2,” where waves crash through layers of granular grit prior to the emergence of aviary chatter, traffic sounds, and percussive knocking. Multi-tiered waves crest and fall throughout “Rtn,” after which Vector grows increasingly nightmarish as it works through the brief “Vctr” and convulsive machine noise of “Lmp.”

Shpwrck is not only broader in its stylistic range but, in some respects, the easier listen of the two. Though three pieces still exceed the ten-minute mark, half are under eight minutes and, while there’s no diminishment of abstract character, the overall sound design is sometimes less dense and therefore easier on the ears. The framing pieces, “Shpwrck1” and “Shpwrck2,” suggest that the recording would make a natural companion to Mesoscaphe, the recent work by Mathieu Ruhlmann and Celer whose nautical focus is the thirty-day 1969 Gulf Stream voyage of the Ben Franklin submarine. One would expect Shpwrck to sound darker by comparison, given the violent fate intimated by the title, but in fact only parts of it are bleak in spirit. The two “Shpwrck” tracks are, in fact, rather peaceful settings of muffled tonal drift, with rustling percussive clatter a constant companion to foghorn-like tones that pierce the shadowy haze. Blustery trumpet smears in “Dstromsh” recall Toshinori Kondo’s playing on Paul Schutze + Phantom City’s Site Anubis, and the track itself is an apocalyptic nightscape that would sound perfectly at home on Schutze’s recording. Elsewhere, crowd chatter humanizes the gloomscapes “Yetisltk” and “Yetiatk” while “Sphotnblp,” “Luupn,” and “Cldstrct” concentrate on tinkling bell tones, reverb-heavy piano, and curdling string atmospheres respectively.

Marker is very much sonically in keeping with the other two, despite the fact that it’s issued on Gruenrekorder, a label more known for its field recordings output than experimental electronic music-making. Much like Vector, the hour-long Marker features four extended settings (fourteen minutes apiece) and a shorter outro. As before, field elements (e.g., children’s voices, radio talk show conversations) and natural sounds (e.g., cymbal percussion) swim in thick electronic baths amidst alien noises of unidentifiable character. The release rarely resembles music of any conventional kind and is clearly geared towards the listener weaned on heavily abstracted soundscaping. The industrial soundscaping of “Ast” unfolds in a queasy ebb-and-flow that feels akin to a turbulent dream-state, after which phantoms drift through an industrial wasteland in “Fragmnt.” The recording’s finest moment arrives when Bible and Henry navigate vast expanses of frozen tundra during the vaporous epic “Glacr,” a slowly heaving mass of ambient cloud formations whose immensity overshadows all that’s come before. The tranquil closer “Indnt” is almost as appealing, despite being the complete opposite of “Glacr” in so many ways. Even so, ending the album with gentle guitar shadings and restrained atmospheric textures (including a re-appearance of the earlier talk show snippets) is a smart move on the creators’ part given that it’s the last impression the listener takes away when the recording’s done. File all three releases under “immersive headphones listening.”

fragment of frgmnt on Amphibious Andromeda

September 27th, 2008

The interesting blog site Amphibious Andromeda by Ricardo Bloch which posts a photograph and sound for each day of the year…has used a fragment of the piece ‘frgmnt’ from Jeremy Bible & Jason Henry’s album Marker on the German label Gruenrekorder.

Vryashn review in The Wire (October)

September 23rd, 2008

http://experimedia.net/press/jbjh-vryashn_wire_oct08_review.jpgAnother very flattering review of Jeremy Bible & Jason Henry’s album Vryashn on Gears of Sand…this time by the respected uk print magazine The Wire.

“2008 is shaping up to be a busy year for the Ohio duo - three albums have appeared over the last few months, and another four are scheduled before the end of the year. And if they’re all as immersive and incantatory as Vryashn, we’re in for a treat. Schematically, this record is as simple as it gets - two lengthy, sonorous tracks clocking in at a total of 50 minutes - but the closer you look, the more complex things get, with looming, viscous currents offset by a seductive parade of pattering detail. Fluttering piano notes pierce shifting planes of texture, catspaws of white noise skip across the swell, and Echoplexed flurries float, like distant birdsong, back and forth across the threshold of audibility. Vryashn reveals a perfect balance between fluidity and architecture before disappearing into a haze of chiming bells.” - The Wire
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Vryashn review on The Milkfactory by Max Schaefer

September 23rd, 2008

Max Schaefer put together an eloquently written review of the Jeremy Bible & Jason Henry album ‘Vryashn’ for the respected ezine themilkfactory.   Thanks to Max and themilkfactory for the very kind words and support!

The two suites of ambitious, sweeping sounds that express but never wholly manifest themselves here, superimposed as they are in layers to infinity, were inspired by the shifting perspectives and hallucinogenic detail of dreams. The mind reels in the declamatory breathlessness and multilayered incantations, out of which slip assiduous sonic close-ups that are soon swallowed by depersonalized electronic shadows, and which return hereafter only as distorted or transformed traces that haunt and push the works further still.

The duo’s approach is anything but radical. They draw heavily from piano and a slew of musical and non-musical instruments, which are then subtly treated through a laptop. It becomes exceptional owing to its almost shocking organizational smoothness that belies the multiplicity of its sources and therefore highlights how ambient music has internal collage logic at its centre.

Some very substantial and evolving electronic sluicing abounds on Part II, ranging from petite fog exercises, with blurred piano chords winking like stars, post-industrial roughness and rippling textures to drones that arc deep into the night sky. Things progress slowly but eventfully; and eventually gently-contoured textures sweep in and then oxidize, while faint striations and distressed electronics obscure the background and create an atmosphere of unexpected menace. Before the work ends, another turn of logic finds its place, as some digital flutter and micro-sonics swell into a fecund, almost celebratory whole. Few albums so thoroughly and unapologetically apply themselves to such a trenchant aesthetic and then manage to mine so much from it.

4.2/5

Jeremy Bible & Jason Henry - Marker [out now on Gruenrekorder]

September 15th, 2008

Artwork: Jeremy BibleMarker, the new album by Jeremy Bible & Jason Henry is now available from the Frankfurt, Germany based label Gruenrekorder.

SYNOPSIS: Marker is the first in a two part album concept for the Gruenrekorder label by Canton, Ohio, US based sound artists Jeremy Bible & Jason Henry. Marker combines multiple elements in order to create constructed fictional environments, realities, locations, and atmospheres. Field recordings captured from the northeast Ohio region and often times in and around the individual artist’s homes, processed and clean, play a large part, alongside treated and processed acoustic instruments and subtle touches of electronic sound design.

CONCEPT: The two albums, Marker and Magnet, were created with the intention of being experienced both individually and consecutively allowing for up to four unique listening contexts.  It is also recommended that the pieces which the two albums are comprised of are combined and experienced in a random manner creating infinite listening experiences.

PROCESS: The sound elements presented on both Marker & Magnet were recorded, composed, performed, collected, and organized by the artists individually over a period of time for the intention of single impromptu & improvised collaborative recording session.  Following this ‘content collection’ period the artists met for a lengthy recording session at Jeremy Bible’s Experimedia Studio1 where these individual sound elements were arranged, processed, and mixed by the two artists in an improvisational manner under conditions of half sleep like states of subconscious focus.  The elements of surprise introduced in a collaborative improvisational recording scenario play a large role in the duo’s process and resulting sound works.

WHITE_LINE reviews IOS & JBJH releases

September 15th, 2008

Review site WHITE_LINE has posted very kind reviews of three of Experimedia’s recent releases.

A trio of new releases from Experimedia demonstrates that Jeremy Bible & Jason Henry are alive and well, and making great work as usual. Housed in very extravagant fold out packaging with beautifully photographed natural elements such as burnt wood, leaves, mould etc, they more than hint at the quality of the releases contained within. Also included in the trio of releases is a new work from Illusion of Safety, a group that should need no introduction to 40 somethings like myself, who invested a lot of time and energy seeking out IOS releases many years ago in what would arguably have been their heyday. Dan Burke’s project resurfaces in the form of The Need to Now , a 7 tracker that does not dissappoint these ears, having not heard their more recent materials, this was a welcome opportunity to experience IOS’s distempered sampling, and edgy, tightly wound atmospherics. IOS have distilled their overall sound further since I last heard them, leaving yawning chasms of near silence to add drama and anticipation, allowing their taut, aqueous ambiences to swirl around sharply focussed field recordings and organic elements. Once again, IOS demonstrate a mastery of the medium in a welcome comeback.

Next up is Vector, a fine release from Messrs Bible and Henry specialising in stripped bare atmospherica, and discrete washes of near oceanic sound draped with granular surface textures. Pieces like “fndt” take an oblique approach, where the sounds of what appear to be jungle or forest ambiences are interleaved with oddly out of kilter sonic presences, somewhere between urban gamelan, and ritualistic chanting moving in and out of focus. The overall recording technique is slightly tainted, like oxidised metals, grating and grinding against each other, leaving a trail of dusts and shavings. In fact, the ensuing tracks, “flck2″ and “rtn” have a similar feel, creating shimmering, dusty trails, that feel somehow unearthly and disjointed, yet holding the attention all the while.Closing track “Imp”, once again uses organic sampling to fuel auditory out of body experiences with razor sharp sampling wrapped around an eerie piano or keyboard central theme, a dreamy, hazy closure to the whole proceedings.

Next up is Shpwrck from Bible and Henry, with trademark titling pared down to the barely discernible, leaving a measure of interpretation to the auditor. Once again, the pairing fuse heady organic field recording with strange, angular atmospheres, that remind me of some of the early recordings on the UK’s EM:T label, back in the day…in the main, these are eerie and spacious works, conjuring dark, but not altogether uncomfortable imagery, infused with the spirit of Dada, being a close cousin of musique concret perhaps, or some of the early works of Pierre Schaefer at times. Pieces like “sphotnblp” are pure experimentalism, using light and space to perpetrate areas of wondrous tonalism. The duo’s overall approach is certainly a breath of fresh air, as their canvas is littered with creative and original solutions, defying any obvious genre (always a good thing in my book), and creating a language all of their own. These three releases come with my highest recommendation, and in the words of Bible and Henry – “excllnt”. BGN

Vector & Shpwrck Review by Frans De Ward for Vital Weekly

September 4th, 2008

Review by Frans De Ward from Vital Weekly 638
JEREMY BIBLE & JASON HENRY - VECTOR (CDR by Experimedia)
JEREMY BIBLE & JASON HENRY - SHPWRCK (CDR by Experimedia)
Two new artists I think (with the amount of music arriving everyday one can’t always be sure), this time from Ohio, are Jeremy Bible and Jason Henry, who are closely connected to probably their own label Experimedia (ok, I reviewed music by Bible before in Vital Weekly 586). Two nice packages (glossy fold out prints) hold two of their recent releases. From the website I gather they “seek to expose a synergetic relationship between real world found sounds, acoustic instrumentation, and electronic sound design” and more than once such terms as ‘painting’ and ‘images’ are used. The language used on the website might be a bit swollen, but these two men do a nice job at what they do. Hardly surprising by any account, as both of these discs contain music that could go down as ‘experimental’, ‘ambient’ or ‘drone’, or anything that is a combination of these words. There are large chunks of field recordings to be spotted around here, sometimes almost ‘clean’, but at other times highly processed. Some of the techniques involved sometimes are bit dull, like time stretching, but throughout I must admit they do a fine job. Listening to both in a row is perhaps a bit much, but I must say if I had to choose a favorite from these two, I think ‘Shpwrck’ would be it. It’s a little more diverse in approach, with a more varying input in sounds, instruments and sound processing. Both dwell a bit too much on the use of reverb, but such is unfortunately a common place in this kind of music. Quite enjoyable late night music. (FdW)

vryashn review on furthernoise.org by Alan Lockett

September 4th, 2008

A review of our album Vryashn has been posted on Furthernoise.org by Alan Lockett as part of a profile of the Gears of Sand label.
“Jeremy Bible & Jason Henry harness an array of electro-acoustics in forging Vryashn, a work of great depth and subtle eloquence. JB&JH propose a theme of the sensation of a dream within a dream; of being surrounded by snow, becoming numb and falling asleep only to awake in the rain in another dream and location. Various phases of such an experience are depicted, from elated to disorientated. Various sound sources - piano, water line pipes, wine glasses, rain on a window, and a garage lamp - articulate Vryashn’s variations; a two-part immersion zone of fragmentation and re-moulding that shuns the delicacy of a Budd bath for riskier reefs towards Andrew Liles’ The Dying Submariner and Aloof Proof’s Piano Text. JB&JH curate a descent into a drowned world of wrecked and wracked elegiacs, attended by envelopes of trills pushed into spills, redrawn revenants distended in a quest for new euphony. The duo’s design is to pique to poke in textural caverns and inlets of accidental harmonics. They achieve this, “Vrashyn I” exemplifying the warmth and spacious movements of their reverberant Satie dissolution - a fine exhibit of well-treated piano.”

jeremy bible & jason henry - shpwrck [expcd005]

August 25th, 2008

Jeremy Bible and Jason Henry’s Shpwrck, is a beautifully diverse opus, bringing together a wide range of acoustic instruments and field recordings through unique processing and arrangements. Dark and minimal yet oddly comforting, Shpwrck’s wide open spaces succeed at creating exotic environments illustrating the duo’s growing attention to detail at crafting and bringing together delicate textures into lengthy abstract sound art montages. Subtle breaths of musicality lie amongst constantly evolving beds of atmosphere. Touches of gritty surface noise and found recordings approach from the distance and momentarily come into focus. Shpwrck comes packaged in experimedia’s custom signature three panel folding tall slim pack featuring the photography of Jeremy Bible and is protected in a clear poly sleeve. Your order of the limited edition packaged CD includes immediate bonus downloads of the album in highest quality MP3 and/or lossless FLAC formats so that you may begin to enjoy the album before your package arrives. Orders of the physical package (including free bonus downloads) can be made HERE for $10. Download only sales of the full album in FLAC or MP3 are exclusively available HERE $5.

jeremy bible & jason henry - vector [expcd003]

July 30th, 2008


Vector, the new album by Jeremy Bible & Jason Henry, presents an epic 1 hour and 7 minute avant-garde sound experience. Vector unfolds through the amalgamation of a vivid palette of sounds placed delicately on a worn canvas, burnt and tattered around the edges. Piano and cello seep through soft blankets of distant voices, rhythmic crackling, and soft distortions. A thousand birds arise from pulsing tones against the occasional rumbling sine wave. A profound score from beginning to end intended for deep listening.

Vector comes packaged in experimedia’s custom signature three panel folding tall slim pack featuring the photography of Jeremy Bible and is protected in a clear poly sleeve.

Your order of the limited edition packaged CD includes immediate bonus downloads of the album in highest quality MP3 and/or lossless FLAC formats so that you may begin to enjoy the album before your package arrives. Download only sales of the full album in FLAC or MP3 will be available exclusively through experimedia for $5 approximately one month after the CD release. This release will proudly NOT be available on iTunes.

NOW AVAILABLE FOR ORDER AND MORE INFO HERE

Vryashn - New Album Now Available

July 30th, 2008

JEREMY BIBLE & JASON HENRY: VryashnOur new album ‘Vryashn’ is out now and available from the fantastic record label Gears of Sand. Alternatively you can get details/samples from cdbaby.

“This two track opus is a truly epic immersion into the vast imaginations of Bible and Henry. The confident, effortless development of broken piano treatment at Vryashn’s epicenter bring to mind the sublime energy of Harold Budd and Brian Eno. The unique talents of the constantly evolving Bible and Henry are on full display with Vryashn. For one, the well honed laptopist duo turn here to piano as their main medium.

While the warmth, spacious piano movements of ambient pioneers Harld Budd and Brian Eno is often drawn upon for inspiration by other artists, few are able to use the instrument in ways heard on Vryashn.

More album previews available at last.fm.

Rather than sparse notes played between silences, Bible and Henry use the piano as a launching pad into a sprawling world of minimal piano motifs that build tension and release given a depth through subtle laptop treatments.

Vryashn is arguably a definitive statement of Bible and Henry’s talents as composers on the cutting edge of an overflowing and arguably oversampled electronic scene.

Beyond synthetic ’soundscapes’ or ‘interesting textures’ Vryashn coalesces into an extraordinarily epic journey.

Unfolding over two movements clocking in at just over 50 minutes, the work’s addictive minimalist motifs pull the listener in only to be washed over–often unexpectedly–by subtle sonorities of breathy fibrillations, pulsing machinery, and radiant drones that intrigue but never serve to take Vryashn off its massive, radiant course. In a word, breathtaking.”

Halfadder - Staying Home Tonight Ep (Jason Henry)

July 14th, 2008

The new and fantastic Halfadder EP…Staying Home Tonight….is available now.

“Staying Home Tonight contains four tracks of left field computer music written for depressed robots. Relying heavily on generative, non-deterministic techniques halfadder blends concréte, electro-acoustic and electronic music concepts to deliver an ep that he hopes is as equally pleasing to the mind as it is to the ears and the feet.”

RECEIVE IT HERE

Jeremy Bible & Jason Henry in Massillon Ohio Saturday June 21st

June 19th, 2008

Jeremy Bible & Jason Henry will be performing in Massillon, Ohio Saturday night the 21st on the historic Lincoln Theatre stage for the annual ArySyrcus event presented by The Ananda Center and Arts in Stark.

We will be performing new material live accompanied by our original motion visual art projected on the giant theatre screen. We will take the stage at 9:30pm.

The ArtSyrcus event begins at 6pm and will features a variety of performances, visual fine art on display, and screenings of short films throughout the various areas of the Lincoln theatre.

The Lincoln Theatre opened Tuesday, November 23, 1915.

lionslincolntheatre.com | www.theanandacenter.org | artsinstark.com

50 years of Groupe de Recherches Musicales

June 18th, 2008

2008 marks the 50th anniversary of Groupe de Recherches Musicales, a French organization for research into sonology and electracoustic music. It was created by Pierre Schaeffer in 1958 as part of the Office de Radiodiffusion Télévision Française with François Bayle as its head (1966-1997).

Members of GRM consist of some of history’s greatest pioneers of sound. François Bayle, Luc Ferrari, Bernard Parmegiani, and Pierre Schaeffer just to name a few. If you are not familiar with these artist’s and their work we highly suggest you take some time to read about and listen to their work. They carved the path for today’s electracoustic music.

Field Notes #1: “Writings on Sound” | Field Notes Magazine by Gruenrekorder

June 10th, 2008

Our friends over at the german label Gruenrekorder have released their first issue of Field Notes magazine. The first issue - published in May 2008 - features six articles, written by Costa Gröhn, Tanja Hemm, Christoph Korn, Stefan Militzer, Marcus Obst (aka Dronæment) & Aaron Ximm (aka Quiet American).
gruenrekorder.de/fieldnotes

electro-music 2008 festival

June 8th, 2008

http://event.electro-music.com/ August 14-16, 2008 Kingsport, Tennessee
Three days of experimental electronic music concerts, jam sessions, lectures, and demos.
“The Woodstock of electronic music” — Philadelphia Inquirer
electro-music 2008 is a three day conference/music festival to be held at the Renaissance Center in Kingsport,Tennessee, August 14 - 16, 2008. The program will include lectures, demos, jam sessions, and concerts.
The scope of this festival is very broad, covering all aspects of electro-music, experimental electronic music, including circuit bending, computer music, electro-jazz, modular synthesis, musique concrete, improvisation, noodles (generated or automatic music and algorithmic composition), multi-media, visual art and much more. The focus will be on participant involvement, sharing, community development, audience education, and great music.

jbjh on walkman podcast

June 8th, 2008

A track from Jeremy Bible & Jason Henry’s recent album ‘glare’ on the restingbell.net label is featured on the fantastic walkman podcast. walkman-podcast

Jeremy Bible & Jason Henry @ electro-music 2008

June 5th, 2008

We will be performing at and attending the Electro-Music 2008 festival being held this year in Kingsport, Tennesee August 14th-16th.

Electro-music 2008, a three day conference/music festival to be held at the Renaissance Center in Kingsport,Tennessee, August 14 - 16, 2008. The program will include lectures, demos, jam sessions, and concerts.

The scope of this festival is very broad, covering all aspects of electro-music, experimental electronic music, including circuit bending, computer music, electro-jazz, modular synthesis, musique concrete, improvisation, noodles (generated or automatic music and algorithmic composition), multi-media, visual art and much more. The focus will be on participant involvement, sharing, community development, audience education, and great music.

electro-music 2008/

new jeremybible.com site

June 3rd, 2008

A new jeremybible.com site has been launched that features a nice interface which showcases his sound, photo, and video work.

‘glare’ now available from restingbell.net

May 18th, 2008

Our album ‘glare’ is now available from restingbell.net
Jeremy Bible and Jason Henry are two productive artists based in Canton, Ohio, an area of the United States referred to as ‘the rust belt’ due to its rapid industrial decline. Similar to their surroundings which contrast rural farmland against decaying industrial landscapes, the duo contrast various sounds and styles in ways that can be compared to the elegant and subtle color contrasts created by painters of fine abstract-expressionist art. Utilizing field recordings, found sounds, acoustic instrumentation and electronic soundscapes, their compositions take place in the wide field of musique concrete, experimental acoustic music, and electronic sound design.
“glare” is a huge piece of modern contemporary music. 5 tracks, about 60 minutes duration.From the first track, you can almost grab the intense and exciting spirit, being inherent in these pieces. Dark and gloomy melodies meet abstract glitches, lost radio frequencies, mysterious field recordings and other interferences. With all these ingredients, Jeremy and Jason create warm, nostalgic, and at times frightening scenery. It smells like old basements, dusty treasure chests, old physical instruments and yellowed pictures from your grandmother’s photo album. The duo’s growing catalog of “sound paintings”, each creating a new experience, will see release through a growing list of labels including Resting Bell, Gruenrekorder, Abgurd, Gears of Sand, and their own imprint, Experimedia.

Two upcoming releases on Experimedia

May 12th, 2008

We will be releasing two albums on Experimedia over the next two months.
vector [expcd003]
shpwrk [expcd005]

Performing at Art Displaced October Edition

May 12th, 2008

We will be performing at Art Displaced - October 25th 2008 - Massillon, Ohio | DETAILS HERE

Performing at Ingenuity Festival 2008

May 12th, 2008

We will be performing at Ingenuity Festival 2008 - Cleveland’s Annual Festival of Art & Technology
July 25th-27th 2008 Playhouse Square - Cleveland, Ohio
DETAILS HERE

Performing at NOTACON 5 - Cleveland, Ohio

May 12th, 2008

Jeremy Bible & Jason Henry will be performing at NOTACON 5 @ Holiday Inn Select City Centre - Cleveland, Ohio
Saturday April 5th 2008 - 9:30pm
DETAILS HERE

Album to be released on Gears of Sand

May 12th, 2008

Our piano based album entitled ‘Vryashn’ will be released on CD by Gears of Sand in May08.

Albums to be released on German label Gruenrekorder

May 12th, 2008

It was confirmed that two of our albums, Marker (pt1) and Magnet (pt2), which coincide with one another will be released on CD by German based label Gruenrekorder.

Album to be released on Berlin label Resting Bell

May 12th, 2008

We will be contributing work to the fantastic Berlin based label Resting Bell to be released May 2008.

Ound album to be released on Russian label Abgurd

May 12th, 2008

jeremy bible & jason henry - ound [abgurd ab55 - 2008]
Our album entitled ‘Ound’ will be released on Russian based label Abgurd.