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From:
patrick haenelt
To:
rhino ,
Date:
Tue, 22 Nov 2005 02:23:05 -0800 (PST)
Subject:
[idm] Thomas Jirku at Oscillate (tuesdays in Seattle)
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<20051122102305.45907.qmail@web36906.mail.mud.yahoo.com>
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Sensory Effect presents OSCILLATE -TUESDAYS at The Baltic Room--1207 pine st. Seattle, WA with residents ELECTROSECT and GREG SKIDMORE live visuals by SHANNON PALMER 8:30p $5 21+ this week's (Tue. Nov.22) special guests.... THOMAS JIRKU (force inc.-VAN)--live JERRY ABSTRACT (fixelplix, shitkatapult-SEA)--dj set .......and a special exclusive listening party for Richie Hawtin's new mic CD "DE9: Transitions" at 8:30p sharp...get there ealy to hear an exlusive playing of Richie's new release........ a little about the performers.... THOMAS JIRKU Germans have ruled minimal electronic music for nearly a decade, but in recent years Canadian producers have made huge strides to challenge the krafty Krauts. Toiling below the mainstream's radar, these Canuck artists have created some of the most challenging techno, microhouse, IDM, and ambient music of this young century. Czech Republic expat Tomas Jirku ranks among Canada's elite cadre of minimalist musicians. His luminous melodies whirl amid dubby techno and IDMbience, making for a stimulating tactile headphone experience or, when pitched up by a resourceful DJ, enticing warm-up ammo for a deep tech-house club set. Most dance music aspires to arouse euphoria, to make the crowd feel like one throbbing organism ever on the brink of orgasm; Jirku's productions inspire a restrained, fizzy sense of well-being that's just as therapeutic as the effects induced by his more outlandish peers. His records trigger a party in your head more than in your hips. Many producers are flashier and more demonstrative, but Jirku's oracular introversion possesses a sly charm, too. His contribution to the epochal Clicks & Cuts 2 comp, "Pohdka," sounds like a celebratory tech-house fist-pumper crafted by a cautious optimist. It's indicative of Jirku's lean, incisive style. There's a sober propriety about Jirku's cheese-free music, even on a cut titled "Booty" (off the Met@music compilation), which bustles and fizzes with a joy tempered with the knowledge that the higher you get, the harder you fall, so let's not get carried away, eh? But don't think Jirku can't get down and flirty. Sequins (Force Inc., 2000) is his most DJ-friendly work, affectionately retrofitting disco and house for a more streamlined, less coked-up decade. Ravers and club queens won't thrill to its subtle manipulations of familiar dance-floor tropes, but the album stands as a vibrant subversion of and homage to much-maligned genres. Never content to stay in one place for long, Jirku deviates into aquatic dub with Entropy (intr_version, 2002). Here, his laptop seems to be immersed in Pacific depths, emitting beatific waves that stir you at a molecular level. This one's strictly for the head(phone)s. Jirku's 2003 collaboration with Robin Judge, Plusism, fuses Basic Channel's dubwise sonic fragmentation and illusion-mongering to an array of glitchy tonal holographs, then nudges them on their way with supple, gliding 4/4 beats. It's uncertain what style(s) Jirku will unleash at his Seattle gig, but wherever he goes, you should attentively follow. Jirku told Discorder's tobias c. van Veen, "I don't connect myself to philosophies or politics. I prefer to think of my music as an exhibition of my aesthetic ideals, and to attach myself to something would only constrain me. And while minimalism is a pleasant aesthetic, it appears to have saturated our culture to the point where it has lost all context and meaning." Hmm--I think our culture could do with more minimalism, especially the well-ordered, beautifully expressed sort conjured by Jirku himself. DAVE SEGAL JERRY ABSTRACT Jerry was born and educated in Detroit, Michigan; where he began his explorations in electronic music and DJing. In Detroit he has performed at such influential nightspots as Submerge, The Motor Lounge, The Shelter, 13 below, and The Velvet Lounge. In 2003, Jerry also performed at the Movement (DEMF) Festival in Detroit. Residing now in Seattle, Jerry has held a residency at Groovetech and performed at such luminous clubs like Aero.Space, I-Spy, and Chop Suey. This last year his label Shitkatupult, invited him to Berlin where he had the opportunity to play the famous Tresor Club. Jerry is also the artistic director of the annual Decibel Festival in Seattle, making him an intigral part of our local electronic music community --------------------------------- Yahoo! FareChase - Search multiple travel sites in one click.