Yearly Archives: 2011

DEERHOOF

Deerhoof will battle evil at Europa on Tuesday night

Europa Club
98 Meserole Ave. at Manhattan Ave.
Tuesday, February 8, $16, 8:00
718-383-5723
www.myspace.com/deerhoof
www.europaclub.com

Deerhoof once again comes to the rescue of the stagnant music world with their latest album, DEERHOOF VS. EVIL (Polyvinyl, January 2011). Following in the footsteps of such previous experimental noise-pop records as THE MAN, THE KING, THE GIRL (1997), REVEILLE (2002), and FRIEND OPPORTUNITY (2007), Deerhoof — John Dieterich, Ed Rodriguez, Greg Saunier, and Satomi Matsuzaki — do what they do best, taking listeners on a twelve-song, thirty-three-minute journey through a multitude of crazy sounds, hard-to-decipher lyrics, and offbeat, ever-shifting melodies that delight while they confound. In songs such as the opener, “Qui Dorm, Només Somia” and “Hey I Can,” it’s as if they’ve added some toys to the mix. Spanish guitar is featured on “No One Asked to Dance,” while beautiful blasts of noise explode in “Behold a Marvel in the Darkness” and “Secret Mobilization.” “The Merry Barracks” goes through so many changes you’ll think your iPod is suddenly shuffling between different bands. Matsuzaki’s dreamy vocals are often more like another instrument, even when she intones, “I’m just a dream, you see” in “Must Fight Current.” The fuguelike “Almost Everyone, Almost Always” brings things to a close, marking the defeat of Evil. “Me to the rescue, me to the rescue,” Matsuzaki sings in “Super Duper Rescue Heads!” Deerhoof will continue rescue proceedings February 8 at Europa with Ben Butler & Mousepad, Buke and Gass, and Nervous Cop. Deeerhoof will also be part of the JapanNYC Festival, playing March 14 at (le) poisson rouge with special guests, including one-man band Ichi and Yuka Honda and Petra Haden of If by Yes.

TWI-NY TALK: WALLY CARDONA

Wally Cardona will hold INTERVENTION #5 on February 12 at the Baryshnikov Arts Center (photo by Peggy Kaplan / artwork by Adam Shecter)

Baryshnikov Arts Center
450 West 37th St.
Saturday, February 12, $15, 8:30
www.bacnyc.org
www.wcvismorphing.org

On January 8, Brooklyn-based dancer and choreographer Wally Cardona held the first of three New York City “Interventions” at the Baryshnikov Arts Center, intimate, experimental performances created over a whirlwind five-day collaboration with a specially selected expert from outside of the traditional dance community. Working with sound artist and activist Robert Sember, Cardona developed a complex piece involving verbal and nonverbal communication and movement over the course of a series of repeated scenes, each with unique and challenging variations. On February 12, Cardona will stage INTERVENTION #5 with Martin Kapell, a design partner and architect at WASA/Studio A who specializes in designing spaces for the performing and visual arts, including the Baryshnikov Arts Center itself. “My commitment to architecture springs from the principle that everyone is entitled to the benefits of intelligent design,” Kapell notes in his online bio, “and that architecture, when approached from this belief, can directly enhance and improve the way we live, work, learn, and play.” Cardona and Kapell are just beginning their collaboration, which will be presented Saturday night at BAC; Cardona discussed that and more in a twi-ny talk held shortly after the fourth Intervention.

twi-ny: In the past you’ve collaborated with such sound, visual, and movement artists as Phil Kline, Rahel Vonmoos, the Brooklyn Youth Chorus, Maya Ciarrocchi, ETHEL, Douglas Fanning, and now Robert Sember. What is the anticipation like waiting to hear which collaborator has been selected for you? Do you have any inklings yet on who your collaborators will be for #5 and #6?

Wally Cardona: I now know Intervention #5 will be with Martin Kapell, and that his profession is in architecture and design. Anticipation: I suppose that begins to show up — and take on various emotional states, depending on my frame of mind — on the day of our first meeting. For me, a powerful thing in each Intervention is not just the fact that I’m meeting a person from a very different discipline or field of inquiry but that I’m meeting a complete stranger. And with the agreement that we’ll spend a week together. The first thing that happens is I perform my “empty solo” for them, and I have to confess that with each Intervention, I begin the second day wondering if the person will show up again.

twi-ny: In New York City, you’ve performed at BAM, the Joyce and Joyce SoHo, Danspace Project, the Duke, and DTW. You’re currently working at BAC. How is the space there informing the new work?

Wally Cardona: I’m glad you brought up BAC! They’ve been incredibly generous in supporting and presenting three Interventions. Each time, you never know what you’re gonna get. With a working period radically condensed to five days and an agreement to make the resources usually available to me as a choreographer also available to each “expert,” all questions re: lights, sound, audience set-up, running time, etc., are usually unknown until the last day. So, all our methods and coping mechanisms are challenged — presenter, tech crew, artist, expert, and perhaps audience.

Robert Sember, Wally Cardona, and Francis Stansky perform the challenging and inventive INTERVENTION #4 on January 8 at BAC

twi-ny: What was it like to have Misha witness INTERVENTION #4?

Wally Cardona: Misha’s got soooo much information in his body. Something wonderful happens when being watched by a person with that amount of knowledge. I’m not sure I can explain it. It’s like I see more of myself. And one thing I find incredibly inspiring about Misha is how he is able to use a minimal amount of force to maximal effect. I feel like a bull in a china shop in comparison.

twi-ny: You have given yourself a mere five days to work with each collaborator at each venue. Why do that to yourself?

Wally Cardona: The entire construct of the collaboration is not like any I’ve experienced before. The point really is to initiate — rather than find mutual agreement or choreograph a “new work by Wally Cardona.” If an expert’s desire or request puts me in an uncomfortable position that feels at odds with my own preference, patterns, likes, or dislikes . . . I’m happy. So it’s kind of like a self-imposed intervention and they are aggressive, in their own bizarre way. Each puts me on shaky ground, demands my constant attention and works best when my generosity overrides my fear.

twi-ny: The word “intervention” works on several levels but immediately conjures up an action taken against one person or event. Why did you choose it as the title of this series of collaborations, since the word “collaboration” can be interpreted to be in direct conflict with “intervention”?

Wally Cardona: People often wonder how an Intervention actually works. This is part of a paragraph given to each “expert” before we meet: “We begin as strangers and get acquainted through a weeklong working process. On Day One, I perform my ‘empty solo’ for each collaborator as a starting point and form of introduction. I present each expert with the same solo, which is designed to bend to his/her interpretation, desire, or aesthetics. What I am most interested in is what each expert might want to see even though he/she might not yet know how to make it manifest; how to do this is to be discovered, together, in the studio. Each expert is asked to think of me as a tool to be utilized and exercised, and I, in turn, call upon my own expertise to realize his/her vision. There is no system to the week and how it unfolds; it is unique to each expert. What we know is that a public performance is the final result, which the expert cannot make without me, and for which I am reliant on the expert’s opinion.”

INTERVENTION #5 takes place February 12 at the Baryshnikov Arts Center. INTERVENTION #6 is scheduled for March 26.

CAVEH ZAHEDI: I DON’T HATE REALITY ANYMORE

Caveh Zahedi shares his deep-seated desire for prostitutes in the semiautobiographical I AM A SEX ADDICT



I AM A SEX ADDICT (Caveh Zahedi, 2005)

rerRun Gastropub Theater
147 Front St. between Jay and Pearl Sts.
Tuesday, February 8, and Wednesday, February 9, $5, 7:00
Series continues through February 10
718-766-9110
www.reruntheater.com
www.iamasexaddictthemovie.com

Indie writer, actor, and director Caveh Zahedi chronicles his sexual addiction in this oddball low-budget docudrama that is as fun as it is embarrassing. Zahedi plays himself as he re-creates pivotal scenes from his life, focusing on his relationships with Caroline (Rebecca Lord), Christa (Emily Morse), and Devin (Amanda Henderson) — each of which was troubled in different ways by his compulsion to visit street prostitutes. Zahedi regularly turns to the camera and addresses the audience (breaking time and space), shows actual footage of the real women, and gets way too personal by reenacting sex scenes that are humorous at first but eventually get to be too much information. Silly animation by Bob Sabiston and songs by Jonathan Richman keep things playful, there’s plenty of female nudity, and the acting is so convincing you’ll wonder at times which parts are the real thing. I AM A SEX ADDICT is being screened Tuesday and Wednesday nights as part of the reRun Gastropub Theater’s weeklong tribute to the Brooklyn-based Zahedi; the retrospective has already included “Six Short Films by and About Caveh Zahedi” and I DON’T HATE LAS VEGAS ANYMORE (1994) and continues Monday night at 7:00 with A LITTLE STIFF (1991) and concludes Thursday night with IN THE BATHTUB OF THE WORLD (2001).

WE LOYAL

Swiss rockers We Loyal will be playing five shows in nine nights on first New York City visit

Multiple venues
Monday, February 7, through Tuesday, February 15
www.myspace.com/weloyal

“Now we rush through the country / Our humming lips in a choir / We will lead across the land / With your hopes laid in our hand,” We Loyal declare on “Declare.” Not to be confused with Tokyo-based duo the Loyal We or Dubai hip-hoppers We Loyal Die Snitchen, the three-piece Basel-based We Loyal will be rushing through their first New York City visit this month with five gigs in nine days in support of their debut EP, 2010’s OBSTACLES. Produced by David Berger and Manuel Bürkli, the five-song disc features catchy Euro synth pop reminiscent of Interpol and Hypernova on such songs as “One Youth” and “Distant Heart.” Lead singer, songwriter, and guitarist Sandro Simon, bassist Ben Kuster, and drummer Fabian Trümpy, who all contribute synths as well, will be at the Trash Bar on Monday with Empty Chairs, Sunspots, and the Go Round ($7), Tuesday at Lit Lounge with Lohio and Donora ($6), Wednesday at Goodbye Blue Monday with Instinct Control, Delicate Sen, Lost Trail, and Meaghan Burke, Thursday at Fontana’s with Secret Country and Beneficial Tomatoes ($7), and the following Tuesday at Cameo Gallery with Chica Vas, Nihiti, and Hard Nips.

FRITZ LANG IN HOLLYWOOD: HOUSE BY THE RIVER

Louis Hayward gets into some big-time trouble in HOUSE BY THE RIVER (courtesy Photofest)


HOUSE BY THE RIVER (Fritz Lang, 1950)

Film Forum
209 West Houston St.
Tuesday, February 8, 2:45, 6:00, 9:15
Series continues through February 10
212-727-8110
www.filmforum.org

The 1950 lurid Gothic noir melodrama HOUSE BY THE RIVER might be midlevel Fritz Lang, but even second-rate Lang is worth watching. Louis Hayward stars as Stephen Byrne, a novelist who lives on the riverside of a small town with his wife, Marjorie (Jane Wyatt), and young maid, Emily (Dorothy Patrick), next to a very nosy neighbor, Mrs. Ambrose (Ann Shoemaker). On a lonely, unproductive afternoon, Stephen gets excited while allowing Emily to use the master bathroom to bathe and makes a creepy play for her that ends up with him accidentally strangling her. He forces his older brother, John (Lee Bowman), to help him dump the body in the river, and as the lies build, John is wracked with guilt but Stephen takes advantage of his suddenly newfound writing success and popularity. Based on the novel by A. P. Herbert, HOUSE BY THE RIVER is a dark psychological crime mystery that melds Robert Siodmak with Douglas Sirk, with shadowy black-and-white camerawork by Edward J. Cronjager and Lang’s sure hand lifting it above its B-movie elements, with creepy surprises waiting around every corner. HOUSE BY THE RIVER is screening with Lang’s 1953 murder mystery THE BLUE GARDENIA, starring Raymond Burr, Anne Baxter, and Richard Conte, as part of Film Forum’s Fritz Lang in Hollywood series, which continues through February 10 with the twin bill YOU ONLY LIVE ONCE (1937) and YOU AND ME (1938).

SUE DE BEER: THE GHOSTS

Sue de Beer’s hypnotic multimedia installation “The Ghosts” finishes its brief run at the Park Ave. Armory at 3:00 and 4:00 on Sunday

Park Avenue Armory
643 Park Ave. at 67th St.
Sunday, February 6, free, 3:00 & 4:00
347-463-5143
www.armoryonpark.org
www.suedebeer.com

Three years in the making following an elongated creative drought, Sue de Beer’s latest site-specific multimedia installation takes viewers on a mystical journey through the psychic corridors of dream, memory, and reflection. On view through Sunday at the Park Ave. Armory, the work includes several sculptures that supplement the centerpiece, “The Ghosts,” a two-channel video screened in the Veterans Room, complete with a large throw rug and eight silver bean-bag cushions (recalling her 2005 Whitney Altria piece, “Black Sun”) for people to lay on. The thirty-minute film follows a money manager (Jon Spencer of the Jon Spencer Blues Explosion) who is obsessed with an occult hypnotist (painter and musician Jutta Koether), inspired by Italian giallo films, who practices “material recollection,” which “allows a patient to literally call forth a past event, to repeat a lost length of time, to revisit those things and people lost to absence, death.” The man feels he never achieved satisfying closure with an old girlfriend (Marissa Mickelberg), so he is attempting to reconnect with her through the hypnotist. The hypnotic, emotionally nuanced work features “persistence of vision” effects in which characters are ghosted and linger on-screen, kaleidoscopic images that echo the historic room’s stained-glass windows, text by frequent de Beer collaborator Alissa Bennett, a soundtrack with songs by Paul Simon, the Cure, Leonard Cohen, and John Lennon, and a rainbow and the fluffy white cat Snoebelle, both of which appeared in de Beer’s 2009 video “Sister.” De Beer, a Parsons and Columbia grad and NYU assistant professor who was raised in Salem, Massachusetts, and until recently shuttled back and forth between Berlin and New York, has also designed a praxinoscope that resides at the center of the armory’s Silver Room, showing an Antarctic glacier referenced in the film, while a large-scale painted plywood and steel sculpture casts eerie shadows in the Field & Staff Room. The final two screenings of the physically and psychologically satisfying “The Ghosts,” a project of the Art Production Fund, take place on Super Bowl Sunday at 3:00 and 4:00, to be followed shortly thereafter by de Beer’s “Depiction of a Star Obscured by Another Figure,” a solo exhibition running at Marianne Boesky’s Chelsea gallery from February 18 through March 19.

PRINCE: WELCOME 2 AMERICA

Prince’s Welcome 2 America tour pulls into the Garden for the fourth and final time on February 7 (photo by twi-ny/mdr)

Madison Square Garden
31st to 33rd Sts. between Seventh & Eighth Aves.
Monday, February 7, $20.10-$179.50, 7:30
www.thegarden.com
www.3121.com

Prince’s Welcome 2 America tour returns to the Garden on February 7 for its fourth visit, after stops on December 18 and 29 and January 18 (in addition to a pair of shows at the Izod Center in New Jersey). His Most Purple Majesty’s first East Coast jaunt since 2004 has featured tunes from throughout his career, with the setlist changing every night, ranging from “Kiss,” “1999,” and “Take Me with U” to “Controversy,” “Baby I’m a Star,” and “She’s Always in My Hair,” from “If I Was Your Girlfriend,” “Little Red Corvette,” and “The Beautiful Ones” to “Adore,” “Scandalous,” and “Insatiable,” as well as some strange, offbeat covers (Sly and the Family Stone and the Time, sure, but Sarah MacLachlan?!). Each show also includes various special acts opening up and later joining him and the New Power Generation onstage; past guests have included Sheila E., Larry Graham and Graham Central Station, Esperanza Spalding, Cassandra Wilson, Maceo Parker, Sharon Jones and the Dap-Kings, Mint Condition, and Janelle Monae. For the February 7 show, Cee Lo Green of Gnarls Barkley and “Fuck You” fame will get things going before the Purple One ascends the unpronounceable-glyph-shaped stage in the center of the Garden floor. We caught the January 18 show, and it was plenty funkalicious, with Prince wailing away on the guitar, crooning to a woman from the audience, shaking his booty with Jones, and continuing through several lengthy sets of arena-rattling encores. There are tickets still available, so grab them as soon as you can and get ready to go crazy.