Showing posts with label Whoopie Goldberg. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Whoopie Goldberg. Show all posts

November 25, 2020

Pamela Z ~ A Secret Code: A Concert of Music for Voice and Electronics

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Pamela Z  ~ A Secret Code
screenshot by Styrous®
 
 
What would be the result if you rolled up Meredith Monk, Joan La Barbara, Leontyne Price, Moondog, Yma Sumac, Nina Hagen, John Cage, Pauline Oliveros and Nico then threw in a touch of the humor of Whoopie Goldberg? I would imagine a performance artist by the name of Pamela Z!        
 
To watch her in action is to hear and see a sonic/visual wonder. I've seen her a few times, the first was about twenty years ago (YIKES!) at Project Artaud, and I had that pleasure again a few days ago in the privacy of my very own studio when she performed on line with her production of A Secret Code. I could have watched in my PJs but opted instead for a t-shirt, sweat pants and slippers; how much more comfortable can you get? I took some photos of my computer screen during her performance.    

 
Pamela Z  ~ A Secret Code
photo by Styrous®
 
 
She has an exquisite voice of operatic quality and uses it to the best advantage along with electronic augmentation and manipulations as demonstrated in her work Badagada (YouTube link below). The electronics she uses are quite fascinating as well, right out of 50's Sci-Fi.     

She is not just a sound artist, however, she has a keen sense of the visual aspects of what she is doing. This was demonstrated quite nicely in the piece she calls, Blink. When she started Blink I thought she was holding a mirror which was reflecting someone in the studio there with her then realized she was holding an iPad or tablet which was set in selfie mode and I was actually seeing parts of her face; a terrific mind bending shift of perception.     


 
Pamela Z  ~ Blink above & below
photos by Styrous®
 


After the performance Pamela talked about her processes and the electronic devices she uses and answered question from members of the "audience". The devices operated in a manner similar to the theremin in that movement is involved without actually touching them, however, the similarity ends there. They are far more sophisticated in that it is not only movement but the shape of her hands and other elements that determine the sound, pitch, key and tone emitted. She has an amazing array of sound generating gadgets. Two of them were on plastic bands that fit around the palms of her hands.    
 
 
Pamela Z  ~ A Secret Code
photo by Styrous®

 
She processes/samples multiple versions of her voice on the spot and loops/modifies each version then sings, vocalizes or reads in harmony with them using a computer modular program, MAX MSP, the same program Tom White used in his Butohdrawing performances on Cyprus in 2000, with Betty Jo Costanzo.    
 
She uses blocks of prefabricated sound blocks she creates but then ad libs as the occasion requires; sometimes one work may sound the same at times, sometimes not. This happened during the show when one of the apparatus did not work. She explained that the programming is sensitive to the lighting; there was some kind of light in the studio that blocked it. She had to substitute with another work.   
 
She doesn't just sing/vocalize she also does her magic while reading. She spoke words, processed them then, when she had what she wanted, she began reading while they played. I found this totally amazing as I cannot read anything if there is someone talking or something going on. To be able to focus like that was fascinating.      


Pamela Z  ~ A Secret Code
photo by Styrous®

 
She did a piece with one of her electronics where she was dictating while typing a letter to a pen pal with total ancient typewriter sounds and movements. It as well as some of the works she did for this performance are parts of the solo voice & electronics piece on YouTube (link below).  


 
Pamela Z  ~ Typewriter above & below
photos by Styrous®
 

 
At one point she walked off camera and returned with her hair messed up! I figured something must be up so I just decided to wait before passing judgment. I was focusing on the sounds she was making but after a few seconds it dawned on me she had put sensors in her hair and they were lighting up. That was a great surprise!
 
 
Pamela Z  ~ Hairlight
photo by Styrous®
 
 
She ended the program with a sparse yet intricate work entitled Other Rooms that sent shivers down my spine and made the hair on my arms stand up!   


Pamela Z  ~ Other Rooms
photo by Styrous®

 
All in all it was a pretty wonderful experience that I will remember for many years to come. Well done, Pamela!!!!!        
 
 
She was kind enough to sent the Set List for the evening to me: 
 
Flare Stains
Typewriter
Declaratives
Broom
Syrinx
Blink
Quatre Couches
Badagada
Pop Titles ‘You’
Breathing  (from Carbon Song Cycle)
Unknown Person (from Baggage Allowance)
Hairlight
Other Rooms

 
The event was Sponsored by Douglass Residential College, a part of Rutgers University, and the Music Department of Mason Gross.      
      
             
Viewfinder links:     
       
Robert Ashley         
Nina Hagen       
Joan La Barbara          
Alvin Lucier        
Meredith Monk       
Leontyne Price       
Morton Subotnick        
Tom White      
Pamela Z     
     
Net links:     
      
Douglass Residential College             
Mason Gross         
SF Classical Voice ~ The Omnivorous Mind of Pamela Z        
     
YouTube links:     
      
Badagada     
Breathing     
The ROOM Series     
solo voice & electronics (9 mins., 36 secs.)    
Typewriter 1      
      
       
      
Brava, Pamela!
      
      
 
      
      
      
      
Styrous® ~ Wednesday, November 25, 2020     
     
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
     

October 1, 2017

Jane Dornacker & The Tubes

        
        
           
         
        
           
         
         

photo by Susan Gilbert

      

Today, October 1, would have been the 70th birthday of Jane Dornacker who was an American rock musician, actress, comedian, and traffic reporter born in 1947.     


Dornacker was the tall lead singer (Leila), keyboardist, and songwriter of the 1970s/1980s San Francisco "tack" rock group Leila and the Snakes (link below). Pearl Gates and Pamela Wood provided supporting vocals. Their repertoire included Rock and Roll Weirdos, Pyramid Power (link below) and a spoof version of the Peggy Lee song, Is That All There Is? Gates later left (and took the band with her) to form Pearl Harbor and the Explosions. Guitarist Miles Corbin went on to form the surf instrumental band the Aqua Velvets.       

Dornacker provided lead vocals on Christopher Columbus (1978) (link below), a song by R. Crumb & His Cheap Suit Serenaders. With Ron Nagle, she co-wrote the humorous hit song Don't Touch Me There for The Tubes (link below). The song was sung by Re Styles and appeared on The Tubes' second studio album, Young and Rich (1976), and was released as a 7" single in the US, the UK, and the Netherlands. The B-side was Proud to Be an American. Jane had also toured with The Tubes as a backing singer and dancer.

photo by R. Pruzan


Dornacker was also an actress. She appeared in playwright Sam Shepard's jazz opera Inacoma at San Francisco's Magic Theatre (1977) and was featured in other works by the Overtone Theatre. She appeared in The Stand-Up, Anita Sperm and as the mysterious Nurse Murch in the film The Right Stuff.      

Dornacker developed a successful career as a stand-up comic on the San Francisco circuit and did her first work as a traffic reporter in the early-mid-1980s for KFRC, a popular Top 40 radio station. She worked with Don Rose, who was that station's morning disc jockey at the time. She was noted for her exceptionally fast speech, so fast it required concentration to understand her. As she did traffic, she would tell her daughter Naomi to get up and get to school. She moved to New York City to become a much-loved, raspy-voiced "trafficologist" and "Jane-in-a-plane." After Dornacker died, Rose arranged several tributes to establish a college fund for Naomi.


photographer unknown



On October 22, 1986, Dornacker was giving one of the station's N-Copter traffic reports during the Joey Reynolds Show on WNBC Radio in New York City. At 4:44 p.m., the Enstrom F-28 helicopter she was aboard plunged into the Hudson River from an altitude of roughly 75 feet (23 m). Dornacker was starting her report for incoming New Jersey traffic when the helicopter suffered mechanical failure in mid broadcast and crashed (links below). Her last words were, "Hit the water, hit the water, hit the water!" 
           
The F-28 helicopter nose-dived, struck the top of a chain link fence at a river pier, crashed into the Hudson River very near to the Manhattan shore and sank in 15 to 20 feet (5 to 6 m) of water. Both occupants were trapped for nearly 10–15 minutes before help arrived. Dornacker died on her way to Saint Vincent's Catholic Medical Center. She was 39 years old. Pilot Bill Pate, the only other occupant, was severely injured but survived.         

In the subsequent investigation, the NTSB found that the sprag clutch that was installed in the helicopter, which was on lease to WNBC Radio by Spectrum Helicopters of Ridgefield Park, New Jersey, was a military surplus part which was not designed for use in a civilian aircraft, and that the part had not been adequately lubricated. It directly led to a mid-air seizure of the main rotor blades. The investigation determined the cause of the fatal crash to have been use of improper parts and poor maintenance on the part of Spectrum Helicopters.   

Her death came shortly after that of her husband, Bob Knickerbocker, orphaning their 16-year-old daughter.  
   
         


Jane Dornacker
photo by Pat Johnson 
       
On November 22, 1986, there was a benefit for Dornacker at the Warfield Theater in San Francisco, California. The performers were Jerry Garcia, KBC Band, Tod Rundgren and The Tubes.   
       
      
    
              
Viewfinder links:          
       
The Tubes - White Punks On Dope       
Leila And The Snakes, Obiko & Kaisik Wong      
     
Net links:          
       
SF Gate obit       
Remembering Jane Dornacker      
          
    
YouTube links:          
        
Jane Dornacker ~          
        Christopher Columbus  
        The Deca Dance                 
        Don't Touch Me There (live)           
        Videowest - Stranger then Friction - 1979      
Leila And The Snakes ~         
        Rock-n-Roll Weirdos     
        Pyramid Power             
David Rapaport ~ Heaven Help Jane (2011)      
WNBC Traffic Helicopter Crash       
Reporters Last Moments Caught on Tape During Live Traffic Report 
Benefit for Jane Dornacker (50 minutes)       
            
    
Styrous® ~ Sunday, October 1, 2017