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Last Updated: 12/18/2009

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Status: Single
City: Montreal
State: Quebec
Country: CA
Signup Date: 5/27/2008

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Tuesday, December 01, 2009 

 



Nimalan Yoganathan
is the first artist to be funded by Conseil des Arts et des Lettres du Quebec's recently established Nunavik Fund for the Arts and Literature program (in
collaboration with Avataq Cultural Institute). As a result, he recently returned from a
two-month artist residency in Inukjuak, Nunavik where he was studying and recording
the sonic environment to gain insight into the richness of Inuit culture. This included both natural sounds such as the wind, water, and mosquitoes, as well as cultural sounds including kayak building, throat singing, and the intricate rhythms of the Inuttitut language. These field recordings will serve as the compositional foundation for his multimedia installation Tusarniq: Soundscapes of Inukjuak.

Six-channel sound and single-channel video will be used to immerse gallery visitors
within evolving cultural portraits of Inukjuak. Field recordings will be complemented by
electronic gestures in an attempt to convey the inherent musicality hidden throughout
these Northern environments. Man-made synthesized sounds will harmonize with and
mimic the natural sounds of Inukjuak and its traditions, similar to how Inuit throat
singing often employs the human body in imitating the songs of geese and mosquitoes.
The social and spiritual significance of sounds and how aural cues are used in Inuit
cultural practices such as hunting and fishing will serve as conceptual themes in this
work. As part of his residency, Nimalan also led weekly sound art workshops for youths
between age 13 and 16, during which they were taught outdoor field recording
techniques. Each youth was given their own digital recorder to document their sound
walks around the community. Nimalan will include portions of their field recordings in
this installation so as to juxtapose their sonic perceptions with those of his own.

The video component will include images of the vast tundra, carvers at work, and throat singers. These visual portraits will complement their sonic counterparts being projected throughout the space so as to contextualize these sounds within their original environments. Visitors will be able to meditate on the song structures of daily activities that are often taken for granted due our dependence on visual cues.

Tusarniq:Soundscapes of Inukjuak will run from December 5th until December 20th at
L’Envers (185 Van Horne). Vernissage on December 5th at 630pm with additional viewings Dec 13 3-5pm, Dec 16 730-9pm, and Dec 20 2-5pm. Artist talk Dec 20 at 3pm.
Monday, March 16, 2009 
Friday, January 30, 2009 


L'envers and Gordon Allen (words and music section, Montreal Gazette online)

by Adam Kinner

Walking into L’Envers is like entering a scene from the ‘70s East Village.   If
Patti Smith were on the old couch in the corner talking to the motley
assortment of Montreal improvisers, artists, gallerists and dancers
typical of a L’Envers audience I wouldn’t bat an eye. This is the
newest music venue in the Mile-End and everything from the large photos
on the wall—by the very talented Marie-Eve Dompierre—to
the warehouse-style windows, the turn-of-the-century wooden support
beams, and the homemade feel of the space suggests that this is a space
run by artists for artists and audiences alike. 


 The mastermind behind the scenes is Gordon Allen.  An
incredible trumpet player and improviser, a talented organizer, a
quick-witted schmoozer, an hilarious MC and a big-hearted friend of at
least half of the musicians in Montreal, Gordon is just what Montreal
needs to get its improvised music scene off and running.  He’ll
emerge from the dense crowd, clad in a porkpie hat and cuffed shirt,
beaming at how well the evening is going, how well the musicians are
playing, and how many great people have showed up.


 Along with three other like-minded musicians, he’s responsible for this new hotspot.   Together
they’ve worked to create a space committed to presenting music, dance,
and performance—“anything that involves improvisation”—that would
otherwise have trouble being shown.  Their mandate is to
offer the excellent musicians of Montreal a comfortable place to play,
and to build an audience that comes curious, listens carefully, and
leaves satisfied.


 But Gordon is a far busier man than his carefree, joyous demeanor might suggest.  He has been organizing the improvised music community since he arrived in Montreal from Guelph in 2005.  The monthly series at Casa Del Popolo “Improvising Montreal” came under his control in 2006; and Mardi Spaghetti, a weekly series he curates along with three other improvisers at Cagibi, is going to celebrate its first anniversary in March.


 On Saturday, January 17th, L’Envers opened its new year of programming with a celebration of Art’s Birthday.  (It
took a couple of weeks for the members of their mailing list to realize
that they weren’t talking about a guy named Arthur, but rather
celebrating the birth of Art, which Robert Filliou famously starting
celebrating in 1963.  Check this out.)  CKUT was there with their live broadcasting gear.  Six bands were slated to play.  There was a birthday cake competition and West-Coast artist Glenn Lewis re-enacted the birth of Art. 


 I arrived just as Gordon took the stage with his trio Pink Saliva, with drummer Michel F. Côté and bassist Alexandre St-Onge.  Their layered, richly textured mix of acoustic improvisation and electronics sent a hush over the hundred or more gathered.  Many
took a seat on the floor and listened to the flow of expressive sounds,
ranging from beautiful trumpet melody to the harsh but effective
noise-electronics of Côté and St-Onge.


 Even the loud students next to me stopped talking
and I saw their facial expressions change to concentrated curiosity as
they craned their necks to see how those three musicians were making
such otherworldly sounds.


 “When audiences are more attentive,” Gordon had
told me earlier in the week, “the musicians have to scrutinize their
own work more.  Consequently we’re pushed harder to create, and the music advances.  I’ve seen that here, and it’s an incredible thing to be a part of.  Worth all the work we’ve put into it.”

 Check here for upcoming events at L'Envers.

 -Adam Kinner

to view the article on the gazette website, follow this link: http://communities.canada.com/montrealgazette/blogs/wordsandmusic/archive/2009/01/30/l-envers-and-gordon-allen.aspx


Friday, December 26, 2008 

Lieux-dits: 'Peirada no. 1' from Isaiah Ceccarelli's debut recording on the Ambiances Magnetiques label. with Jean Derome (winds), Fransisco Lozano (winds), Steve Raegele (guitar), Cliton Ryder (bass) and Isaiah Ceccarelli (percussion). The group plays L'envers on February 7 2009.

Nutty: Stuffy Turkey live at L'envers (September 12 2008) playing Thelonious Monk's tune 'Nutty'. Thierry Amar (bass), David Payant (drums), Sam Shalabi (guitar), Matana Roberts (alto sax), Gordon Allen (trumpet) with La Brique cheerleaders.

Pink Saliva: live at L'envers (July 4th 2008) with Michel F Cote (drums + feedback), Alexandre St-Onge (slectric bass + laptop), and Gordon Allen (trumpet). www.myspace.com/pinksaliva





Wednesday, December 24, 2008 


December 25 2008
Year in review: L'envers

Go forth! And make music!

Robyn Fadden

The musicians behind community-driven venue L'Envers trumpet in the new year on our cover

I'd like to see creative music grow and change in Montreal. I'm hoping we
can challenge what it means to play music, and find out how much we can
do for each other as human beings through it. By discovering something
new in music, can we transform ourselves and our world? May 2009 be a
year of compassion and awakening through music!

Gordon Allen, co-founder of L'Envers a musician-run space located in Mile End, which he opened in June 2008 with fellow musicians Philippe Battikha, Sam Vipond and Levy Bourbonnais.

For Allen, 2008 turned out to be great - L'Envers started up along with his Mardi Spaghetti music night at Cagibi. Not only that, but he presented about 200 concerts, proving how even in a tough economic year, community mobilization and Montreal's creative force remain strong and supportive.

"We're part of a network, a family here, especially with respect to other loft spaces like La Brique and Lab Synthèse - I was inspired by them." Over
the past year and a half, L'Envers has hosted local artists and brought in others from New York, Baltimore, France and throughout Canada. "L'Envers was born out of a need for a different kind of venue for creative music, specifically for improvised music," says Allen. "It's nice to have somewhere that's predicated on the artists and not on making money. We saw a need for a place that can cater to what the artists need - whether that means setting the place up for a dance performance for the whole day or doing an elaborate sound check, playing at odd hours. At the same time it's less formal than a concert hall, but the way people listen is quite deep - people come here for a reason, to listen to the music, even if they don't know what to expect."

To see what L'Envers has been up to and what's in store for 2009, see myspace.com/lenvers185.




Friday, August 29, 2008 
L'envers is getting a new room-mate!! she's got four legs and three feet, with lotsof strings attached. she's a bit older than the rest of us (about 100years old) but she's totally contemporary. She wants to play in lots ofbands--maybe your band...
she's a beautiful piano, and we're having a BIGASS DANCE PARTY to welcome her to our home.

Thisis a fundraiser to help us move, tune, and maintain our new friend.  Wewant to have a class instrument for all you creative types who neverget a chance to perform on a real piano. We're gonna make it reallyeasy and fun for you to help us out.
Come and pay the really cheap $5 cover...
Dance to DJ'S : Patate and Dr. Livinsgstone and The Youjsh, with pianist extraordinaire Malcolm Sailor...
Partake of a sweet and delicious bake sale...
Make a bid for original art and CD's in the silent auction...
Bringsome serious bucks for our red-hot DATE AUCTION....that's right, tostart off the night we'l be putting some wonderful and attractivepeople on the auction block. for the right price, you'll have anawesome date for the night...
Tell your friends, your mom, yourdentist, and especially your piano player about this chance to haverediculous backtoschool fun for a great cause.

If you can helpus with CD'S, artwork, brownies, cakes, postering, or if you want to beauctioned of as a date, please let us know at lenvers185@gmail.com


http://www.new.facebook.com/..event.php?eid=71732835575&ref=..share

SATURDAY SEPTEMBER SIXTH: L'envers 185 Van Horne  $5
Tuesday, August 12, 2008 
/////If there was a horror movie about the northern lights, this might be the soundtrack/////

Madness and the Body of Mystery is the first solo recording by Montréal trumpeter Gordon Allen. Recorded in the dead of night in the Canadian Rockies at the Banff Centre for the Arts in the spring of 2005, it features Allen's trumpet and Kinetoflux, an electroacoustic soundsculpture that activates harpsichord strings with software-driven electromagnets.

The disc is released in a signed and numbered edition limited to 138 copies. No two copies have the same package image. This release marks the inauguration of Allen's new cdr label "Mr. E"
The evening will start with selected tracks from the cd in a sunset listening session at 730pm.
A live solo performance will follow. There will be no cover charge. Refreshments and copies of the cd will be available. Doors open at 630pm.

You can hear a track from the cd at www.myspace.com/gordonallen.

The launch of Colin Stetson's cd has been postponed.
Saturday, August 09, 2008 
Here is a description of the piece by composer Eldritch Priest which will be performed at L'envers on the 11th of October 2008.

the brown study
IOf course there is nothing brown about the work, except that brown is a confusing colour and the character of this work is also confusing. But then again, a brown study really has little to do with colour and more to do with reverie. Importantly then, the work is all melody, by which I mean, the brown study is only melody, and as such, is only an Idea. Let me explain. First, this work more (semi)orchestrates what Michael Parsons termed "hidden resources," the histories and habits that compose the diverse capacities which subsist spontaneously within the a group of individuals. Thus, the austerity of material, a single non-repeating melodic line, proposes that each performer approach the melodic Idea as a moment of creative dissension to be worked out during the performance of the piece. That is, though the brown study is in some sense a simple melodic congress, the din of voices that gather around its name make sense of the work as a kind of expressive nonsense, a musical portmanteau that blends the sound of being singular plural. the brown study is therefore the same "gloomy contemplation" whose clamorous surface weirdness becomes the sense of nonsense.

The players: Linsey Wellman (saxophone), Pierre-Yves Martel (viola da gamba), Gordon Allen (trumpet), Philippe Lauzier (saxophone), Josh Zubot (violin), Nicole Lizée (fender rhodes), Steve Raegele (guitar), and Eldritch Priest (guitar, lap steel, melodica).
This work is about 2 hours long and will be performed continuously, in one set.