Dallas, 6.6.2025
No live shots this time. I put a password on my phone and now I'm locked out. Apparently this kind of Android won't let you power it down without entering the password, so now the young person at the phone store says I need to let it run out of power, then come back with my Google password and they can make it lose its mind. Ah, these machines that are smarter than I.
So I had a very 20th century experience driving to New Media Contemporary in Dallas' Exposition Park to take in a triptych of women working in various forms of experimental music, in the tradition of Pauline Oliveros. Got lost, but was able to improvise my way (heh) to the venue before start time. (Street team and zine distribution action has helped me familiarize myself a little better with Big D's daunting highways and byways.)
Sarah Ruth Alexander's solo music combines pure vocal tone, operatic training, multi-instrumental flexibility, goofy humor, a literary bent (Didion and McMurtry are favorites) and a feminist perspective with an aesthetic rooted in a place (the Panhandle farm where she grew up) to create something resonant and expressive. She opened with an audience vocal exercise, in which we were invited to scream (men first, then women, then the whole audience), then hum together. A way for us to bond and ground ourselves.
After verbally riffing on Bartok and bar talk, she played a new piece, "Bird Talk," in which she imitated bird sounds on slide whistle and recorder. Another new composition, accompanied on harmonium, expressed sadness at the conversion of beloved elders in her home town to Trump supporters ("although they're not racists" -- ironic?). She apologized for "getting political," but as my friend Tammy Melody Gomez says, all art is political, including watercolors of bluebonnets and barns.
Sarah's most striking new piece was "Sweetheart of the Rodeo," inspired by hearing high school girls singing the National Anthem at the rodeo. Over a bed of roiling, dissonant electronics, Sarah sang the Anthem (using a screenshot of lyrics "because I'm not that big of a fan") in the manner of a variety of "belty" models, including (briefly) Whitney Houston, then extemporized. She played a new work in progress on New Media Contemporary's baby grand piano, drone-y and modal but with some dissonance, and finished with a nice surprise: "Dust Bowl" from her 2015 Words on the Wind cassette (a fave at mi casa and still Bandcamp-available). I enjoy her work in a lot of contexts, but always dig her solo music the most.
Hexpartner is the performing rubric for Grace Sydney Pham, a virtuoso on violin, voice, and electronics who's incorporated harp into her instrumental array the past two years. She uses samples of her voice, keyed to what she plays on her electronically enhanced instrument, to create layers of swirling, through-composed harmonic wonderment and dark beauty. Her projected video complemented her soundscapes, but I think it was paused at a certain point in her performance and never resumed.
Brooklyn-based polymath (musician, visual artist, architect) Sandy Ewen has advanced the language of prepared guitar farther than anyone else. Although best known among Texas rockaroll types for her work with the group Weird Weeds, she's led a long-lived, Houston-based, all-female large improvising ensemble, and collaborated with improv heavyweights like Damon Smith, Weasel Walter, Roscoe Mitchell, Henry Kaiser, Jaap Blonk, and Lisa Cameron. She's currently in the middle of a 23-date solo tour that also included multiple dates in Houston, Austin, and Denton. I was unable to attend her show at Rubber Gloves the previous night, so I was happy to be able to catch this one.
Sandy's now running her seasoned Ibanez semi-hollow (strung with a plain D string, the better to withstand her abrasive attack) through a Milkman stereo amp with two 15-inch speakers -- good for capturing the full sonic range of what she's doing -- and her trusty Ernie Ball pan pedal (contrary to ign'ant journos, the only electronic effect she uses). She employs an array of objects -- metal rods, plates, and the railroad spike that provided the name for her record with Roscoe Mitchell (2021's A Railroad Spike Forms the Voice), bells, a stainless steel scrubbing pad, a selection of electroluminescent wires, sidewalk chalk -- and works like a sculptor to create densely textured soundscapes.
It's fascinating to watch her in action from up close (easily done in New Media Contemporary's intimate, live-sounding room) and hear the sounds of freight trains, shifting tectonic plates, temple bells, and radio static emerge from her highly tactile process. (She says she might do a video shot from above to allow interested listeners to see how it's done.) While Sandy has a number of good solo recordings available (my pick is the vinyl You Win from 2020), you need to be in the room to get the full depth and dimension of her sound, and experience the head-spinning sensation her stereo panning creates, in tandem with her back-projected visuals. An authentic innovator and a true original. Kudos to Sarah Ruth and New Media Contemporary impresario James Talambas for facilitating an enjoyable and edifying evening.