Jazzgalerie

WARM UP FESTIVAL


AM 8. JULI 2018 LÄDT DIE JAZZGALERIE NICKELSDORF ZU EINEM EINTAGESFESTIVAL AM KLEYLEHOF. ES WERDEN DREI KONZERTE IN DER STEINARENA STATTFINDEN UND IN DER HALLE WIRD EIN FILM GEZEIGT.

Film ab 16 Uhr in Dauerschleife, Konzerte ab 18:30, Eintritt € 20

KONZERTE:


POISONOUS FREQUENCIES + HANS FALB

Petr Vrba, Trompete
Tomas Prochazka aka Federsel, Gitarre
Didi Kern, Schlagzeug

Hans Falb, Turntables


Poisonous Frequencies is a sort of power trio, unexpectedly formed in 2014. Federsel, Petr Vrba and Didi Kern go berserk mixing rock, noise and free improv.
Petr Vrba is discovering the possibilities of electrified trumpet, disguised as electric guitar and Tomáš Procházka aka Federsel is continuing in his search for the most awful electric guitar sound. Didi Kern beats the drum.

"For forty minutes, we are exposed to the agitation of the trio of all-powerful instrumentalists destroying the rock canon, breaking from break to break, apparently having great fun"
                                                                                           Petr Slabý, Radio Wave


Hans Falb ist Veranstalter der Konfrontationen Nickelsdorf und Turntable-Spieler. Beide Tätigkeiten basieren zu einem guten Teil auf seiner Plattensammlung.


QUEHENBERGER/KERN

Philipp Quehenberber, Synthesizer
Didi Kern, Schlagzeug

Kern und Quehenberger spielen seit vielen Jahren zusammen. Ihre jeweils eigene Musik ist in die des anderen eingeflossen und hat dort einen Platz gefunden. Wie ein siamesischer Zwilling scheint der eine mitzufühlen, was mit dem anderen geschieht oder was ihn verlockt. Der psychedelische Swing entsteht in einer Doppelspirale kosmischen Verständnisses.


DÄLEK + MATS GUSTAFSSON


DÄLEK’s take on hip-hop is foreboding and hypnotic in a way that feels unexpected; sure, in the Age of Future, creepy, dark vibes are almost de rigeur, but DÄLEK takes it a step further towards the abyss by incorporating a seething electronic edge—think Einstürzende Neubauten, not Soundcloud.” – Noisey


https://deadverse.com/artists/dalek/

https://www.laut.de/Daelek

http://matsgus.com/archives/category/bio



FILM:


Leimert Park. The Story of a village in South Central L. A.


ABOUT LEIMERT PARK

In April 1992, Richard Fulton, a formerly homeless man who had been living on Los Angeles' skid row, opened Fifth Street Dick's coffeehouse in the South Central Los Angeles neighborhood of Leimert Park. A few days later, the 1992 Los Angeles riots broke out. For five days and five nights, a group of dedicated merchants and artists stood guard to protect their village from the fires that raged through the streets of South Central Los Angeles.

Richard's coffeehouse soon became a gathering spot for the community, and ultimately sparked a remarkable underground renaissance of African-American art and culture. Leimert Park became a stopover for world-class jazz musicians who might drop in to jam until 3 or 4 in the morning. The sidewalks overflowed with people of all ages and races absorbing the jazz, hip-hop, blues and spoken-word poetry performed in the park and various music venues.

Told through the powerful words, art and music of the community, this film articulates and celebrates the profound struggles and deep spirit of the extraordinary artists and musicians who transformed a few blocks of modest storefronts into a vibrant and inspiring cultural oasis. Intimate and compelling, Leimert Park is a universal tale of the struggles and triumphs of artists everywhere and of the power and importance of art and music in our lives.

All net proceeds from the distribution of this film are slated to go back to the community to support the arts and culture.

Interviews and performances by
Kamau Daáood · Richard Fulton · Billy Higgins · Horace Tapscott
with
Brian Breye, Ben Caldwell, Nzingha Camara, Michael Datcher,
Dale Davis, Tim Leimert, John Outterbridge, Ramsess,
Dwight Trible, Lady Walquer Vereen

PRODUCED AND DIRECTED BY Jeannette Lindsay
DIRECTOR OF PHOTOGRAPHY Zan Zetina
EDITORS Beth Spiegel and Jeannette Lindsay
                                               
SOUND EDITOR Scott Rader 

ADDITIONAL MUSIC by Horace Tapscott, Derf Reklaw
and Fuasi Abdul-Khaliq

88 Minutes · Color