• Time Out Chicago
    • Time Out Worldwide
    • Travel
    • Book store
    • Subscribe to Time Out New York
    • Subscriber Services
  • Time Out New York
  • Ad Space
    (728 x 90)
  • Search
  •  
    • Home
    • Apartments
    • Art
    • Books
    • Clubs
    • Comedy
    • Dance
    • Film
    • Games
    • Gay
    • I, New York
    • Kids
    • Museums & Culture
    • Music
    • Opera & Classical
    • Restaurants & Bars
    • Sex & Dating
    • Shopping
    • Spas & Sport
    • Theater
    • Travel
    • TV & DVD
  • « BACK TO SEARCH
    • Essentials

      • Info & map
        • event:  Ikue Mori: Celebrating 30 Years of Life, Love and Music in NYC with Matthew Welch and Gamelan Dharma Swara + Makigami Koichi


    • Tools

      • E-mail

        E-mail a friend





        • * Mandatory

        • View our privacy policy
      • Print
      • Rate & comment
        [X]

        • (will not appear on site)
          *Required
          •  characters left

        • View our privacy policy
      • Report an error

        Report an error


        • View our privacy policy
      • Share this
        • Delicious
        • Digg
        • Facebook
        • reddit
        • StumbleUpon


  • Blogs

    The TONY Blog

    • OtherShore party

    • Published on 7/23/08

    • OtherShore is having another...

    More posts »





    Music blog

    • Bon Jovi, the Breeders and Sonny Rollins will never walk into a bar together

    • Published on 6/30/08

    • And even if they did it wouldn’t be funny, just weird....

    More posts »





  • Ad Space
    (120 x 240)


  • Video

    Tons of clips!

    • Get a heads-up on the week’s top events, go inside the hottest restaurants and trendiest shops, and more.

    Watch videos »





    Newsletters

    • The best that NYC has to offer, delivered to your inbox every week. Sign up now.





    TONY Free Flix

    • Get free tickets to hot new movie releases.





    Prizes & Promotions

    • Win prizes and get discounts, event invites and more.





    TONY Free Flix

    • Register now for a chance to win free tickets to preview hot new movies.





    TONY Nightlife+

    • Get real-time information for bars, clubs and restaurants on your mobile.





    Subscribe

    • • Subscribe now

    • • Give a gift

    • • Subscriber services





    TONY On Demand, online!

    • Watch videos of TONY-approved places and events, also airing on Time Warner channel 1112.





    TONY on the radio

    • Tune in to Out There with TONY on WPS1.org for conversations with our editors and special guests.





    Get listed

    • Share the details of your event with our editors.





  • Music

    Time Out New York / Issue 651 : Mar 19–25, 2008

    Plugged in

    Ikue Mori celebrates three decades of sparking currents in downtown music.

    By Steve Smith

    NATURAL SELECTION From DNA to elaborate multimedia projects, Ikue Mori has flourished in the downtown-music scene for 30 years.
    Photograph: Heung-Heung Chin

    New York City has long been a magnet for aspiring artists, attracting creative souls from around the globe in search of fame and glory. But Japanese electronic musician Ikue Mori, whose central position in the city’s downtown-music avant-garde is being celebrated with a two-day festival at Japan Society this weekend, never set out to pursue a career as a performer. A Tokyo art student who left home at 18, Mori knew that she wanted to experience life in a foreign city when a friend, guitarist Reck, invited her to join him on a trip to New York in 1977, to explore the Lower East Side’s burgeoning punk-rock scene. “I told my mother, ‘I’ll be back in three months,’ ” she says, laughing.

    The rock scene in Tokyo was a man’s world, Mori explains during a conversation in her cozy East Village apartment. “I was surrounded by musicians, but it never occurred to me to be one,” she says. “You needed to be desperate to perform in front of people.” Through Reck’s involvement with No Wave act Teenage Jesus and the Jerks, Mori got to know that band’s vocalist, Lydia Lunch, as well as other strong women performers such the Contortions’ Adele Bertei and Pat Place and Mars’s China Burg. Hooking up with poet-turned-guitarist Arto Lindsay, Mori became the drummer for the last of the seminal No Wave acts, DNA.

    “It was easy for me to get in because everybody was just picking up instruments and mostly came from the art scene,” Mori explains. “Even though I didn’t speak that much English, we could really connect. And it was more fun to play in a band than to support your boyfriend!” Mori’s untutored, occasionally barbaric beats were the perfect pulse for the chaotic, incandescent DNA, which was ultimately as much a performance-art ritual as it was a rock trio.

    After DNA ended in 1982, Mori briefly played in Sunset Chorus, a song-oriented, all-female trio that was never officially documented. (She still has some tape of the band’s work: “Maybe for my 50th anniversary,” she teases.) It wasn’t long before John Zorn, an acquaintance Mori met via Lindsay, initiated Mori into the improvisation-oriented avant-garde scene developing at Studio Henry, Roulette and other downtown lofts. At first on drums, and later on her signature drum machines and effects pedals, Mori became an integral part of projects led by Zorn, electric-harp player Zeena Parkins, trombonist Jim Staley and others.

    “Ikue Mori is the real deal: 100 percent pure music,” Zorn declares via e-mail. “For 30 years she has been challenging, creating and breaking through new musical frontiers, forging some of the most uniquely original electronic music in the world. She makes the digital world sing, sigh and howl with emotive passion.” Zorn’s testimonial underscores the evolution of Mori’s art: Where her early efforts were those of an auxiliary percussionist, she steadily incorporated new instrumental colors and even melodic contours in her drum-machine work. On her own recordings, especially since the 1996 solo disc Garden, Mori has fashioned vivid soundtracks for nonexistent films.

    In Mori’s latest work, now created on laptop, she has actually started to create those films with computer animation. Friday night’s program includes Bhima Swarga, a dazzling project that sets ancient paintings from the ceiling of Balinese temple Kertha Gosa dancing to a score Mori created with Matthew Welch and a gamelan ensemble. Also on the bill is a new collaboration with Japanese vocal improviser Makigami Koichi, featuring animations based on Edo-period cartoons. On Saturday night, Mori will showcase Phantom Orchard, her painterly duo with Parkins, and Mephista, a hard-hitting improv trio with pianist Sylvie Courvoisier and percussionist Susie Ibarra.

    Both concerts are being presented under Zorn’s Tzadik banner, but Mori notes that her shows are also part of a series devoted to Japanese women artists who’ve made an impact here, including singer Akiko Yano and choreographer Yoshiko Chuma. “I’m always a Japanese woman, even though I’m so Americanized when I’m in Japan,” she says. Still, she admits to some surprise: “How could I have believed 30 years ago that I would be featured at Japan Society?”

    Ikue Mori plays Japan Society Mar 21, 2008, and Mar 22, 2008.




    • Comments
    • |
    • Leave a comment
    [X]

    • (will not appear on site)
      *Required
      •  characters left

    • View our privacy policy

    • No comments yet. Click here and be the first!



      • Subscribe now and save 90%!

      • Time Out Covers
        • • One year of Time Out New York for $19.97
        • • Special issues and guides throughout the year include: Cheap Eats, the Spa issue, Summer Concert Preview, Fall Preview and the Holiday Gift Guide.
        • • Day-by-day listings for the events, clubs, artists and restaurant openings in every borough of the city that you won't want to miss!

      • Time Out New York respects your privacy. We will only use your e-mail address in order to contact you regarding to your subscription and to send you our weekly e-newsletter. We will not share this information with anyone.

  • Ad Space
    (320 x 110)


    Ad Space
    (300 x 250)


  • Most viewed in Music

    • Articles
    • Venues
    • Paramore + The Starting Line + The Almost
    • Ne-Yo + El Gran Combo
    • Kate Nash
    • Backstage with…Arctic Monkeys
    • Santogold
    • Lordi
    • Upcoming shows
    • Beyoncé + Robin Thicke
    • 50 Cent
    • Kanye West
    • Ico Art & Music Gallery
    • Blender Theater at Gramercy
    • The Brecht Forum
    • Nikon at Jones Beach Theater
    • Damrosch Park
    • Celebrate Brooklyn at the Prospect Park Bandshell
    • South Street Seaport, Pier 17
    • Terminal 5
    • Hudson River Park at Pier 54
    • (Le) Poisson Rouge


  • Ad Space
    (160 x 600)


    Ad Space
    (160 x 600)
    • Copyright © 2000–2008 Time Out New York
    • Privacy Policy
    • Contact Us
    • Media Kit & Advertising
    • Get Listed
    • We're Hiring
    • Subscribe
    • Subscriber Services
    • Site Map
    • Home
    • Apartments
    • Art
    • Books
    • Clubs
    • Comedy
    • Dance
    • Film
    • Games
    • Gay & Lesbian
    • I, New York
    • Kids
    • Museums & Culture
    • Music
    • Opera & Classical
    • Restaurants & Bars
    • Sex & Dating
    • Shopping
    • Spas & Sport
    • Theater
    • Travel
    • TV & DVD
    • Visit our sister sites:
    • Time Out New York Kids
    • Time Out Chicago
    • Time Out London
    • Time Out Worldwide