Bekah Simms

by Annie Corrigan / All News, ONSOUND
October 2, 2019

Composer Bekah Simms‘ varied output has been heralded as “nuanced and complex” (NOW Magazine) and “cacophonous, jarring, oppressive — and totally engrossing!” (CBC Music). Propelled equally by fascination and terror toward the universe, her work is often filtered through the personal lens of her anxiety. Foremost among her current compositional interests is quotation and the […]

Debashis Sinha

by Annie Corrigan / All News, ONSOUND
October 1, 2019

Debashis Sinha (Toronto) has been involved with the world music scene in Canada, garnering multiple Juno nominations along the way. Deeply trained in traditional rhythmic systems from various cultures, Sinha has begun to turn to the world of improvisation and sound art to further explore his traditional percussion instruments. Through questioning the context of world […]

Robert Lippok

by Annie Corrigan / All News, ONSOUND

Robert Lippok is an avant-garde German visual artist and composer who has been an influential player in Berlin’s thriving experimental music scene since the early 1980s. He co-founded dissident punk band Ornament und Verbrechen with his brother Ronald in 1983 and also To Rococo Rot, a significant post-rock/electronic outfit, in the 1990s. Known for his […]

Announcing ONSOUND Artists

by Annie Corrigan / All News, ONSOUND

ONSOUND is Sound Symposium’s four-day electronic music festival happening October 17-20, 2019 at venues around St. John’s. You know the recipe. Artists from around the world join local musicians to create art unlike anything you’ve ever experienced. But this time, the ingredients are turntables, laptops, electronics, tech, and tape. In addition to DJ sets and […]

Farewell Sound Symposium XIX

by Annie Corrigan / 2018 Sound Symposium XIX, All News
July 16, 2018

As we bid a fond farewell to Sound Symposium XIX, our team reflects on what this biennial event means to them.

It Was A Beautiful Time Machine

by Sound Sym Office / 2018 Sound Symposium XIX, All News
July 15, 2018

By Carolyn Chong I try to bring my 6 ½ year old to as many live performances as I can. What better way to take your listening senses to new levels than experiencing live music. I think it’s important for kids to have these opportunities, too. I admit, it doesn’t always make for the most relaxing […]

The Rooms Ringing With The Sounds Of ‘Cinquanta’

by Sound Sym Office / 2018 Sound Symposium XIX, All News
July 13, 2018

By Teresa Connors As one of the players for this Sound Symposium XIX premiere, I’m in the unique position of having been a musical “comrade in arms” in Vancouver when Nobles first began to experiment with spatial music. During those early days, many works were scored and performed at unique locations throughout Vancouver – such […]

Craig Squires Honoured With Gerry Porter Award

by Annie Corrigan / 2018 Sound Symposium XIX, All News

Congratulations to Craig Squires of Night Music, winner of the inaugural Gerry Porter Award for Creative Improvised Music at Sound Symposium XIX.

John D. S. Adams Wins Mike Zagorski Award

by Annie Corrigan / 2018 Sound Symposium XIX, All News
July 12, 2018

Congratulations to John D. S. Adams, the winner of this Symposium’s Mike Zagorski Award. This award is given to an artist every Symposium who works at the intersection of technology and sound.

Let’s Get Weird. A Dada Experience With ‘Entr’Acte’

by Annie Corrigan / 2018 Sound Symposium XIX, All News

It’s 1924. You have tickets to the Ballets Suédois production of Relâche at the Théâtre des Champs-Élysées in Paris. It’s a new ballet by avant-garde artist Francis Picabia, with choreography by Jean Börlin. It’s shocking and bawdy. Erik Satie’s musical score adds to the irreverence, pulling from popular tunes and “raunchy army songs.”