The Tonearm Podcast Por Lawrence Peryer arte de portada

The Tonearm

The Tonearm

De: Lawrence Peryer
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The people and ideas moving culture forward. With host Lawrence Peryer.

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The Tonearm
Arte Historia y Crítica Literaria Música
Episodios
  • Julianna Barwick & Mary Lattimore: Like Tears in Rain
    Apr 5 2026
    Today, we’re putting The Tonearm's needle on Julianna Barwick and Mary Lattimore.Julianna is a composer, vocalist, and producer whose music is built almost entirely from layered, looped human voices. Mary is a harpist who has spent years pushing that instrument into a vast, exploratory realm.In January 2025, the two flew to Paris just days after the LA wildfires tore through their community. There, they spent nine days recording with instruments pulled from a museum, including harps dating back to 1728 and vintage analog synthesizers. The result is Tragic Magic, out on InFiné, and it's one of the most talked-about records of the year so far.Julianna and Mary just returned from Big Ears Festival and, in a few days, are heading back to Paris to perform these songs live with those same instruments. We caught them as they were preparing for the trip.(The musical excerpts heard in the interview are from Julianna Barwick & Mary Lattimore's Tragic Magic)—Dig Deeper• Artist and Album:Visit Julianna Barwick at juliannabarwick.com and follow her on Instagram and FacebookVisit Mary Lattimore at marylattimore.net and follow her on Instagram and FacebookPurchase Tragic Magic from InFiné, Bandcamp, or Qobuz and listen on your streaming platform of choice• Recording Location:Philharmonie de Paris — Musée de la Musique — the museum whose instrument collection made the album possibleMusée de la Musique collections database — searchable archive of the museum's historic instruments• Collaborators:Roger Eno — composer of "Temple of the Winds," written for voice and harp after a shared lunch with Barwick and Lattimore in MelbourneTrevor Spencer — engineer, additional producer, and mixer on Tragic Magic; known for his work with Fleet Foxes and Beach House• Instruments:Jacob Hochbrücker — maker of the 1728 harp used for "Temple of the Winds"; one of the oldest instruments on the albumÉrard harps — the French instrument maker whose 1799 and 1873 harps Mary Lattimore used throughout the sessionsSequential Circuits Prophet-5 — the synthesizer Julianna Barwick chose; introduced in 1978 as the first fully programmable polyphonic synthesizerRoland Jupiter-8 — the second synthesizer Barwick used; the "Jupiter" referenced throughout the episodeKorg VC-10 Vocoder — used by Barwick on "Stardust" and elsewhere on the album• Visual Art — James Turrell:James Turrell — the light artist whose work both Barwick and Lattimore cite as a significant influenceJames Turrell: Into the Light at MASS MoCA — where Barwick and Lattimore opened Turrell's newest Skyspace, C.A.V.U.Chichu Art Museum, Naoshima — permanent Turrell installations on the Japanese island Mary mentions visitingJames Turrell retrospective at the Guggenheim — the 2013 exhibition (Aten Reign) that first brought Mary to Turrell's work after reading a New Yorker review• Previous InFiné / Musée de la Musique Collaborations:InBach by Arandel (2020) — the first album in InFiné's Musée de la Musique series, featuring Baroque instrumentsSaturn 63 by Seb Martel (2022) — the second album in the series; Tragic Magic is the third—Dig into this episode's complete show notes at podcast.thetonearm.com—• Did you enjoy this episode? Please share it with a friend! You can also rate The Tonearm ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ and leave a review on Apple Podcasts. • Subscribe! Be the first to check out each new episode of The Tonearm in your podcast app of choice. • Looking for more? Visit podcast.thetonearm.com for bonus content, web-only interviews + features, and the Talk Of The Tonearm email newsletter. You can also follow us on Bluesky, Mastodon, YouTube, and LinkedIn. • Be sure to bookmark our online magazine, The Tonearm! → thetonearm.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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    49 m
  • Bellbird: Montreal's Jazz Collective Heeds the Call
    Mar 29 2026
    Today, we're putting The Tonearm's needle on the Montreal jazz collective Bellbird.Bellbird formed during pandemic park jams and has since become one of the more compelling voices in Canada's avant-garde jazz scene. The quartet consists of Claire Devlin on tenor sax, Allison Burik on alto sax and bass clarinet, Eli Davidovici on bass, and Mili Hong on drums. No guitar, no piano, just three mostly single-note instruments and a drum kit, which turns out to be more than enough. Their debut, Root in Tandem, earned serious praise. Their second album, The Call, came out on February 6th on Constellation Records. It was built from bird sound transcriptions, Mary Oliver poems, and sessions in the countryside, and it doesn't sound like anything else on that storied label's roster.Two members of the collective, Claire Devlin and Eli Davidovici, are here to take us through the story.(The musical excerpts heard in the interview are from Bellbird's album The Call)—Dig Deeper• Artist and Album:Visit Bellbird at bellbird.band and follow them on Instagram and YouTubePurchase Bellbird's The Call from Constellation Records, Bandcamp, or Qobuz, and listen on your streaming platform of choiceVisit Bellbird's page at Constellation Records• Individual Members:Claire Devlin — tenor saxophone; follow her on InstagramEli Davidovici — bassAllison Burik — alto saxophone and bass clarinet; follow them on InstagramMili Hong — drums; follow her on Instagram• Label:Constellation Records — Montréal's celebrated independent label, home to Godspeed You! Black Emperor, Matana Roberts, Sam Shalabi's Land of Kush, and more• Recording and Compositional Context:Hotel2Tango — the Montréal studio where The Call was recordedOrford Musique — the Quebec residency center where Bellbird developed the album's material• Musical References and Inspiration:White Bellbird (Procnias albus) — the Amazonian bird whose recorded call Allison Burik transcribed and analyzed as the foundation for the title trackMary Oliver, "Wild Geese" — the poem that inspired the track "Soft Animal," published in House of Light (Beacon Press, 1990)• Montréal Scene:Casa del Popolo — Montréal venue and community hubSuoni Per Il Popolo — Montréal's annual festival of experimental music, free jazz, and improvisation, presented at Casa del Popolo and La Sala Rossa• Previous Release:Root in Tandem (2023) — Bellbird's self-released debut—Dig into this episode's complete show notes at podcast.thetonearm.com—• Did you enjoy this episode? Please share it with a friend! You can also rate The Tonearm ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ and leave a review on Apple Podcasts. • Subscribe! Be the first to check out each new episode of The Tonearm in your podcast app of choice. • Looking for more? Visit podcast.thetonearm.com for bonus content, web-only interviews + features, and the Talk Of The Tonearm email newsletter. You can also follow us on Bluesky, Mastodon, YouTube, and LinkedIn. • Be sure to bookmark our online magazine, The Tonearm! → thetonearm.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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    51 m
  • Sam Wenc: The Experimental Language of the Pedal Steel Guitar
    Mar 22 2026
    Today, we're putting The Tonearm's needle on guitarist and composer Sam Wenc.Wenc is a Philadelphia-based artist who has spent nearly a decade building one of the more distinctive bodies of work in American experimental music, mostly under the name Post Moves.Now he's released his first album under his own name. It's called Language at an Angle, and it came out on Lobby Art Editions in January. The record grew out of a year of live performances—from Philadelphia to Japan—and it captures Sam doing something specific with pedal steel guitar: striking it, bowing it, treating it as both a sound source and a physical object. The result sits somewhere between drone, jazz, and a kind of American folk music you can't quite place.Sam's here to walk us through the record, his move to Philadelphia, and what it means to finally put his own name on the work.(The musical excerpts heard in the interview are from Sam Wenc's Language at an Angle)—Dig Deeper• Artist and Album:Visit Sam Wenc at samwenc.com and follow him on InstagramPurchase Sam Wenc's album Language at an Angle from Bandcamp or Qobuz, and listen on your streaming platform of choiceLobby Art Editions — Sam Wenc's label, releasing Language at an Angle and his previous catalog• Susan Alcorn:Susan Alcorn — official website of the pedal steel pioneer to whom Language at an Angle is dedicatedAnd I Await the Resurrection of the Pedal Steel Guitar — Alcorn's landmark 2007 solo albumSusan Alcorn: Revolutionary Voice of the Pedal Steel Guitar — The Tonearm's tribute, including a full conversation with Alcorn on her album CANTOSusan Alcorn obituary — WRTI• Collaborators:Sam Yulsman — pianist on Language at an Angle; studied with George Lewis at ColumbiaBark Culture — the Philadelphia trio of Victor Vieira-Branco (vibraphone), John Moran (bass), and Joey Sullivan (drums); members appear in Wenc's live bandVictor Vieira-Branco — vibraphonist and Bark Culture leaderBark Culture — Warm Wisdom — the trio's 2024 debut album• Venues:Roulette Intermedium — Brooklyn venue where Wenc held his album release showThe Stone — New York experimental music venue referenced in the episode• Musical References and Influences:George Lewis — composer, trombonist, and Columbia University professor; Sam Yulsman trained with himOkkyung Lee — South Korean cellist and improviser; Wenc cites Alcorn's improvisations with her as influentialMarshall Allen / Sun Ra Arkestra — Marshall Allen, still active in Philadelphia's Germantown neighborhood, is mentioned by Wenc as part of the city's deep musical lineageOlivier Messiaen — composer whose work Susan Alcorn famously transposed for pedal steelVíctor Jara — Chilean singer-songwriter; Alcorn covered his songs• Additional Context:Mississippi Records — the independent archival label Wenc manages alongside his own music workSam Wenc — Post Moves: Heart Music — released on Where to Now? Records, representative of his work under the Post Moves alias—Dig into this episode's complete show notes at podcast.thetonearm.com—• Did you enjoy this episode? Please share it with a friend! You can also rate The Tonearm ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ and leave a review on Apple Podcasts.• Subscribe! Be the first to check out each new episode of The Tonearm in your podcast app of choice.• Looking for more? Visit podcast.thetonearm.com for bonus content, web-only interviews + features, and the Talk Of The Tonearm email newsletter. You can also follow us on Bluesky, Mastodon, YouTube, and LinkedIn.• Be sure to bookmark our online magazine, The Tonearm! → thetonearm.com Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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    45 m
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