bio
J.C. Combs (born 1970) is a Seattle-based composer. His works include “Charmed Elixirs” from 2008, “Bats in the Belfry” from 2009, “Safe Passage” on the premiere Russian label Electroshock Records from 2010, “Jane Martin” from 2010 (video excerpt of a piece set to dance at BEAF), “Minstrel Nomadic” from 2010, and “File Under: Misc.” (an ongoing album of misc. works featuring many artists), and “Janus and Juno” – 2010. Combs also participated in the international event 60X60, 2010 – Magenta Mix. In 2011, Combs released “Confessions of a Deviant Machine,” a collaboration with Lee Noyes on the label Con-V and “The Chrome Castle and an Overgrown Lawn” on his independent label Cellar Door Records.
Combs founded and is actively involved in the event “ImprovFriday” (2009-present).
Combs has also been involved in several compilation projects, including “ImprovFriday Volumes 1. and 2.” and “For Japan” on the “Amaranth Records” independent label. He has also made appearances on the “Three Legs Duck” label and “Spectropol” label via compilation projects.
His independent label collection is located here.
Jane Martin’s Civil Defense at BEAF
Performed at the Bellingham Electronic Music Festival May 7, 2011. Composer J.C. Combs, Choreography/Performance Susan Haines (It Must Have Been Violet Dance Productions)
Experimental Music and Experimental Listening
On the subject of EA hybrids, etc. etc. – we should be careful to separate experimentation into two separate categories, listening and creating. There is little experimentation within new music creation. The majority of experimentation and pioneering occurred back in the time of Pierre Schaeffer – early period of musique concrète. However, I do think there is a lot of refining and re-findings within the creative process. If the door was cracked open during the 1950s, technology insomuch as today’s field recording gadgets, affordable PC/laptops and software kicks the door wide open.
Confessions of a Deviant Machine – (Review from “Acts of Silence”)
I’ve been doing my best to keep up with reviews, but I think I may have been slipping of late with all the work I’ve been up to. Being an artist of any type with a full-time job makes operating a blog more trying, but I do believe I have enough energy to get by (knock on wood).
Anyway, below is a quote from a very thoughtful review by David Nemeth on the pages of “Acts of Silence.”regarding “Confessions of a Deviant Machine” – Lee Noyes, myself, on the Con-V label. (PS: I shy away from using the term “netlabel” because the “net” part no doubt will become irrelevant in the future in the recording industry).
Maybe the “liking” of various experimental improvisational music is much like Justice Potter Stewart’s recognition of hard-core porn, ” . . . I know it when I see it.” For me, I know when I like a record when I like it, and I really like Confessions of a Deviant Machine. - Acts of Silence (David Nemeth reviewed)
Confessions of a Deviant Machine: Con-V label
Dear Readers:
I am happy to finally announce the release of “Confessions of a Deviant Machine.” Landing at the outstanding Con-V label, its been a long time in the making (roughly a year). Anyway, I approached the free improvisation specialist, Lee Noyes, about collaborating on an electroacoustic project back in late 2009 and slowly we worked it out. Thanks again to my collaborator, Lee Noyes. It was a thrilling project.
Download for free here
“Abysmal – Safe Passage” Video
I just realized recently that I should create a couple videos for “Safe Passage.” Here is this first of probably a couple more.
“Safe Passage – 2010″ Review @ Elmusyka
A nice review by Damian Koczkodon over at Elmusyka in Poland. Damian also nicely surprised me by creating a video to accompany the review. A very kind gesture. An excerpt:
“Ta twórczość, mimo eksperymentalnej etykietki, daje się swobodnie słuchać dzięki swojej różnorodności. Może stanowić dobrą zachętę dla lubiących wyzwania odbiorcy”
The full review here. This is the video for the track “Safe Passage.”
Safe Passage – Arlequins, January 2011
Review by “Arlequins” Giovanni Carta
Translated by Gaetano Fontanazza
James Clark Combs is a young music composer from Seattle committed to electronic and electroacoustic music. He especially prefers field recording procession and manipulation of extemporary material. This kind of approach generally leads to improvised, free-form music, but in this case leads to structured compositions where we find a clear vision and a musical path. “Safe Passage” takes its inspiration from an event founded by Combs in Spring 2009 called “ImprovFriday“. This music happening takes place each week. Here Combs joins other improvisers and sound sculptors to share each others music through a series of performances. The tracks on this CD come from these “ImprovFriday” sessions. They have been edited as a soundtrack for two different stories, each one divided into five compositions: “Rikke’s Harbor” and “The Giant Eye Of The 5th Dimension.” “Rikke’s Harbor” is an abandoned shipyard located at the World’s End where many visitors come from several countries, sometimes falling to the abyssal waves of another dimension. In “The Giant Eye Of The 5th Dimension”, a deity called “The Giant Eye” sometimes passes through the veil that envelops him and casts his judgment upon the whole space-time continuum. This CD production is not only connected with Artemiy Artemiev’s label, in effect the cinematographic atmospheres evoked from this unusual sound collage are much closer to the Tarkovsky avant-garde than to that of simple sci-fi entertainment. J.C. Combs’ music acquires poetic and metaphysical meanings of a reliable value, suggested by the sound frame sequence that can transform apparently peaceful, familiar situations into something disturbing and obscure. In this CD it is clear that musicality is minimized because “Safe Passage” is made by sonic collages of field recordings, soundscapes, musique concrète and occasional cryptic ambient openings. The short CD length, less than 40 minutes, makes the listening experience not particularly heavy. The charm of such a unique and out-of-the-boundaries work leads us to replay it many times in order to activate our imagination toward the strange dimensions created by J.C. Combs.
James Clark Combs è un giovane compositore di Seattle attivo nel campo della musica elettronica elettroacustica, con una particolare predisposizione verso l’elaborazione dei fields recordings e l’utilizzo di materiale estemporaneo, una predisposizione che in generale può portare spesso verso l’improvvisazione free-form ma che in questo caso si esprime in una serie di composizioni piuttosto articolate e funzionali ad una ben precisa visione e direzione musicale. “Safe Passage” prende spunto da un evento fondato dallo stesso Combs nella primavera del 2009, “ImprovFriday”, un avvenimento musicale che si ripete periodicamente ogni settimana in cui Combs si riunisce insieme ad altri musicisti-improvvisatori e scultori sonori per condividere e mettere in pratica la propria musica attraverso una serie di esibizioni ; i brani presenti in questo cd provengono dunque dalle sessions “ImprovFriday”, per questa occasione organizzate e strutturate come una sorta di colonna sonora per due storie distinte, divise ciascuna in cinque composizioni, “Rikke’s Harbor” e “The Giant Eye Of The 5th Dimension”. “Rikke’s Harbor” è un cantiere navale abbandonato sui confini del mondo in cui giungono visitatori da tutto il mondo, talvolta per perdersi nei flutti abissali di un’altra dimensione, mentre in “The Giant Eye Of The 5th Dimension” una divinità (The Giant Eye) riesce ad oltrepassare periodicamente il velo dimensionale che l’avvolge per espandere il suo giudizio sull’intero spazio-tempo. Le connessioni con l’etichetta di Artemiy Artemiev non sembrano limitarsi alla semplice produzione del cd, in effetti le atmosfere cinematografiche evocate da questo singolare collage sonoro sembrano decisamente più vicine all’avanguardia di un Tarkovsky piuttosto che alla semplice fantascienza d’intrattenimento, la musica di J.C. Combs assume significati poetici e metafisici di un certo valore, suggeriti da una sequenza di frammenti sonori che tramutano delle situazioni familiari ed apparentemente serene in qualcosa di inquietante e indecifrabile. Sia chiaro che la musicalità di questo cd è ridotta ai minimi termini in quanto “Safe Passage” è composto da collage sonori di registrazioni all’aperto, soundscapes, musica concreta e sporadiche aperture ambientali decisamente criptiche… la relativa breve durata del cd, neanche quaranta minuti, fa comunque in modo che l’ascolto non sia particolarmente pesante, anzi, il fascino di un lavoro così peculiare e fuori dalla norma ci spinge verso ripetuti ascolti fino a lasciarci andare con l’immaginazione verso le strane dimensioni evocate da J.C. Combs…
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