REMOTE ORCHESTRA

Credits:
Collaborations include: Sabreen Association for the Arts, Jerusalem, Radiophrenia, Glasgow, Büchs’n Radio, Büchsenhausen, Austria

On going sound, performance and radio project
About

remote

Remote Orchestra is, on first glance, relatively simple: is the attempt to bring musicians living in different cities together using free, off-the-shelf telepresent technology and internet connectivity to affect real-time collaborations. Remote Orchestra challenges the quotidian relationship we have with technology and the politics of mobility that are made invisible by their very banality. Identifying, documenting, and exposing these complexities and the consequences that they have on social mis/conceptions of mobility and migration are fundamental to this project. Maintaining what Grant Kester deems the “quasi-autonomy” of art allows for Remote Orchestra to effect dynamic engagement with the real-world challenges and implications that this process exposes. The materiality of the internet is considered an instrument part of Remote Orchestra, to be played, discussed and reconsidered.

To nurture these collaborations, I coordinate and facilitate online meetings, discussions, practice sessions, and public concerts among musicians. Building on these collaborations, I will work towards researching the challenges of bringing Remote Orchestra musicians together into the same physical space, and get a sense of how much efforts it takes today to play in real- time without the requirement of technological mediation. The simplicity of this proposition belies the challenging social, political, and economic conditions that make the realisation of a physical meeting possible. In working towards developing extended and on-going collaborations, Remote Orchestra musicians have to negotiate with timezone and linguistic differences, technological delays, poor sound quality, bad connections, etc…

To hear the first Remote Orchestra Radio Show please go to:
soundcloud.com/user-827520841