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Artist description
Angular, tooth-rattling, polymetric, panmetric, a-metric, panic-inducing, convoluted noise. |
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Music Style
disorienting neo-o-wave/prog-punk/jazz-core/folk-classical/good-time-rock-and-roll. |
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Musical Influences
spicy food, possession rituals, things we hear, the Impending Cataclysm. |
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Similar Artists
Ruins, The Ex, Fushitsusha, Boredoms, Mr. Bungle, George Harrison, Melt Banana, Dog Faced Hermans, John Denver |
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Artist History
92: Formed in Houston TX. 94: Recorded PLENUM, tourette of east coast. 95-96: Diaspora.9/96: Glorious re-convergence in Chicago. 12/98: Recorded DOOZY. 8-9/00: Tour of the Great American West. |
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Group Members
Kyle Bruckmann, Kurt Johnson, Philip Montoro, Mark Stevens |
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Instruments
Electric accordion/oboe/Minimoog, bass, metal percussion, drums. |
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Albums
PLENUM (Farrago Records 1995), DOOZY (ToYo Records 2000), SCIENCE OF GLASS GARGANTUA (CD EP compilation, ToYo Records 2000) |
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Press Reviews
"The cross-pollination of punk and improvised music has opened various new avenues of exploration, from the Ex's euphoric intersections with Dutch improvisers to Thurston Moore's free-jazz-noise-guitar compotes to the range of shotgun weddings between jazz and no wave arranged by Weasel Walter in the context of his Flying Luttenbachers. Lozenge, a Chicago band that shares bassist Kurt Johnson with the current Luttenbachers lineup, has charted a similarly twisted path that leads through art rock and the territory inhabited by Japanese eclectic extremists the Boredoms and Omoide Hatoba. The group was formed in 1992 in Houston, where it recorded its first CD, Plenum (Farrago), then re-formed in Chicago in '96 after taking a two-year hiatus in the name of higher education. Its first record since the move, Doozy (on the San Fransisco Toyo label), is a messy, frenetic, supercharged pack of tracks recorded with the late Phil Bonnet. Kyle Bruckmann, who plays oboe and accordion and sings his own lyrics, is an active member of theimprovising underground, often performing with Guillermo Gregorio and Gene Coleman's Ensemble Noamnesia, though if you'd heard him only in Lozenge you'd hardly recognize him in those more chamberlike settings. Bruckmann, Johnson, and saxophonist and electric violist John Robbins make an effectively and purposefully clunky front line, barreling through occasional odd meters, fuzzy garage riffs, and menacing prog-punk pronouncements. Philip Montoro's metallic percussion -- arranged around a set of 55-gallon oil drums -- is equal parts Einstuerzende Neubauten thump-and-smack and timbre-selective Lovens- or Lytton-style garbage-can improvising. He and drummer Mark Stevens handle the rhythmic duties collaboratively; on "Panang," for instance, they establish a metronomic pulse and then push offinto unmetered percussion like swimmers leaving the side of the pool for a dip in the deep end. Doozy also includes a big apocalyptic blowout, "Quintet for the End of Time" (titled in cheeky homage to Messiaen), and open pieces like "Oodly" and "Gaulk" that highlight the intuitive interactions beneath Lozenge's craggy surface." John Corbett, Chicago Reader |
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Location
Chicago, IL - USA |
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