News

DEAFKIDS in a week / DUMA postponed

In a week's time, next Friday, June 3rd, we'll welcome the Brazillian band DEAFKIDS back to Barreiro after their explosive concert at OUT.FEST 2019. We had this to say about them back then (and they’re words we stand by): “They mix various aspects of initiatic hardcore punk, several declinations of metal, and a rhythmic tribalization which is a sort of a Sepultura via Motorhead-style psychedelic hard’n’heavy, with a lot of moments which are more on the abstract, with a lot of pages taken out of hairy rock with a ton of delay.” An unmissable event, as you can tell already, even more so due to the presence of Lisbon's CLEMENTINE and their power-garage-rock at the kick-off. 

Meanwhile, we're sad to announce that the debut of Kenyan duo DUMA has been postponed due to issues with the European visa of one of the band's members. We're working with the musicians and their agents to schedule a new date for their show, sometime later this year. Tickets already purchased for the event will remain valid for this next date.

Tickets are still on sale for the Deafkids concert, as well as the one by FÖLLAKZOID*, on June 25th, at outra.bol.pt and its associated stores.

PARTICULAR UNIVERSAL: Vaiapraia em residência em Castro Marim

Rodrigo Vaiapraia é o próximo artista em residência no Concelho de Castro Marim, ao abrigo do projecto Particular Universal. 

Criador transdisciplinar e autodidata, lidera desde 2014 os Vaiapraia, banda maior do rock independente em Portugal, herdeiros directos e assumidos dos movimentos punk/riot-grrrl/queercore, aclamados em igual medida por Público, Blitz ou Time Out, por exemplo, com o álbum “100% carisma”, de 2020, como marco no rock português de qualquer época.

Entre os dias 6 e 13 de Maio, Rodrigo, juntamente com Ana Farinha, Daniel Fonseca e Beatriz Diniz, estará pela Quinta da Fornalha a trabalhar sobre várias ideias embrionárias colecionadas ao longo dos últimos dois anos, procurando “encontrar coletivamente a atenção, crescimento e reformulação que cada melodia pede”.

No dia 14, pelas 19h, no Anfiteatro ao ar livre do Revelim de Santo António, teremos a oportunidade, talvez, de conhecer pela primeira vez (ao lado de algumas das mais enérgicas e profundas canções de produção nacional dos últimos largos anos), as novas direcções de Vaiapraia. O concerto é de entrada livre.

Esta é a segunda residência com curadoria da Filho Único, parceira do projeto Particular Universal.

PARTICULAR UNIVERSAL: Knut Olaf Sunde is the next artist-in-residency at Castro Marim

Norwegian composer Knut Olaf Sunde, whose work revolves around notions of place, duration and immersion, is the next artist in residence in the Castro Marim Municipality, as part of the Particular Universal project.

Between April 23rd and May 7th he will “observe, learn and try to understand the different cultural and landscape logics” of the region, through sound and video recordings, as well as in conversation with the locals, with the aim of establishing a narrative, to be presented April 29th, at 5.30pm, at the Armazém do Sal - a free admission event.

This will be the second residence curated by NyMusikk, norwegian partner for the project, which is funded by the EEA Grants mechanism, with the theme “Identity, Memory and Landscape in Castro Marim”.

OUT.RA Local Creation Grant 2022

We’re happy to announce the winner of the 2022 OUT.RA Creation Grant, after carefully analyzing the applications we received during the start of this year.

This year’s winner is Rita Santos, composer and sound artist born in Barreiro who is currently studying towards a Master’s degree in Musical Science at Universidade Nova de Lisboa, where she develops investigative work in the fields of sound consciousness, acoustic ecology and soundscape composition, with a project entitled “A Segunda Natureza” (“The Second Nature, in Portuguese), a sound art piece which will strive to “create an immersive sound space which emulates the second nature of an aquatic body”.

This work, which will be developed over the coming months, will be presented as an installation towards the end of the year. Stay tuned for more news!

Concerts for May, and a JUNHO CRAZY

Even with April having barely started and two unmissable events already on the horizon, we refuse to stop and now share with you everything we have in store for May and June (which is going to be crazy!)

On May 14th we will celebrate the creativity within “Greater Barreiro” with the presentation of the final work by the two recipients of OUT.RA’s Local Creation Grant for 2021: George Silver (André Neves) and Puçanga (Vera Marques). Both of them will be presenting new releases, with the concerts happening at ADAO and entry being free of charge.

The month that follows is JUNHO CRAZY: three nights full of great concerts with Deafkids from Brazil and Clementine from Lisbon (June 3rd at ADAO), Duma from Kenya and Cavernancia from Barreiro (June 11th, at Gasoline), and Föllakzoid from Chile and Anti S. from Catalonia (June 25th, again at ADAO, finally fulfilling our promise to host these bands in 2020, which we were forced to postpone due to the pandemic*).

Since this June truly is Crazy, we have a combo ticket with special pricing for these three concerts, available in limited quantities, which you can already purchase through outra.bol.pt and its associated stores. Also available are the individual tickets for each of these events.

* Tickets purchased for the original 2020 date are still valid for this concert

Friday: Erik Dæhlin at Castro Marim Castle

Taking place Friday, at around 17:00 at Castro Marim Castle, will be the first public presentation of work developed by the artists-in-residence of the Particular Universal project: in this instance that of Norwegian artist Erik Dæhlin, a composer working across Sound, Image and Text who has, since March 13th, explored the different places and environments within the Castro Marim Municipality (including the Castro Marim and Vila Real de Santo António Marsh Natural Preserve, with a particular focus on the Guadiana river delta), making a record of his impressions through texts, field recordings and photography, all of which he has worked on with a view towards Friday's performance / talk, which will afterwards be evoked in a piece to be presented at the Only Connect festival in Oslo, towards the end of April.

Be sure to check out the teaser below, which includes a small part of the conversations we've had with the artist during his residency and a glimpse into his working process.

Spring in bloom: what's in store for March and April

We're super excited to share the five-yes-five events coming up in March and April throughout Barreiro - a strong return with must-see concerts which take the pulse of what's being made throughout the country and the world.

On March 11th, we'll host, for the first time, a transatlantic quartet carrying within itself all of jazz: guitarist Luís Lopes' Humanization 4tet, accompanied by Rodrigo Amado's saxophone and the drums of Texans Aaron and Stefan Gonzalez; the group's latest album, their fourth since they began playing together in 2008, has made its way into almost every international list of 2021's best albums, and their concert promises to feature the fire of free, the melody of bop, and the energy of punk. There's hardly a better way to return to a venue where we've been very happy, one under a new and dynamic management - Sala 6 (formerly the Be Jazz Café).

One week after that, two returns: the remarkable Clothilde, master of modular sonic architecture and elecronic soundscapes created with a wall of synthesizers handmade by the musician known as Hobo, returning to our city after her performances at OUT.FEST in 2018 and 2019, and the promising João Silva, the trumpeter we had the pleasure of listening to around two and a half years ago as parte of the special night dedicated to the Creative Sources label. These concerts will take place at the Auditorium of the Municipal Library on the 18th.

Onwards to April, when we'll have two more evenings of creative music: first, on the 15h, we return to Sala 6 for the explosive meeting between two stars of Portuguese jazz - Ricardo Toscano & Gabriel Ferrandini bring us their duo, full of lyricism and fury, a dialogue between the poetry of Toscano's saxophone and Ferrandini's infinite drums.

On the 29th, and again at the Municipal Library, an evening of free improvisation will take place with the Barreiro debut of Belgian artist Farida Amadou, a leading name in European new music who, with an electric bass, an amplifier and half a dozen pedals, redefines the role and the potential of the instrument. Also performing on that evening will be "our" Fernando Ramalho, doing the same with a guitar and his oblique poetry.

Tickets for these four events can already be purchased, as usual, either online, or person at BOL's associated stores (such as Fnac and Worten).

To wrap up these announcements, we can't forget the fifth event - the first one, in fact: On the afternoon of March 5th, at the Municipal Library, another public moment of the work developed by one of the OUT.RA grant recipients will take place: Vera Marques aka Puçanga will play host to another session of “Vozes Plurais“, a cycle of talks, open to the public, regarding the affective and political power of the voice in its many expressive forms, be they musical, oral or written. This time the guests will be the historic anti-fascist militants Helena Pato and Álvaro Monteiro. Admittance is free for this event.

These coming months will thus be filled with great opportunities to see each other again. See you soon!

Rabu Mazda presents 'Bindi' at Gasoline on Feb 4th

Our shows return with a friday night party at Gasoline to celebrate and present to Barreiro “Bindi", the new album by Rabu Mazda aka Leonardo Bindilatti, an illustrious resident of these parts for the last couple of years. 

Leo’s special guests for this occasion are Silvestre, a young Lisbon producer mixing everything under and over the sun who even brings along dancers, playstation challenges, lights and smoke out the nose, and Irish musician Seán Being, a happy example of our country’s takeover by British Islanders and crafter of a delicate ambient-pop which reveals an in-depth learning of the meaning of saudade. 

Tickets are already on sale through outra.bol.pt and associated stores for 5€ (2,5€ for under 25 year olds).

A OUT.RA procura: Produtor Executivo em Castro Marim

A OUT.RA – Associação Cultural procura uma pessoa para exercer as funções de Produção Executiva Local das actividades do projecto Particular Universal no concelho de Castro Marim.

O projeto engloba diversas atividades artísticas até 14 de setembro de 2023.


O/a produtor/a terá como principais funções:
— O acompanhamento das actividades a realizar durante toda a execução do projecto, nomeadamente assistência a artistas em residência;
— Todas as tarefas inerentes à produção de eventos e apresentação públicas (definição de horários, licenciamentos, articulação entre todos os intervenientes e demais detalhes de ordem logística e técnica);
— Representar o projecto em visitas e reuniões com artistas, parceiros de projecto, representantes de entidades locais e membros da comunidade.Necessário:
— Ter residência habitual no concelho de Castro Marim ou num dos concelhos limítrofes;
— Falar e escrever fluentemente português e inglês
— Domínio de ferramentas de gestão de produção online (drive, dropbox, email).
— Deverá ter carta de condução e viatura própria.Candidatura:

Para a candidatura deverá ser enviado email para info@particularniversal.pt com identificação, carta de motivação e CV, até às 18h00 do dia 31 de Janeiro de 2022.
Candidatos/as com os CV’s mais adequados ao perfil pretendido serão contactados para realização de entrevista.

PARTICULAR UNIVERSAL: Identity, Memory and Landscape at Castro Marim

Today we're very happy to announce our new and ambitious project to the world: PARTICULAR UNIVERSAL, which will take place in the magical Castro Marim municipality, in the most southeastern part of the country. 

With financing by the Culture programme of the EEA* mechanism, and partners such as the Castro Marim municipality, the Norwegian NyMusikk and Lisbon associations Teatro do Vestido and Filho Único, we will develop several artistic co-creation activities related to themes of identity, memory and soundscape in the region, among which two dozen artistic residencies oriented towards the development of sound art and new music pieces by Portuguese, Norwegian and international creators, as well as the creation of a sound archive, a community archive for the "Voices of Memory", and the community production of theatre performances in dialogue with the municipality's inhabitants and immaterial heritage.

The project website is already online, and there we will soon announce several events and opportunities for artists across the world. Make sure to visit it and follow all the news related to this project through our usual channels.

OUT.RA Local Creation Grant for 2021: Applications open

Picture by: Vera Marmelo

OUT.RA – Associação Cultural is now accepting applications to its creation grant by young local artists who want to develop artistic work related to music / sound / sound art / multimedia during 2022.

This year, we've decided to remove the age limit from this grant, although it remains focused on supporting emergent artists without a consolidated career.

The broadened geographical scope established in 2021 remains, and artists residing in neighbouring Moita and Seixal are still eligible for this grant, which amounts to 1000€.

Since 2015, the OUT.RA Local Creation Grant has supported artists like André Neves, Van Ayres, Camila Vale and Vera Marques, among others.

You can read all the necessary information regarding this grant below. Applications are open until January 16th 2022. We're looking forward to receiving your projects!

 

OPEN CALL

BOLSA DE CRIAÇÃO LOCAL OUT.RA 2022

The criteria considered in selecting a project for this grant are as follows:

  • Resident in the Barreiro, Moita or Seixal Municipalities;
  • Over 18 years old;
  • Education (higher or technical) in artistic fields, particularly in Music / Sound Art / Multimedia / Ethnomusicology, or alternatively relevant work already developed in Music / Sound Art which reveals an interest in seeking new solutions and an idiosyncratic artistic personality;
  • Awareness of the work developed by OUT.RA (OUT.FEST, regular programming, sound documentation, etc) and degree of project fit with said work;
  • Conceptual quality of the creative project, level of maturity presented in regards to its development, feasibility of the presentation in terms of means necessary towards realizing them;
  • The work developed by the grant winner should result in at least one public presentation.
  • This grant is set at 1000€.

Applications should be sent to info@outra.pt up until January 16th and contain the following information:

  • Name, CV and artistic biography;
  • Project description and calendarization.
  • Materials necessary for the development of the project.

Interview with Sarnadas (OUT.FEST 2021 (II))

João Sarnadas, aka Coelho Radioactivo, was the man in charge of opening the last day of the second moment of OUT.FEST 2021, presenting a deep listening experience intimately connected to that of his debut work under his own name, the two double albums "The Hum" & "The Humm". At SDUB "Os Franceses" we were able to listen to two hours of electronic improvisation rich in harmony and texture in the perfect conditions for doing so: lying down, eyes closed, absorbing the sound.

We also had the chance to speak with the artist before and after the concert, and it is the compiled result of those interviews we present to you below.

Interview by Tiago Franco. Photos by Nuno Bernardo and Pedro Roque (in black and white).

 

 

What was your first contact with this kind of long-form, minimal music?

Hi hi. I always loved long music, not necessarily in terms of its duration but more of its composition, and the use of continuous sounds, for many reasons, including the fact that often there’s some sort of drama associated with long music like that and that drama is something I relate to easily. Thinking about it on the spot, I’d say my first contacts with long-form minimal music happened with artists who aren’t particularly “durational” or minimal, the first pieces I recall are “Back to Schinzo” by Pascal Comelade and “Stranger Intro” by Bill Frisell (the intro for a Marianne Faithfull album) which were songs I heard a lot when I was a kid. Pascal is one of my favourite musicians ever, and fortunately he has enough albums to be able to constantly hear new things from him, I only discovered his first, more experimental albums around 5 years ago. “Stranger Intro” is a 30 second loop that I heard on repeat, and I decided to make a version of it for this album, although when I made it I didn’t necessarily know it would become part of an album, I only wanted to try playing it in order to listen to what a version with more than 30 seconds could sound like, and it ended up turning into D1 M Bombarda Transmission. When it comes to more intellectual stuff, I think the first long-form minimal musician I got into was La Monte Young, then maybe Terry Riley’s concert with Don Cherry in Köln. But I don’t know if these were my inspiration to make this album, especially because this long form comes more from the way I play than from a prior decision to do so. Those are obviously musicians I enjoy, so they ended up influencing my melodies and my thoughts, but I think the music is always the result of a much wider range of influences.

 

 

Could you tell me a bit about the equipment you use on this album? It was built by Inês Castanheira, who runs a DIY synthesizer workshop. Was it a commission or was it given to you with the three oscilators?

Yes, the synthesizer I used on this album and the one I now use live is a simple one, with three oscillators and three on/off switches, made by Inês Castanheira. I’m fortunate enough to share not only my life but also my house with Inês, so I have easy access to the things she builds, and this one in particular is one of the first she built, because she was starting to explore synthesizer-building at the time, and that’s precisely the reason why it’s so simple. We started using this synth and another one in a project we both have called Well, and I eventually started using it in collective pieces by Favela Discos, such as the “Desilusão Óptica” piece. That was the background I had in developing the approach to the material I created for this album, based on the use of this synthesizer, the mixer, loops and other effects pedals.

 

 You recorded this album in two days, which resulted in 8 hours of recordings, and it took you three years to mix it down to two albums of two hours each. What kind of methods did you use to bring it down to that size and what kind of challenges did you encounter in the cutting room?

Well, at the time when I did that recording session, I didn’t really have the idea of making an album out of it. As I said previously, I simply felt that I had arrived at a different way of playing from what I did as Coelho Radioactivo, for instance, and that I wanted to record something using that “language”. I actually feel like The Hum has something of Coelho Radioactive in it, I think that the melodies have something to do with that universe, as does the use of loops, which was something I did often both live and when playing by myself at home. At the time I had Nuno Loureiro’s mixer at my house, because I had used it at a Desilusão Óptica concert, and so I took the chance and started recording for two days, which as you mentioned resulted in 8 hours of music. It was actually more, around 11 hours, but I usually don’t count those hours because they weren’t that great to begin with. Basically, the biggest challenge was to understand the results I came up with, which led to two problems – first to reduce the music to a more acceptable length to make them understandable as “songs”, and second to figure out what those songs were, if they’d lead to three albums, to one, to two…which way to order them made sense…Eventually I managed to simplify it into two albums, one which was more “drone” and a more “ambient” one, or a more “atonal” and a more “melodic” one, a “daytime” album and a “nightime” album, but over those three years I started grouping the music with really quite different concepts, which probably aren’t that clear but which helped me understand what these songs were.

 

 

I read somewhere that you took cues from “the unique harmony of each city you lived in”, could you tell me a bit about that? Do you see any crossover between your music and architecture?

Well, in fact, even through it was inspired by things I feel about the record, the process, and my thoughts when I was making it, that’s a bit of press mumbo-jumbo. I’m always torn between conceptualizing the music I make or not, I usually don’t make things following a pre-defined concept, the only thing I’m interested when I’m recording is my intuition, and if I’m enjoying the music I’m creating. However, on the other hand, I’m interested in thinking about sound, and it’s something I do on my day-to-day for various reasons, either simply because of reading things about music and sound, or due to communicating about what I do solo or with the people I work with on a day to day basis – for instance, with the rest of the guys at Favela Discos when we develop collective pieces – we obviously need to speak about what we want to do, and either you want to conceptualize what you do or not you always end up having some thoughts about what you are doing. In that sense, something I’m interested in, for instance, is the relationship between ambiguity and deep listening. In the same way you can, with deep listening, discover melodies, rhythms, tones, etc in the soundscapes of a city, you can also discover new sound layers in the kind of music I make, in between the more obvious melodies you can discover other melodies, like you can distinguish them in the middle of the mass of sound and noise. In that sense, I think the relationship with the city soundscapes is that one, discovering some musical logic in the midst of the mass of sound we’re exposed to, between cars, fans and turbines, those noisy air conditioning things, and all the other things that make up the sound floor and which we sometimes don’t even notice.

 

The global phenomenon of ‘The Hum’, with tales of people who are almost chased by ultra-low frequencies in residential or industrial zones, is considered an unpleasant sound, one that leads to insomnia and headaches. Those are the last things I’d mention when describing your music. Does the album try to redeem this type of sound and put it in a different context, in a way?

Well, first of all thanks for the compliment. Regarding The Hum phenomenon, I think it’s unpleasant because it’s a sound that is an undesired and permanent intruder, but maybe that sound would be acceptable in an experimental music context (laughs). My idea isn’t so much to redeem the phenomenon, I simply think I adopted the name as a more encompassing term, like I said above, I think my The Hum is more about the sound of cities which isn’t immediately perceptible to us. This phenomenon isn’t audible to everyone, apparently some people are more susceptible to it than others. So, I wasn’t interested in talking about a violent, people-chasing sound, but simply about a sound which we only perceive when we become aware of its existence, or something like that. I’m interested in the idea, but not so much in the text-book definition of the concept, and like the music, one of the main reasons I chose the name was due to my intuition, I liked the mystic aspect of the idea and it looked like a cool name. Besides, I also used this theme and title for a comic book released by O Panda Gordo in 2016 or 2017, and at the time I thought it would be cool to connect the two things because they work on the same idea in very different ways.

 

 

How different is the album and the music when you play it live? Did you make any adjustments for the OUT.FEST concert?

Well, I’m not actually playing the music on the album, what I’m doing is using the same means and techniques to create new music. The album was created through improvisation, which is what I do live, although lately I’ve been bringing along some pre-recorded loops so it isn’t as boring. During rehearsals I tried to replicate some of the music on the album, but I wasn’t a fan of the result, since I was concerned with make the music sound like the album it ended up sounding like a cheap copy of it, which both wasn’t identical to it or as interesting as it. So I thought the best thing to do was to simply use the techniques I used on the album to create something new, which isn’t what’s on the record but is a part of it, in a way. For OUT.FEST, the only special thing I did was to select some pre-recorded loops, but the concert preparation was all very chaotic because it was the first time I used the scenography and it was all a bit last minute. I think the biggest adjustment I made for this concert was to use the “city” prop, or whatever you want to call it, which was something I wanted to do since the beginning but hadn’t had a chance to, and I was very happy with the result.