Wednesday, 9 October 2013

LIVE: UNEARTHING FORGOTTEN HORRORS

The Star and Shadow Cinema, Newcastle 9/11/2013






Bringing together rare film screenings of key works from the golden age of UK horror, with an exclusive line up of musicians/bands influenced by them, Unearthing Forgotten Horrors is a celebration of horror in music and film.
Presenting North East (and English) premieres by outsider artists who operate on the occult fringes of the musical underground, Unearthing Forgotten Horrors, draws together a very special bill of eerie drones, psychedelic noise, and classic horror films rarely screened in cinemas.

Also featuring:

Black Mountain Transmitter
English Heretic
Culver
The Dead End Street Band
Joseph Curwen
The Temple of Sekhmet

plus screenings of 'Blood on Satan's Claw' and 'The Stone Tape'

Tickets: £9.00 in advance from We Got Tickets

The first 50 tickets include an exclusive handmade CDr mixed by Melmoth the Wanderer, featuring all of the artists on the Unearthing Forgotten Horrors bill.



Tuesday, 8 October 2013

FREE GIG : DERBY, Bar One, 26th October




/pan'd?m?k/
adjective - (of a disease) prevalent over a whole country or the world. Origin: -mid 17th century: from Greek pandemos (from pan 'all' + demos 'people')

During a series of happenings in Sheffield, in 2011, York in Sept 2012, Leeds in April 2013, PANDEMIC incorporated a continuous programme of visual art and SITUATIONS consisting of a combination of experimental music, film, lectures, talks, workshops, readings and performances.

Influenced by the 1960s group the Situationist International, whose foundations were derived primarily from anti-authoritarian Marxism and the avant-garde art movements of the early 20th century, particularly Dada and Surrealism, P A N D E M I C represents an attempt to synthesise this diverse field of influences into a modern and comprehensive critique of the art market, advanced capitalism, and the influence of both over our everyday creative lives.

The wish is to reclaim the gallery space (all spaces) as a social space, an occupation, where we can create, discuss, live and generally have a big party.

There is no money involved, all spaces were given for free, and there's charge on the door so no excuses.



We’ll be performing our Jack the Ripper Banishment at Bar One, Derby at around midnight.

For more details of the whole weekends events see the Facebook Events Page




Friday, 14 June 2013

GLASGOW’S HIDDEN GEOMETRY: A Night of Psychogeographical Exploration




A Night of Psychogeographical Exploration in music from The Psychogeographical Commission and Glasgow sound artist Caroline McKenzie, with a showing of the feature film ‘The Devil’s Plantation’ by BAFTA winning filmmaker May Miles Thomas, with an Introduction to Psychogeography by Dr David Manderson.

Tickets£8/£6 + booking fee

The Devil’s Plantation

 A feature film based on May Miles Thomas’ BAFTA-winning website, The Devil’s Plantation promises an unforgettable journey into the hidden corners of Glasgow. It tells the true story of amateur archaeologist Harry Bell whose self-published book Glasgow’s Secret Geometry describes his obsessive search for a secret network of aligned sites traversing the city. The original work changed course after the discovery of an abandoned casefile belonging to ex-psychiatric patient Mary Ross whose long walks in the city mirrored those of Bell. Narrated by Kate Dickie and Gary Lewis, the film lovingly captures the spirit of the dérive unplanned journey or drift and like any good excursion arrives at a satisfying and surprising conclusion.

The Psychogeographical Commission

 The Psychogeographical Commission are well known for high-concept recordings based around London ‘Genius Loci’, the psychological effect of the second half of a year ‘Patient Zero’ and the Occult origins of the Glasgow Subway System ‘Widdershins’. For this appearance they will be soundtracking a film based around two journeys through Maryhill, intertwining the past with what they found whilst walking.

Caroline McKenzie

 Caroline has lived close to the River Clyde for just over a decade. In that time, she has crossed its bridges many, many times and 2 new ones have been built. For her set, she will be considering these bridges and the halfway point they represent; they are inherently transitional and yet we cross them without a thought.

David Manderson

 “David’s remarkable debut novel, Lost Bodies Kennedy & Boyd has a rare quality which takes it into two camps that critics usually keep apart, it’s both a literary novel and a compelling page turner and well worth adding to your reading pile if, like me, you’re beginning to turn away from genre-defined fiction and looking at new ways of telling stories. In the Guardian Review last August in the pre-publicity surrounding Umbrella, Will Self generated a good debate about ‘the failure of modernist fiction’ and wrote about his anxiety in finding the right form. He ought to add Lost Bodies to his TBR pile.” – Bookrambler, Northwords Now

Thursday, 26 April 2012

Urban Psychetecture





The Psychogeographical Commission's latest release is a free to download album called 'Urban Psychetecture'. It contains a selection of tracks off their first two albums as well as a few previously unreleased covers including this cover of Coil's 'Lost Rivers of London'

Lost Rivers of London - The Psychogeographical Commission from Psychogeographical Commission on Vimeo

1.Antenociticus reawakens
2.The Lost Rivers of London
3.Gutterbright to the Starres
4.Alphalude 6
5.In Every Dream Home a Heartache
6.Fires of London
7.Fertile Omnipitence of the Underside
8.Hotel Room
9.Have you ever?
10.Cities
11.Alphalude 7
12.Meet you in the Subway
13.The Ones Who Walked Before
14.Walking with Omega

Total time: 66Mins




Free to download from Bandcamp

Monday, 9 April 2012

Widdershins Review from Musiquemachine.com

The inner circle of the Glasgow Subway system doesn’t immediately suggest a venue for ritual. Its modern carriages merely ensure busy people reach their desired destination efficiently, unaware of their precise location until a big, clear sign rushes in to view. It’s a collectively ignored experience, an interim between A and B, where most seem encouraged to block out the environment by book or rag, phone or ad, as they’re herded beneath the city surface.
And yet, as the mysterious Psychogeographical Commission point out, the anticlockwise travelling of the subway’s inner circle can be viewed as a constant banishing ritual first performed in the late nineteenth century when an accident that stalled its opening provided a blood sacrifice distributed circuitously ever since.

With ‘Widdershins’ the duo of S.: and Hokano once again seek to address this disconnect they perceive between urban dwellers and their local mythologies. However, while their previous releases have more generally encouraged listeners to re-evaluate city situations through treated layers of ambient guitar and electronics to soundtrack exploratory strolls along lost rivers and secret historical tramways, ‘Widdershins’ is a straight recording of the noise of travelling on Glasgow’s underground.

Or is it? Through concentrating on the sounds of this 24 minute journey with its beeping electronic doors bookending the rhythmic rush of wheels as the engine accelerates and decelerates, one starts to perceive a change in mood, or a subtle presence, as the detail of the once familiar noises starts to reveal new qualities. Have The Commission deftly tweaked the tube sounds to invoke a sense of dread and otherness or have they merely separated the sound from its source and presented it in such a way that we finally take notice of what was there all along?

Either way it makes for a compelling listening, especially when using similar transport, bathing a journey in its altered light. Indeed, the duo apparently played the recording back into its source on a subsequent late night round trip and, in doing so, inspired aggression in those passengers who erroneously responded to its beeping doors as the recording fell out of sync with the train and, perhaps, the protection afforded by Glasgow’s secret banishing ritual.

4/5

http://www.musiquemachine.com/reviews/reviews_template.php?id=3710

Saturday, 21 January 2012

The Psychogeographical Commission go LIVE!



The Psychogeographical Commission will be appearing as the first chapter of 'A Psychocinematic Ritual' in conjunction with The Arches and Glasgow Film Festival. Also appearing as part of the ritual are the Wyrding Module and OV



Thursday, 23 February 2012 at the Old Hairdressers, Renfrew Lane (opposite Stereo), Glasgow. Tickets via GFF12

Monday, 23 May 2011

Widdershins now available.

A Magical trip around the Glasgow Underground






This recording documents the inner circle of the Glasgow Subway system which travels in an anticlockwise direction (widdershins), a constant banishing ritual performed daily upon the whole of the west side of Glasgow. The Subway first opened on 14 Dec 1896, but was soon closed after an ‘accident’ resulting in wheels painted in blood being traced around a circuit of the track (a blood sacrifice to energise the protection). The line didn’t reopen until well after the Winter Solstice (19th Jan 1897) allowing further rituals to take place. Central to this circular containment field is Cranston Hill, (formerly Drumother Hill from the Gaelic - druim odhar meaning Grey Ridge), which was prophesized in the 1600’s to become the future 'Cross of Glasgow' by the masked Covenanter Alexander ‘Prophet’ Peden. At that time, the hill stood in open countryside outside the Burgh of Glasgow, but during the western expansion of the City in the early 1880s, a series of railway tunnels were built in the area. No record can be found of what was discovered/experienced during the excavations, but a consultation process started shortly after between the Glasgow Town Council and members of the Societas Rosicruciana in Scotia (SRIS) (whose teachings were the foundation of the Hermetic Order of the Golden Dawn). The Glasgow Subway was commissioned in 1890.

We had planned to record the outer (clockwise) line then replay it on the inner to negate the effect of the banishing, but then decided we'd subtly change its phase to glimpse behind the protection without dropping the shield altogether. Beginning and ending at Hillhead Station, we recorded over the period of totality on the winter solstice eclipse 2010, the first time a total eclipse has fallen on a winter solstice since the days of Prophet Peden (1638). This recording was then soundscaped and played back on the inner circle late one evening at beginning of Feb 2011. Because of differences in passenger numbers, platform delays and speed between morning and night trips our recording soon fell out of sync with the passing stations as intended. A notable increase in the train’s vibration was then felt; four people in the carriage fell asleep and needed to be roused in order to prevent them missing their stops and those used to taking audio cues from the train were standing in sync with the music and moving towards the doors only to find the train not slowing down. Confusion soon turned to aggression giving us a glimpse at what lay inside the protection field and we curtailed our experiment and ran, allowing the banishment to return.

The polymath Alasdair Gray wrote in Lanark: A Life in Four Books, of a vision concerning a mouth opening in a stone face within the Glasgow Necropolis which transported Lanark to Unthank, an altogether different, darker, Glasgow. We believe the portal is to the west of that, and within a few years, as the city moves slowly into alignment, they should coexist upon the Grey Ridge, the centre of the Subway ritual.



Total time: 24Mins


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