ACT XIII: Elaine Mitchener
Featuring an unplugged improvised vocal set by Elaine Mitchener
August 2, doors at 8PM
Torpedo Theater, Amsterdam
Elaine Mitchener is a British Afro-Caribbean vocalist, movement artist and composer working between contemporary/experimental new music, free improvisation and visual art. Amongst a wealth of accolades, she is currently a Wigmore Hall Associate Artist as well as an Artist Associate with ENSEMBLE KLANG and a NEEDCompany Fellow. Prior to this, in 2022 Elaine was a DAAD Artist-in-Berlin Fellow and, that same year, was honoured as a Member of the Order of the British Empire for Services to Music
Over the years, Mitchener has collaborated with many artists and composers, including George E. Lewis, Jennifer Walshe, Tansy Davies, Rolf Hind, Laure M Hiendl, Matana Roberts, Sonia Boyce, Christian Marclay and The Otolith Group. She is also the founder of the collective electroacoustic unit The Rolling Calf, whose performances combine texts by revolutionary African-Disaporic thinkers with collective electroacoustic improvisation.
For ACT XIII, Michener will travel from London and continue with this referential spirit to present an unplugged improvised vocal set that departs from her first solo LP Solo Throat, released in 2024 on OTOROKU, the in-house label for London’s Cafe OTO. The album itself came from a period of improvising and composing wherein the written word was used as source material. In particular, her 2021 performance of Umbra poet N.H. Pritchard’s text FR/OG was considered revelatory in its solo vocal recasting of the powerful visual-material form that Pritchard uses to disrupt semantic ‘sense’.
Building on this performance, Solo Throat takes the work of Pritchard alongside poets Edward Kamau Brathwaite, Aimé Césaire and Una Marson as its source material. Its compositions are a loose translation, a carrying from text to voice which holds multiplicity and celebrates the transformative power of literary possibility. For this occasion, Mitchener will again draw on N. H. Pritchard, Edward Kamau Brathwaite and Una Marson as well as Jeanne Lee, Moor Mother, Jay Bernard, Nhã Thuyên and Sun Ra to disrupt semantic sense, play with the margins of lyrical translation and give rise to new voicings.