NeAnoNeNoNo is a new publication concern edited by Jorge Boehringer (Core of the Coalman) based in the UK
contributions from
Margarita Kirilkina
Patt Reilly
Boris Bezemer
George Chen
Lucy Cheesman
Theo Gowans
Yasi Perera
Michelle Von Carmel
Bob Doubles
Stephen Chase
NeAnoNeNoNo celebrates indecisiveness, prods the clouds for surprise, seeds snowbanks and sandbanks, and deposits crystal treasures to be covered over by barchan dunes, petrified or melted to reveal the imagined colour, newly discovered, or carried forward.
For our purposes, the difference between a shaky or out of focus photograph and photograph of clouds close-up is equivocal, useful.
Stephen Chase Like a crummy counterfeit Con Colleano, Stephen Chase’s music-making teeters on the precipice of the spontaneous [Whoaa, now], quivering gracelessly on an unthreading wire of compositional conceits [TWANG! THWACK!], flailing limbs akimbo in a whirl of acoustical phenomena [~WOBBLE~], plummeting to a mesh of performer cooperation [aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa], bouncing anvil-like to a dusty floor of participatory scores [kmnpff…].
Lucy Cheesman “Not mumbling you meathead, rumbling!” For fans of moistening mortal springs with tears and fresh and rosy-fingered dawn. Books – heavy – books – heavy – books – heavy – books – heavy – books – heavy – books – heavy – lifting A zine about the months of the year and a dream about being eaten by a bear.
Theo Gowans Territorial Gobbing is a Leeds based STUPID music maker and improvisor wrangling tapes, vocal leftovers, contact mics, broken pedals and wave generators and whatever else is to hand into high speed dada cutup nonsense.
Jorge Boehringer Sound Artist, Noise Fanatic, Amp Worshiper, Music Composer, Environmental Artist, (as installations and for ensembles or soloists (with or without electronics [and/or computers]) self as solo performer: (processes with instruments, objects, electronics)); writer, researcher, educator (themes include: {morphological: pattern formation & recognition (plant, animal, water, weather, mineral)}, {phenomenological: (visible & invisible, temporality, real and unreal situations and circumstances)}, {environments (ecology, interactivity)}, {(pre-) history (& post-)});