Loop 2.4.3

Zodiac Dust (CD)
Music Starts From Silence/Analog Arts

Release Date:
June 16, 2009


Bio:

"Reinvents percussion..." – Fresh Air, NPR

From edgy to impressionistic, classical to experimental, the music of Loop 2.4.3 takes the audience on "a really focused and thrilling percussive ride," creating vibrant contemporary music that is "enrapturing and truly alive indeed." (NewNoise.net)

[more]


Hi-Res Photos:

300 dpi JPG


300 dpi JPG


Hi-Res Cover Art:

300dpi JPG
4 x 4 in


On The Web:

www.loop243.com
www.myspace.com/loop243
www.musicstartsfromsilence.com
www.myspace.com/musicstartsfromsilence
www.analogartsensemble.net

Bio (Continued):

Loop 2.4.3 employs the gamut of percussion instruments, from marimba and steel drum to tom-toms, bongos and snare drums, temple bowls and wood blocks, opera gongs and electronics.  Their music has been described as "transportive percussion odysseys," (The Boston Phoenix) "taut compositions with a stunning improvisational sense," (Time Out Chicago) and as containing of both "action adventures and reveries...  all sound[ing] like part of a well-thought-out tradition, only the tradition has never existed until now." (NPR Fresh Air)

Hailing from Michigan and arriving in Brooklyn via New Haven and Seattle, Loop 2.4.3 has spent the last five years alternately traveling and working in a Bed-Stuy loft space, focused on writing, improvising and creating their own style. They were exclusively a live act until the release of their debut CD, Batterie, on the Brooklyn label, Music Starts From Silence (MSFS) in the fall of 2007. Batterie was captured in a one-hour session for Sonarchy Radio in Seattle, WA.  Upon hearing Doug Haire's radio show, the group asked if they could release it as a CD. There was NO EDITING of any kind on the recording (other than removing the voice announcements in between tracks).  Their new album, Zodiac Dust, is more varied, with tighter compositions, and a more cohesive dramatic flow throughout the entire album.  The group introduces two new instruments, the eLog and Rose Echo, and utilizes cello, violin, piano, and voice, along with their standard barrage of percussion.

Loop 2.4.3 has toured throughout North America, Europe, Scandinavia, South Korea, and Australia, and has performed for radio, film, and television, including footage for The Learning Channel and MTV.  The group has given concerts, conducted master classes, and held residencies at Cornell University, Okalahoma City University, and Michigan State University amongst others.  As active figures in a cross-world of musical genres, they have performed with Clogs, The Books, Willie McBlind (Jon Catler), Evan Ziporyn, Sufjan Stevens, Shara Worden, Belle Orchestre, Newband, their late mentor Robert Hohner, and as soloists with the Brooklyn Philharmonic at the BAM Opera House.

Loop 2.4.3
members have also played at The London Jazz Festival, Merkin Hall, Tonic, The Sydney Festival, Music Works Northwest, Carnegie Hall, The Japan Society (NYC), the Harry Partch Institute and many others. 

The duo has received awards and support from the National Endowment for the Arts, The Connecticut Council on the Arts, Chamber Music America, Analog Arts, the UK Arts Council, Yale University, and the International Association of Jazz Educators.

Press Quotes:

"Absorbing." – Time Out New York

"Transportive…" – Boston Phoenix

"Mesmerizing..stunning" – Time Out Chicago

"Reinvents percussion..." – Fresh Air, NPR

“That only two guys beating on things could sound so orchestral will be a revelation to some listeners… “ – Lansing State Journal