[pe158]Pet The Tiger
Hail The Traveler
[pe156]Philip Gayle
Mammoth Flower
[pe155]Seeded Plain
Badminton, The Volleys
[pe154]Bryan Day & Dereck Higgins
Woven Territories
[pe153]John Krausbauer & David Maranha
[pe152]Evan Lipson
Echo Chamber
[pe151]Guro Skumsnes Moe & Philippe Petit
[pe150]Brasilia Laptop Orchestra
10 yEars aLive
[pe149]Bill Brovold
Pi
[pe148]Illusion of Safety & Z'ev
[pe147]Naturaliste
Temporary Presence
[pe146]Euphotic
Isopleths
[pe145]Pet The Tiger
Gaze Emanations
[pe144]Ashtray Navigations & Anla Courtis
Protozoic Rock Express
[pe143]Alan Sondheim
Future Speed Future
[pe142]Albert / Day / Kreimer
Mutations
[pe141]Bill Brovold's Stone Soup
Michael Goldberg Variations
[pe140]Michael Gendreau
Polvo Seran, Mas Polvo Enamorado
[pe139]Hélène Breschand & Elliott Sharp
Chansons du Crépuscule
[pe138]Alan Sondheim / Azure Carter / Luke Damrosch
LIMIT
[pe137]Collision Stories
Those Missing Will Complete Us
[pe136]Ghost In The House
Second Sight
[pe135]Henry Kaiser / Alan Licht
Skip to the Solo
[pe134]Peter Aaron / Brian Chase Duo
Purges
[pe133]Alan Sondheim / Azure Carter / Luke Damrosch
Threnody
[pe132]Ou
Scrambled!
[pe131]Many Arms & Toshimaru Nakamura
[pe130]Ben Bennett / Jack Wright
Tangle
[pe129]Period
2
[pe128]Music For Hard Times
City of Cardboard
[pe127]Tetuzi Akiyama & Anla Courtis
Naranja Songs
[pe126]Massimo Falascone
Variazioni Mumacs
[pe125]Auris + Gino
Rub
[pe124]Honnda
Fantasy Remover
[pe123]Azure Carter & Alan Sondheim
Avatar Woman
[pe122]Various Artists
The Unscratchable Itch: A Tribute To Little Fyodor
[pe121]Nels Cline / Elliott Sharp
Open The Door
[pe120]Pretty Monsters
[pe119]Cactus Truck
Brand New For China!
[pe118]Belcher / Bivins Double Quartet
EXO
[pe117]Normal Love
Survival Tricks
[pe116]Ron Anderson / Robert L. Pepper / David Tamura / Philippe Petit
Closed Encounters of the 4 Minds
[pe115]Philip Gayle
Babanço Total
[pe114]Dino Felipe
Sorta' Bleu
[pe113]Ydestroyde
Synzosizer
[pe112]Pilesar
Radio Friendly
[pe111]Little Fyodor
Peace is Boring
[pe110]Courtis / Yamamoto / Yoshimi
Live at Kanadian
[pe109]Bob Marsh
Viovox
[pe108]Tartar Lamb
60 Metonymies
[pe107]Shelf Life
Ductworks
[pe106]A Tomato a Day
The Moon is Green
[pe105]D + D
[pe104]The Mighty Vitamins
Take-Out
[pe103]Smut / OVO
Split 7"
[pe102]Bill Horist / Marron
Sleephammer
[pe101]Richard Trosper
The Ocean
[pe100]Shinyville
No Sleep till Babylon
[pe99]Lisi
Damn It!!
[pe98]Poormen
[pe97]Emily Hay / Marcos Fernandes
We Are
[pe96]The Machine Gun TV
GO->
[pe95]Monotract
Live In Japan
[pe94]Mike Pride
The Ensemble is an Electronic Device
[pe93]Jorge Castro
Cinética
[pe92]Yagihashi Tsukasa
Automatic
[pe91]Eftus Spectun
The Tocks Clicking
[pe89]Amy Denio
Tasogare
[pe88]Eric Cook
Asymptosy
[pe87] Onid & Isil
[pe86]Autodidact
Devotional Hymns for the Women of Anu
[pe85]Che Guevara Memorial Marching (and Stationary) Accordion Band
[pe84]Day / Boardman
One to Seven
[pe83]Knot + Over
[pe82]Shifts
Vertonen 9
[pe81]Blue Collar
Lovely Hazel
[pe80]Mogami
[pe79]Jesse Krakow
Oceans in the Sun
[pe78]Diaz-Infante / Forsyth / Scherzberg
A Barren Place of Overwhelming Simplicity
[pe77]Angels
[pe76]Khoury / Shearer / Hall
Braille
[pe75]Renato Rinaldi
The Time and the Room
[pe74]Masami Kawaguchi
Live in December
[pe72]Watch the Stereo
Presents...
[pe71]Modern Day Urban Barbarians
The Endless Retreat
[pe70]The Bunny Brains
Holiday Massacre '98
[pe69]Jack Wright & Bob Marsh
Birds in the Hand
[pe68]Free From Disguise
[pe67]Jad Fair & Jason Willett
Superfine
[pe66]Baker / Baker / Bloor
Terza Rima
previous


Bryan Day & Dereck Higgins - Woven Territories
CD (San Francisco / Omaha)



1. Hovering Debris
2. Neon Cactus Beacons
3. Serpentine Tracing
4. Locomotive Distortion

bandcamp


Recorded in Omaha, NE
in February 2023
Mastered by Jeff Kaiser
Cover Art by Gaberiel Higgins
Disc Art by Bryan Day

Reviews:
(Noise Not Music) It is not up for debate that Bryan Day is very good at what he does—nor that he is the only one who even can. Not only does he scratch-build novel sound sculptures that function as both musical and visual artwork, but many of them are also fully usable instruments as well, harnessed by the same hands that cobbled them together in amazing displays of improvisational dexterity (check out this video of him playing with Jay Kreimer as Seeded Plain a few years ago). That dexterity also allows for transposition to a variety of contexts, something explored on other collaborative efforts on eh?, Eyesore, and elsewhere over the years, a recent gem being 2021’s Crooked Doppler with Seymour Glass on Tanzprocesz. Like that tape, Woven Territories dissolves any boundaries between performance, observation, and processing, making it difficult—irrelevant—to tell who’s doing what. Is this a field recording of the same space in which these machines are trundling, or is it cut-and-paste? Is that the sound of a contact mic’d vibrating surface or the growl of an old tractor engine? Any answers I spitball tend toward the imagistic because of how vivid these surreal vignettes are, painstakingly painted in all the right colors. I am a big fan of the unwieldy motifs that show up in the lengthy sketches like accidental inkblots: short synth ditties like train station announcement tones; sweeping, gauzy swirls of loosely spooled tape blur. - Jack Davidson

(Disaster Amnesiac) As far as Disaster Amnesiac can tell, Woven Territories documents a reunion between peripatetic Public Eyesore main man Bryan Day and erudite Omaha lifer Dereck Higgins. The former's musical output sticks to the Experimental side, while the latter is involved in disparate approaches to sound making. Still, they share a common bond in Omaha and its scene as well as the propensity to get odd with those sounds of theirs. The four pieces that comprise Woven Territories unfold over durations that strike this listener as being almost courtly in their feels. No elements within them feel rushed or forced as the duo present their respective additions to the overall aural matrix. Ideas emerge, blend with whatever other sounds are happening, and then they all float and bob until they drift away. Higgins's field recordings are particularly noticeable in that they go well past simple environmental documents and capture what could be much more varied field sources. Day's invented instruments still sound somewhat familiar to me, and his phrasings on them are evolving as his familiarity with them increases. It's these two aspects of these sound artists' toolboxes, both physical and aesthetic, that give Woven Territories that air of sophistication. Day and Higgins are probably not going to just bash through any scenario, particularly one which involves sound blending and music making. This is not to say that the album is dull, for it certainly provides plenty of action; it's just that none of its four tracks ever jump immediately to the more frenetic spaces. Instead this duo set up moods, let them establish themselves in almost cybernetic ways, and then add spice as the broths thicken. It'll be interesting to see if these two can find more time to break away from their various other endeavors in order to produce more of these weaves. - Mark Pino

(Vital Weekly) From the home of Public Eyesore and Eh? Records, same building, three new releases for us to enjoy. The first one contains music from the man in charge, Bryan Day, who is someone creating his own instruments. He will use old electronics, metal bits, wooden parts, and whatever he finds scattered around in search of amplification. I don't think I heard of Dereck Higgins before, who takes credit here for electronics and field recordings. The information lists that he worked and worked with David Nance Mowed Sound, Digital Sex, Son Ambulance, RAF, 3gypt, Skuddur, Hotlines, InDreama, Chemicals, Norman & The Rockwells, Icky Blossoms, and Hotlines, none of which I heard before. He is also a visual artist. Earlier this year, the two met up again in Omaha, Nebraska and recorded the four pieces of music. While this music is part of whatever improvised music might be, especially in Day's handling of the amplified objects, I think things move to another level thanks to Higgins' use of field recordings. Maybe it all is more electro-acoustic, and it's a combination that works very well. There is a contrast between the broken-up, shorter sounds and the longer, continuous sounds, which meet in the middle. Sometimes Day produces the longer ones; sometimes, whatever Higgings brings on is short. The result is music with significant interaction, half urban with its societal debris being amplified, half outside, in the field, with animal sounds. There is always action, one steady stream of changing sounds; nothing leaps out, and little silence is allowed. Not very traditional in terms of improvised music or pure field recording, and an excellent release all around. - Frans de Waard

(Bad Alchemy) Woven Territories (PE153) entstand bei einer Rückkehr von BRYAN DAY nach Omaha in Ne­braska in der Begegnung mit DERECK HIGGINS, den er von yly her kennt. Er hat dafür seine durch Bad Jazz, Collision Stories, Euphotic, Pay Dirt nicht unvertrauten Invented Instruments einge­packt, Higgins operiert mit Field Recordings & Samples. Als Nebraskas unermüdlichster Um­triebler, der von Digital Sex in den 80ern über 'Nzwrks' als DHX bis zum Bassspiel mit Dave New­house in Manna/Mirage Musik aller Art macht und auf YouTube tolle Platten empfiehlt. Mit 'Hovering Debris', 'Neon Cactus Beacons', 'Serpentine Tra­cing' und 'Locomotive Distortion' vieldeutig be­namst, führt das Zusammenspiel mit Day abseits von ambienten Sonosphären ins bruitistische Ge­dränge alltäglich urbaner, industrialer und diffus verwilderter Szenerien. Spielende Kinder, krachende Tore, geräuschhafte Machenschaf­ten der brodeligen oder perkussiven, der tropfenden und rauschenden Art. Mit sogar saitenspielerisch zarten Einschlüssen ins schleierhafte Dongen, Scharren, Dröhnen. Mit verhuscht liquiden oder eisenbahnerischen Anmutungen, schrottigem Noise, stereopho­ nen Schlieren, knarzigen oder surrenden Spuren, dumpfen Tönungen. Donnerblecherne Laute mischen sich mit gongenden oder drahtigen, mit knurschenden Schritten, mit mo­torischen Einsprengseln oder homöopathisch musikalischen. Permanente Bewegung lässt keine Ruhe einkehren. Hantieren, Automatisches, der Wind, Wasser, Leute oder Vögel in vagen Andeutungen, perkussive Art Brut, liquide Kaskaden, der Ausklang nur ein abge­brochener Fortgang. - Rigobert Dittmann


© 2020 Public Eyesore Records. All Rights Reserved.