on Figures and Grounds, psi, 2011
“This is radical music in the best sense, taken back to basics but to basics that are relational in essence. [...] Figures and Grounds is a beautiful and sensuous record.”
— Brian Morton, Point of Departure
“What I admire most about Figures and Grounds [is that] electronics heighten the visceral sting of their acoustic found sounds, but without the musicians relying on electronics to do the work for them, or worse, allowing electronics to paint a homogenised gloss over the music.”
— Philip Clark, The Wire, UK
“The four players deliver a vibrant, free-flowing session. [...] As an exemplar of the use of electronics and processing with a small improvising group, Figures and Grounds is a great success.”
— John Eyles, All About Jazz
“La réactivité, l'attention, la spontanéité et la richesse des propos et des interventions surprennent et envoutent par leur force émotionnelle, leur richesse structurelle et texturale, ainsi que par leur caractère aventureux. [...] Spontanée, chaleureuse, intense et profonde, une musique très énergique qui accèdent à des territoires riches et nouveaux.”
— Julien Heraud, Improv Sphere, France
“Det är ovanligt öppet, flytande och inbjudande. Samtidigt som alla musiker hela tiden tar sin konst på djupaste allvar utan allt flams.”
— Thomas Millroth, Soundofmusic, Sweden
on Systems Quartet
live at the Vortex, London
Evan Parker's "Might I Suggest" Festival
January 2012
live at the Vortex, London
Evan Parker's "Might I Suggest" Festival
January 2012
“For the first of six Anglo-German collaborative concerts at the Vortex, devised by Evan Parker and generously supported by the Goethe-Institut, Systems Quartet offered a reassuringly uncomfortable collision between live instrumentation and electronic intervention in what Parker reckoned would probably be the most confrontational event of the series.
Axel Dörner with his specially adapted Firebird slide trumpet and laptop, and Rudi Mahall on a substantial bass clarinet, took up the leftstage, complemented to the right by the black-clad rhythm section of Adam Linson on string bass and electronics and Parker's long-time collaborator, percussionist Paul Lytton.
They served up a complex sonic brew, rarely straightforward, often juddering in and out of bleak, mechanically-hinted environments, with the spectre of electrical malfunction hovering overhead. The insinuation of unlikely processed sounds and a perpetual unravelling of morphed transformations suggested the shifting scenes of a film's soundtrack. Frenzied and frenetic, rising to the density of sound associated with the ICP Orchestra, they could equally drop to ethereal, delicate pulses and waves.
Paul Lytton used his fingers so lightly on his snare that a ladybird might have been scuttling across the skins. Dörner blew on a mike which picked up the edges of his breath; he sampled and reprocessed sounds so that for moments there would, disconcertingly, be no active players, even though virtual duets were being enacted.
Sparks and crackles, thunderous semaphore and various strands of interference were introduced to build up a spacious yet condensed landscape. [...] Linson's intense application to fretboard and bridge confirmed an anchoring presence, linking in to Lytton's exceptional, low-key percussive invention with great assurance.
The nervous anguish of the siren sounds, the waves of weather and insect swarms were complemented by the odd touch of humour. [...] The musicians' instincts and experience made it all hang together with finely-wrought coherence.”
— Geoff Winston, LondonJazz, UK
“The London jazz club's second annual Evan Parker-curated "Might I Suggest" Festival presented a six-night programme celebrating Anglo-German musical collaboration. [...] The festival opened on Tuesday, with the Berlin-based Systems Quartet's blistering free-jazz aesthetic souped up by ad-libbed electronica. [...] Their acoustic material followed the standard contours of through-improvised performance – sparse beginnings, full-blooded climaxes and spiky duets punctuated by moments of calm. It was lifted out of the ordinary, though, by the periodic injection of mightily distorted samples of what the musicians had just played.”
— Mike Hobart, Financial Times, UK
on Integument, psi, 2009
Casserley and Linson “open up impressive vistas.”
— Julian Cowley, The Wire, UK
“This studio meeting delivers a wide range of surprising (and often gritty) textures. A difficult though rewarding listen.”
— François Couture, Monsieur Délire
“The buzzing intensity this duo creates is just the ticket.”
— Jason Bivins, Signal to Noise
“An entrancing effort that stands out in radiant colors among similar undertakings of this ilk.”
— Glenn Astarita, All About Jazz
“Ecco un esempio da non perdere di quintaessenza della musica elettro-acustica!”
— Francesca Odilia Bellino, All About Jazz Italia
“Casserley et Linson transforment le temps et l'espace et plusieurs écoutes successives n'en altèrent le rayonnement multidimensionnel. Fascinant.”
— Jean-Michel Van Schouwburg, Improjazz, France
MORE
Point of Departure Roundtable
(2009) with Lisle Ellis and Adam Linson, moderated by Bill Shoemaker.
A 2007 feature in online double bass magazine Xbass, in original Italian
and English translation
.
Spotted in an epigraph in this fascinating post
on automatism in the arts, on David Toop's blog (July 2012).
Label Spotlight on psi Records by Stuart Broomer in the July 2011 New York City Jazz Record
, with invited comments from Evan Parker, Adam Linson, Richard Barrett, John Russell, and Peter Evans.
Sabu Toyozumi, Adam Linson, John Russell, Evan Parker
by Naiel Ibarrola for online jazz magazine Tomajazz (Spain)
by Naiel Ibarrola for online jazz magazine Tomajazz (Spain)
Caption (translated): "John Russell, Evan Parker, Sabu Toyozumi, and Adam Linson enveloped the absorbed audience of Cafe Oto through three musical landscapes for two sets. It all started with an almost inaudible atmosphere. And textures began to overlap. And their music came to life."
Point of Departure Roundtable
A 2007 feature in online double bass magazine Xbass, in original Italian
Spotted in an epigraph in this fascinating post
Label Spotlight on psi Records by Stuart Broomer in the July 2011 New York City Jazz Record
ACADEMIC RESEARCH
Paper for the Society of Biologically Inspired Cognitive Architectures
Brief account of Linson's doctoral research, presented at an event honoring keynote speaker Marvin Minsky
On the limits of computational musicology
Paper presented as part of the Alan Turing Centenary
On phenomenology, embodiment and design
Paper for the Society of Biologically Inspired Cognitive Architectures
A. Linson, C. Dobbyn and R. Laney, "A Parsimonious Cognitive Architecture for Human-Computer Interactive Musical Free Improvisation,"
in Advances in Intelligent Systems and Computing Vol. 196, Springer, 2013. [preprint]
Brief account of Linson's doctoral research, presented at an event honoring keynote speaker Marvin Minsky
A. Linson, C. Dobbyn and R. Laney, "Improvisation without Representation: Artificial Intelligence and Music,"
in Proceedings of Music, Mind, and Invention: Creativity at the Intersection of Music and Computation (MMI) 2012, The College of New Jersey, USA, March 30-31, 2012.
On the limits of computational musicology
A. Linson, C. Dobbyn and R. Laney, "Critical issues in evaluating freely improvising interactive music systems,"
in Proceedings of the International Conference on Computational Creativity (ICCC) 2012, Dublin, Ireland, May 30-June 1, 2012.
Paper presented as part of the Alan Turing Centenary
A. Linson, C. Dobbyn and R. Laney, "Interactive Intelligence: Behaviour-based AI, Musical HCI and the Turing Test,"
in Proceedings of the AISB (The Society for the Study of Artificial Intelligence and Simulation of Behaviour) and IACAP (The International Association for Computing and Philosophy) World Congress, Alan Turing Year 2012, Birmingham, UK, July 2-6, 2012.
On phenomenology, embodiment and design
A. Linson, "Unnecessary constraints: a challenge to some assumptions of digital musical instrument design,"
in Proceedings of the International Computer Music Conference (ICMC) 2011, University of Huddersfield, UK, July 31 - August 5, 2011.