schlock!

Gianluca Licciardi, a.k.a.“Schlock!” (Rossano, 1978) is a self-taught Italian ‘cheap electronic’ music composer and performer who firmly believes in the possibilities of visual sound. He scored short/medium length movies and documentaries (the award winning Dentro Roma, 2006; Massima Punizione, 2006; Entr’acte Cambodgien, 2005) and wrote music for silent movie classics (Das Kabinett des dr. Caligari, 1919). He also published three concept albums, available for free download: Bad Chemistry (2007), broken blossom (2004) and It’s Like Having a Madman in the House (2001). He is currently working on a pop side-project called "lucamörde", a sonic version of 4.48 Psychosis by Sarah Kane and a sonic architecture concept developed for iPod, Roma, esterno notte. His webspace www.schlock.altervista.org contains an extensive selection of schlockworks.

awards & exhibitions

2006, NASTRI D'ARGENTO Dentro Roma BEST SHORT MOVIE 2006, murgia film festival entr'acte cambodgien BEST documentary 2005, INTERFACCE::SONUS 2005 bad chemistry [soundtrack from a movie never made] SPECIAL PRIZE FOR ELECTRONIC MUSIC COMPOSITION, SOUND DESIGN AND MASTERING 2005, RINOCANTANDO tribute ALBUM to Rino Gaetano (Comune di Roma / Heristal Entertainment) requiem per) Aida SELECTED 2004, INTERFACCE::SONUS 2004 How to Generate a Cancer PRIZE FOR ELECTRONIC MUSIC COMPOSITION 2003, enzimi in corpe selected
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work

thumbnail screenshotRome Ext. Night is a “site specific” sonic exhibition; formed by macro electronic music composition (split into 22 linked micro-compositions), designed mixing ambient sound objects (created through digital synthesizers) with background noises (traffic, voices, wind and other weather phenomena, subway trains, the flowing of the Tevere, all caught with mikes and a boom in the night-time) subsequently transformed to become in their turn sound objects. These 22 microcompositions are impressions on (and expressions of) Rome "shot" by night, and they reflect an experience of the city as soundscape. The sound of the city in motion. The sound of the city as still. Not the daytime sound, that permeates the environment like the pervading brightness of the roman light, but the nighttime one, of a Rome mysterious and almost invisible. Rome Ext. Night looks like a sonic “guide” to the city, portraying its face and telling its space in a poetical way; it’s a mere listening experience, made of contemplation, purposing the pursuit of a soundscape design: “organised sound” made to contribute to the spreading of an environmental conscience. Both sound and pace follow the general tone of the district described: nervous, urgent and fast-paced for TESTACCIO, MONTE MARIO and TERMINI/EUR; easy, placid and serene for GHETTO; meditative for CAFFARELLA, GIANICOLO and SAPIENZA; ancient and experienced for VERANO and APPIA ANTICA; mysterious for COPPEDÉ, TRAFORO and MONTI; materic and concrete for CORVIALE andTANGENZIALE EST; bright and sentimental for PONTE MILVIO. It’s a poetic translation of the city, and its task is not to support the listeners into recognizing places but to supply an unusual vision. Rome Ext. Night is: sonic architecture; a site specific sonic exhibition; a way to get back a perception of the everyday space; a sonic document; an invisible and impalpable medium that mimes the city space; a model of the city; a space that is both recognizable and unrecognizable; the city from a sinaesthetic point of view; the space dispersal that sound sticks; the city as acousmetre; an imitation of Rome as a fragmented, variegated, balanced body; an alternative way to comprehend Rome. PERFORMANCE FORMALITY _______________________________________________________ amplification and cases (or wireless headphones). As an alternative, mp3 players with headphones, in order to allow individual listening and free motion across the exhibition space. Actually, Rome, Ext. Night was originally conceived to be performed on iPod.

Rome, ext. night

collection: 2007
date added: 2007-03-28
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