Wires and Holograms

a
,
,
 
show

on

Sunday, April 6
12pm–3pm

book

Bookings
$35/28, shared with The Last Plunk. Included in Festival Pass ($125) and I ❤️ AE ($250). Flexible price option available for this show.

at

Wireless Hill Museum

Telefunken Drive, Ardross WA 6153

Whadjuk Noongar boodja

Accessibility

Wireless Hill Museum and the Yagan mia precinct is wheelchair accessible with ACROD parking bays on Telefunken Drive at the top of the hill. The music will range from very quiet to moderately loud, with the occasional abrupt sound like the hit of a drum. There is a wheelchair accessible unisex toilet on site. Free earplugs and N95 masks will be available.

  • 12pm

    Settle in, Teeter Bakery, Pound Coffee

  • 1pm

    a.hop

  • 1:45pm

    After School Art Club Band

  • 2:15pm

    Emilio Gordoa, Josten Myburgh & Sabine Vogel (Tracing presence on land)

  • 3pm

    Furchick's procession departs (next event)

Details

On the last day of the festival, join us for three site-specific performances at the top of Yagan Mia (Wireless Hill), a special site south of the river with a view of the whole city. Hosted amongst expansive bushland and wildflowers, this one’s great for the kids and the family — there’s food, kid’s activities and lots of space to run around.

International supergroup a.hop use remote collaboration to work together despite extraordinary geographic constraints: their members span five continents. Boorloo’s own E Millar and Singapore-based Lynette Quek will bring the ideas of the nine-piece ensemble to reality, in collaboration with Korean conceptual composer Lo Wie. Working towards the concert in a residency which has them repurposing the radios in Wireless Hill Museum's collection, they might also employ DIY circuits, kinetic sculptures and amplification, creating a bristling soundscape of tiny, detailed sounds and images.

The After School Art Club Band is comprised of Boorloo-based sound practitioners aged 8 to 12. In collaboration with Saskia Willinge and members of the local Noongar community, they will explore how listening to the site of Yagan mia can inform improvising with instruments and found objects.

Tracing presence on land is another geographically wild collaboration: Mexican percussionist Emilio Gordoa, German flautist Sabine Vogel and Tone List’s own Josten Myburgh (on saxophone). United by a deep friendship and a fascination with the relationship between music and place, this is their first show on a forthcoming eleven-show tour of this continent and Aotearoa. Their music is decisive, with each sound highly considered, striving to sonically belong.

We welcome you to come down early to take in the site and get acclimatised. We’re excited to offer free snacks by Teeter Bakery and coffee from Pound (breakfast for last night’s club-goers?).

The last day of Audible Edge, as per tradition, is alcohol-free and all ages. Kids are welcome and encouraged to come!