CLOCKDVA @ SUBSTANCE / LOS ANGELES / CALIFORNIA 22 OTTOBRE 2022
CLOCKDVA PRESENTERANNO IL NUOVO ALBUM AL FESTIVAL ‘SUBSTANCE 2022′ DI LOS ANGELES – L’ESIBIZIONE SI TERRA’ SABATO 22 OTTOBRE 2022
Questa performance mostrerà per la prima volta i nuovi video creati da Gabriel Edvy appositamente per NOESIS, il prossimo nuovo album che verrà pubblicato il prossimo 30 gennaio 2023 (A/R/E Armcomm Rizosfera Europe, ARMEU 004, 2023).
Il live set includerà, oltre al materiale nuovo prodotto per Noesis, alcuni dei classici dei CLOCK DVA ma con le nuove interpretazioni video di Gabriel Edvy, americana, nuova artista visuale che diventa nuovo membro permanente del gruppo, a partire proprio dallo show di Los Angeles. Gabriel Edvy è stata per lungo tempo collaboratrice di ClockDVA e da ora farà parte integrante della formazione live e/o performativa del gruppo cyber-esoteric-EBM Clock Dva. Cogliamo l’occasione per congratularci della scelta da parte dei Clock DVA e, in particolare, cogliamo l’occasione per augurare un brillante futuro a Gabriel Edvy, talentuosa artista visiva che spazia dalla fotografia all’immagine in movimento (film, documentari, videoclip).
VENUE
Los Angeles Theatre
615 S Broadway, Los Angeles, CA 90014
IG: @substance_la @restlessnites #substance2022
FB: @substancedtla @RestlessNites #substance2022
TW: @restlessnites #substance2022
ticket link
http://link.restlessnites.com/substance2022
Photo Courtesy of Gabriel Edvy //
VENUE / LOS ANGELES THEATRE ON 615 S BROADWAY :: Designed by architect S. Charles Lee, the Los Angeles Theatre was the last and most extravagant of the ornate movie palaces built on Broadway between 1911 and 1931. The 2,000-seat movie palace features an opulent French Baroque interior that was reportedly modeled after the Hall of Mirrors in Versailles. No expense was spared on the lavish decor, which included crystal chandeliers, marble, gold leaf, silk damask wall coverings, walnut paneling and a crystal and marble fountain in the upper lobby. The main lobby features a 50-foot ceiling, chandeliers and a grand staircase. Together, the main lobby and basement lounges could accommodate 2,000 people waiting for the next showing.
The theatre’s state-of-the-art technology included the most modern projection and sound systems of the time, lighting with dimmers, an electric monitor of available seats and blue neon floor lights decades before they became standard in today’s multiplexes. Amenities included a restaurant, a children’s playroom, a refreshment room with soda fountain, soundproof “crying rooms” for mothers with infants, a smoking room with built-in cigarette lighters, and a walnut-paneled lounge with a secondary screen to watch the film from a periscope-like system of prisms.
The Los Angeles Theatre opened Jan. 30, 1931 with the premiere of Charlie Chaplin’s masterpiece, City Lights. Chaplin reportedly helped finance the completion of the theatre’s construction so it could open in time for the City Lights premiere. Chaplin’s special guests at the opening were Albert Einstein and his wife, Elsa. The Los Angeles Theatre was added to the National Register of Historic Places in May 1979 and designated Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monument #225 in August 1979.