Armed only with a theremin, Nick Franglen is hymning London's commuters, and they'll be helping - whether they know it or not.Next Thursday, I am going to be playing a theremin under London Bridge for 24 hours. I will be starting and ending at midnight, in a slowly developing collaboration with the thousands of pedestrians who cross the bridge. I'll be situated on
the walkway beneath the arches, feeding the output of the theremin into a series of loop and effect pedals to create
continuous, complex washes of sound that will be audible on the walkway around me. Pedestrians crossing the bridge above will unwittingly affect this output: as they pass by, they will cut a hidden beam on the bridge that will momentarily mute the music I'm making, a little blip of silence imprinted by each passing pedestrian throughout the 24 hours.
I had my photo taken yesterday during the evening rush hour on London Bridge, for the Guardian article that's coming out on Friday. It was very bright and extremely windy - Felix the photographer was worried his flash would blow away. For a few of the shots I sat, cross legged, in the stream of commuters with a theremin in my lap. Someone passing said "there you go, mate", and put 20p on the theremin. You couldn't make it up - I'm still laughing about it. I tried calling after him but he'd gone, as had the real street guy who'd had his cup out a bit further up, earlier on. I've still got the 20p, I'll pass it on to a more deserving cause. At a friend's suggestion: I may be knocking up a board saying "not homeless, not hungry" for next week.
It's the first time I've been back to London Bridge in several weeks, it's all feeling very imminent. There are still loose ends, I guess we'll have to sort those out on the fly. For quite a long time I checked out the space where I'm going to be playing for quite a long time. The moon was out over Tower Bridge when I left.
I'm excited to announce the upcoming performance of my Hymn To London Bridge, a duet for Theremin and Soundbeam, taking place on Thursday September 2nd 2010.
I'll going to be playing a theremin under London Bridge for 24 hours, starting and ending at midnight. I'll be feeding the output of the theremin through all my loop and effects pedals to create continuous, complex washes of sound that can be heard on the underbridge walkway around me. Pedestrians crossing over the bridge above will unwittingly affect this output : as they pass by they will cut a hidden beam on the bridge that will momentarily mute the music I'm making. This long form piece will slowly change character as it's affected by the flow of pedestrian traffic on the bridge - in the middle of the night it'll be almost continuous sound with only the occasional blip of silence as someone passes, and at rush hour it'll be a very percussive experience, or maybe even silent as the masses of commuters rush by. That's the theory anyway.