Blevin Blectum (born Bevin Kelley) is an American electronic musician and multimedia composer. She is celebrated as an "icon of deviant and cerebral electronic music".[1] The pioneering musician and composer otherwise known as Bevin Kelley has been active in the US electronic avant garde since the 1990s. A classically trained science fiction enthusiast with an enviable academic record, she’s best known as one half of irreverent rhythmic glitch duo Blectum From Blechdom and multimedia band Sagan with J Lesser, Ryan Junell and Wobbly.[2]
Blevin Blectum | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | Bevin Kelley |
Also known as | D84, Synopterus |
Born | 1971 (age 52–53) |
Genres | Electronic |
Years active | 1998 – present |
Labels | |
Member of | Blectum from Blechdom |
Formerly of | |
Website | http://www.blevinblectum.com/ |
Early life and education
editShe was born Bevin Kelley in 1971.[3][4] Her younger brother is musician Kelley Polar[5] and her cousin is musician Rayna Russom. Blectum studied the violin during her youth.
At Oberlin College she began making electronic music at the WOBC-FM studios. At Mills College, she partnered with Kevin Blechdom to form Blectum from Blechdom, an electronica and performance art duo.[6] In 2001, Blectum from Blechdom won an Award of Distinction for digital music at the Prix Ars Electronica.[7]
In May 2014, she graduated with a PhD in Computer Music and Multimedia from Brown University's Multimedia and Electronic Music Experiments (MEME) department. Her dissertation committee included writer Brian Evenson and playwright Erik Ehn.[8] While at Brown University she created sound and music for several of playwright Theo Goodell's works.
Career
editBlectum has released many solo albums, and released a CD/DVD Unseen Forces on Matmos's Vague Terrain label as part of multimedia band Sagan with J Lesser, video producer Ryan Junell, and Wobbly.[9] In 1998 she worked at Orban testing radio processing units, in 1999 worked at Thomas Dolby's Headspace and Beatnik Inc. as a beta-tester, and in 2000 to 2004 worked as a sound designer at LeapFrog Enterprises and several smaller sound design companies in the San Francisco Bay Area.
She has commonly worked with the software Ableton Live, Pro Tools, Max/MSP/Jitter, Apogee Duet.[3]
An avid bird enthusiast, Blectum quit music for several years and worked as a registered veterinary technician at the Medical Center for Birds in Northern California,[10] before moving to Providence, Rhode Island in 2007.[4]
In 2013, she co-founded theatrical-electro-acoustic-chamber-ensemble The Traveling Bubble Ensemble with Michael Kelley, Elise Kuder, and Marjorie Gere.
In 2011 she was artist-in-residence at WORM, a Rotterdam-based institute for avant-garde music and art.
Her fifth solo LP/CD, Emblem Album, was released on Aagoo records on December 5, 2013.
In November 2017 she released All Day I Dream About Singularity (vinyl and download) under the name Synopterus, on Darling Dada (Paris).
Late 2020 saw the release of a remix track + video, for composer Kirsten Volness's album 'River Rising'. Music by Blevin Blectum, video by Alex P Dupuis.
In 2021 she resides in Seattle, working by day as Senior UX Sound Designer for Echo Alexa Devices, and continues to perform and release music. A new solo record as well as Blectum from Blechdom ('Deep Bone') and Sagan ('Anti-Ark' on the Hausu label) albums will be released later this year.
On 2023's OMNII, "Kelley has tempered her zanier inclinations and focused on the most sonorous and wonder-filled tones and otherworldly atmospheres of her career. It's a shame that Cosmos went off the air, as these tracks would make for an ideal soundtrack."[11]
Multitudes Of Venom is Kelley’s sixth album released under her Blevin Blectum alias, the second to drop on equally eccentric Los Angeles label Deathbomb Arc. Multitudes Of Venom "features a live recording of a performance on Stanford’s KZSU radio, billed as a presentation of music from 2023’s Omnii, but you wouldn’t know from listening to it. Instead, Multitudes Of Venom features a heady collision of samples, signals and loops that speed and scramble across a universe of sonic possibility."[12]
Discography
editBlevin Blectum
edit- Talon Slalom (album) (2002)
- Magic Maple (album) (2004)
- The Rapid Cooling EP (EP) (2007)
- Gular Flutter (album) (2008)
- Emblem Album (album) (2013)
- Irradiance (2014 Blevin Blectum album) (2014)
- OMNII (album) (2023)
- Multitudes of Venom (album) (2024)
with Blectum from Blechdom
edit- The Messy Jesse Fiesta (album) (2000)
- Snauses And Mallards (EP) (2000)
- Bad Music And Buttprints (EP) (2000)
- De Snaunted Haus (EP) (2000)
- Haus De Snaus (album) (2001)
- Fishin' In Front Of People: The Early Years 1998-2000 (album) (2002)
- Deep Bone (album) (2021)
with Sagan
edit- Unseen Forces (album) (2004)
- Resting Pleasures (7") (2006)
- Anti-Ark (album) (2021)
as D84
edit- Pirate Planets (1998)
as Synopterus
editReferences
edit- ^ Liability, Fabien. "Chronicle: Blevin Blectum: Emblem Album". Liability. Retrieved 20 December 2014.
- ^ Kretowicz, Steph (October 2024). "Electronics by Steph Kretowicz: Blevin Blectum Multitudes of Venom". The Wire. No. 488. pp. 64–65 – via Exact Editions (subscription required).
- ^ a b "herstory of electronic music". NerdGirls. 2014. Retrieved 2019-11-27.
- ^ a b Rodgers, Tara (2010). Pink Noises: Women on Electronic Music and Sound. Duke University Press. pp. 235–242. ISBN 9780822394150 – via Google Books.
- ^ Sherburne, Philip (2005-11-22). "Record Review: Kelley Polar Love Songs of the Hanging Gardens". Pitchfork. Archived from the original on 2008-01-18. Retrieved 2019-11-26.
- ^ Suarez, Jessica (22 January 2006). "Pitchfork Interviews: Kevin Blechdom". Pitchfork. Retrieved 20 December 2014.
- ^ "Blevin Blectum: Gular Flutter". Pitchfork. Retrieved 2019-11-27.
- ^ Kelley, Bevin L. (2014). Terms of Addition: Compositions and Strategies for Electro-Acoustic Chamber Ensemble (Thesis). Brown University. doi:10.7301/Z0610XQV.
- ^ Golden, Barbara. "Conversations at the Crack o Dawn". Canadian Electroacoustic Community. KPFA 94.1 FM. Retrieved 20 December 2014.
- ^ Segal, Dave. "Having Birds Is "Like Living with Perpetually 4-Year-Old Dinosaurs"". The Stranger. Retrieved 2019-11-27.
- ^ Segal, Dave (July 7, 2023). "Blevin Blectum's Plutonian Techno-Jazz". The Stranger. Retrieved November 19, 2024.
- ^ Kretowicz, Steph (October 2024). "Electronics by Steph Kretowicz: Blevin Blectum Multitudes of Venom". The Wire. No. 488. pp. 64–65 – via Exact Editions (subscription required).
External links
edit- Official website
- Golden, Barbara. “Conversation with Blevin Blectum.” eContact! 12.2 — Interviews (2)[permanent dead link ] (April 2010). Montréal: CEC.