Agnès Pe

Agnès Pe is a Spanish multidisciplinary artist working in interventionist art practices and tactical media. She’s interested in sound theories and their sound ethnography, especially in the area of the internet. Educated in contemporary art, she has a DIY approach to her practice: “I am a cybermedia dumper promoting an approach that challenges traditional genres and the boundaries of the gallery/museum context”

She accurately describes her approach to music as an “all or nothing style”. We’ve also heard her work being described as a sort of “twisted formalism” before. In short, there’s not a lot quite like it, and we’re excited to welcome her to Counterflows.

For her performance at the festival she will present ‘Doo, who, rrrr or brrr. A masquerade symphony

Doo, who, rrrr or brrr. A masquerade symphony’ is a composition that was developed to be played for 6 and an infinite number of people utilising only kazoos. It premiered in Manila on 7 November 2019, and was intended to be performed by people who have no knowledge of musical notation.  The cyclical structure of the composition is inspired by “Pagsamba” by Filipino composter José Maceda, which was composed for a mixed group of 100 voices and various instruments and bamboo gongs, with performers arranged around the room. Like Maceda’s piece, every person in the room will hear the piece differently due to the spacial arrangement of players.

“The kazoo is perhaps more accurately understood as a vocal distortion device than an instrument. When a musician plays a kazoo, s/he hums into it and that causes a thin film to vibrate. This vibration changes with the sound of the voice giving it the buzzing quality, which is unique to the kazoo. While the instrument may never get the recognition of the guitar, the tuba or the violin, the kazoo is still the only instrument just about anyone can learn right off the bat. If we consider the kazoo’s function of masking voices, we may understand it as a sonic masquerade. The whole idea behind the instrument is, that a kazoo player by singing or speaking through the instrument induces an air current which makes the membrane vibrate and thus creates a summing, “nasal” sound. While the instrument may never get the recognition of the guitar, the tuba or the violin, the kazoo is still the only instrument just about anyone can learn right off the bat.

The kazoo is perhaps more accurately understood as a vocal distortion device than an instrument. If we consider the kazoo’s function of masking voices, we may understand its presence in this song as revealing that all the characters are actually in masquerade. The Kazoo is a folk instrument, but not in the historical sense of the word. Is a folks instrument since it is not part of the western “high culture” standards. Furthermore, it has a funny and phony relation with the concept of folk music, since it was produced as an industrial object in the era ethnomusicology itself was being born. Certainly, in contemporary culture, the sound of the kazoo is understood as irreverent, teasing, and possibly disruptive. These days the kazoo is a divisive instrument, and it seems to live its life mostly as a novelty toy handed out at children’s parties.” – Agnes Pe