High Places
High Places | |
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Performing at the Pitchfork Music Festival, July 2008 | |
Background information | |
Origin | Brooklyn, New York |
Years active | 2006–present |
Labels | Thrill Jockey, Upset The Rhythm, Mistletone |
Website | http://hellohighplaces.blogspot.com/, http://www.myspace.com/hellohighplaces |
Members |
Rob Barber Mary Pearson |
High Places is a band originating from Brooklyn, New York, recently relocated to Los Angeles, California. The band is a duo comprising multi-instrumentalist Rob Barber and vocalist Mary Pearson.
History
Pearson and Barber met while Mary was completing a music degree in bassoon performance at Western Michigan University and Rob was working in visual art, teaching lithography and etching in New York. Both were performing as solo musicians at the time, Mary as Transformation Surprise, and Rob as the Urxed. The two began collaborating under the name High Places in May 2006, after Mary relocated to New York.
Performance
High Places, has performed at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, Whitney Museum of American Art the New Museum and the Kitchen in New York City. They have performed at the Smithsonian Institution's Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden as part of Doug Aitken's SONG 1 (2012) in Washington DC. In Berlin they have performed via Volksbühne and Berghain's main room. With Lucky Dragons they have performed collaboratively in the group's 2008 Whitney Biennial performance, as well as at the Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles, and REDCAT. Rob has played drums in the Boredoms' 88 Boadrum Los Angeles LACMA performance, and performed as part of the Doug Aitken-curated Museum of Contemporary Art, Los Angeles 2010 benefit.
High Places is almost constantly touring, and have toured with such notable bands such as Deerhunter, No Age, Abe Vigoda, the Blow, Ponytail, Soft Circle, Lucky Dragons, Yacht, Dan Deacon and Xiu Xiu
Process
High Places' overall sound consists of bass-heavy yet crisp beats, lilting vocal melodies, syncopated rhythmic lines performed on folk percussion instruments, guitar duets turned into treated samples, and percussive lines created from the manipulation of household objects. The duo has an “exquisite corpse” style of songwriting where they exchange ideas back and forth, challenging each other's ideas in an organic way.
In a live setting, the band creates their layered recordings with Mary singing and simultaneously manipulating her vocals with various delay and reverb pedals, while playing some hand percussion, recorders, and creating and controlling various loops. Rob handles the music, triggering a variety of percussive sounds with sampling drum pads and traditional samplers, as well as various percussion, wooden blocks with contact mics, and singing some ambient vocals.
High Places’ self-titled debut was recorded by Rob and Mary in their apartment in Brooklyn’s Bedford Stuyvesant neighborhood between January and May 2008. In making the album they employed a wide variety of instruments, including 12 string guitar, banjo, shakers and rattles, bass, bells and Kalimba, as well as plastic bags, mixing bowls, wood blocks and other common household objects. Rob created the High Places artwork by using photos taken by both band members.
Discography
Albums
- 03/07–09/07 (Compilation) on Thrill Jockey (2008)
- High Places on Thrill Jockey (2008)
- High Places vs. Mankind (March 23, 2010)
- Original Colors on Thrill Jockey (2011)
7" EPs
- High Places (2007)
- Picture Disc (2007)
- Vision's the First... b/w Namer (2008)
Splits
- with Aa Wedding 7" (2007)
- with Xiu Xiu Polaroid 7" (2008)
- with Soft Circle 12" on PPM Records (2009)
Compilations
- Grown Zone on States Rights Records (2007)
- Mistletonia on Mistletone Records (2007)
- Love And Circuits on Cardboard Records (2008)
Other
- 6 song demo CD-R (2006)
- Can't Feel Born 12" (2010)
References
External links
- High Places at MySpace
- High Places blog
- Thrill Jockey's High Places site
- High Places Album Review at Pitchfork
- High Places 03/07-09/07 Review at Pitchfork
- High Places 7" Review at Pitchfork
- High Places at NPR Music