Tag: dave birchall

  • Stuckometer / Abscond – 8 September 2011

    Stuckometer / Abscond – 8 September 2011

    “Stuckometer is a free improvised no wave noise rock from the NorthWest of England originally formed in 2005. The third wave of the band consists of David Birchall (guitar) Karl Sveinsonn (guitar) JOINCEY (bass) Pascal Nichols (percussion). Recent CDR out on Total Vermin and forthcoming on Kovorax Sound.” www.myspace.com/stckmtr Also joining them this evening is…

  • “Six Memos” featuring lots of NUS regulars

    “Six Memos” featuring lots of NUS regulars

    Some of you might remember Daniel Ledda from when he performed back in December 2010. Well part of why he was in Manchester was that he was making a film based on Six Memos for the Next Millennium by Italo Calvino. Well some of the clips from that have started surfacing online and you can…

  • Phil Marks & Dave Birchall – 12 May 2011

    Phil Marks & Dave Birchall – 12 May 2011

    Dave Birchall was born in Leicester and started playing the guitar there in 1995. He moved to Manchester in 1999 and still live here. His work as a musician has been in several areas: in improvising within and without structures and in writing and arranging music. At present he am focused on working on developing…

  • Phil Marks & Dave Birchall – 11 May 2011

    Phil Marks & Dave Birchall – 11 May 2011

    Dave Birchall was born in Leicester and started playing the guitar there in 1995. He moved to Manchester in 1999 and still live here. His work as a musician has been in several areas: in improvising within and without structures and in writing and arranging music. At present he am focused on working on developing…

  • Levenshulme Bicycle Orchestra – 10 September 2009

    Levenshulme Bicycle Orchestra – 10 September 2009

    The Levenshulme Bicycle Orchestra (L.B.O) is the efforts of Zeke Clough, David Birchall, and Huw Wahl. L.B.O seeks to use constructed instruments alongside the conventional, to provide reclaimed sounds that interact and delve into the feelings of the players, the space – and the audience. The group is therefore as much a cathartic tool as…