RPM Orchestra

RPM Orchestra
Origin Phoenix, Arizona, United States
Genres Experimental
Industrial
Americana
Dieselpunk
Avant-Garde
Psychedelic
Years active 2008–present
Website http://rpmorchestra.com/
Members Pete Petrisko (conductor, shortwave radios, typewriter, noisemakers)
Jim Dustan (guitar, banjo, bass, live sound engineering)
Jocelyn Ruiz (clarinet, flute, percussion, found objects)
Erik Hunter (drums & percussion)
Vic VOID (salvaged-material instruments)
Past members Kathleen D. Cone
Dan Montes
Jenna Moody
Omar AKA WildBill
Rocky Yazzie

RPM Orchestra is a proto-Industrial Americana music ensemble based in Phoenix, Arizona.

The orchestra composes and performs original scores to accompany films of the Silent Era, provides musical scores in collaborative multidisciplinary performances, records soundtrack music for contemporary films, and regularly performs at various music venues.

Origins and history

Started in 2008 as a studio project by Pete Petrisko, the orchestra transformed into a live multiple-member ensemble by mid-2009. Its line-up has varied between three and seven members, with its core group (Petrisko, Jim Dustan, Jocelyn Ruiz, Vic Void) playing together since 2011.

Cited as a "band staffed by futurists and dadaists who take the sounds of the past and filter them into the heads of today's audiences",[1] the orchestra is most identified with dieselpunk music - combining elements of Jazz, Swing, and Bluegrass commonly found during the diesel era with its own unique instrumentation and avant-garde composition.[2] Additionally, it draws from the "noise" aesthetic of Proto-Industrial music [3] harkening back to the Russian avant-garde period.

The orchestra eschews digital sampling (music), instead favoring analog Electroacoustic music and Acousmatic sound techniques and the use of contact microphones, when creating elements of its music. Its eclectic sound has not gone unnoticed, RPM Orchestra currently holds distinction as the "Oddest Band in Phoenix".[4]

Discography

Albums

Compilations

Film scores

Silent Era film scores

Contemporary film scores

Multidisciplinary performances

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 10/25/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.