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david coulter
Experimental / Acoustic / Blues

"...and Mighty Tiny on the saw" - Tom Waits




United Kingdom

Profile Views:  61655




Last Login:  11/26/2009
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   david coulter: General Info
Member Since1/2/2006
Band Websitewww.younggodrecords.com/artists/davidcoulter
Band Members1 September 2008 * The Monkey Journey To The West CD charted last week in UK at number 5 and reviews have been very favourable. Just had news that we should be performing a season in London sometime soon. As soon as there is news I will let people know. In the meantime, try this out for size! You'll hear my saw and jew's harps among other things. Hal Willner's Rogue's Gallery was also a huge success in both Dublin as well as at the Barbican in London and it's looking like we're on our way to Australia to play 3 Festivals in February 2009. Check Blog for footage of myself playing mandolin with Shane MacGowan! Other highlights for me were playing fiddle with Lou Reed and David Thomas and sitting all night on stage next to my favourite guitar player Leo Abrahams with whom I have just collaborated on the new Protein Dance score for their upcoming show and tour, Dear Body. March 2007: working as Damon Albarn's Music Supervisor on Monkey: Journey To The West, a new Gorillaz opera scheduled for June 2007 as well as guesting with The Good The Bad and The Queen and various solo performances... Clip below is me guesting with GBQ at York Hall in London, February 2007 Another clip from a concert in January 2007 with Charlemagne Palestine and The K...
InfluencesList of some of the people I have worked with over last two decades: Damon Albarn, Tom Waits, The Pogues, Jean Jacques Palix, The Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain, The Handsome Family, Kronos Quartet, 48 Cameras, Talvin Singh, Nitin Sawnhey, Sandy Dillon, Yuka Yamamoto, Ed Harcourt, Test Dept, Peter Hammill, Steve Martland, The Communards, Vivian Stanshall, Joe Strummer, Roger Eno, Steve Nieve, Marc Ribot, Sarah-Jane Morris, Richard Strange, Hal Willner, Marianne Faithfull, Michael Gira, Lydia Lunch, Nick Cave, Jarvis Cocker, Beth Orton, Rufus Wainwright, Martin Carthy, Eliza Carthy, June Tabor, Kathryn Williams, Richard Strange, Beth Orton... Damon Albarn, Kate St John and myself played a mad version of Syd Barrett's Word Song at The Barbican's recent Syd Barrett Tribute event. I absolutely love this performance (the first time we 3 have performed in public together having just been closed away in 13 for the last 6 months creating the as yet untamed beast that is Monkey: Journey To The West opening in Manchester 28 June 2007 at the Palace Theatre. There are a bunch of Youtube clips from the Handsome Family UK Tour I played on last Fall, including: At the moment I am listening to: Cats, Hats Gowns and Perfume (www.myspace.com/catshatsgowns), The Burning Leaves, Jun Miyake, Yan Jun, Palix, Gorillaz - Monkey: Journey To The West (I hear this about 8 hours a day at the moment!), Harry Partch At the moment I am watching: Ryu Murakami, David Lynch early shorts
Sounds Like5/21/2004 | The Guardian | John L. Walters The Black Rider (DAVID COULTER - musical director) | Storm in a pawnshop With its drunken piano, pocket trumpet and musical saw, The Black Rider is obscure-instrument heaven. The songs of Tom Waits are inherently visual - not just in their words and themes, but in the way they sound. Just as film footage of a lake, or a country house acquires mystery and glamour when underscored by a chugging Nymanesque riff, images of cheap house-fronts and dusty streets take on extra gravitas when accompanied by Waits's ragged tracks. Check out Jim Jarmusch's Down by Law and Night on Earth, or Francis Ford Coppola's fabulous One from the Heart. The band currently playing in the Barbican Theatre pit have the challenge of re-creating Waits's distinctive instrumental timbres every night. "There are certain things you need to play his music," says associate musical director David Coulter, chatting backstage. "There's upright bass, of course, and pump organ and drunken piano; lots of things that are slightly out of tune with each other, or 'sour', to use Waits's own word." Coulter, a musical-saw virtuoso who plays another 20 instruments, is the man who put together the band for The Black Rider, the show by Tom Waits, Robert Wilson and William S Burroughs opening at the Barbican tonight after four nights of previews. Given the palette of sounds needed for Waits's idiosyncrasies, the band has to have a wide range of sounds, styles and skills at their fingertips. Led by musical director Bent Clausen, who plays drums, keyboards and marimba, the eight-piece group has the tough job of capturing the spirit of Waits's messy, freewheeling music while sticking to all the dramatic cues in this demanding, visually rich production. Clausen is a Waits veteran who played on the albums Alice and Blood Money, and worked with Waits and Wilson on Woyzeck. So the musicians' pit looks like a downtown pawnshop, packed with arcane and/or beautiful instruments: bass clarinet, toy piano, pocket trumpet, accordion, Stroh violin, mandolin, ondes martenot, glass harmonica, cristal Baschet. The last three are specialities of Thomas Bloch, whose CV includes Messiaen's Turangalila and sessions with Radiohead. Kate St John ( Dream Academy) Caroline Hall, Jack Pinter and Terry Edwards (Scapegoats, Lydia Lunch) play on a huge variety of wind instruments. The ensemble is underpinned by bassist Rory McFarlane, looming out of the pit's seething activity like a mariner clutching the mast of a boat. If you've heard The Black Rider ( Island, £8.99), you'll have some idea what to expect. Except that Waits's studio recordings are more like miniatures - lovingly made "bigatures" - with Waits taking all the parts himself. The Barbican band has to fill the theatre with a Waits-like sound and accompany a dozen diverse performers, singing, speaking, raging, howling or mute. This is neither West End musical nor hardcore music theatre. Rather than developing motifs in a compositional way, Waits transforms his material through extremities of sounds. This is hard to notate. In the words of Coulter (who, like Waits himself, doesn't really read music), it's more "organic". The musical language for the show is established early, with an introductory circus-like theme that jumps in every other bar, as if transcribed from a scratched record. For another scene the ensemble boils menacingly, with little bubbles of free improv escaping from the sonic soup, while a hallucinatory three-note flugel phrase floats overhead. Another potentially static segment derives its richness from the harmonic complexity of Coulter's didgeridoo. Out in the hall, the mix was superb, its unholy instrumental alliance sounding entirely natural. Many featured instruments - Swanee whistle, musical saw, trombone - can stray far from the diatonic path. The ensemble sections have the requisite sourness. Yet it's a disciplined, professional sound, a swanky showbiz version of the microtonal explorations of Frank Denyer or Harry Partch. And whether the band is required to rock or swing, play sentimental ballads or demented burlesque, they never step out of character - the huffing, puffing fantasy band created from Waits's rugged templates. ___________________________________________________________________________ 4/27/2004 | The Guardian | John Fordham Perfect Partners ...David Coulter made his musical saw tingle the spine on a lyrical treatment of Hurricane (accompanied by Roger Eno on piano)... Movie scores are usually supposed to complement the action, but the late Nino Rota's could take on the role of an extra character. That was the quality in Rota that producer Hal Willner pursued when he asked a group of American jazz musicians - including then unknowns Bill Frisell and the Marsalis brothers - to reappraise the composer's work for the Amarcord Nino Rota album in 1980. Willner put the show back on the road with an old and new cast for the Barbican's Only Connect series. ___________________________________________________________________________ 11/1/1999 | The Wire Review | David Coulter | INterVENTION ...a thrilling acoustic intimacy reminiscent of Japan's Cinorama… " The highlight of this month's column is the debut solo release from ex-Pogues and Test Dept multi-instrumentalist David Coulter...It has a thrilling acoustic intimacy reminiscent of Japan's Cinorama, and a similar exacting concern with coaxing evocative new textures out of instruments familiar and strange... Loosely receptive and inventive playing, uncluttered spaciousness, and the lack of rhetorical baggage makes this release a masterpiece of miniaturised beauty." ___________________________________________________________________________ 7/1/2000 | Mean Magazine | Andy Pierce Review | David Coulter | INterVENTION In an astounding range of virtuoso performances, Coulter makes music from a variety of obvious and not so obvious sources. My editor's plea to limit the word count in this review is only problematic in view of the fact that even an unlimited lexical workout would still not do justice to this fine recording. A multi-instrumentalist in conjunction with Test Dept. and the Pogues, David Coulter has manifest a rather enviable fruition in the marketplace of multiethnic, pan-experimental music making. INterVENTION achieves the very reality of its titular double/revealed meaning because Coulter (and a revolving collection of players) is ever respectful of the context and function of his instrumental color combinations and the discoveries inherent in his compositional objectives. In an astounding range of virtuoso performances, Coulter makes music from a variety of obvious and not so obvious sources. Terracotta pots and paper, one; string fiddle, didgeridoo, and a host of more "conventional" pop instrumentation make music that simmers minimalist soul wails, resounds with echoes from an alien topography, and undulates to a rhythm of universal knowing. The short-duration epic of "Polaroids" is indication that Coulter is not out for mere wank and flex. In a series of short interlocking compositions featuring the likes of Marc Ribot, Steve Nieve and Phil Minion, Coulter expertly weaves a sweeping musical mise-en-scene that in the service of lesser composers might only achieve density without attention to the more exacting skills of restraint. About as flawless a recording as has been released this year, INterVENTION never fails to achieve what mere words can hardly convey. ___________________________________________________________________________ 6/20/2001 | allmusic.com | Thom Jurek David Coulter | INterVENTION | Review AMG Expert Review David Coulter is well known among musicians as a sideman of enormous talent on virtually any instrument he chooses to play and can perform in almost any musical setting. (Hint: he was in the Pogues and the industrial power unit Test Dept. at the same time.) His debut solo album on Young God (label boss Michael Gira has a knack for discovering new talent and recording them before anyone else does) is a compendium of Coulter's amassed musical and sonic knowledge. The disc opens with "Kinsnow Orchestra," on which Coulter plays jew's harp, krar, and one-string fiddle, while being accompanied by a sheet-like soundscape by Palix, a double bass, and guitar. There is an Indian raga feel to the piece, but it has no time signature, it's all microtones strung together in rows. On "How Can I Love Thee?" Coulter's soprano saxophone accompanies an over-the-phone reading by Iain Morris of Elizabeth Barrett Browning's poem of the same name. Its darker-than-night feel gives the impression of a suicide note being left on an answering machine. When Coulter writes his short "Broken Mass," one can hear the Kyrie Section of the orthodox liturgy cut short all but one tone and three notes. Coulter does a vocal in the tradition of the Tuvans and Tibetans meeting in the Himalayas while using a plectra violin and a piano for sonic architecture; it doesn't tower above you, it floats through your body, leaving a longing for the sacred with the taste of the profane on your skin. On "Harmonik," where the entire piece is a dance tune created and executed in just intonation with Ghedalia Tazartes on vocal and accordion, the overtones come from the sawing of the violin in its high register, just behind its own drone and the accordion pulsing with the organic percussion the same series of chords over and over again. The effect is not just hypnotic, it's entrancing. Coulter's record is virtually unidentifiable as genre music—it doesn't even fit in the world music category because more often than not, whether he's playing violins, saxophones, the didgeridoo, ukulele, or singing, his music sounds as if it were from another world, where musical languages are interchangeable and complimentary rather than codified and restrictive. His mates on this date are as varied as the music—from avant jazz/improvisational vocalist Phil Minton, guitarist Marc Ribot, and pianist Steve Naïve, all of whom appear on the album's astonishing closer, "Polaroids," a composition of such dynamic and textural wealth and modal invention it appears to defy musical logic while sounding so far inside Western musical systems as to be inherent in their origins. Intervention is a confoundingly beautiful work from an artist whose name should be synonymous with the term "original."
Record LabelYoung God Records / One Little Indian / Interzone
Type of LabelIndie


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david coulter's Latest Blog Entry  [Subscribe to this Blog]

DC playing mandolin with Shane MacGowan + Tim Robbins : Rogue's Gallery : Barbican Hall 28.7.08  (view more)

Monkey: Journey To The West at Royal Opera House Covent Garden  (view more)

Hal Willner’s Rogues Gallery Live  (view more)

The Plague Songs at The Barbican  (view more)

Monkey Article From New Yorker  (view more)

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   About david coulter


I edited my profile with Thomas’ Myspace Editor V3.6!

David Coulter has worked internationally as an artist, teacher, lecturer, workshop leader and deviser/director of over 30 large scale music/performance/theatre events for young people. David has created and composed soundtracks for numerous dance, theatre, film, tv and radio projects including Yolande Snaith, Protein Dance, Candoco and Le Ballet du Fargistan. In April 2004 he played musical saw in Hal Wilner’s Nino Rota/Fellini tribute concert at the Barbican. He is currently guesting with the Ukulele Orchestra of Great Britain and spent most of last year and January 2005 as Associate Music Director and multi-instrumentalist with Tom Waits and Robert Wilson on the opera The Black Rider, produced by BITE. In September and October 2004 David performed on stage at the Geary Theatre in San Francisco in more than 50 sold out performances of The Black Rider. He was also didjeridu player to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth ll on several State occasions including recitals at Buckingham Palace and Westminster Abbey. In December 2004 he toured Japan. Coulter saw in 2005 playing 3 sold-out nights at Sydney Opera House as guest soloist for Came So Far For Beauty - a celebration of the music of Leonard Cohen - where he played music saw and jews harp with Nick Cave, Jarvis Cocker, Antony, Rufus + Martha Wainwright and The Handsome Family. In February 2005 David was in San Francisco where he and friend Ralph Carney contributed their eclectic soundscapes to Hal Willner's score for Robert Wilson’s KOI POND, which was shown at Expo 2005 in Tokyo. His numerous live and studio collaborations as a multi-instrumentalist include work with The Pogues , Kronos Quartet, Charlemagne Palestine, Talvin Singh, Nitin Sawnhey, Sandy Dillon, Ed Harcourt, Thea Gilmore, Test Dept, Peter Hammill, Steve Martland, The Communards, Vivian Stanshall, Joe Strummer, Roger Eno, Steve Nieve, Marc Ribot, Sarah-Jane Morris, Richard Strange, John Harle, Hector Zazou, 48 Cameras, Michael Gira, Lydia Lunch, Marianne Faithfull and Mary Margaret O’Hara. Early 2006 sees another Daughters of Albion concert this time at The Barbican in London, a residency at Dartington College of Arts and Coulter's reprising his role as Associate Music Director for The Black Rider which will be running at the Ahmanson Theatre in Los Angeles until mid-June. Please keep eyes open for the Spring release of One Little Indian artiste Sandy Dillon's new album - Pull The Strings - produced by and featuring DC!

   david coulter's Friend Space (Top 40)
david coulter has 3026 friends.
 Marianne Faithfull 


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david coulter's Friends Comments
Displaying 25 of 369 comments  ( View All | Add Comment )
Evamusic

Evamusic



Nov 23 2009 7:30 AM

 

Thanks for the add!!!!!
buon inizio settimana !!!!
Jun Miyake

Jun Miyake



Nov 21 2009 8:12 AM

Please experience my new toy!
JMMP
[Jun Miyake Music Player]

Johnny Vane & The Mirrors

Johnny Vane & The Mirrors



Nov 18 2009 11:52 PM

Genius!
The Criterion Band

The Criterion Band



Nov 17 2009 12:40 AM

Hi david coulter, check out our new track "Long Legs"
Club Integral

Club Integral



Nov 16 2009 4:55 PM

Club Integral @ Whitechapel Gallery, 18th December 2009.

Featuring music from Lotus Pedals, Nobodies, MayMing, Boycott Coca-Cola Experience and Jack Shirt. + DJ Chris Cornetto and projections from Jaime Rory Lucy of Rucksack Cinema

Entry: £7.00

Whitechapel Gallery

77-82 Whitechapel High St 

London, E1

020 7334 3922




Lotus Pedals: - "Gorgeous live music from the supremely strange Lotus Pedals, who remained on stage throughout the show...shambolic, bold and beautiful...offers truly unique rewards." Beccy Smith - British Theatre Guide.





Palix

Palix



Nov 15 2009 4:22 PM

Cardew @ Stuttgart

Cornelius Cardew und die Freiheit des Hörens
curated by Jean Jacques Palix, Dean Inkster & Lore Gablier
September 19 - November 29, 2009
http://www.kuenstlerhaus.de/de/vorschau/cornelius-cardew-und-die-freiheit-des-horens_4761



EVENTS' PROGRAM @  KÜNSTLERHAUS STUTTGART
http://www.kuenstlerhaus.de/de/aktuell/cornelius-cardew-veranstaltungsprogramm_4928
************************

20. November, 19 Uhr
The Great Learning - Paragraph 1, produziert von der Staatsoper Stuttgart

21. November, 17 Uhr
The Great Learning - Paragraph 5, Choreographie: Annie Vigier, Franck  Apertet, Lore Gablier  / at the gallery
Horace and Walter Cardew: Konzert / at the gallery

************************
Künstlerhaus Stuttgart
Reuchlinstrasse 4b
D-70178 Stuttgart
 Tel: +49 (711) 617652

Dave De Rose EP on iTunes NOW!

Dave De Rose EP on iTunes NOW!



Nov 9 2009 4:41 PM

Sorry bout the spam activity on your page... You know how it is! :)
The big, warm, electro-acoustic sounds of the De-Glammafy EP are finally available here Dave De Rose - De-Glammafy EP
Nuff Respekk
Ddr
Amiel Balester

Amiel Balester



Oct 26 2009 9:48 AM

Cardew @ stuttgart

Cornelius Cardew und die Freiheit des Hörens
September 19 - November 29, 2009
http://www.kuenstlerhaus.de/de/vorschau/cornelius-cardew-und-die-freiheit-des-horens_4761



EVENTS' PROGRAM @  KÜNSTLERHAUS STUTTGART
************************
5. November 2009, 15 Uhr
Michael Parsons: "Walk" performance somewhere in the city (precise informations will come later)

5. November 2009, 19 Uhr
Keith Rowe: Konzert und Gespräch / at the gallery

7. November 2009, 19 Uhr
The Great Learning - Paragraph 7, Dirigent: Jean-Jacques Palix / at the gallery
Ekkehard Ehlers: "Innocence" Konzert / at the gallery

************************
Künstlerhaus Stuttgart
Reuchlinstrasse 4b
D-70178 Stuttgart
 Tel: +49 (711) 617652


EVE COUTURIER

EVE COUTURIER



Sep 27 2009 8:53 AM

I miss you.
Hope to see you soon around.###



Paul Byrne

Paul Byrne



Sep 8 2009 12:19 AM

Dude!

Great to hear from you. Hope all is good. Just back from Italy with Cami. Might be in London in December. I'll keep you posted and we'll have some pints.

Love your stuff. Sounds great. If you're ever looking for a drummer...ehm... ;). Talk soon.

Cheers!
PB
bonfire madigan

bonfire madigan



Sep 1 2009 8:36 AM

Everyone chases after happiness, not noticing that happiness is right at their heels.



- Bertolt Brecht

xox how is my saw savant compassion full bro dc?
Yo Zushi

Yo Zushi



Jul 16 2009 9:56 PM

i never thought a saw could be made electric, but there you go! sounds great, the whole lot. YZ
The Icarus Project

The Icarus Project



Jul 10 2009 7:32 AM

Happy summertime rising DC! Love YOU BMad + TIP!


THE 12 WARNING SIGNS OF GOOD HEALTH*
(If several or more appear, you may rarely need to visit a doctor.)

1. Regular flare-ups of a supportive network of friends and family.
2. Chronic positive expectations.
3. Repeated episodes of gratitude and generosity.
4. Increased appetite for physical activity.
5. Marked tendency to identify and express feelings.
6. Compulsion to contribute to society.
7. Lingering sensitivity to the feelings of others.
8. Habitual behavior related to seeking new challenges.
9. Craving for peak experiences.
10. Tendency to adapt to changing conditions.
11. Feelings of spiritual involvement.
12. Persistent sense of humor.

*Adapted from a posting on a computer bulletin board in Waldport, Oregon, author unidentified. Reprinted in Whole Earth Review (Winter 1994), a compendium of brash thinking and lofty ideas.

http://bonfiremadigan.com
http://theicarusproject.net
The Saw Lady

The Saw Lady



Jul 8 2009 10:46 PM

47 sawists have registered to perform. We'll miss you!

NGATARI / ガタリ

NGATARI / ガタリ



Jun 28 2009 11:47 PM

Thanx fo the add and message!
beautiful 'onion thin cello skin' is my favourite
ガタリ
Old Hag Syndrome

Old Hag Syndrome



Jun 26 2009 10:21 PM

We have uploaded a new song on our profile.Give it a listen if you have the time and tell us what you think.Thank you
Michael J Sheehy

Michael J Sheehy



Jun 18 2009 7:40 AM

Photobucket

flyer for lexington
Mari Persen-NEW ALBUM SEPT 28TH!

Mari Persen-NEW ALBUM SEPT 28TH!



Jun 16 2009 10:54 PM

New single "MELODY" available on iTunes now! Mari Persen - Melody - Single - Melody Melody - singel
EVE COUTURIER

EVE COUTURIER



Jun 15 2009 9:32 AM

To morrow


.







.


▲



Jun 14 2009 3:46 PM

thank you david!
just closed my eyes and rocket high shot i was by your sounds!
X
Palix

Palix



Jun 14 2009 8:16 AM

Cornelius Cardew et la liberté de l'écoute
curated by Jean Jacques Palix et Dean Inkster

LUNDI 22 JUIN 2009  /  20H30  : CONCERT AU CAC BRÉTIGNY  /
Monday 22 June 2009  /  8.30 p.m.

MEDITATION ON WAGE LABOR AND THE DEATH OF THE ALBUM
de TERRE THAEMLITZ (Tokyo)


*************
Navette gratuite (free shuttle) pour le CAC Brétigny
au départ de Paris à 19h face à l'OPERA BASTILLE
retour prévu sur Paris vers 23h.
Sur réservation - info@cacbretigny.com –
tel 01 60 85 20 76

http://www.cacbretigny.com/inhalt/information.html

http://www.comatonse.com/thaemlitz/gigs.html

Cardew fly 1
Isobel

Isobel



Jun 13 2009 10:55 AM



:)

I.
Federico Martello

Federico Martello



Jun 13 2009 5:46 AM

hi, thanks for the friendship, it's a pleasure having you among my friends. my best compliments for your music. I wish you great success in all your pursue. Greetings from Italy. Federico Martello
Palix

Palix



May 26 2009 9:59 AM

Cornelius Cardew et la liberté de l'écoute
Cornelius Cardew and the freedom of listening
curated by Dean Inkster & Jean Jacques Palix

DIMANCHE 7 JUIN 2009 DE 14H A 17H : CONCERTS AU CAC BRÉTIGNY /
Concerts on Sunday 7 June 2009 / 2 p.m. - 5 p.m.

THE TIGER’S MIND (1967) de CORNELIUS CARDEW
avec NINA CANAL, NADIA LICHTIG, MICHAEL MORLEY (NZ), & SARA STEPHENSON (NZ)
et la participation de DAVID WATSON (NY)

VOLO SOLO (1965) de CORNELIUS CARDEW
avec RHYS CHATHAM

TREATISE (1963-1967) de CORNELIUS CARDEW
avec MARCUS SCHMICKLER (KOELN), JEAN JACQUES PALIX, MICHEL GUILLET, & SAMON TAKAHASHI


http://www.cacbretigny.com/inhalt/information.html

http://www.cacbretigny.com/inhalt/cardew.html


fly Cardew 7 light
The Saw Lady

The Saw Lady



May 3 2009 9:55 PM

Hi David,

How are you?
I would like to share some exciting news: after a long application process, the NYC Musical Saw Festival was approved
by the Guinness Book of Records to attempt to break the current world record for the 'Largest Musical Saw Ensemble'.
The current world record (set in Poland last year) is 27 musical saw players playing together.
Could we set a new world record on July 18th? We need your help for it!
Please join us and be part of a Guinness World Record breaking attempt at the 7th annual NYC Musical Saw Festival:
When: Saturday, July 18th, 2pm
Where: Trinity Church, 37th street corner of 31st Avenue, Astoria (Queens), NYC.
Admission: $10
Info: www.MusicalSawFestival.org

For the Guinness World Record attempt all sawists will be playing 2 pieces together (in what we call the 'Chorus of the Saws'):
Ave Maria/Schubert - accompanied by church organ
Over the Rainbow - accompanied by piano
The 'Chorus of the Saws' will be conducted by Scott Munson.

Hope to see you there, and please - pass the info on - we need to get as many musical saw players to participate as possible to set a new Guinness World Record!



All the best,

Natalia
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