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Reliving Erin Jorgensen’s Marimba Noir Broadcast

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Erin Jorgensen in "Waiting for Signs" at the 2012 City Arts Festival (Photo: Kari Champoux)

Erin Jorgensen in "Waiting for Signs" at the 2012 City Arts Festival (Photo: Kari Champoux)

Erin Jorgensen in "Waiting for Signs" at the 2012 City Arts Festival (Photo: Kari Champoux)

Erin Jorgensen in "Waiting for Signs" at the 2012 City Arts Festival (Photo: Kari Champoux)

The 2012 City Arts Festival, now fading in our memories, really put the “city” into an arts fest. A number of arts installations were squirreled away into secret locations that you had to wait to hear details about. It was fun; it felt like you were invited to a “happening.” You’d show up on a sidewalk somewhere and eyeball others standing around, trying to discern if they were in on it.

One of the shows was Erin Jorgensen‘s Waiting for Signs, which took place in a tattoo parlor on Olive Way. Tucked away in the back was a surprisingly realistic studio apartment (or live-in radio studio) that Jorgensen and friends had constructed. Before the show began, Jorgensen was getting the finishing touches on a tattoo herself, as befits a performer known as a “punk marimbaist.”

People clustered around, sitting on the floor up front, as Jorgensen launched into late-night radio broadcast mode. She sings in English, French, German…and anything else she cares to. It’s not necessary to understand the words, really–as a musician, Jorgensen is used to communicating through sound, phrasing. Wherever you walked in from melted away in the face of this voice of world-weary experience.

This time, the songs came with confessional, spoken-word arias: conversations, interviews, philosophizing, all in a late-night minor key, about that time someone worked at a strip club, that time someone went to their first addiction meeting. One voice discoursed directly about signs and coincidences, synchronicities we can’t help but find meaningful. In this noir landscape, the signs marked the last exit, last straws, last hopes.

It was a short show, relatively speaking. But a month later, its taste of whiskey and stale cigarettes, buzz of speaker or needle, and pulsations of neon instruction, still inhabit an imaginary place where Hopper’s Nighthawks actually open up.

City Arts Fest Begins in 5…4…3

“Emerald City”

The 2012 City Arts Festival begins Wednesday evening and wraps up Saturday, October 20. Some of the festival’s wristband passes have already sold out, so if you are a procrastinator, you may be hunting for tickets on an event-by-event basis. David Byrne and St. Vincent are opening the music side of the festival at the 5th Avenue Theatre, but there’s an equally anticipated arts facet as well.

How anticipated? The Arts Adventure Pass is sold out. That’s for people who want to see every single arts event during the festival. They want, for instance, to hear marimba player and singer Erin Jorgensen perform her “Waiting for Signs” at a local tattoo parlor. The show is “best suited for adults” and should contain, reference, or ignore “3 a.m. visions, melancholy chansons, and the philosophy of Simone Weil.”

Also suited for adults, in both senses of the word, is the KT Niehoff/Lingo Productions & Jill Donnelly fashion-party/installation-spectacle “Emerald City: I Have to Be Seen in Green.” It’s about “adornment, personal aesthetics, and how we choose to present ourselves to the world” and there will be live music. It may get weird.

Speaking of getting weird, there’s also Jose Bold & Friends, in their “Dream House,” which is possessed by a spirit highway. This also comes with musical accompaniment. On the dance front, there’s a smaller (physically) work from Zoe | Juniper called “Kate & Zoe” (the Kate being Kate Wallich) that offers “a brief glimpse into the mystery of the other,” and Danielle Agami‘s “Dance in a Public Place,” which is more or less what it sounds like.

There are many more events, including pop-culture historian Jennifer K. Stuller’s multimedia presentation on the female hero in modern mythology, “Ink-Stained Amazons & Cinematic Warriors.” Also of note, a multi-hour literary pub crawl.