Pioneer 11
Zebulon
2478 Fletcher Dr
Los Angeles, CA 90039
Sep 29, 2018
5:00 PM PDT
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About this concert
DUBLAB'S 19TH ANNIVERSARY W/ ARIEL PINK IMPROV TRIO, BARDO MARTINEZ, PROPHET, PASSION OF WEISS, MARY LATTIMORE, MIRA BILLOTTE, ANN MAGNUSON, GINGER ROOT, LINAFORNIA, THE PANTONES + GEMMA CASTRO
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Pioneer 11 Biography
Named after NASA’s 1973 robotic space probe of the same name, the duo of Pioneer 11 creates transmissions from cosmic coordinates where the spacecraft is adrift, the oxygen levels are low, but the view is spectacular. Psychedelia preserved in hazy disorienting guitar riffs.
Think something recalling Caribou's psychedelic faded beat symphonies. Flying Lotus' surreal celestial explorations. Nicolas Jaar's sinister grooves and tenebrous aesthetic. Four Tet's layering of samples to yield extraterrestrial but intimate songs. Or late period Radiohead when they shed expectations and wandered into the unfamiliar fringes of sound.
Released on POW Recordings, their debut album Gravitorium examines themes ranging from empathy and technology, to the future of space exploration and the nature of evil in our society. 11 lunar soundscapes woven together by the vocals and guitars of Bryan Gomez and Alex Hastings, comprising an emotional narrative that weightlessly floats its way from baleful ennui to Big Pun covers.
Over a period of four years, Hastings and Gomez created, performed, recorded and mixed every note to create a work that reveals deep psychic exploration and monomaniacal passion. During that span, Noisey hailed Pioneer 11 as the “best amalgamation of Darkside and Dilla you're apt to hear.” Paste raved that they were “marvelously soulful.” Buzz Bands described their songs as “interstellar bliss” and asked the question that demands answering: Where was this music when Matt Damon needed it in “The Martian?”
Read MoreThink something recalling Caribou's psychedelic faded beat symphonies. Flying Lotus' surreal celestial explorations. Nicolas Jaar's sinister grooves and tenebrous aesthetic. Four Tet's layering of samples to yield extraterrestrial but intimate songs. Or late period Radiohead when they shed expectations and wandered into the unfamiliar fringes of sound.
Released on POW Recordings, their debut album Gravitorium examines themes ranging from empathy and technology, to the future of space exploration and the nature of evil in our society. 11 lunar soundscapes woven together by the vocals and guitars of Bryan Gomez and Alex Hastings, comprising an emotional narrative that weightlessly floats its way from baleful ennui to Big Pun covers.
Over a period of four years, Hastings and Gomez created, performed, recorded and mixed every note to create a work that reveals deep psychic exploration and monomaniacal passion. During that span, Noisey hailed Pioneer 11 as the “best amalgamation of Darkside and Dilla you're apt to hear.” Paste raved that they were “marvelously soulful.” Buzz Bands described their songs as “interstellar bliss” and asked the question that demands answering: Where was this music when Matt Damon needed it in “The Martian?”
Psychedelic Rock
Electronic Rock
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