The Edge is a Place by Vanessa Tomlinson
New album by Vanessa Tomlinson released by Brisbane's Room40 brings six compositions originally recorded in 2024 using a fixed set of acoustic sound sources. A vibraphone, 8 ceramic bowls, 1 glass bowl with water, 2 metal bowls, 3 planks of wood, shell chimes, 2 cymbals, shakers, hihats, 3 indian bells with no donger, 1 bass drum. Utensils such as knitting needles, bouncy balls, chains, chefs chopsticks, vibraphone mallets, doublebass bows, triangle beaters are all used to conjure sounds out the objects. Recorded by Erik Griswold they show variety of techniques Vanessa is using to create ethereal realm of punctuation, nuances and vibes through the percussive aspects of objects which are not always deemed as percussive instruments. Yet through her hard and attentive work, we can embrace the full(?) (as of yet) potential of those.
It's a beautiful work of art which invites the listener into the world of intimacy, personal exploration of everything and anything that surrounds us and helps to understand how much there is to hear, listen and transform through the power of imaginative and creative forces.
It gives meaning to what is ordinary and how it can be changed into something full of, dense with meaning.
It's also a showcase of how improvising and experimenting can turn into fully fledged modern composition modal. A beautiful journey.
Vanessa is a percussionist-composer-pianist with a focus on exploratory, ecological sound practices. She makes bold sonic events that propose new futures for 21st century music whether on a rockface, in the bush, building an inhabitable acoustic guitar, or towing a piano along flooded river systems. Central to all her work is listening - opening our ears to paying attention to the world around us as we consider space and place, the human and the more-than-human. Driven by the unknown, her speculative text-based compositions, object-based re-purposing, and deep sonic gatherings stimulate our imagination as we listen in a climate-transforming world.
Her work orbits around broadly around extended approaches, site-specific investigations, minimalist reductions and a visceral sense of embodied play. She has toured the world for 30 years, premiering hundreds of works, musicking with scores of improvisers, presenting work at major international festivals, and sharing her knowledge as a teacher, mentor, researcher, university lecturer and arts advocate.
Recent work includes collaborating with Annea Lockwood (Volume AGNSW/ OHM Festival Brisbane/Black Truffle label/Rising/Brisbane Festival), The Journey Down (through Western Australia with Tura), Peak Plastique (World Science Festival/Unsounds label), Out of Time (Clocked Out). Other notable works include The Imaginary Aviary (speculative ornothology); Channelling Dulcie’s Piano (How the River taught the piano to sing); Curating and Directing the annual Easter at the Piano Mill; The Immersive Guitar (with Karin Schaupp); Beacons, (trio for acoustic instruments, electronics and ocean co-composed by Lawrence English); The Edge is a Place and The Space Inside (Room40 label); The Listening Museum (exploring sonic possibilities in the working factory of UAP) and ongoing work with the multi-award winning labatory that is Clocked Out (with Erik Griswold).
Vanessa demonstrates leadership as a Music Curator and Artistic Director including Festival Director of Tyalgum Festival (2017-2020), Easter@Harrigans Lane (2015-24), the Australian Percussion Gathering (2010/2016), Transplanted Roots International Percussion Symposium (2017), 100 Ways to Listen at World Science Festival (2017), New Sounds Brisbane (2017), Sounding the Smithsonian (2019). She has received recognition through APRA/AMC Awards in Experimental Music, Excellence in Regional Australia, Performance of the Year, Excellence as an Individual, and Excellence by an Organisation (Clocked Out), Green Room Awards (Dada Cabaret), Aria nomination (Water Pushes Sand), and prestigious opportunities including Civatelli Ranieri Residency in Italy, Banff Residency in Canada, Australia Council Project Fellowship, Asialink Residency in China and was Artist-in-Residence at the Smithsonian Institute 2019. She has published two books Here and Now: Artistic Research in Australia (Intelligent Arts) and The Piano Mill (URO Publications). Vanessa is Head of Percussion at Queensland Conservatorium 2003 – 2022, the inaugural Director of Creative Arts Research Institute, Griffith University (2021 – 2024) and is Professor of Music, Head of Percussion (from 2025).
She studied at the Flinders Street School of Music, University of Adelaide, Hochschule fur Musik in Freiburg and received her Masters and Doctorate from the University of California, San Diego where she worked closely with Steven Schick and George Lewis. In addition Vanessa has studied Sichuan Opera with Master Zhong Kaichi in Chengdu, China. She has been on the faculty of the Queensland Conservatorium of Music for 22 years, transforming the field of percussion in Australia, helping to define the field of Artistic Practice in music internationally, and pioneering the performer/composer, interpreter/improviser pathway for students.
Vanessa can be heard on Unsounds, Black Truffle, Innova, Immediata, Room40, Etcetera, Jazzhead, Mode, Tzadik, Hathut, HLC and Clocked Out labels, and her articles appear in Leonardo, Contemporary Music Review, Intelligent Arts and World Forum for Acoustic Ecology among others. She has performed widely across four continents including Wein Modern Festival, London Jazz Festival, Beijing Festival of Modern Music, Green Umbrella Series, Bang-on-a-Can Marathon, Sydney Festival, Melbourne International Festival, Vancouver Jazz Festival, Volume, Rising and many more.
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