The Lecture “from Sound Engineering to Engineering with Sound” – how did it go

In addition to the “usual” talk by pibinko aka Jack o Malley aka Andrea Giacomelli on rural resilience, open mapping, night sky participatory monitoring, we explained how various songs (starting from Etruschi from Lakota) help us to convey issues on land and environment, we also had a talk by Prof. Wolfgang Scheibe, our one-string bass player. Wolfgang also happens to have some fifty years of experience in biodynamic agriculture, and he explained to our audience his “matter cycle” in relation to agriculture.

Professor Scheibe drawing some chart, followed with attention by Professor Canal and Professor Sandrucci

As a closing situation, a cool rock-blues-beatobox jam session featuring Manuel S.

From Tatti, Southern Tuscany, to Germany: “geomusical” waves from the Metalliferous Hills to speak about our territories (and do something about it)

Tomorrow, Thursday May 30, AM, from Tatti, a small hamlet in the area of Massa Marittima (Southern Tuscany), there will be the kick off of a “little feat”. Little, but a feat.

Picture a 70 year-old a 50 year-old, and two under 30’s, interacting almost daily for over two years now, on the grounds of their respective professional experiences (agriculture, engineering, music) to explain some issues which are important to them, concerning the development (or the lack thereof) of a rural area.

Or… picture two young folks from the Cecina Valley, born and raised in a combination of rural tradition and modern geothermal energy utilities, and two “less young folks” born in Germany (even though one is genetically from Southern Tuscany), who have been roaming and working for years in various European and extra-Europan countries, eventually meeting at 400 metres above sea level, around longitude 43 North in the Thyrrenian area, experimenting the coexistence of indigenous and local values and projects.

The overall result of this exercise to date is an interdisciplinary project which -starting from the “minimum common denominator” represented by music multiplied by a will to make an active use of it in the environmental field, i.e. geomusic– has taken the form of a collective called Metalliferous Hills Jug Band (in Italian “Jug Band dalle Colline Metallifere“, or JBCM).

The base quartet of the Jug Band Colline Metallifere: left to right, Dario Canal, Wolgang Scheibe, Jack o’Malley (Andrea Giacomelli), Simone Sandrucci (photo by Liliana Cafiero).

The feat will consist in giving five performances in four days. These will combine music, storytelling, land planning, agriculture, citizen science on light pollution, free/open source mapping, and other threads (including tasting of typical products from the area where the group is based). The opening event will be at Politecnico di Milano. Then, the band will head to in Germany, in the Stuttgart area (performing, in addition to the Baden-Württemberg capital, in Ludwigsburg, Vaihingen-Enz, Sachsenheim, and Oberrot). A detailed schedule of the story is explained in this post.

The JBCM collective went public in September 2018. During the cold months it played in several events in Southern Tuscany, and worked in parallel to explain the project. This has raised interest both in Italy and abroad. Among other feedback, the geomusical idea has been acknowledged by the European Citizen Science Association as an experimental project for empowerment, inclusiveness and equality in participatory investigations (where scientist and citizens co-exist), and is enticing research and outreach institutions from various countries.

The return to Toscana is planned for June 3, with a load of typical German products to balance the Tuscan products we will have shared on our way up. We then expect to arrange some event to let people know how the story went.

As Marcus King, young bluesman from South Carolina says “.. we don’t know where we’re headed, but we know we’ll meet you there”.

For more information: jugbandcm@pibinko.org (all band members read it) or +39 3317539228 (Jack O’Malley).

Dates, times and venues for the Metalliferous Hills Jug Band tour in Germany, via Politecnico di Milano (May 30 – June 3, 2019)

In the past weeks we gave you a bunch of detailed information of explanations and rationale concerning the Metalliferous Hills Jug Band project, and its fractal ramifications on geomusic, art-science-Tuscan goodies tasting, etc. While we approach the final phases of our preparations before starting the tour, let us summarize directly where you may find us on tour. Looking forward to see you!

For more information: jugbandcm@pibinko.org or +393317539228.

Thu. May 30, from 6 to 7PM, Politecnico di Milano, Citrini Hall (with a prologue from 4 to 6PM)

Partenza il 31-5 mattina da Milano verso nord, con cinque situazioni:

Fri May 30, 8PM, Sachsenheim, TENDER Cultural Centre

Sat, June 1, 1PM to XPM, Ludwigsburg, Beer Days

Sat., June 1, 8PM, Vaihingen-Enz, Ristorante Salento

Sun, June 2, 3PM, Stuttgart, Caffé-Bar Tatti ( Facebook event)

Sat, June 2, 8PM, Völkleswaldhof bei Oberrot

Lunedì 3 giugno – lenta discesa verso la Toscana con possibile sosta di defaticamento.

Per chi non ha confidenza coi luoghi tedeschi (di noi, tutti tranne Wolfgang), una mappa che riassume le località:

Foto di testa: Liliana Cafiero

-10 Days to the Launch of the Metalliferous Hills Jug Band Geomusical Tour

The Metalliferous Hills Jug Band (in Italian: Jug Band dalle Colline Metallifere or JBCM) is an international and inter-generational collective based in Southern Tuscany, close to the border of the Grosseto and Pisa provinces. This is an area where rural issues, geothermal energy, and decommissioned mining sites characterize one of the lesser known parts of the region.

The JBCM proposes a combination of music and environmental practice, where melody, rhythm, storytelling, and scientific outreach merge in a single situation, with a country-blues backdrop, played by two young professional rockers, and two environment and agriculture experts (less young, but still quite dynamic).

From May 31 to June 3, 2019 the JBCM will be on its first tour, which happens to be abroad, namely in the Stuttgart area, in Germany (here are the tour details). On its way North, the band will make a stop in Milano. Here the JBCM will give a seminar (Campus Leonardo, Aula Citrini, May 30 from 4PM to 7PM) about “From Sound Engineering to Engineering with Sound“. This event is also part of the official program of a national Festival on Sustainability.

The musical component of the JBCM, directed by Dario Canal (vocals, guitar, and washboard) and Simone Sandrucci (guitars and banjo), travels in parallel with the other ingredients which the collective proposes in each performance. It carries a merchandising desk which may be exchanged for a “micro-museum” or for a tourism board info point, or a delicatessen tasting table…it’s all in the eye of the beholder. In fact, the band carries its territory, in the form of maps (curated by Jack O’Malley who is an environmental engineer when not drumming), hand-made prints (created by Wolfgang Scheibe, the JBCM one-string bass player), balls from ancient games, and numerous other items collected in Southern Tuscany (and beyond).

The JBCM song list sums the influences and the experiences across three different generations, given the age range of the musicians. Starting from some Rock’n’Roll and Blues standards (some of which adapted to Italian by the band), it then covers some traditional Italian songwriter hits from the Seventies, and proposes several original songs. These include various tracks from Etruschi from Lakota (the main band where Dario and Simone work together), as well as new Italian authors.

The poster of the Politecnico di Milano +Germany tour. This was hand made by Wolfgang, our one-string bass player, in his secret print shop.

To complement this repertoire, we have the “geomusical“, part of the project. As an example, there is a blues on air quality in Milano, written by Jack o’Malley in 1991, and re-visited with the JBCM as a part of a path where music becomes a connector between cities and countryside, science and practice, urban innovation hubs and bars in rural hamlets…

…at the end of the day, you may find that the differences between these settings are more in form than in substance, and that a rocker, a researcher and a farmer can work as peers in a project concerning the protection and the development of their territory.

A taste (including typical Tuscan products) of the JBCM format was recently given in a duo mini-tour covering Milan and Brescia, with the collaboration of Federico Giussani, a professional nightscape photographer. We are also planning more events starting from the second half of June, always mixing entertainment location and scientific venues.

If you like the JBCM project, you can also support our mission. Find out how.

For more information: jugbandcm@pibinko.org or +393317539228