Debut album: Juice for the Baby is here!

Exciting news:

After many years exclusively playing live, my award winning human, theremin and robot band Spacedog have launched our debut album. It’s called Juice for the Baby and you can listen to the whole album, download it or buy a physical CD here.

Spacedog creates live music for theremin, vocals, saw, percussion and our famous uncanny musical robots. Our work reflects our obsessions with defunct machines, faded variety acts and the darkest English folk tales.

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Splendid and Rathergood

On a rainy day in Brighton, what better pick-me-up than a new video from Rathergood and my dear friend, the witty and imaginative Professor Elemental.

I’ve been lucky enough to know the Professor (aka Paul Alborough) for a couple of years now – we met when we were both performing at one of Brighton’s first Steampunk nights and neither of us were entirely sure what Steampunk was (I didn’t have the foggiest idea). Paul was appearing as Professor Elemental with his trusty badgermingo; I was playing a Spacedog set with my sister Jenny. Paul subsequently took to Steampunk like a badgermingo to water, unlike Spacedog (who do nevertheless enjoy the odd performance at a live Steampunk night).

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Televisor awarded Best Music Event of Brighton Festival and Fringe 2011

Spacedog with their award for Best Music Event, Brighton Festival and Fringe 2011

Spacedog with their award for Best Music Event, Brighton Festival and Fringe 2011

We’re over the moon! Televisor – our new Spacedog show – featuring humans, theremin, robots, Baird televisor and an unplugged guest appearance from Professor Elemental – has been awarded Best Music Event of the Brighton Festival and Fringe 2011. Thanks to everyone who put in a good word for us and to the Latest 7 Awards committee for embracing our oddity and backing our act.

We now plan to take Televisor to more venues, festivals and cities. If you’d like to see and hear Spacedog at your event, drop us a line!

Line-up in the photograph (left to right): Jenny Angliss, Colin Uttley, Sarah Angliss, Stephen Hiscock. Thanks to Peter Crisp for the photo.

Thanks to The Brunswick and Bom-Banes for being such generous hosts during the Fringe and to the Marlborough for supporting us in previous years.
Also on the shortlist was this Balkan Brass Battle which sounds tip top.

From Televisor:


Televisor at the Brighton Festival Fringe

AWARDED BEST MUSIC EVENT OF BRIGHTON FESTIVAL AND FRINGE 2011

“It felt like an audio version of The Shining, played on instruments thrown together in sheds somewhere near Bletchley Park
…mediaeval electronica meets Trip Hop meets Tomorrow’s World. Superb.”
Read a review from Tirimasu, Fringe Review

“Scientists, engineers but above all musicians, their genius lies in
their magpie collections of intellectual exotica”. * * * *
Read a review from Richard Stamp (aka FringeGuru)

“Spacedog deserves wider recognition for this constantly surprising,
inventive and moving show” * * * * *
Read a review from Stuart Huggett, Latest 7 Magazine

Read a preview of Televisor from Richard Stamp (Fringe Guru).

Televisor (Spacedog with Prof. Elemental)

Eerie musicians Spacedog summon the spirit of John Logie Baird as they perform with flickering projections, created live on their working reconstruction of Baird’s original 1920s televisor.

There will be a crackle of static as Fringe regulars the Angliss sisters evoke the earliest days of television in their new evening of deliciously unsettling music. Televisor is the latest retro-futuristic treat from their band Spacedog, mixing theremin, saw, vocals, waterphone and live action from the group’s famous, uncanny musical robots. And this year, their music is given an extra kick from tip-top percussionist Stephen Hiscock (Ensemble Bash).

Technically cranky, faltering, and even a little dangerous, Baird’s televisor was a world away from the bland plasma screens we see today; a perfect match, in fact, for Spacedog’s trademark, homespun electronica, haunted by an analogue past.

Highlights include a new torch song for variety star Tommy Cooper and a high-energy anthem to the awe-inspiring Soviet Ekranoplan (aka The Caspian Sea Monster).

“A word of mouth wonder”, the Londonist.

“Like a classic surrealist object from a dream”, FAD magazine

“Spacedog…generate the kind of gore-free spinechilling terror that mainstream cinema seems to have forgotten”, the Londonist.


Bom-Bane’s Brighton, Tuesday 24 May
Doors open 8:00pm
Show starts 8:30pm
Show lasts approx. 1hr 40 mins (including short interval)
Booking and tickets

Our Televisor shows at the Brunswick are now over – thanks to everyone who came along – but we’ll be reprising the Spacedog set at Bom-Bane’s Tuesday 24 May. Please note: The Bom-Bane’s show will not include a guest spot from our dear friend Professor Elemental as he will be strutting his stuff at the Steampunk World Fair, New Jersey, USA.

Brighton Festival Fringe

Brighton Festival Fringe

Twenty-thousand Leagues under the Seas

2000 Leagues Under the SeasI’ll be performing some uptempo numbers on theremin and saw, accompanied by percussionist Stephen Hiscock and some of my robot pals in this underwater jamboree.  We’ll be joined by the incomparable Professor Elemental for a one-off performance of a neo-Victorian submarine fantasy. From 9pm-4am, Saturday 16 April 2011.

For White Mischief – an extravaganza of live music and jaw-dropping vaudeville, in The Scala, London’s famous art nouveau cinema, just outside King’s Cross Station. Inspired by Jules Verne’s sci-fi classic  “20,000 Leagues Under The Seas”, White Mischief will invite guests to explore the mysteries of the deep, dressing up in their favourite nautical regalia for an evening of undersea excursions.

Tickets £17.50
Limited VIP tickets £28.50
Book online

Full line-up here
Map and venue details

Jane Bom-Bane, Spacedog and Professor Elemental, Brighton (23 November 2010)

instrumentsMaestro and mechanical hat maker Jane Bom-Bane will be hosting this evening in the delightful Bom-Bane’s, Brighton.

An evening of words and music, mechanical hats, theremin and robots from Jane, Prof. Elemental (Brighton’s finest hip hop raconteur) and Spacedog. With songs of tea, submariners, love, death, milliners and assorted cryptozoological marvels.

Venue

Bom-Bane’s
24 George Street, Brighton, East Sussex
BN2 1RH
MAP

Tickets £4 (£3 concessions)
Small venue – booking advisable
Email janebombane [AT] yahoo.co.uk
Telephone 01273 606400

Bom-Bane’s

This lovely cafe and music venue is owned and run by Jane and multi-instrumentalist Nick Pynn. Check out their other events between now and Christmas. Includes performances by Nick Pynn and Mike Heron, Colin Uttley, Rosi Lalor and Dr David Bramwell (who will be talking about his bus ride to Utopia).

Aquatic songs for night owls, Brighton (30 October 2010)

Sarah Angliss (Spacedog) on theremin with hip hop raconteur Professor Elemental - photo: Gavin Mecaniques.

Sarah Angliss (Spacedog) on theremin with hip hop raconteur Professor Elemental - photo: Gavin Mecaniques.

I’ll be teaming up with the incomparable Professor Elemental, tea drinking, hip hop raconteur, for an aquatic set with some robot pals.  Drop into the Sea Life Centre any time between 7:30pm and 2:00am (BST) to hear us playing among the fishes and night owls. We’ll be performing new songs of submariners and voyages under the sea, along with some old favourites, in this beautiful Victorian aquarium. With vocals, theremin, waterphone, saw and other musical and robotic oddities.

We have fish!

Admission is free!

An event for White Night 2010 – Brighton & Hove’s all night festival to mark the end of British Summer Time, the night the clocks go back. Make the most of the extra hour of darkness as you promenade the city and enjoy a selection of free music and visual arts.