TRANSMISSION ART ARCHIVE

Matmos

Hands view of Matmos performance

Hands view of Matmos performance. Photographed by Adam T. Deen. (May 31, 2024)

Matmos performs

Matmos performs. Photographed by Adam T. Deen. (May 31, 2024)

Matmos performs

Matmos performs. Photographed by Adam T. Deen. (May 31, 2024)

Matmos performs

Matmos performs. Photographed by Adam T. Deen. (May 31, 2024)

View of Matmos in the Beer Garden

View of Matmos in the Beer Garden. Photographed by Lucy Bohnsack. (May 31, 2024)

View of Matmos with screen projection in the background

View of Matmos with screen projection in the background. Photographed by Lucy Bohnsack. (May 31, 2024)

Based in Baltimore, Matmos is Drew Daniel and M.C. Schmidt. The two have been making music as Matmos since 1997, first in San Francisco, and then relocating to Baltimore in 2007 when Daniel began to teach at Johns Hopkins University. They are respected, innovative auteurs in the world of electronic music and sampling culture whose very first album was hailed as “entering electronics Valhalla” by the WIRE magazine for sampling highly unusual sound sources such as the amplified nerve tissue of crayfish. Ever since, they have made music out a wildly heterogeneous set of objects and sources, including the sound of the pages of bibles turning, water hitting copper plates, liposuction surgery, cameras and VCRs, chin implant surgery, contact microphones on human hair, rat cages, tanks of helium, a cow uterus, human skulls, snails, cigarettes, cards shuffling, laser eye surgery, whoopee cushions, balloons, latex fetish clothing, rhinestones, Polish trains, insects, life support systems, inflatable blankets, rock salt, solid gold coins, the sound of a frozen stream thawing in the sun, a five gallon bucket of oatmeal, snails interrupting the path of a laser and altering the pitch of a light sensitive theremin, a PVC police riot shield, silicon breast implants, and their own washing machine. These raw materials are manipulated into surprisingly accessible forms, and often supplemented by traditional musical instruments played by internationally celebrated guest musicians from their circle of friends and collaborators. The result is a model of electronic composition as a relational network that connects sources and outcomes together; information about the process of creation activates the listening experience, providing the listener with entry points into sometimes densely allusive, baroque recordings that have the direct sensory immediacy of pop music.