DÚO TRONEITOR
After several years of transiting singing, contemporary music, musical theater and free improvisation, the musicians Natalia Cappa and LucasWerenkraut meet to deepen their own research and sound experimentation.
DÚO TRONEITOR
Inspired by the sound peculiarities of the TRoneitor, built by Lucas Werenkraut from electronic scrap, and in conjunction with the vocal research that the singer Natalia Cappa has been developing for years, the Duo TRoneitor emerged in Buenos Aires, Argentina, in January 2018.
The musical and sound work of Duo TRoneitor is based on improvisation, the use of multiple vocal resources, texts, pre-existing songs, images, and on the intrinsic nature of the sound generated by the instrument.
TRoneitor instrument, creation and interpretation are inextricably linked and are the soul of this project. As Luciano Berio says “the instrument is an organism that acts and thinks with us”.
The TRoneitor is entirely built with electronic scrap, which is an elegant way to call a particular type of garbage that today’s society produces in absurd amounts. Recycling this garbage and creating sound and musical art from it, constitutes for Dúo TRoneitor, as well as a path of artistic research, a way to openly question our consumption habits and discard as inhabitants of a planet of finite resources.
The musical and sound work of Duo TRoneitor is based on improvisation,
the use of multiple vocal resources, texts, pre-existing songs, images, and on the intrinsic nature of the sound
generated by the instrument.
TRoneitor instrument, creation and interpretation are inextricably linked and are the soul of this project.
As Luciano Berio says “the instrument is an organism that acts and thinks with us”.
The TRoneitor is entirely built with electronic scrap, which is an elegant way to call a particular type of garbage that today’s society produces in absurd amounts. Recycling this garbage and creating sound and musical art from it, constitutes for
Duo TRoneitor, as well as a path of artistic research, a way to openly question our consumption habits and discard as inhabitants of a planet of finite resources.