Co-produced by Andi Studer/Cenatus, supported by PRS Foundation’s New Music Plus
Reflective, swooping, hard-edged and crystal clarity – and that’s just the inspiring architecture of this year’s Pavillion at the Serpentine Gallery. Perfectly set under the gleaming aluminium roof, British drummer Charles Hayward (This Heat, Camberwell Now) and Japanese prog rock musician Tatsuya Yoshida brought a rhythmic maelstrom to a peaceful summer Hyde Park. Andi Studer, one of the producers on our New Music Plus programme, had co-produced this night with the Serpentine Gallery and OTO projects, and the rapturous capacity crowd spilled out onto the park around creating a appreciative festival vibe.
Charles Hayward’s first set married his percussive wizardry with live electronics and vocal dexterity, fleet of foot and hand while teasing delicate resonances and bombastic gestures from his kit. Tatsuya Yoshida’s haunting vocals raised the second set as the sun dropped. Renowned for his prog rock in Ruins and YB02, and as ‘the indisputable master drummer of the Japanese underground’, his fans pressed forward in eager anticipation. The briefest of breaks and they were both back for an astonishing duo, improvising with trays, ding-dong hand-overs and delightful wit.
More to come from both Yoshida care of Cafe Oto that weekend, and more to come from Andi Studer’s production on 9 October (Phill Niblock, Nelly Boyd) at the Pavillion.
Charlotte





