Iconoclast (band)

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Iconoclast is a New York avant jazz duo [1] consisting of Julie Joslyn [2] (alto saxophone, live electronics, violin, vocals) and Leo Ciesa [3] (drums, percussion, keyboards, vocals). Iconoclast has been performing and recording since 1987 and has released ten studio albums, [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] and is featured in All About Jazz.

Contents

The duo has received an Artist's Fellowship in Music Composition from the New York Foundation for the Arts as well as grants from Meet the Composer and from Arts International: The Fund for U.S. Artists at International Festivals and Exhibitions, now known as Mid Atlantic Arts Foundation: US Artists International.

Iconoclast has performed at festivals in The United States, Canada, Italy, Poland, Hungary, Serbia, Czech Republic, and Slovenia. The duo performed regularly beginning in 1988 at the New York clubs [9] CBGB and the Knitting Factory. Iconoclast collaborated and performed with Polish poet Andrzej Dorobek (pl).

Media

Iconoclast also composed and performed the music for the documentary film "Savage Acts: Wars, Fairs and Empire" and the online exploration game “The Lost Museum”, both by the American Social History Project (ASHP), and the soundtracks for the films “The Bench” (Poland, 2010) and “Con gli occhi di domain”/“With Tomorrow's Eyes” (Italy, 2006). [10]

Created between 1996 and 2005, the Lost Museum is a project concerning the history of P.T. Barnum's American Museum in New York City through its destruction in 1865. [11]

Discography

Collections

See also

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References

  1. All About Jazz
  2. Lewis Porter's Encyclopedia of Jazz Musicians: Julie Joslyn
  3. Lewis Porter's Encyclopedia of Jazz Musicians: Leo Ciesa
  4. delarue, "Can Iconoclasts Be Iconic?" New York Music Daily (April 24, 2017)
  5. Mario Gazzola, "La Resistenza del punk jazz," Posthuman (February 28, 2017)
  6. John Pietaro, New York City Jazz Record Review (April 2017)
  7. Keaton Lamie, Modern Drummer Review (September 2017)
  8. Claudio Bonomi, All About Jazz-Italia Review (August 19, 2014)
  9. Steve Holtje, "Iconoclast at Michiko Studios," Culture Catch (October 27, 2014)
  10. "Biography". Iconoclast NYC.
  11. "The Story of the Lost Museum". American Social History Project (ASHP). 2015 [2002].