blog | Performance Space New York

COIL Festival Intern

Our 9th annual COIL Festival is rapidly approaching. PS122 is in the midst of planning and preparations and could use a great intern with an interest in performing arts producing. Is it you? Check out the description below and apply via email.

COIL Festival Intern (September through Feb 1)

Performance Space 122 is currently accepting applications for interns in the Programming Department to assist with all aspects of the annual COIL festival. Interns are an integral part of the festival and will interact with all internal departments in the the lead up to the festival.

Interns will be involved in projects and tasks including: artist hospitality, travel planning, marketing and press coordination and administrative duties. The internship is ideal for candidates with an interest in non-profit producing, especially those interested in contemporary work. He or she must be detailed oriented, organized, posses intimate knowledge of Microsoft Suite, specifically Word and Excel and have excellent oral and written communication skills. The internship is part-time and flexible based on the needs of the department and the individual. During the festival, the internship becomes full-time.

COIL is Performance Space 122’s annual mid-winter festival of contemporary performance from New York City and around the globe. Coinciding with the annual APAP (Association of Performing Arts Presenters) conference, the festival is now in its ninth year.

Interested candidates should send a resume and cover letter to office@ps122.org. No phone calls, please.

Celebrating the SM-58

I like simple, tough and reliable things. Things that do not have fancy features, that are not over designed and that do one job and do it well. Of the few cars I’ve owned for example, the ‘71 VW Beetle and the ‘71 Mini are my favorites, because they were simple, could be beat around, and fixed without great expense. However, I never really needed to fix them too much, because they were just so damn reliable.

Not much of the equipment we use in the production of our shows and events could really be called simple and tough, although most of it is reliable to a point. We can’t throw around our lighting consoles or sound boards, not if we want them to work the next time. Same with the lighting instruments themselves, or a video projector. If we could, if the gear was that tough, the road case industry would disappear overnight, and if that happened, the crew would have nothing to case surf across the stage on, and we can’t have that.

One of the pieces of gear we use, and use a lot, one that does take a beating, one that is simply and effectively designed, and almost never fails is also happens to be one of my favorite pieces of equipment, the Shure SM58 microphone.

Now before your eyes glaze over at the mere mention of product numbers and the like, I can guarantee you have all seen and heard an SM58 in your lives. That is if you have ever been to a live concert, a gala or event, a wedding or Bar Mitzvah, or anytime someone was using a microphone. The chances that it was an SM58 are very high (see the image above).

So here’s just a little history on the microphone. The Shure Radio Company was founded on April 25 1925 by S. N. Shure as a one-man company selling radio parts kits before factory-built radio sets were marketed. They expanded into the manufacture of it’s own microphone designs in 1931. One of Shure’s first iconic microphones was the Model 55 Unidyne Microphone developed in 1939, and that models smaller variant, the 55S become known as the “Elvis Microphone”. You will all recognize that one too:

Later years Elvis not pictured as the mic would disappear in his hands.
Later years Elvis not pictured as the mic would disappear in his hands.

In 1965, they developed the SM57, known now as the “President’s Mic” as it has been used for every U.S President as their lectern mic since Lyndon B. Johnson.

Around the same time, Shure developed the SM58, and it rapidly became the microphone of choice by rock musicians, primarily for its rugged reliability and great sound quality. It was the Who’s Roger Daltrey’s choice for swinging over his head because if it hit the stage it would continue working. Also it was and still is affordable, one of the first mics to offer it’s level of quality, and still be able to work after being run over by the band’s van when the drummer, for some reason, is allowed to drive.

So what is it that make it so good really?
For a start it’s a cardioid Dynamic microphone meaning it works via electromagnetic induction, and has a pickup pattern that is rotationally symmetrical about microphone axis which means……WHAh WAH WAHH AHH AH WAH WAh wah…………and other dry boring technical stuff.

Simply put, the way it picks up sound reduces the chance of feedback. If you’ve never heard feedback, it’s when sound goes from the speaker, into the mic, and loops without stopping, an annoying screechy noise the seems like its never going to stop. Think weekly interdepartmental budget meetings, and you get the idea.

The SM-57
The SM-57

It also is built with internal shock mounts, which reduce handling noise. This is when the sound of someone grabbing the mic or it being clipped to its stand is amplified through the body of the mic. Not such a big deal in a studio, as the mic is not touched or removed from the stand as much. But in a live situation, when it’s going to be yanked from the scarf covered mic stand of Steven Tyler, as he dives to his knees in crescendo of “Dream On”, you want to hear his high screams and his wide vocal range, not the thump and bump of the mic.
For those too young to know who Steven Tyler is, or the song “Dream On”, turn off the Beyonce or Bieber and run, don’t walk, to Google.

Lastly, and my favorite little repair hack for them, deals with the grill, or the wire mesh ball at the top of the mic. Sometimes during its use, this grill will get knocked about, deforming it, or making flat spots. Fixing this is easy. Just unscrew the grill, and place it over the rounded top of a broomstick. Lightly tap the flattened area with a hammer from the outside and you’ll re-shape the grill back to original.

After all this though, why do I like them so much? Because they harken back to a simpler time. Don’t get me wrong, give me a new Ion lighting control console over a manual analog board any day. Same with digital audio consoles, or a modern projector over a tri-gun one from decades ago that needed three crew to carry it.
The SM58 was just designed and manufactured in a way that I can’t see ever happening again. Solid, made to last. A visitor from the past, still with us today.

Now you kids get off my lawn!

Champagne Jerry Starts Album Rollout

PS122 favorite Neal Medlyn aka Champagne Jerry, who co-hosted last year’s Season Launch Party has at last started rolling out his first rap album, For Real, You Guys. The album will drop on ChampagneJerry.com over the course of the next year and features beats by Max Tannone, Adam Ad Rock Horovitz and Carmine Covelli. The first track to drop, Tampa Realness, hits hard and finishes with a mature bouquet that may be perceived as a threat to Rick Ross and other Florida rappers.

Champagne Jerry on For Real, You Guys:
“The album is about having sex with people in your office
It is about driving a Chevette.
It is about the states of Texas AND Florida.
It is about realness, hip hop, and champagne.”

(photo of Neal Medlyn and Kanye West from his show, Why Won’t You Let Me Be Great at PS122 in 2009).

LMCC Open Rehearsal: Okwui Okpokwasili

This Saturday on Governor’s Island, PS122 artist Okwui Okpokwasili has a free open rehearsal of her work in progress, Bronx Gothic, which will premiere this January in COIL 2014*. She has been developing the piece over a residency at Lower Manhattan Cultural Council’s Arts Center. Details and location below.

Okwui Okpokwasili – In progress: Bronx Gothic
Saturday, August 3, 2-4PM
Building 110: LMCC’s Arts Center at Governors Island
Rehearsal Space B
Free, viewer discretion advised

Okwui Okpokwasili’s In progress: Bronx Gothic explores the sexual exploits and misadventures of two 11 year old girls in the Bronx. This open rehearsal will be a working rehearsal where audiences have the opportunity to step into the development process with the artist in crafting an intimate narrative excursion through language and the body. Viewer discretion advised: content is not appropriate for audiences under 18 years of age.
More Info

Bronx Gothic is co-commissioned by Performance Space 122, Danspace Project and LMCC with commissioning support from a 50th Anniversary Grant from the Jerome Foundation.


*Full COIL14 lineup coming soon!

All rights reserved by Performance Space New York
Skip to content