
Matmos have announced a sprawling tour throughout the US and EU this Spring and Summer, including sets at Long Play Festival, Jazz is Dead Festival, Primavera Sound, and special residency performances. The tour comes after the acclaimed Baltimore-based electronic duo’s new album Metallic Life Review and will feature rivoting performances with their all-metal object show. The tour also will overlap with the release of Matmos’ M.C. Schmidt’s new collaborative album Cloud Machines, made with fellow Baltimore provocateur John Berndt.
Matmos’ singular compositional approach resembles the creation of sculpture. The incredibly detailed pieces that make up each album are created with carefully selected sounds that adhere to a specific conceptual framework. The duo, composed of Drew Daniel and M.C. Schmidt, makes music that defies both category and expectation, shattering notions of what electronic music is by questioning what else it could be. In the case of Metallic Life Review, what may be possible with the sound that metal objects make? By ignoring the categorical genre constraints associated with terms like found sound, music concrète, techno, glitch and, yes, “metal” and pushing into new territory, Matmos’s approach answers this question with gleeful abandon. Underpinning their adventurous and inquisitive spirits is a sense of real feeling, never shying from the difficult and unsettling moments, but embracing the breadth of human experiences that live in communication with the constraints of each project.
Cloud Machines is the extraordinary debut collaboration between M.C. Schmidt of legendary electronic duo Matmos and John Berndt, the Baltimore avant-garde institution and band leader behind High Zero Festival, the Red Room collective, Geodesic Gnome, and radical sonic concepts like Spectral Relay (a bespoke signal processing architecture) and Relabi (a conceptual genre defined by a Rorschach-blot pulse). After more than one hundred combined years of this pair pushing the boundaries of what music can be and where it can come from, these two iconoclasts have delivered something genuinely unexpected: an oddly sweet electronic opus that’s as immediately engaging as it is a series of delicious puzzles. When two of experimental music’s most irascible characters spend twelve years crafting an album, you don’t just get another release—it is an anthology of pocket universes.
Matmos tour dates:
May 2 – New York City, NY – Long Play 26 c/o BRIC Ballroom
May 29 – Turin, IT – Jazz Is Dead Festival
May 30 – Precenicco, UD – Auditorium di Precenicco
June 2 – Lisbon, PT – ZBD
June 3 – Braga, PT – GNRation
June 5 – Barcelona, ES – Primavera Sound Festival
June 9 – Stockholm, SE – Rumtiden
June 11 – Aarhus, DK – VoxHall *
June 19 – Foligno, IT – Dancity *
June 22 – Hessen, DE – SANAA #
June 23 – Hessen, DE – Neue Musik Zentrale ~
June 25 – Prague, CZ – Archa+
June 28 – Athens, GR – Plyfa Space
July 17 – Bologna, IT – Botanique
July 31 – Shanghai, China – Wigwam
Aug 15 – San Francisco, CA – Gray Area
* w/ The Soft Pink Truth DJ set
# Residency
~ Residency & Improv set with students






