After a decade of performing concerts under the Mariachi guise, Nina
Garcia has finally unveiled her unique approach in Bye Bye Bird, her first album under
her name. Bye Bye Bird is her second solo album, to be released by Ideologic Organ in
February 2025.
With no pretence or demonstration, the album is a captivating blend of
chiaroscuro, melodies, and raw emotion.Nina Garcia’s album takes on an almost documentary-like quality by
adopting a simple approach to gesture and sound recording. It offers a candid
portrayal of a moment, a lack, a state, and a breathtaking energy. With ostinato as her
only credo, Nina Garcia’s music is an experiment in freedom, where the peaks answer
the abysses, and the power of movement and the emotion of sound serves as her
compass.From very short (01:28) to never very long (07:34), the eight tracks that make
up this set explore a moment, a space, a mechanism, an intention or a way of doing
things. As a common feature of almost all these pieces (all but one, the last), Nina
Garcia explores a new technique. She adds to her instrumentation, reduced to the
essentials (a guitar, a pedal and an amp), an electromagnetic microphone which, when
held in hand, makes it possible to listen in on the exact zones where the vibration of
the string creates a sound amid vast spaces of silence. The guitar is unplugged, and
the body/instrument relationship changes in dimension.In this series of variations, you can get caught up in masses of noise seen from
very, very close up, evocations of melodies in the making, feedback on ridgelines,
pulsations that hold their own, modulations weakened by exhaustion and harmonic
bursts that hint at better days to come.Neither hopelessly chthonic nor beatifically ethereal, Bye Bye Bird is a sum
of musical pieces that make a whole and give voice to echoes of what has been, the
presence of what is and the hope of what will be, a record movement in the form of
flight and salvation.Since 2015, Nina Garcia has been researching and creating around the
electric guitar, halfway between improvised music and noise.
On numerous stages in Europe and North America, she has played occasionally with
Stephen O’Malley, Sophie Agnel, Fred Frith, Antoine Chessex, Louis Schild or with
Luke Stewart and Leila Bordreuil’s Feedback Ensemble, in addition to more regular
formations in which she participates, such as the ensemble Le Un, mamiedaragon,
Autoreverse (with Arnaud Rivière), duets with trombonist Maria Bertel and
percussionist Camille Émaille, and the installation piece De Haut En Bas, De Bas En
Haut Et Latéralement (with Christophe Cardoen, Jennifer Caubet, Etienne Foyer, Anna
Gaïotti and Romain Simon).
–Arnaud Riviere, Paris November 2024Nina Garcia has been actively moving the art of noise guitar into surprising and
intriguing new spaces. She has been at it for some time now, a bit of a secret
weapon all the while hiding in plain sight. As I listen to her music and ruminate
upon seeing her perform it brings me to a realization which I have with very
few musicians: the ego inherent in making art can be transcended through
a purity of direct action. At least that’s the feeling I have when experiencing
Nina’s music which comes across as serious and radical and wholly engaged
in the moment of its creative impulse. With Bye Bye Bird she delivers her most
exalted and sublime collection of recordings for all adventurous hearts to hear.
A fantastic album.
—Thurston Moore, London October 2024