Brooklyn musician
Ben Greenberg began
Hubble in 2011 as a solo guitar project extended from his work with avant-rock band
Zs and Pygmy Shrews. Relying on virtuosic guitar techniques more in line with metal shredders than the experimental scene,
Greenberg implemented finger-tapping and minimal use of pedals or looping in his long-form compositions, setting him apart from legions of the crescendo-building loops of his contemporaries. A cassette on NNA Tapes in 2011 entitled
Hubble Linger was the first available recording from
Greenberg's project, followed by the debut full-length
Hubble Drums later that year on adventurous N.Y.C. label
Northern Spy.
Greenberg toured extensively in support of the album, including stops throughout the U.S. and Europe, as well as appearances at 2012's South by Southwest festival. In early 2012
Greenberg also joined gritty rockers
the Men, with the long-running Pygmy Shrews on their way to disbanding and
Zs in an extended hiatus.
Greenberg juggled his various projects and managed to keep a focus on
Hubble, with touring and exclusive engagements at various colleges and galleries.
Hubble performances were often self-referential and highly conceptual. Some pieces included "Hubble's Hubble" (a hypnotic score set to interstellar images taken from the Hubble telescope), "Hubble's Escape" (a metallic repetition that morphs into the theme from
John Carpenter's 1980's sci-fi adventure flick Escape from New York), and some more ambitious performances with the "Hubble Superposition," which routes
Greenberg's guitar signals through a systematically placed quadraphonic amplifier system. ~ Fred Thomas