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New York-based composer and visual artist
Eli Keszler is known for his inventive approaches to drumming as well as his large-scale sound art installations. Informed by free jazz improvisation in addition to hardcore punk and experimental noise, his percussive techniques include rapid, hummingbird-like drumming and abrasive, feedback-heavy deconstructions. Active as a recording artist since the mid-2000s, his discography includes collaborations with
Ashley Paul (as the duo Aster),
Joe McPhee, and
Oren Ambarchi and solo works such as
Cold Pin (2011) and
Stadium (2018).
Keszler's work has been commissioned by
the Iceland Symphony Orchestra, ICE Ensemble, and
So Percussion. He has also performed and recorded with
David Grubbs,
Laurel Halo, and
Oneohtrix Point Never. His first original soundtrack, for the horror film The Scary of Sixty-First, appeared in 2021.
Born in Brookline, Massachusetts,
Keszler began playing drums and composing before he was a teenager. He played in hardcore groups as a high-school student and graduated from the New England Conservatory of Music in Boston. Eventually settling in New York City, he began designing performance installations often involving material such as piano wire, motors, and pickups. He started issuing limited CDs of his music through his own R.E.L Records in 2006. His first vinyl release was Livingston, issued by Rare Youth in 2008. He formed the duos Aster (with
Ashley Paul) and Red Horse (with Steve Pyne); both issued self-titled debuts in 2009.
Keszler's solo CD Tilt appeared the same year.
In 2010,
Keszler's solo album
Oxtirn was released by ESP-Disk, with Oxtirn Live following on R.E.L in 2011. The year also saw the premier of
Keszler's ambitious sound installation,
Cold Pin, as well as an album of the same name, issued by Pan. The label also released
Catching Net, a 2012 double CD that included the material from
Cold Pin as well as a full ensemble performance of the piece. Also issued in 2012 were a live collaboration with
Joe McPhee titled Ithaca (8mm Records) and a split LP with
Keith Fullerton Whitman (NNA Tapes).
Keszler performed with
the Iceland Symphony Orchestra at the Transmedial Festival in 2013.
Alps, a collaboration with
Oren Ambarchi, was released by Dancing Wayang in 2014. During the same year,
Keszler toured the United States with engineer and sound artist
Rashad Becker; two years later, they performed together in Japan.
Keszler's solo double-LP Last Signs of Speed was issued by Empty Editions in 2016.
Keszler appeared on
Laurel Halo's acclaimed 2017 full-length, Dust, and performed with her as a duo the following year. He also performed with
Oneohtrix Point Never as part of his MYRIAD ensemble and contributed to 2018's
Age Of.
Keszler's solo album
Stadium, his most accessible work to date, was released by Shelter Press that year. The label also issued his 2019 EP, Empire.
Two live recordings from 2018, a set with
John Butcher at London's Café Oto and a solo performance of
Stadium at the Kitchen in New York, both appeared in 2021.
Keszler's studio album
Icons was then released by LuckyMe, and his score for the horror-thriller The Scary of Sixty-First appeared digitally at the end of the year. The single "The Vaulting Sky," backed by a
Kode9 remix of
Icons track "Static Doesn't Exist," surfaced in 2022. ~ Paul Simpson