Zweikommasieben
Issue 27
A contemporary music magazine based in Lucerne, Zweikommasieben is as experimental and exciting as the artists it reports on. Each issue takes a completely different format, and for the 27th instalment, they play around with elongating their texts, taking the reader on a strange and disorienting journey through this moment in music.
In this issue:
Dancehall queen Lateena Plummer on “dominating” Switzerland
Divide and Dissolve on invoking their indigenous ancestry in live performances
The art of staging Children of the Light
Christian Marclay reflects on 40 years of fusing fine arts and audio cultures
And Swiss artist Xzavier Stone on finding inspiration beyond his own country’s borders
Issue 27
A contemporary music magazine based in Lucerne, Zweikommasieben is as experimental and exciting as the artists it reports on. Each issue takes a completely different format, and for the 27th instalment, they play around with elongating their texts, taking the reader on a strange and disorienting journey through this moment in music.
In this issue:
Dancehall queen Lateena Plummer on “dominating” Switzerland
Divide and Dissolve on invoking their indigenous ancestry in live performances
The art of staging Children of the Light
Christian Marclay reflects on 40 years of fusing fine arts and audio cultures
And Swiss artist Xzavier Stone on finding inspiration beyond his own country’s borders
Issue 27
A contemporary music magazine based in Lucerne, Zweikommasieben is as experimental and exciting as the artists it reports on. Each issue takes a completely different format, and for the 27th instalment, they play around with elongating their texts, taking the reader on a strange and disorienting journey through this moment in music.
In this issue:
Dancehall queen Lateena Plummer on “dominating” Switzerland
Divide and Dissolve on invoking their indigenous ancestry in live performances
The art of staging Children of the Light
Christian Marclay reflects on 40 years of fusing fine arts and audio cultures
And Swiss artist Xzavier Stone on finding inspiration beyond his own country’s borders