
Held on 19 Feb 2021
The two volumes of Theremonial (Beat Generation, 2017 and 2019) see Javier Díez Ena pay homage to the timbre of the theremin, a musical instrument, invented in 1919 by Russian musician Lev Termen, with a sound customarily associated with US horror film and sci-fi scores from the 1950s or as an ominous addition in relatively traditional pop music creations. Nevertheless, the instrument has been used in a variety of ways, ranging from Japanoise to historicist experiments by Andrey Smirnov and the electronic pop of Dorit Chrysler.
Javier Díez Ena composes his songs solely using the sound of the theremin — tired of the instrument’s constant association with a sci-fi aesthetic, he pays homage to exotica, a style originating from the Martin Denny record under the same name and produced in Hawaii in 1954. Exotica came out of the same context and virtually the same period in which monster movies turned the theremin sound into a popular icon. The records from this genre written by Les Baxter, Juan García Esquivel and Arthur Lyman mixed, appropriated and decontextualised the sounds of congas and Chinese bells, Haitian tree trunks, piano and bird calls.
This concert is framed inside Disonata. Art in Sound up to 1980, an exhibition which presents some of the experiments with sound throughout history in a context of European avant-garde movements. Javier Díez Ena’s concert performance adds perspective to experimentation with musical references that include John Zorn, Kid Koala and The Cramps (see the attached PDF for a more in-depth look at the music of Javier Díez Ena). In a similar vein, of particular interest is the podcast produced by Javi Álvarez for RRS Museo Reina Sofía Radio, whereby Díez Ena runs through his influences and renders certain tracks.
Curator
José Luis Espejo
Organised by
Museo Reina Sofía
Credits
Music: Javier Díez Ena
Live visuals: Corazón Gallardo
Participants
Javier Díez Ena (Zaragoza, 1974) is a musician (a double bass, theremin and bass player, electronic music composer…) and a journalist, as well as being a member of Dead Capo, L’Exotighost, Ginferno and Forastero. He was also part of Insecto and Phono in the 1990s and the bands of Ainara LeGardon (2006–2009) and Aaron Thomas (2007–2011). Moreover, he has worked in collaborations, both in the studio and live, with artists such as Hyperpotamus, Standstill, Damo Suzuki (Can), Víctor Coyote, Javier Corcobado, Julio de la Rosa, Javier Colis, Toundra, Ajo, Bruno Galindo, Los Caballos de Düsseldorf, Eh!, Susana Cáncer, Clint, Strand, Az Rotator, That Crooner from Nowhere, Biodramina Mood, Alondra Bentley, Lava, Juan Belda and Mathis Haug, working, all told, with more than thirty record labels and performing over five hundred concerts.
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Inside the framework of The Collection Screened, a programme rooted in the institution’s film, video and moving image holdings, the Museo invites Laura Baigorri, one of the leading specialists in video art, to approach specific aspects related to identity, self-representation and the body within the Museo’s audiovisual collection since the 1990s.
![Dias & Riedweg, Casulo [Crisálida], 2019, película](https://recursos.museoreinasofia.es/styles/small_landscape/public/Actividades/desafios-cine-2.png.webp)
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Inside the framework of The Collection Screened, a programme rooted in the institution’s film, video and moving image holdings, the Museo invites Laura Baigorri, one of the leading specialists in video art, to approach specific aspects related to identity, self-representation and the body within the Museo’s audiovisual collection since the 1990s.

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This session advances a programme focused on the most elemental side of performance: a simple, direct act that starts from the self-exhibition of the body. At certain points, from the calculated serenity of Miguel Benlloch’s Tengo tiempo (I Have Time, 1994); at other times, from the challenging and visceral impulse of Bollos (Buns, 1996), by Cabello y Carceller, or the rage of Habla (Talk, 2008), by Cristina Lucas; and, finally, from video-graphic experimentation, disconcerting and sustained in the dance culture of Moving Backwards (2019), by Pauline Boudry and Renate Lorenz, whose mise en scène reminds us that it is not actually déjà vu but the present, unfortunately, that moves through a reactionary period.
Inside the framework of The Collection Screened, a programme rooted in the institution’s film, video and moving image holdings, the Museo invites Laura Baigorri, one of the leading specialists in video art, to approach specific aspects related to identity, self-representation and the body within the Museo’s audiovisual collection since the 1990s. The session recovers paradigmatic performances, from three successive decades, crossed by the indisputable expression of gender; that is, mediated by the confronted acts of feminisms and the queer paradigms of culture.

READ Madrid. Festival of Books and Ideas
Friday 17 and Saturday 18 April, 2026 – Check Programme
READ Madrid. Festival of Books and Ideas emerges as a meeting space for critical and experimental voices in the fields of literature, theory, and publishing. With particular attention to artistic production practices and independent publishing, and seeking to build a transatlantic cultural bridge with Latin America, the program aims to decenter hegemonic frameworks of knowledge production and open up new communities of interpretation and horizons for political imagination. To this end, it takes writing and reading—understood in broad and plural ways across their modes, forms, and registers—as constitutive of a public laboratory of what we call study: a space for thinking collectively, debating and coining ideas, making and unmaking arguments, as well as articulating new imaginaries and forms of enunciation.
In a context of ecological, political, and epistemological crisis, the festival proposes modes of gathering that make it possible to sustain shared time and space for collective reflection, thereby contributing to the reconfiguration of the terms of cultural debate. In this sense, the program is conceived as an intervention into the contemporary conditions of circulation and legitimation of thought and creation, expanding the traditional boundaries of the book and connecting literature, visual arts, performance, and critical thought. These formats are organized around three thematic axes led by key voices in contemporary writing, artistic practice, and critical thinking.
The thematic axes of READ Madrid. Festival of Books and Ideas are: a popular minoritarian, or how to activate an emancipatory practice of the popular; raging peace, or how to sustain justice, mourning, and repair without resorting to pacifying imaginaries devoid of conflict; and fiction against oblivion, which explores the role of science fiction, horror, and speculative narratives as forms of resistance against the liberalism of forgetting. Ultimately, the aim is to interrogate our present through the potential that ideas and books can mobilize within a shared space of study, debate, and enjoyment.

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