Holland Andrews / Methods Body

Wednesday, April 17th at 8pm, ISSUE is pleased to present the world premiere of REMAIN, a thoughtful study of connection, grief, joy and catharsis developed by vocalist and composer Holland Andrews (2020 ISSUE Artist-In-Residence), with Portland-based sound artists Methods Body (John Niekrasz & Luke Wyland). The piece serves as a living development of their work SPEECHLESS (2022), created for Beacon Sound’s forthcoming compilation supporting Palestinian liberation. Andrews’ residency was interrupted by the COVID-19 pandemic, so this occasion marks their return to the ISSUE theater for the first time since their initial residency performance in February 2020.

The evening will consist of solo performances by both Methods Body and Andrews, concluding with a collaborative set. The trio showcases a creative dynamic built over a decade; Methods Body refracts Andrews’ singular vocal gestures through live processing, percussion, and keys. Andrews, often blending this with voice, clarinet, synth and electronic music, creates a realm of live performance that is boundlessly present and expansive. Believing that improvisation is an act of love and trust, the artists explore these emotional themes in their collaboration. This limited capacity event at 22 Boerum Pl. is Free for ISSUE Members with RSVP, pending availability.

A Holland Andrews+Methods Body trio record will be released in the coming year.

Holland Andrews (they/them) is a vocalist, composer, producer, and performer whose work focuses on the abstraction of operatic and extended-technique voice to build soundscapes encompassing both catharsis and dissonance. Frequently highlighting themes surrounding vulnerability and healing, Andrews arranges music for voice, clarinet, and electronics. Notable musical collaborations include Nils Frahm, Son Lux, Christina Vantzou, William Brittelle, Peter Broderick, and Jeremy Toussaint-Baptiste. Andrews also develops and performs soundscapes for dance, theater, and film, and their work is toured internationally with artists such as Bill T. Jones, Sonya Tayeh, Dorothee Munyaneza, and Will Rawls.

Methods Body (Portland, OR) creates original sound art using custom tuning systems, polyrhythms, and the cadences of language. John Niekrasz (percussion, voice) and Luke Wyland (keys, electronics, voice) employ musical and technological strategies that force them to break old habits and patterns. Extrinsic song forms and standardized meters fall away, leaving subliminal melodies and deep, uncanny grooves. Methods Body treats time as a physical substance that can be sculpted to alter the listener’s emotional experience. Wyland channels his life-long stutter into a music of broken speech. There are lost languages in this music—it is haunted by artifacts the musicians can’t always explain. Methods Body has released two critically acclaimed records, Methods Body (2020 New Amsterdam Records/Beacon Sound) and Plural Not Possessive (2023 Beacon Sound), demonstrating the duo's hallmark microtonality, cyclical rhythms, world-building intricacy, and unmistakable collaborative chemistry.

Founded in 2003, ISSUE Project Room is a pioneering nonprofit performance center, presenting projects by interdisciplinary artists that expand the boundaries of artistic practice and stimulate critical dialogue in the broader community. ISSUE serves as a leading cultural incubator, facilitating the commission and premiere of innovative new works.  

The Holland Andrews / Methods Body program is supported by New Amsterdam Records (NewAm), a community-based cooperative record label and artists’ service organization, dedicated to supporting the public’s engagement with new music by composers and performers whose work transcends traditional and outdated genre distinctions.

For visitors requiring accessible access for performance, ISSUE Project Room’s 22 Boerum Pl. theater is ADA accessible by lift and a ramp funded through the Accessibility Project of Downtown Brooklyn Partnership’s Downtown Revitalization Initiative Placemaking Fund. For accessibility assistance or questions, please contact tech@issueprojectroom.org at least 48-hours in advance of visiting.

ISSUE Project Room programs are supported, in part, by public funds from the New York City Department of Cultural Affairs in partnership with the City Council, and made possible by the New York State Council on the Arts with the support of the Office of the Governor and the New York State Legislature.

Additional support for ISSUE Project Room's 2024 season is provided by Metabolic Studio.