QuaQuaQua (NYC/Baltimore) and The Third Guy (Brussels) bring you pieces for an open-ended jack cable, strobe lights and midi pad, slaps in the face, virtuosic knife and hammer work, and light banter.
Slovenian guitarist Primož Sukič and Spanish percussionist Ruben Orio make up The Third Guy, a duo based in Brussels, Belgium. They first met at the post master-academy program offered by the ICTUS ensemble and the HoGent Conservatory, with their official debut in January 2017, which was a result of an artistic residency at QO-2 in Brussels.
Their musical, and artistic research is based on composed works that explore, and blur boundaries between improvisation, programmed computer algorithms, and composition. The Third Guy also focuses on collaborating with other musicians (composers, interpreters, improvisers), and artists from other artistic fields, among whom each of them bring in new personalities and aesthetics, that, for every performance, reshape, and sometimes even redefine the identity of the ensemble.
Since the beginning of their first concert in 2017 The Third Guy has premiered more that seven new works all together, composed by composers such as James Saunders, Marko Ciciliani, Caroline Profanter, Matej Bonin, Elina Lukijanova, and Mihael Maierhof. Their performances have taken place in SIRGA Festival (Flix, Catalunia), University of Southampton (UK), Champ d’action in Antwerp, SPOR Festival in Aarhus (Denmark), Ljubljana city museum (Slovenia), Miry concert Hall Ghent, iMAL Brussels. http://thethirdguy.com/
QuaQuaQua is a flexible (mostly percussion-based) group headed by local Baltimore percussionist Adam Rosenblatt (https://rosenblatt.live/). He and New York-based percussionist Terry Sweeney (http://www.sandboxpercussion.com/) will present composed pieces somewhere between performance art, contemporary music, and absurdist theater.

Event location:

The Red Room at Normals Books and Records 425 E. 31st Street Baltimore, MD 21218

The Red Room is a volunteer-run space in Baltimore dedicated to mind-expanding experimental culture, headquartered at Normals Books and Records.