Tag Archives: Te Kōkī/ New Zealand School of Music

TRIO – the new album by vegetable.machine.animal

TRIO, the new album by vegetable.machine.animal (vma), release date – 14 August 2026. This album is co-released between skirted Records and Audio Foundation Records.

TRIO feels like the completion of the first full cycle of vegetable.machine.animal. In our initial, grandiose way, we planned for TRIO to be released alongside the album GUEST in 2025 as part of the NZSM/Toi Pōneke Artist in Residence position held in 2024. We wished to present them as a couple of bookends for the possible scope from which this project might grow. A full album of ‘trio’ material was gathered, mixed … and then fully discarded as falling short of the mark required to be satisfied.

It was apparent to the ears of skirted Records that substantial work was needed to find vma’s coherent voice. After tours, residencies, explorations, failures, and a lot of playing, we are proud to present this iteration of TRIO to all who are interested in hearing.

In the first two weeks of January 2026, all the gear was installed in an old, out-of-action wooden Salvation Army hall in Island Bay. The cherry log that was gifted during the 2025 tour of Aotearoa had flourished again in a bloom of mushrooms, offering up the essential voltage to tickle the synth. Playing was daily, and hours of recordings were collected.

An invitation to play MONA fuelled the motivation to complete the album earlier than anticipated. There is nothing like a deadline to make things happen. It had to be edited, mixed, tweaked, remixed, mastered, artworks and layouts designed and completed all in short order to get to the factory for production with the hope it would return in time for the Australia tour. The efforts were compounded by simultaneously replicating exactly the same process in completing the vma album Electrical Minzu 35, .

The following text is printed inside the TRIO package.

Listen—to reverb that bounces from the wooden walls of an aging Salvation Army hall, back into the microphone. There, sound waves convert to electrical signals. On the stage sits a drum kit, with timber shells from unknown forests. From hand, the impact from wooden sticks makes drum skins sing. Beside the kit, a chunk of cherry tree—a deathbed for lifeyness. Beneath bark, mycelial threads infiltrate, feed, and flourish into fruiting bodies up on the surface. Here be mushrooms. Life contains voltage. Fluctuations, detected by sensors, connect to the modular synthesiser—where electrical impulse becomes sound wave. A living interface presents—the human responds. 
The circuit is continuous, spontaneous, unrepeatable.

TRIO is the response to the curious idea—“What could ‘more-than-human’ music sound like?”, music that includes more than our shared and exclusive conception. VMA, the “interspecies trio,” is our small unit of investigation. In human terms, this album could be called a solo album. However, that negates the contributions that non-human and circuited elements provide. 
Together, we have achieved so much more than I could alone.

The music for the tracks came first. The naming of the tracks is a relatively arbitrary process. Several titles came from provocations used on the day — provocations that set limits, directions, and parameters. Other titles are either collected from scraps of writing we have lying around the house, or from phrases that leapt from the pages of books being read at the time, authors such as John Berger, Báyò Akómoláfé, Robert Macfarlane, and Lee Hana.

All the parts are assembled and sent to the factory for production. But disappointingly, the production timeframe for this job is considerably longer than that of the previous album, Electrical Minzu. The estimated delivery date falls after my departure for the Australian tour. We request a small quantity to be delivered to an address in Sydney. The copies can be collected in the second week of the tour. The day of my flight to Brisbane comes.  As we preparing to leave, a text from FedEx arrives saying the box is out for delivery – earlier than projected! For a moment, there’s hope, but that becomes dashed. We need to leave. Chrissie drops me off at the airport, I dither for a bit before heading to the departure lounge. That weird space where, once upon a time, a stamp inside your passport would create a strange sleight of hand of being in-between countries. I’m five metres from entering when a text states a box has been deposited in a shed! I contact Chrissie, and like a champ, she races back across the city with a small bundle of CDs. TRIO is delivered to the gate – available only on tour.

Thanks are offered to the following: Audio Foundation, Pyramid Club, all the glorious oddball music makers, Jess and Barry, Timothy Morel for eternal optimism and enthusiasm, CreativeNZ for funding support, Te Kōki / New Zealand School of Music, Mak@disposablebelief for the b&w photo, Kai-Yu Liu, Glory and Sam for the log that keeps giving. Special mention – Andreas Lepper, for the friendship, the instruments, and the hall! Always, always, Chrissie xxx.

Album Launch: Electrical Minzu 35, by vegetable.machine.animal

Screenshot


Electrical Minzu 35, by vegetable.machine.animal [vma] : a site-specific recording project, undertaken during October/November 2025, while on residence in the southern Taiwanese city of Tainan.

Between the laneways off Minzu, Xinyi, Jinhua, and Chenggong Road is Ting Shuo Hear Say, a space that has sound at the centre of its purpose. For two months vma and DSLB called this residency home and a base for musical exploration, connection, and touring.

In these narrow thoroughfares that weave between the main roads, green-space is rare. Yet people install potted greenery to soften the concrete and marble, and wild-seeded plant-life thrives in the gaps and cracks. At these potted assemblies, and in close proximity to wheels of scooters and feet, vma would connect the leaves of Eternity Plants, ferns, and other flora to the modular synth via sensors. These sensors detect invisible voltage, bio-signals, inside the plants, signals that flow into the circuitry of the synth, converting the imperceptible electrical fluctuations into sound.

The environmental sounds audible to human perception are also, simultaneously, recorded. Conversations, dogs, vehicles, silence, jet fighters, and echo. The sonic interpretation of the internal world of plants, and the sound world of these laneways are then bound together, capturing moments of multiple lives lived in real time, seemingly seperate yet intimately connected.

This project takes place in public spaces: a cafe frontage, outside a Community University Project, in the carpark of Ting Shuo, and at the entrance to a local electrical repair shop. People were curious, asking questions, and were interested to listen to and interact with the process during the recording sessions. These electronic sounds, interpretations of the invisible aliveness of plants, offered an unexpected shift in perspective. Via the ears, this small part of the world just got a little bigger.

Only one recording contains overdubs. Early on in the process additional percussion was added, and then mostly removed as it added very little. There are also pre-recorded sounds stored in a sampler on the synth that were gathered during the residency; the strings of a Guzheng, the percussive sounds of tables and water containers, the plasma arc of Hsinchu artist Kai-Yu Lin’s Somatic Plasma Resonator – these sounds are all triggered by plant voltage.

Electrical Minzu 35 is released on digital, and physical [CD], format. It is available for purchase via Bandcamp and Subvert, and at shows.

Thanks: Alice Hui-Sheng Chang, Nigel Brown, and Esme, at Ting Shuo Hear Say. Te Kōkī/ New Zealand School of Music for use of studio. Creative NZ for funding. Kai-Yu Lin for the sounds from the Somatic Plasma Resonator. William at Cafe Bar, Fangi Yi Liu, Chen En He, OOOnie, and Cia Himiân Lí in Tainan. Also: Lars of Colour Domes, Immanuel Dannenbring, DJ Rex Chen & Buddha Tiger Dog, Reuben Zahl, Chang Deng-Yao. Made Mantle Hood at the TNNUA, Tainan National University of the Arts. The local 7/11, and thanks always to Chrissie xxx!