Neurodivergent Orchestra


The Point of Science

is Making Things Explode


Excerpt From Liner Notes by PEK

“… This music contains a great deal of playfulness and humor which is often lacking in the world of pure improvisation.  I have long valued humor in music as a method of engaging people and I think this band is the best example so far of an Evil Clown ensemble which centers humor as a critical element… The improvised words have been developing along a certain theme which has to do with Science and Monsters.  The first or second time that we did this Count Robot and Tim had been watching an old Japanese Godzilla movie the night before and had discussed the need for Giant Monster Insurance.  That came out in our performance and the theme of Monsters and Science gone awry has continued through the sets since.…”

The Point of Science is Making Things Explode:

Neurodivergent Orchestra

Livestreamed to YouTube from

Evil Clown Headquarters, Waltham MA

22 March 2025

1) The Point of Science is Making Things Explode – 1:10:59

2) I Married a Potato from Outer Space – 5:39

PEK – wacky banter, clarinet, basset horn, contralto & contrabass clarinets, alto & tenor saxophones, glissophone, piccolo oboe, penny whistle, accordion, melodica, ms-20, moog subsequent, novation peak, Linnstrument controllers, lfo violin, cow bells, chimes, Tibetan bells, d]ronin, 17 string bass, gongs, plate gong, rubber chickens

John Fugarino – trumpets, flugelhorn, trombone, French horn, penny whistle, nord stage 3, lfo violin, array mbira, spring and chime rod boxes, balafon, xylophone, almglocken, crank siren, Englephone, danmo, chimes, wood & temple blocks

Eric Dahlman – trumpet, overtone singing, moog subsequent, novation peak, Linnstrument controllers, nord stage 3, crank siren, ratchet, seed pod rattle, orchestral castanets, balafon, xylophone, almglocken, brontosaurus bell, bells, gongs, rubber chickens

Count Robot – wacky banter, drone jar synth, lights, fx pedals, gongs, wood & temple blocks, balafon, xylophone, almglocken, theremin with moogerfooger, 17 string bass, spring & chime rod boxes, moog subsequent, novation peak, Linnstrument controllers, nord stage 3, ms-20, lfo violin, lfo percolator, bells, orchestral chimes, gongs, clown hammer, rubber chickens

DNA Girl – wacky banter, vocals, 4 string electric mandolin, goldtone octave mandolin, fx pedals, pows, potatoes, gongs, crotales, glockenspiel, log drums, wood & temple blocks, balafon, seed pod rattle, Tibetan bells, brontosaurus bell, gong, rubber chicken

Tim Mungenast – wacky banter, overtone singing, 1965 hagstrom I electric guitar, fx pedals, nagoya, folderol, bells, chimes, brontosaurus bell, log drum

Scott Samenfeld – 4 string fretless bass, melodica

Joel Simches – live to 2-track recording, real-time signal processing

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Liner Notes by PEK

Every once in a while, a new ensemble gets started at Evil Clown.  Sometimes the new unit has a particular aesthetic problem, and an appropriate band name assigned defined in advance.  For example, Metal Chaos Ensemble started as a duet between me and Yuri Zbitnov as soon as we started to work with newly acquired metal instruments in 2015, and Turbulence was formed to feature groups of horn players – sometime as only horn players and sometimes with bass and drums.  Sometimes the new unit is spun off from an existing ensemble with some variation or different set of resources.  Simulacrum was spun off from Metal Chaos Ensemble to include even more electronic instrumentation and signal processing and to not require a drummer.

Sometimes the new unit comes about because new players join the roster and contribute to a session by an existing ensemble, and it is clear their contribution adds a distinctive voice to the Evil Clown palette which deserves a new band name.  Such is the case with Neurodivergent.  Count Robot, DNA Girl and Tim Mungenast played on two Expanse records in 2023 (Swathe in March and Gamut in July).  They bring an odd sensibility that involves improvised spoken word banter between the three of them and a more pop-culture oriented use of guitar, mandolin and electronics than is typical in Evil Clown ensembles.  For the third set featuring these three relative newbies, I rolled out the new band name, Neurodivergent, to explore combinations of their aesthetic as a group of players with a long history with various combinations of players from the Evil Clown Roster. 

While most of the Evil Clown ensembles perform strictly instrumental music that does not contain words, a few of the bands do use words and I like how the text provides an entry point for the audience to access the music.  Metal Chaos Ensemble uses text from literature and movies and Axioms uses the Poetry of the amazing poet Jane SpokenWord who recites her words in small ensembles which also feature the amazing bass playing of her husband Albey onBass.  In these settings, the words come from fixed text, but the delivery and the choice of which words and when to place them are improvised.  In Neurodivergent, the improvisation of the words is on another level… None of the text is fixed in advance; all the words are improvised in reaction to the Wacky Banter of the others.  This music contains a great deal of playfulness and humor which is often lacking in the world of pure improvisation.  I have long valued humor in music as a method of engaging people and I think this band is the best example so far of an Evil Clown ensemble which centers humor as a critical element.

The Point of Science is Making Explosions is the 7th set of this project and the 3rd to be credited to Neurodivergent Orchestra.  The “Orchestra” suffix is added to the end of an ensemble name when the band gets larger – usually at least 8 players, but here for a septet.   This lineup is the same as the last set except drummer Andy Korajczyk who was sick this last week.  The improvised words have been developing along a certain theme which has to do with Science and Monsters.  The first or second time that we did this Count Robot and Tim had been watching an old Japanese Godzilla movie the night before and had discussed the need for Giant Monster Insurance.  That came out in our performance and the theme of Monsters and Science gone awry has continued through the sets since.

Anyway, we had a terrific Livestream performance.  I really like this set and I bet you do too…

– PEK 3/23/2025


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