About

Meet OoB: DIY Creative Spirit

OoB 2022

I’d like to introduce my band — its name is OoB. That’s short for “Opposite of Blink” which is what we’re trying to achieve in our music.

But I’m not telling you about OoB because we’ve got something to sell you. We don’t have music products or t-shirts, downloads, NFTs, or framed autographed posters. You can’t buy tickets to see us play and it’s doubtful we’ll ever perform in a place you’d be going to anyway.

That’s right, we’re pretty private. But we play on a regular basis because there’s something about it that is way more basic than making a business out of our art. We do it because we want to — and have to.

My band mates are guys I have been playing with since 1996 — Mark J. Rosoff and David Zekman. We were even jamming long before that, but in 1996, we decided to become a performing group called TVS and two fingers.

The “TVS” is me, of course, and “two fingers” refers to the fact that Rosoff and Zekman were members of an experimental music group called fingers. By the time we joined together, there was just the two of them.

I was a fan of fingers’ wild, stream-of-consciousness “sound art”, using alternative instruments from pots and pans to amplified toys. And in their strange sound, I heard an opening for some words — not song lyrics, but poetry.

I remember our first session together — literally playing in Rosoff’s single car garage. I brought some poems and they played some sounds and we found a way for the two to work together.

The impetus to form a group was a new Fort Collins community festival that was coming up at the time — First Night, a New Year’s Eve arts festival that used multiple downtown venues and hired local artists.

That first First Night was the beginning of a career that took TVS and two fingers all over Colorado, Wyoming, and even on some tours on the East Coast. We were “alternative” performers and we played in a lot of “alternative” situations — like performing from the steps of the Great Stupa of Dharmakaya as it was being built.

A lot of our work, though, was done in schools. We not only performed, but also did workshops, encouraging kids to write their own words. If they didn’t have any words, then we encouraged them to play sound art — and perform together for each other.

One good story to tell about that comes from one of our East Coast tours. We were working in an inner city school in Bridgeport, Connecticut — a school that housed both a high school population and an elementary school group. We did a workshop with a large group of high schoolers, encouraging them to write some spontaneous poetry, pick instruments and work together to create their own pieces.

The high schoolers seemed to find this all pretty funny, until the auditorium filled with little kids — and then they were on the spot to perform their new pieces in “public”. They cut the jokes and got to work and the entire concert was a roaring success.

This wasn’t just an isolated experience, but something we experienced over and over again in so many different schools. We enjoyed playing our own stuff, of course, but seeing kids open up was special indeed.

All throughout our 17 years together as TVS and two fingers, we had also been working on an “alter ego” group we called the Sound Art Orchestra. We included other musicians, dispensed with the poetry, and just played “music”.

We took this out into public a number of times, allowing audience members to join us in long, otherworldly jams.  Perhaps our most prestigious performance as SAO was a collaboration with Dance Express – composing and performing a live soundtrack for original dance pieces, culminating in two grand performances at the Lory Student Center Theater at CSU.

But finally, especially once TVS and two fingers stopped performing, we just settled in to play. We kept calling ourselves the Sound Art Orchestra until one night, after listening to the recording of one especially harrowing piece of work, I said, quite flippantly, “That’s the opposite of blinking!” That comment produced a howl and became our new band name, “Opposite of Blink”.

What we’re after is a sense of ecstasy — to be transported to another place and time by our sounds and the experience of playing. This happened quite a few times when we were performing on stage, but not nearly as much as it does now in our home studio. We play and play until we finally achieve lift off and that in itself is something.

Over the years together, the one important thing we have maintained is a do-it-yourself creative spirit. We used that spirit to create our own artistic niche that took us on the road for years and it still keeps us in the studio.

The reason I bring all this up is to encourage other would-be artists out there to get off the couch and make some noise. You don’t have to be a professional to make it worthwhile — you just have to have the desire to express yourself creatively.

OoB released its first piece of music – “Meet OoB: Soundtracks for the 22nd Century” — on YouTube last September. Currently, OoB has just released a brand new piece on YouTube titled “OoB: Playing With Fire (Still)” and the group also provided the soundtrack for my March 2022 YouTube release, “Incredible Cranes Nomads on the Move”.

Listen to OoB if you get a chance. We may get around to releasing the rest of our recordings someday — but maybe not. We may be too busy playing.

TVS and two fingers Bio

TVS and two fingers have been involving audiences since 1996 with a mind-teasing mix of original spoken words with sound art made with traditional and VERY non-traditional instruments…

TVS and two fingers

TVS and two fingers: Mark J Rosoff, Dave Zekman, Tim Van Schmidt

TVS and two fingers Bio

TVS and two fingers have been creating their unique combination of performance poetry and sound art since the group’s debut performance in Fort Collins, Colorado on New Year’s Eve 1996. Poet Tim Van Schmidt joined forces with Mark J. Rosoff and Dave Zekman, members of the experimental music group two fingers, in the Fall of 1996 to record their first independent album release, “More Poets Inside,” a limited edition cassette. The group debuted the album and their act during their hometown’s inaugural First Night festival.

Since then, TVS and two fingers have performed extensively in Colorado and Wyoming, as well as in the East Coast states of Connecticut and Massachusetts. The group has also released three more independent albums, including “Live,” “Dreaming of the Pyramids,” and “Air and Words,” published with a book version of the words. TVS and two fingers have appeared on two albums by Australian storyteller and didjeridoo player Paul Taylor and on a CD compilation of poetry from Sparrows, Colorado’s Performance Poetry Festival. They also recorded and produced the CD release by award-winning Colorado poet James Tipton, “Letters from a Stranger.” Another independent releasefor TVS and two fingers was “Live on Homegrown Radio,” a recording from a recent performance and interview on Fort Collins public radio station KRFC-FM. Other work includes a ten year retrospective of the best of the band’s recordings, titled “Big Treasure, The Best of Ten Years,” release in October 2007.

TVS and two fingers have sought out a wide variety of venues for presenting their art. They have played in coffeehouses, nightclubs, book stores, theaters, festivals, residential treatment centers, craft shows, art galleries, museums, parks, libraries, arts centers, living rooms, churches, urban youth centers and on radio. They have also supported a variety of nonprofit organizations by playing numerous benefit performances, including appearances for Public Radio for the Front Range, Swallow Hill Music Association, Friends of the Library, RockyMountainCenter for the Book, Open Door Mission and the American Cancer Society. Not only does the group perform, but they also host open mike opportunities for other poets to read to improvisational background sound.

Along with performing to the general public, TVS and two fingers have worked extensively at schools, doing performances and workshops for students in all grades- from pre-school through university graduate level. On two occasions, they did performance workshops with ColumbineHigh School students in the time of healing following the Columbine tragedy. TVS and two fingers have worked with a variety of school organizations, including special performing arts schools, charter schools and public schools.

 “Temple of Dendur” (TVS) by TVS and two fingers

More Poets Inside – First cassette by TVS and two fingers