Illustration of the Stamp Office
Performance

The Things That Pass Through

Sat 26 Apr 2025
12.00 - 12.15 & 12:30 - 12:45
Pay What You Can
Stamp Stair
South Wing

In their take-over of Somerset House’s Stamp Stair, percussionists David Soin Tappeser and Sarathy Korwar perform a rhythmic dialogue, revisiting the sonic ghosts of the building’s extractive histories. 

Legal and commercial stamps are impressed partly by steam-presses located in the basement and partly by hand in rooms on the ground floor… The pedestrian on the Victoria Embankment who notes the clatter of mechanism behind the barred windows under the terrace of Somerset House is listening to the process by which the State makes paper into gold. - Needham, R., Somerset House, Past and Present, London: 1906, p. 257   

In the performance ‘The Things That Pass Through’, Hylozoic/Desires (H/D) address the invisible exchanges, repurposings and entanglements that one ran, and continue to ripple across the physical and intangible dividing lines imposed by Empire.   

Referencing the sonic history of Somerset House, H/D propose a rhythmic dialogue mimicking the incessant noise of stamps that once echoed its hallways and stairwells. Percussionists Sarathy Korwar and David Soin Tappeser will take over the building’s central Stamp Stairs. Unable to see each other, while occupying varying levels in its architectural hierarchy, they will engage in a ‘jugalbandhi’, a musical exchange of messages that - like the ideas, salt and stones that, picked up from the land, crossed the ‘Great Salt Hedge of India’, and became of the land - defy borders, divisions and separations. In doing this, they form new logics of argumentation and play. 

About David Soin Tappeser

David Soin Tappeser is an artist, drummer and composer based between London and New Delhi. his practice explores socio-eco-spiritual-tempo-somatic dimensions of sound. his performances and compositions use rhythm as their primary medium. they explore intercultural entanglements, parallel histories and extra-human frames of reference while thinking about environmental destruction and sociopolitical fissures. 

 

Header Image: Stamp Office, Somerset House, Thomas Rowlandson and Auguste Charles Pugin 1809. Hand-colored etching and aquatint. Courtesy of Heritage Image Partnership Ltd and Alamy Stock Photo

About Sarathy Korwar

Sarathy Korwar is a drummer, composer, producer and bandleader.. Korwar has established himself as one of the most original and compelling voices in the UK jazz scene. His music fuses jazz, electronics, Indian folk and classical influences with a focus on decoloniality, community, race and transcendence. His latest album, KALAK, is an Indo-futurist manifesto that celebrates a rich South Asian culture of music and literature and urges a cure for historical amnesia. The Guardian placed it at #2 in their Best Global Albums of 2022. In 2023, KALAK won the Songlines award for best album (Asia/Pacific). 

Korwar has toured and collaborated with the likes of Anoushka Shankar, Kamasi Washington, Metropole Orchestra and Shabaka Hutchings and performed at festivals/venues including Sydney Opera House, North Sea Jazz Festival, London Jazz Festival, Dekmantel and many more. His music has been featured in the New York Times, The Guardian, The Quietus, Pitchfork and Rolling Stone along with support from NPR, KEXP, BBC Radio 1, Radio 3 and 6 Music.