Generative Experiment (MP3)

The blog of musician Alec Vance, aleatoric.backporchrevolution.com, takes its name — ale{atori}c, as he displays it in the site’s header — from a useful expansion of his given name. He’s Alex, his blog aleatoric, which Webster’s defines as “characterized by chance or indeterminate elements,” both of which words (chance, indeterminate) are closely associated with the work of John Cage. In a recent post, Vance dug into his exploration of aleatoric music, specifically “generative” music, and his attempts to, as he put it, “start simple.” Of course, as anyone who’s played with Conway’s Game of Life knows, the idea of a simple start is a meaningful one, for from simple starts complex structures may grow. Vance titled the 16th in his series of investigations into generative music “Opalize” (MP3), perhaps after Opal, the former record label of Brian Eno, whom he lists as one of his inspirations.

[audio:http://aleatoric.backporchrevolution.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/09/16-Opalize.mp3|titles=”Opalize”|artists=Alec Vance]

Vance’s vision here of generative music — that is, of music that is the result of a system set in motion, rather than of a hard-coded (aka “deterministic”) score that is interpreted — involves setting layers of randomized events atop each other. In this regard, he notes Eno’s Bloom app for Apple iOS, which involved “random ambient music based on a handful of parameters the user defines.” He also credits Terry Riley’s “In C,” whose structure of ambient counterpoint informs “Opalize.” Writes Vance:

I was able to take a simple 2-note passage (that forms the main drone) — playing only very long notes of C and F alternating which you can here, below — then separately for each of 2 additional “solo”synths, repitches randomly and remaps to a note on the C major pentatonic scale. These come and go randomly based on probabilities I set up and on multiples of 8 bars.

Then I added a drum machine loop, which also comes in based on random probabilities.

Finally, I added … some random feedback to the main drone and the drum machine at unexpected moments.

The result is very much as described, a series of shifting plates that provide a kind of doubled randomness: first, the structure of the individual lines, which are often interrupted by sudden variations (a rupture generally softened by the tonality Vance has employed), and second, the manner in which those varied plates interact. “Might be too jarring for the effect I was originally going for though,” he writes of his placement of the drum machine part, but overall the work, which is heard here in a 20-minute example, is only chaotic to the extent that it is lively — which is to say, full of life.

Original post at aleatoric.backporchrevolution.com.

These Guitar Picks Kill Genre Isolationists

Don’t mistake these recent guitar picks as ironic.

They were produced recently by the 12k label, whose logo adorns the one in the upper right corner. Continuing counter-clockwise, another features the icon from that logo, itself derived from the 5¼ inch floppy disk of days gone by. A third is a closeup of the data-accessible regions of the floppy, and (in the upper right corner of the pick) the write-protection tab. Those three were designed by the 12k label’s owner, musician Taylor Deupree, who is also a talented photographer.

The other two picks were designed by Marcus Fischer, whose music is a frequent presence on this site. One (continuing counter-clockwise) shows a tape-loop machine, and the final one shows the standard digital-audio controls (“record, play, pause and repeat,” as Fischer lists them on his site, unrecnow.com). I initially mistook the tape-loop picture for a boombox, when it was reproduced at a small size. Fischer has a particular interest in the intersection of design and tape loops, having produced a lovely cassette-loop device whose image was widely circulated after he made it public in March of this year (see: disquiet.com).

On first glance, it’s potentially tempting for some to mistake these items as a collective pun. The 12k label traffics largely in music that would be called “electronic,” so the idea of a pick, let alone one emblazoned with tape-loop machines and ancient digital-data devices, suggests a certain amount of ironic distance. But the opposite is the case. For one thing, the tape-loop machine taps into the tradition associated with Robert Fripp of live sonic layering (on Twitter.com, @compactrobot tweeted “Frippertronics!” a minute after @taylordeupree admonished me for my boombox misreading). For another, a lot of 12k artists, notably Christopher Willits, use the guitar as one of their primary instruments. The label released its guitronic collection EADGBE (featuring Willits, along with Fonica, Keith Fullerton Whitman, and Sébastian Roux) back in 2003. Fischer is currently finishing an album for 12k.

The picks are available as a set in the 12k.com store, filed under “Objects.”

Soothing Sounds for (My) Baby

[audio:http://luvsound.org/mint/pepper/tillkruess/downloads/tracker.php?remote&url=http://luvsound.org/files/luv025/01-Fredo_Viola-Lullaby.mp3,http://luvsound.org/mint/pepper/tillkruess/downloads/tracker.php?remote&url=http://luvsound.org/files/luv025/02-Autistici-Two_Sleep_States_In_A_Quiet_Environment.mp3,http://luvsound.org/mint/pepper/tillkruess/downloads/tracker.php?remote&url=http://luvsound.org/files/luv025/03-Nomad_Palace-Saigon.mp3,http://luvsound.org/mint/pepper/tillkruess/downloads/tracker.php?remote&url=http://luvsound.org/files/luv025/04-Hey_Exit-Twenty_Seconds.mp3,http://luvsound.org/mint/pepper/tillkruess/downloads/tracker.php?remote&url=http://luvsound.org/files/luv025/05-The_OoRay-Bubbaly.mp3,http://luvsound.org/mint/pepper/tillkruess/downloads/tracker.php?remote&url=http://luvsound.org/files/luv025/06-Nils_Quak-Printemps.mp3,http://luvsound.org/mint/pepper/tillkruess/downloads/tracker.php?remote&url=http://luvsound.org/files/luv025/07-Stephane_Leonard-Au_Clair_De_La_Lune_ReEdit.mp3,http://luvsound.org/mint/pepper/tillkruess/downloads/tracker.php?remote&url=http://luvsound.org/files/luv025/08-talkingmakesnosense-Holophrase.mp3,http://luvsound.org/mint/pepper/tillkruess/downloads/tracker.php?remote&url=http://luvsound.org/files/luv025/09-Benjamin_Klein-Tuba_Cloud.mp3,http://luvsound.org/mint/pepper/tillkruess/downloads/tracker.php?remote&url=http://luvsound.org/files/luv025/10-He_Can_Jog-Shhh_Before_Peyton.mp3,http://luvsound.org/mint/pepper/tillkruess/downloads/tracker.php?remote&url=http://luvsound.org/files/luv025/11-Brian_Green-Peyton.mp3|titles=”Lullaby”,”Two Sleep States In A Quiet Environment”,”Saigon”,”Twenty Seconds”,”Bubbaly”,”Printemps”,”Au Clair De La Lune (Re-Edit)”,”Holophrase”,”Tuba Cloud”,”Shhh! (Before Peyton)”,”Peyton”|artists=Fredo Viola,Autistici,Nomad Palace,Hey Exit,The Oo-Ray,Nils Quak,Stephane Leonard,Talkingmakesnosense,Benjamin Klein,He Can Jog,Brian Green]

Three weeks ago today, my soundworld changed forever. There was a lot of electronic beeping and human panting for many hours, and a not small amount of institutional chatter and directives, and then suddenly silence, into which arrived this incredible scream, a scream of life. This was late in the evening of August 31, 2010, when my wife gave birth to our daughter, who turns a momentous three weeks old this evening.

A group of electronic musicians has put together an incredible (and free to download) compilation of music intended as appropriate for the mix of quietude and gurgling playfulness that one might associate with a baby’s first experiences of life. The project’s production unfolded entirely unbeknownst to me, until the day before its release, when Erik Schoster, who makes music as He Can Jog, wrote to inform me of what he and his musician buddies had been up to.

The album is titled Soothing Sounds for Baby, after the collections by famed inventor-musician Raymond Scott. However this Soothing Sounds collection includes a subhead and a brief introduction that make me blush to reproduce here:

Soothing Sounds for Baby
A LuvSound Sampler for Marc Weidenbaum

You probably know that Marc Weidenbaum is the man behind the excellent and long-running Disquiet blog on ambient music (and beyond!) but you may have missed a recent tweet declaring his new fatherhood – true to form, it was couched in a reference to an ambient festival he’d planed to attend.

This seemed like a good enough excuse to take a moment and pay respect to someone who has tirelessly supported this little corner of the musical world we love so much. So, Marc: thanks for everything! Here are some sounds for you and baby (and you, dear reader) presented with warmth from a gaggle of LuvSound alumni.

Here, by the way, is the tweet in question:

Looks like I will miss the On Land & SFEMF festivals in San Francisco these next weeks. Good excuse: my first child was born Tuesday night.

11:11 AM Sep 2nd  via web  from Ashbury Heights, San Francisco

 
As the fellows who handle the raymondscott.blogspot.com reminded me, I listed Scott’s Soothing Sounds for Baby among the “16 Albums That Changed My Life” when I made the list in February 2009. Let’s just say that the ideas of life and of life changing are even clearer to me now.

You can flip back and forth through the playlist (up above) using the small arrows, or select an individual track down below — as well as click through to learn more about each contributing artist. The collection is housed at the luvsound.org netlabel.
Continue reading “Soothing Sounds for (My) Baby”

Sketches of Sound 6: Thorsten Sideb0ard

This is the sixth occurrence of a little Disquiet.com project called “Sketches of Sound”: inviting illustrators to sketch something sound-related. I post the drawing as the background of my Twitter account, twitter.com/disquiet, and then share a bit of information about the illustrator back on Disquiet.com. Call it “curating Twitter.”

The above drawing was done for me for this project by Thorsten Sideb0ard, who is possibly slightly more well known for his London-based electronic music label, Highpoint Lowlife. He has been scribbling on paper for many years, from club flyers to album artwork, with the occasional self-published comic. Over the past year, he has been devoting more and more time to drawing, uploading content regularly to his blog at drawingb0ard.blogspot.com, where you can see sketches, works in progress, and older material that has been found and scanned. This year he decided to lay the label to rest and concentrate on his illustration, and has started in earnest on a comic project entitled Physic or Surgery which is set in a near future post-industrial city, covering the interactions and lives of the cities many inhabitants.

In interviewed Sideb0ard back in 2003 (“Behind the 8-bit”), and he explained how the label he’d founded was inspired less by indies like Def Jam and Matador, and more by a computer database:

“I had just started working at a company who specialize in content-managed websites within the music industry, usually for small independent labels (the company is called State51), and they have this really cool database system for adding and manipulating content. I’m the system and network administrator for them, which is something I have done for years. However, I hadn’t done too much Perl coding, nor database work. So 8bitrecs.com started almost as a pet project to get up to speed with how a lot of their systems work, like a much smaller version.”

He’s also on Twitter, at twitter.com/sideb0ard.

The previous “Sketches of Sound” contributors were, in alphabetical order, Brian Biggs, Warren Craghead III, Dylan Horrocks, Minty Lewis, and Hannes Pasqualini.

Steampunk Minus the Punk (MP3)

C. Reider has recorded steampunk music, minus the punk — a single-track release of what he describes as “drones, drummachines and recorded sound” that has all the ambience of a dank tunnel and all the composure of a tape-music event, or perhaps it’s the other way around (MP3). Reider is a prolific and deeply curious (and curiosity-inducing) musician, some of whose most intriguing work involves employing drum machines for purposes other than beats. He announced the track’s availability via twitter.com/vuzhmusic last week. In it, recognizable pneumatic pounding shares space with insectoid chatter, whizzing burry sine waves, and sinuous droning. Any one of those items might, in fact, be sourced from the drum machines in question, but there’s even money that in fact it’s the least likely element — quite likely, it’s those drones that are, in fact, some standard issue drum machine tweaked far from its factory-preset comfort zone.

[audio:http://www.archive.org/download/JNN052-CReider-SteamInspector/JNN052-Steam_inspector_vbr.mp3|titles=”Steam Inspector”|artists=C Reider]

If the title summons up some Hayao Miyazaki vision of a homunculoid cartoon character making its way through a realm equal parts fantasy and dessication, you aren’t far off.

More on Reider at vuzhmusic.com.