Russian Post-Turntable Turntablism (MP3s)

The Dusted Wax netlabel continues its forays into post-turntable turntablism with Mizontiq‘s A Room Without Mirrors. The album, coming in at 14 tracks, ranges widely, from downtempo lounge to spaced-out jams. There are two certain highlights: “Vocain” takes an Eartha Kitt”“ish wail and turns it into something akin to a muted Jimi Hendrix solo, filtered amid blissfully detuned drums and a fuzzed-out bass solo (MP3). “The Walls Have Ears” seems, like “Vociain,” to take a pre-existing soul track as its source material, and then proceeds to break up the drums and muffle the vocal, heightening the reverberations while desiccating the original (MP3); if Serge Gainsbourg had been Om Records’ house producer, it might have sounded like this.

[audio:http://www.archive.org/download/DWK116/Mizontiq_-_09_-_Vocain.mp3|titles=”Vocain”|artists=Mizontiq] [audio:http://www.archive.org/download/DWK116/Mizontiq_-_03_-_The_Walls_Have_Ears.mp3|titles=”The Walls Have Ears”|artists=Mizontiq]

Get the full set at dustedwax.org. More on Mizontiq, who’s based in Russia (where exactly is unclear), at his soundcloud.com/mizontiq page.

Sneak Peek at New Disquiet.com Project: Disquiet Junto

This post wasn’t intended to go live until Tuesday, and there was a chance it wouldn’t be written at all. Yesterday saw the launch of a new communal music project associated with Disquiet.com. It’s called “Disquiet Junto” and it’s hosted over at soundcloud.com.

Here’s how it works: on Friday, which is to say yesterday, January 8, I posted an assignment, an “idea” for a piece of music. A deadline was set for this coming Monday, January 9, at midnight, by which time anyone who wanted to participate would post their own original track that acted on the assignment. The first assignment is:

“Please record the sound of an ice cube rattling in a glass, and make something of it.”

It’s only Saturday evening as I type this, and there are already 51 members of the group, and as of three hours ago a total of 18 completed tracks have been posted, many though not all available for free download. I didn’t know if I’d ever write this post, because I didn’t know if anyone would participate. But participating they are — not only responding in sound to the assignment, but listening to and commenting on each other’s tracks. Collectively, the 18 tracks have been listened to almost 600 times in barely 24 hours, and there are over 70 comments, most from one contributing musician to another. Here’s a stark contrast: the recent Disquiet.com music project Instagr/am/bient has been listened to almost 17,000 times since its launch a week and a half ago, and there have been a total of 31 comments.

The variety of responses to “Disquiet Junto 0001” is just as thrilling as the number of responses is. The idea of making music from the sound of ice in a glass has yielded a very short story from Mark Rushton, some detailed phonography from Mike Bullock, a lovely mix of buggy whirring and gentle melodic phases from My Fun, and subdued funk from Open Heart Sound, just to point out a few.

I have many ideas for things to do as part of Disquiet Junto, and will roll them out in coming weeks. I also have much more to say about where the project comes from, culturally and sonically and socially, but for the moment, let’s let the assembled musicians’ excellent contributions speak for themselves.

Check out the Disquiet Junto page at soundcloud.com.

PS: The word “junto” comes from the name of a society that Benjamin Franklin formed in Philadelphia during the early 1700s as “a structured forum of mutual improvement.” I learned of it while reading, recently, the Franklin biography by Walter Isaacson, who penned the recent Steve Jobs bio. I highly recommend the Franklin book, and Isaacson’s book on Albert Einstein. I have not yet read the Jobs one.

Update: With a little under 40 hours to go before deadline, there were already 24 entries by as many musicians.

Past Week at Twitter.com/Disquiet

Fennesz Modern Dance Score (MP3)

[audio:http://www.touchshop.org/touchradio/Radio73.mp3|titles=”On Invisible Pause”|artists=Fennesz]

The first Touch Radio free download of the year is nothing less than a Fennesz performance for modern dance. The work is “On Invisible Pause,” choreographed by Christopher Arouni, and it was part of SkÃ¥nes Dansteater’s performance HAZE on November 4, 2011, in Malmö, Sweden. The piece is lengthy and rangy, encompassing vast stretches of bright drone, and melodic sways of Fennesz’s trademark guitar (MP3). A brief note at the organization’s website provides some information on the project:

In On Invisible Pause six dancers hover between the visible and the invisible. What does it mean to be present, without necessarily being visible to the outside world, or visible even to the person standing next to you, the closest? Austrian electronica pioneer Christian Fennesz has composed the music for the piece.

Track originally posted at touchradio.org.uk. More on the dance company at skanesdansteater.se. More on Christian Fennesz at fennesz.com. The recording was mixed by Christopher Arouni, Christian Fennesz, and Anders Myhrman.

Chimes and More Chimes

Perhaps the only thing better than a wind chime — the only thing more redolent with the generative wonder inherent in this most basic of automated instruments — is a pair of wind chimes. That is precisely what Josh Davison, who goes by Stringbot, posted recently to his soundcloud.com/stringbot account. It’s a brief track, under a minute in length, but eminently loop-able. The beauty of having a pair of chimes is the extent to which they act independently, seemingly far more so than do the individual rungs of a single chime. The result is a gentle cacophony.

Davison’s sole stated regret? That he had but a mono microphone at this instance: “I wish I had a stereo mic with me, this is two sets of wind chimes. I was standing in between them.”