The Name of the Game Is the Public Domain (MP3)

Collage as surrealist melodrama

The 22nd in the Radius podcast series is a collage committed by Public Domain, aka the London, England, duo of Jane Burton and Doris Lake. It’s a string of static-laden sampled fragments, spoken bits and snatches of music, strung together in a model that fits somewhere between surrealist melodrama and willfully distracted knob-turning. The duo says they use humor and found materials to express something akin to the “collective unconscious.” The key element here may be the static, because it means that the reused goods are transformed at least once before context lends a subsequent mental or otherwise associative realignment.

Track originally posted for free download and streaming at soundcloud.com/radius-9 and theradius.tumblr.com. More on Public Domain at its facebook.com page.

Learning to Love the Static (MP3)

The track at its opening tells the ear to pay attention

From light hum with a sonar blip, across a brief plateau of fuzzy-circuit texture, into a brief swell of bug-zapper droning, and on through a series of pitched undulations, sound-element fade-ins, and tonal fragments. That is one unhelpfully parsimonious description of a recently uploaded track by C. Cu titled “As a child it dreamt in fear of coventrate, as an adult she learnt to love to bomb.” It’s brief, the track, arguably more brief than its title. It’s a study in small sounds that accrue meaning through narrative and contrast. Contrast provides incremental narrative, how one thing resonates in the ear and the imagination versus the things that precede, follow, or overlap it. Narrative allows for associations not just in a linear process, but how later sounds reflect earlier ones, and how earlier ones prepare the ear for later ones. The first heavy swell of C. Cu’s track would be relatively quiet, were it not foretold by something barely discernible from a room tone. The track at its opening tells the ear to pay attention, and then it proceeds to reward that attention with carefully posited instances.

Track originally posted at soundcloud.com/ccu. More on C. Cu, based in Belfast, Ireland, at springtimeinnepal.tumblr.com and twitter.com/limnul.

Emphasizing the Gleaming (MP3)

Thomas Park reworks the national anthem.


Thomas Park, who records as Mystified, is a frequent participant in the weekly Disquiet Junto projects (at soundcloud.com), and a prolific member of the international array of musicians who contribute to netlabels. When posting some recent rewordings of an old 78rpm recording of “The Star Spangled Banner,” he mentioned, generously, that a recent Junto project was part of his inspiration. In making something new from the old recording of the national anthem, he emphasizes the gleaming — the four versions he has posted move from rousing, octave-leaping exuberance to something spectral and spacious. The third version in particular is simultaneously vaporous and introspective in ways one might not associate with the source material (MP3).

[audio:http://archive.org/download/Mystified-StarSpangledBannerOuttakestreetrunk213/SSB3120.mp3|titles=”SSB3120″|artists=Mystified]

The U.S. national anthem is an interesting subject of interpretation because of how it stands as a sort of sonic parallel to the flag. It seems like a year doesn’t pass when someone isn’t criticized for singing it too slowly, or fumbling a performance, or dressing inappropriately. Park opens himself to criticism by so thoroughly reworking the material, far beyond recognizability. Yet in the end, what he has produced is so stately, it seems to deflect criticism deftly by suggesting itself as being deeply inspired. Then again, Park isn’t so sure what people will say, which is why he adds at the end of the brief liner note accompanying the tracks: “Any interpretations of these pieces are left to the listeners– Mystified viewed this project as an aesthetic one, not a political one.”

Full set available for free download at archive.org. More on Mystified at mystifiedmusic.com.

Update 2012.04.06: After posting this, I was informed by Park/Mystified that John Tocher was the person who introduced him to the source audio, not the person who recorded it. The source recording is, in fact, anonymous. This article has been corrected to reflect this information.

Reflect, Remix: The Top 10 Posts & Searches of March 2012

The top ten most popular posts (out of 36 total) of the month included (1) the overview of the 10th Junto project: Disquiet Junto Project 0010: “The Reflective Remix,” in which participants in the weekly Disquiet Junto project at Soundcloud.com each reworked a track from one of the previous nine projects.

Eight of the most popular posts of the month were drawn from the site’s daily Downstream department of freely legally intentionally downloadable MP3s: (2) Andras Hargitai‘s snare dub; (3) Nicholas Davis improvising with Natalie Chami (“Duet or Duel, or Both”); (4) Yasuo Akai‘s digital blues; (5) Craque, a split second before the funk; (6) Earsmack‘s apparent mistake (“Synth Almost-Pop”); (7) ioflow‘s exploration of improvisation and everyday sound; (8) Scanner‘s educational minute of listening; (9) Ambienteer‘s mining the dark side of a common door.

Also in the top 10, (10) one of the weekly automated summaries of the past week at twitter.com/disquiet.

The most popular post of the past 60 days is LX(RMX), a collection of originally commissioned works by Scanner, Steve Roden, and six other musicians, all reworking sounds of urban Lisbon in tribute to the late poet Fernando Pessoa.

The most popular post of the past 90 days is a study in noises, white and otherwise, by Phil Julian.

The most popular searches of the month were: junto, ghostly, hip-hop, bars, youtube, apparat, Autechre, buddha, harold budd live, illbient, ioflow, n4tural, rephlex, sitting, so percussion, squarepusher.