Past Week at Twitter.com/Disquiet

  • While I was trying a chord progression on my ukulele my 21-month-old again said “noise.” The tone was approving. #
  • My 21-month-old said “noise” after playing with a zipper. Father’s Day arrived early this year. #
  • 6pm bells, of which this tweet is a kind of echo. #
  • Pondering the sound design of Nikita: http://t.co/1YpGpTRB #
  • Hollywood improved its sequels by watching TV. Now it must make them faster. 5/2014 for Planet of the Apes? 7/2014 for X-Men: First Class? #
  • My extensive profile of painter Mel Ramos is in June/July @SactownMagazine. Not online (yet) but brief mention here: http://t.co/AIMEEfk4 #

Continue reading “Past Week at Twitter.com/Disquiet”

Hot Doggin’ (MP3)

Beats from Virginia

On first listen, and fifth, what to make of “Wawa.” by Glia, whose soundcloud.com/glia account lists the state of Virginia as point of origin? There’s a slow and steady if enjoyably off-kilter beat, and two main flourishes: a flanging noise like an excited drum head and an occasional snippet of female voice echoed to dubby effect. The track as posted on SoundCloud is accompanied by a photo of a white-label piece of vinyl, and it’s free of any explanatory tags, which isn’t quite the Internet equivalent of white-label vinyl, but close. In any case, it’s a great little two-minute rhythmic treat. When there’s this little information associated with a track, what little there is takes on greater meaning, and in this case the location, Virginia, combined with the arid and inventive beat brings to mind Timbaland and Missy Elliott, commendably.

There is one other bit of text aligned with the Glia track: it links through to the typographically inventive and only slightly less rhythmically resolute “hºly W A w ∆” by ⒿⒶⓂⒺⓇⓈoⓃ, at soundcloud.com/jamerson. This track has a more pronounced keyboard part and slightly more limited instrumental expanses, and seems to have provided source material for Glia’s piece. The female vocal is still brief, even by club music standards, but it’s more intelligible than in Glia’s, and a deep synth swell in the final third serves as evidence of interest in compositional development. The Jamerson track is accompanied by a photo of a Wawa corner store, the sign only partially visible.

Glia track posted for free download at at soundcloud.com/glia, and Jamerson’s at soundcloud.com/jamerson.

(Side note: I pretty much lived on Wawa hot dogs my first semester at college. By “pretty much” I don’t mean I ate other things. By “pretty much” I am gauging the extent to which I almost didn’t live: by Thanksgiving I ended up in the hospital for something akin to malnutrition. There was a strike by employees at the school, and we were given back the 70 bucks or so a week that our fees had included for food, and then left to our own devices to feed ourselves. What I didn’t spend on hotdogs at Wawa I spent on records.)

“It’s the Hum”: The Sound Design of ‘Nikita’

In which the title character pauses to note the room tone

For reasons beyond my comprehension, the time during which I am writing this has become transfixed by the concept of *spoilers*, which have become something akin to a moral panic in recent years. It’s not unforeseeable that down the road the word will likely have asterisks permanently affixed to it. As I note when necessary over on goodreads.com: I promise that below I don’t “spoil” anything that would have bothered me had I known about it in advance. That said, I cannot think of anything I have read or watched that would have been spoiled had I known the plot-advancing facts beforehand. (Not that it applies here specifically, but my firm belief is that the only real way to “spoil” something is to detail any serious flaws in logic, to the extent that you then can’t get them out of your head as you consume the work.)

The CW series Nikita is at its heart science fiction. Nikita doesn’t have aliens, or sentient computers, or superpowered characters, but it takes place just enough technological moments ahead in the future that it exists apart from the everyday reality of its viewers. And like much science fiction, Nikita has at its heart a spaceship. The key difference is that its spaceship is underground. The spaceship is called Division. It’s an off-the-books government agency that has gone rogue; that rogue status is unbeknownst to most of its members. Division isn’t a spaceship, of course. It’s a paramilitary compound built of concrete, glass, and steel — and decorated with the Design Within Reach catalog.

Like many basic-cable television series, Nikita has a limited budget. And like the more inventive of these series, Nikita makes the most of what it has, especially in terms of its sets. As far as locales are concerned, the show for much of its initial two seasons maintained opposing poles: the desolate if stylish loft where the title character (played by Maggie Q) hid out, and this subterranean organization called Division that is the focus of her vengeful ire. As season two progressed, Nikita’s hideout was abandoned, and as the season came to an end, as it did a week ago, it looked like Division would soon follow.

Having long ago escaped Division and sought to destroy it from outside, Nikita ventures, during the show’s two-part season finale, back into the mothership (the season-ending episode was titled “Homecoming,” with a lack of subtlety that is a trademark of the series). The Nikita viewer has spent much of the show deep inside Division, following the camera’s gaze as it wandered down concrete hallways, hovered over computer banks, and lingered in the offices of the enjoyably malevolent senior management. But Nikita, we come to recognize, hasn’t herself been in Division in a very long time. Brief flashbacks taunt her as she finally re-enters the complex and makes her way toward her target: the scenery-chewing sociopath, played with relish by Xander Berkeley, who runs the place.

Midway through the episode, Nikita pauses while descending an air shaft (pictured above) and says,

“I finally realized what I hate about this place. It’s the hum.”

The hum, clearly, isn’t what she hates about Division. She hates that it carries off routine assassinations, that it puts kill chips in its employees, that it has hijacked American democracy, and that it has stolen the youth of its recruits, herself included. Her comment about the hum is a deadpan joke before a storm of gunfire. And it brings to mind the YouTube videos of another, actual science-fiction starship: the ones showing nothing but the low-level rumble of various generations of the Star Trek Enterprise (see below). These hums are the room tones of fictional places. They are the breath that brings sets to life, that makes the set decorator’s faux concrete seem to reflect sounds like concrete, that makes an ordinary studio feel like it is situated deep below ground.

The look on Nikita’s face at this moment is perfect because it interrupts the illusion cast by the sound design’s hum. She hasn’t just infiltrated the heavily protected edifice; she’s broken the fourth wall as well.

6-String IDM: The Top 10 Posts & Searches of May 2012

Among the top 10 most popular posts of the past month, May 2012, out of a total of 28 posts, all but two were drawn from the daily recommended free downloads of the site’s Downstream section: (1) XYZR_KX plays Autechre on guitar, (2) Mark Browne dips his tech in boiling water, (3) Schrödinger’s Dog recognizes the fax machine as a dubstep muse, (4) Rawore plays around, (5) Hey Exit adds a touch of the electronic to his guitar, (6) Greg Surges employs SoundCloud as a sketchbook, (7) Phillip Wilkerson records the Floridian quotidian (i.e., birds), and (8) Federico Durand‘s album preview serves as a composition unto itself.

The two remaining most popular posts were sets of automated Saturday collections of the previous week’s twitter.com/disquiet posts, from (9) May 5 and (10) May 12.

The most popular searches on the site during the month of May were: aaron, distinction, pessoa, mixes, alan morse davies, cicada, crewest, darkly, garde, intone, iron chef of music, lique, mallet, monolake, n4tural, neilwiernik, selun, sharing, sol rezza, stasisfield.