Is the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Getting Electronically Mindful?

Or is it just biding its time before it catches up with grunge?

The just-announced 2013 nominees for induction into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame are an especially technologically-oriented bunch. It’s a generation increasingly marked by the ever-rising influence of technology at a practical, day-to-day level in popular music.

The 2012 inductees were certainly tech-oriented in their own right; the 17 inductees last year included three production legends (Tom Dowd, Glyn Johns, Cosimo Matassa) as well as sample-innovators the Beastie Boys.

The widespread electronic nature of this year’s list, however, goes far beyond last year’s showing. The Hall of Fame announced the nominees yesterday morning, October 4, and with this cohort the technological is as much an aesthetic matter as it is one of technique. Of course, these are just the nominees, not the inductees. Quickie rules cheat sheet: “To be eligible for nomination, an individual artist or band must have released its first single or album at least 25 years prior to the year of nomination.” In a couple years Nirvana, whose Bleach was released in 1989, will be eligible, and the ensuing grunge years will provide plenty of rockist comfort for the Hall of Fame. For balance, industrial act Nine Inch Nails, whose Pretty Hate Machine was released in 1989, will be eligible the same year. Brian Eno, it’s worth noting, is not yet a Hall of Fame inductee, despite his production of such major-league inductees as Talking Heads and U2.

This year the nominees include the following: Two early rap stalwarts, N.W.A and Public Enemy, are sure to draw attention to their production teams, notably Dr. Dre and the Bomb Squad. Donna Summer is nominated; her collaborations with producer Giorgio Moroder are major milestones in pop music’s adoption of a purely electronic instrumental foundation (the disco single “I Feel Love” from her 1977 album, I Remember Yesterday, is widely considered a watershed moment in this transition). The ensemble Chic, although quite grounded in r&b virtuosity, was very much a studio endeavor for co-founder Bernard Edwards; the group’s tight, mechanized recordings — brittle hand claps, lockstep tempos — set a template for the more willfully synthetic dance music to come.

And then there’s the prog-rock vote: it centers on Rush, but should consider as early prototypes the adventurous early hevay metal band Deep Purple, whose sound was deeply shaped by Jon Lord’s organ, and the art-rock outfit Procol Harum.

Even the Meters deserve some consideration from this perspective, given the extent to which the rhythm ensemble’s modern reputation owes much to the frequent sampling of their back catalog.

In fact, of the 15 nominees announced today, just six are difficult to situate as electronic fellow travelers: the Paul Butterfield Blues Band, Heart, Joan Jett and the Blackhearts, Albert King, the Marvelletes, and Randy Newman.

Again, these are the nominees. The actual inductees will be announced soon, once voting has been tallied. Between five and seven of the nominees are expected to be inducted, and they will share the limelight with additional figures in the form of the Ahmet Ertegun Award (for non-performers), a batch of “early influences,” and the “Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Award for Musical Excellence” (which along with the Ertegun award is generally where producers get the nod). It’s quite possible that the inductees will be selected primarily from the gang of six listed above who have little in the way of a technological sensibility.

Read the annotated list of nominees at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame’s website, rockhall.com/pressroom.

And consider voting for those you consider most worthy. This is the first year that the Hall of Fame is factoring in a “fans’ ballot”: rockhall.com/get-involved.

Disquiet Junto Project 0040: Music + 1

The Assignment: Turn a Kenneth Kirschner piano/viola duet into a trio.

Each Thursday evening at the Disquiet Junto group on Soundcloud.com a new compositional challenge is set before the group’s members, who then have just over four days to upload a track in response to the assignment. Membership to the Junto is open: just join and participate.

The assignment was made in the evening, California time, on Thursday, October 4, with 11:59pm on the following Monday, October 8, as the deadline. (There are no translations this week.)

This is a set of the tracks created in this project. At the time of this update, there were 23:

These are the instructions that went out to the group’s email list (at tinyletter.com/disquiet-junto).

Disquiet Junto Project 0040: Music + 1

The latest release from Kenneth Kirschner is a series of duets for himself on piano and Tawnya Popoff on viola.

For this Disquiet Junto project you will add your own performance to one of the duets. This will turn it, in effect, into a trio.

You cannot change the existing audio, except to the extent that you can elect to trim it to a more manageable length, in which case you might choose to fade in and out.

The Kirschner release is titled June 5, 2012, and it consists of three parts. You’ll be working on the third part, which is titled “June 5, 2012 – iii.” It’s available for download at the netlabel shskh.com, where the album is the 7th (and most recent) of the label’s releases.

Deadline: Monday, October 8, at 11:59pm wherever you are.

Length: Your finished work should be between 2 and 11 minutes in length.

Information: Please, when posting your track on SoundCloud, include a description of your process in planning, composing, and recording it. This description is an essential element of the communicative process inherent in the Disquiet Junto.

Title/Tag: When adding your track to the Disquiet Junto group on Soundcloud.com, please include the term “disquiet0040-kirschnerplus1”in the title of your track, and as a tag for your track.

Download: For this project, your track should be set as downloadable, and allow for attributed remixing (i.e., a Creative Commons License permitting non-commercial sharing with attribution).

Linking: When posting the track, be sure to include this information:

The source audio for this track is part three of the Kenneth Kirschner album June 5, 2012, which features Kirschner on piano and Tawnya Popoff on viola. The album was released in September 2012 on the shskh.com netlabel, where it is available for free download.

More on this 40th Disquiet Junto project at:

Disquiet Junto Project 0040: Music + 1

More on Kenneth Kirschner at:

http://www.kennethkirschner.com/

More details on the Disquiet Junto at:

http://soundcloud.com/groups/disquiet-junto/info/

Tangents: Alvin Luci(f)er, Eno Automata, Sound Art.sy …

News, quick links, good reads

¶ EVRP (Electronic Voice Recognition Phenomenon): The novelist Richard Kadrey made the following post on Facebook earlier this week. It’s reprinted by permission:

It’s a fascinating — especially because it’s unintentional — spin on Alvin Lucier’s classic “I Am Sitting in a Room.” The incident is particularly tasty if you’re familiar with Kadrey’s novels. His now four-volume Sandman Slim series, which deals with a hell-weary anti-hero, is rich with pop-song (and motion-picture) references to devilish activity. It seems all too perfect that his software would come to recognize a sentient presence in his absence. The EVP, or Electronic Voice Phenomenon, movement seeks to locate the semblance of speech in the noise of static. Kadrey experienced a step further into the metaphysical void: the less perceptible noise of a more generic sort, the everyday room tone. (I’ve known Kadrey for two decades now. He wrote a long profile of Ministry for me when I was an editor at Pulse! magazine and participated in a 2005 discussion here about Brian Eno’s album Thursday Afternoon.)

¶ Composition(al) Rules: Video below of the latest iOS app, Scape, from Brian Eno and Peter Chilvers:

The generativemusic.com website says of the app: “Can machines create original music? Scape is our answer to that question: it employs some of the sounds, processes and compositional rules that we have been using for many years and applies them in fresh combinations, to create new music.” The approach and timing are intriguing since Eno referenced cellular automata in regard to the art installation that led to his forthcoming Lux album on Warp Records. The app and album should be considered in tandem.

¶ Sound Art.sy: The art.sy website has just two artists associated with the “gene” (or genre, or category) for “sound art” (Zimoun and Tom Marioni). It does, however, have a “tag” for “tape” that includes Christian Marclay, Michael Craig-Martin, and a handful of others. The site is still in beta. I have a heap of invites. If you’re interested, shoot me an email to request one.

¶ Far Afield Recordings: The “remix ←→ culture” project on Kickstarter has an interesting take on not only financial models but cross-cultural collaboration as well. The proposed iPad app makes source recordings (initially from Morocco) available for remixing, and channels funds back to the original musicians.

More on the project, led by Hatim Belyamani, at remix-culture.com.

¶ Love the Player (Piano): Also on kickstarter.com, Other Minds is looking to fund “the largest festival in North America dedicated to the life and music of the genius composer Conlon Nancarrow,” Maverick of the player piano Nancarrow would have turned 100 this year, in the shadow of John Cage’s centenary — not to mention Alan Turing’s and, for good measure, Chuck Jones’. For $25, the second lowest level of participation, you’ll get audio downloads of the three-day festival, and a copy of the catalog.

¶ New Meaning to “Co-Op Mode”: There’s a remix contest sponsored by Halo 4 to rework music from the latest iteration of the game. The source material is by Halo 4 composer Neil Davidge, who’s worked extensively with Massive Attack: halo4remix.com.

¶ Glass(re)works: The NPR website is streaming remixes both by Beck and by Tyondai Braxton of the music of Philip Glass. More on the forthcoming Philip Glass – Reworked album at thekorarecords.com. Also contributing are Amon Tobin, Cornelius, Dan Deacon, Johann Johannsson, Nosaj Thing, Memory Tapes, Silver Alert, Pantha du Prince, My Great Ghost, and Peter Broderick.

Dreams of Guitar Ambience Past

Self-described nostalgia from Adam Worthan of Atlanta, Georgia

Adam Worthan titled his five-minute medley of tremulous strings and undulating drones “The Echo of Yesterday,” and when posting it to his SoundCloud account he affixed to it more than its fair share of descriptive tags. These are weighted toward genre (ambient, electronic, soundtrack, soundscape, drone, shoegaze, dreamy, space, experimental) but also emphasize technique and technology (ambient guitar, loops, reverb, guitar ambient). And then there are these three: emotional, nostalgia, nostalgic. The emphasis on the past is emphatic, but the question is: Which past? Is it a personal past, either individual or projected/shared, that the piece probes, or is the past the reservoir of techniques that he embraces, explores, and pushes through toward his own unique musical voice? Perhaps it is both at once.

Track originally posted for free download at soundcloud.com/adamworthan. More on Worthan, who is based in Atlanta, Georgia, at adamworthan.bandcamp.com. The above image, from Worthan’s instacanv.as account, accompanied the song (albeit in black and white) when it was posted to his SoundCloud account.

Natalia Kamia’s Piano Edits & More (MP3)

Emanations from Gothenburg, Sweden

Natalia Kamia of Gothenburg, Sweden, is racking up some fascinating listening on her soundcloud.com/kamikuma account.

“Gunpowder Tea for One” sounds nothing like a piano. It sounds more like someone triggering explosions on a galavant across an open field. The explosives association may in large part be due to the term “gunpowder” in the title, but the power of words only fuels associations so far — the brief explanatory note states that the track is a “piano recording on steinway converted,” yet even allowing for a broad meaning of the word “converted,” the presence of a Steinway piano here seems quite distant.

The piano, albeit at high speed, is more recognizable in “Invisible Study X,” which was included along with a bio of Kamia at the invisibledialogues.org site, which documents an installation in which she participated in early 2011. The piece is the result of piano edits executed in response to an original graphic score, a detail of which appears to the left.

“Aeolian Hang of Ecut, Pasodoble Chimes” is describes in a brief liner note as “audiomulch recording of sample fragments looped simultaneously- chords and melodies hunt.” It’s one of several such experiments in muted metal percussion, some more linear than others. The extent of the processing limited, leaving an unembellished sound.

More on Kamia at nataliakamia.blogspot.com.