Vsls Live from Poughkeepsie (MP3)

Concert by an alter-ego of device maker Travis Johns

It starts with an elegant layering of string sounds amid the slowly receding yaps of an audience that is shifting from enthusiasm to alertness (from, one might say, “scene” to “heard”). It ends like what could be a truck filled with glass plowing in slow motion into a thick wall of concrete (MP3). In between it gains momentum, the opening half a study in the pleasures of razor tones until it pivots, quite suddenly, into overdrive — as if the loops were being refracted in the countless mirrors at the end of The Lady from Shanghai.

[audio:http://archive.org/download/Vsls09.22.12ProjectCatalystPoughkeepsieNy/vsls_092212_pcpk.mp3|titles=”Live at Project Catalyst”|artists=Travis Johns (vsls)]

The piece is by vsls, a working name of Travis Johns, who did his undergraduate study at the Oberlin Conservatory of Music and graduate at Mills College. It’s a live performance recorded live at Project Catalyst in Poughkeepsie, New York,
performance on September 22 of this year. Those opening sounds aren’t merely string noises; they are raspy with static, bits of feedback subsuming them, emanating from them, while additional sounds suggest bits of metal clanging lightly.

Audio made available for free download at archive.org and woundedsquid.blogspot.com. More on Johns, who makes electronic music devices in Costa Rica, at vauxflores.com and travisjohns.bandcamp.com. Catalyst doesn’t appear to have a website, simply a presence on Facebook.

(The above image isn’t from the Catalyst show. It’s from a Brooklyn concert that Johns played last year.)

Eno & Retail: The Top 10 Posts & Searches of September 2012

As mentioned two months ago, the software that for a long time automatically tallied the most popular (i.e., read, commented-upon, linked-to) posts on this site has gone belly up. So, as will remain the case until a proper replacement has been located, the following is, instead, a list of 10 key posts from September 2012, during which there were 31 posts:

(1) What the new Brian Eno album, Lux, his solo debut on the Warp label, will likely sound like, featuring video of the music as installed in Italy, and a related lecture by Eno. Overviews of (2) the first and (3) the second (“A Brief History of Listening”) weeks of the class on “sound” that I am teaching this semester at the Academy of Art in San Francisco. The two Disquiet Junto projects thus far that are being employed to develop audio for the exhibit As Real as It Gets, organized by Rob Walker for the Apex Art gallery in Manhattan — (4) one field recordings of retails spaces, (5) the other faux field recordings of such spaces created with foley sounds). Free downloads of (6) a Lary 7 performance at a Touch Editions concert in New York City (he was opening for Eleh), (7) Nils Frahm performing piano minus one finger, (8) four loops from the score to Looper, (9) Jason Richardson‘s closely mic’d children’s toy, and (10) and J. Soliday‘s sonic salute to his former club, Enemy.

The most popular searches of the month included: distinction, dome, xenakis, youtube, aaron, arcka, elian, ionizer, junto, kikapu, southland, steely.

New Beats

Arcka returns with the highly recommended, five-track The Opinion in the Room.


There is much to marvel at, to revel in, on the new, five-track collection (The Opinion in the Room) of abstract beats by Arcka, aka Young Architect, aka Whyarcka, aka Shawn Kelly of Philadelphia. Perhaps it’s simply the framing benefit of its title, but “Put the Mic Down” is a great place to start. As its title suggests, this isn’t hip-hop production in search of a vocalist; it’s hip-hop production with the concept of a vocalist put aside. After an extended bit of tightly looped throbs — vocal snatches, strings — at the opening, the beat that is “Put the Mic Down” surfaces, its arrival delayed just enough that it never truly kicks in. To Arcka’s credit, the beat arrives, its solidity more a matter of retrospect than sudden announcement. It’s a swaggery thing, a deep, bassy sequence that occasionally drops out, occasionally swells up, gets haunted by smatterings of echoed vocals, but never loses sight of its sharp snare.

Other highlights: how the beats willfully stumble on top of each other as “Let Go! (Free Me)” gets underway, the running of the bulls reimagined in hightop sneakers. The use of old-school girl-group vocals as the source material on “Listen to the Whole Record.” The percussive detail on “Get Your Chops Up!”

Get the full set at arckatron.us. More on Arcka at twitter.com/whyarcka. And here’s a 2009 interview with Arcka: “Young Communicator.”