- Excellent news to wake to: @feedly says line-item format (a la the soon-to-be-late @googlereader) coming to its RSS mobile app shortly. ->
- Quiet time at the Oakland Zoo. http://t.co/JhBfCQipRq ->
- "Night Chorus": Sign from insect hall at Oakland Zoo. http://t.co/bE4QQ58NNx ->
- 12 tracks so far of a Gregorian chant recording played back in a reverberant space and then transformed further: https://t.co/BNTZNeWMky ->
- I'm a total @sublimehq noob. Can one mimic Mou's multi-size font treatment in Sublime 2? ->
- You think SoundCloud kicked up an unusual "related" track but the laptop's on mute and it's just café mechanisms, traffic, and conversation. ->
- Noise: A Human History. A 30-part documentary being presented starting tomorrow, March 18, on BBC 4 by @DavidJHendy: http://t.co/9wOy6miDK1. ->
- Was the gag line about the Nazi sub in the March 8 episode of Nikita a dig at the canceled Zero Hour? ->
- This BBC 1 broadcast about Roland 808s, 303s, and 909s is only online for another 22 hours: http://t.co/sMPNOp2iBW (as of 5pm Pacific 3/17). ->
- Was beginning Three Stigmata by PKD but think I may reread Stross' Accelerando for the third or fourth time instead. ->
- I really need to rethink or just jettison the "Elsewhere" (i.e., links) page on Disquiet. ->
Month: March 2013
Loop Healing (MP3)
A downtempo Super Miracle Dream Team
With echoes of early loop-based downtempo music like Funki Porcini and, at his most sedate, DJ Cam, the track “You Are Healed” by **Super Miracle Dream Team** works a series of gestural maneuvers atop a willfully rote rhythmic foundation. That foundation is little more than a tiny sliver of bells, a bit of drum kit on automatic, and a bass line that sounds like a car trying to get its engine going while underwater — or, more likely, under molasses. Above the surface are heard bits of woodwind, Radiophonic effects, echoed chords, and other momentary sonic visitations. They make their presentation briefly heard, more a programmatic affair than one of melodic development. They keep the mind guessing what might come next, and trying to tease out a sense of progression, of narrative, throughout. A highly enjoyable excursion.
Track originally posted for free download at [soundcloud.com/super-miracle-dream-team](https://soundcloud.com/super-miracle-dream-team/you-are-healed). More from Super Miracle Dream Team, aka **Miranda**, at [twitter.com/OBrandNuMiranda](https://twitter.com/OBrandNuMiranda). (It was via Miranda’s SoundCloud account that I came upon [Alveola Ämting’s 8-bit](https://disquiet.com/2013/03/11/alveola-amting/) earlier this [month](https://disquiet.com/2013/03/11/alveola-amting/).)
Disquiet Junto Project 0064: Composing from Memory
The Assignment: Compose a piece to align with, from memory, 60 seconds of everyday sound.

*Each Thursday at [the Disquiet Junto group on Soundcloud.com](http://soundcloud.com/groups/disquiet-junto/tracks) 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 in the Junto is open: [just join and participate](http://soundcloud.com/groups/disquiet-junto/tracks).*
This assignment was made in the mid-afternoon, California time, on Thursday, March 21, with 11:59pm on the following Monday, March 25, 2013, as the deadline.
These are the instructions that went out to the group’s email list (at [tinyletter.com/disquiet-junto](http://tinyletter.com/disquiet-junto)):
>Disquiet Junto Project 0064: Composing from Memory
>
>This week’s project’s theme is composing from memory. It is recommended that you read through all the steps in the project before proceeding to attempt to execute it.
>
>These are the steps:
>
>Step 1: Find a place, preferably outdoors, where you can sit for five to fifteen minutes without being disturbed. This place should have a fair amount of inherent noise to it, and that noise should be variable, not static — i.e., not the long held drone of an overwhelmingly loud HVAC system, but the bustle of a street corner, or of a playground, or, if weather or other circumstances keep you indoors, perhaps of a busy cafe.
>
>Step 2: Bring with you a portable recording device as well as something on which you can quietly take a small number of written (or typed) notes. You may wish to do a test recording to be certain that your note-taking isn’t part of the audio recording.
>
>Step 3: Settle into the space and get a sense of its sounds. Listening closely.
>
>Step 4: Make a field recording of one full minute, or a little longer, of continuous sound in this place. While recording the sound, use time codes to make note of any memorable sonic instances.
>
>Step 5: Trim the field recording to exactly 60 seconds.
>
>Step 6: Without listening back to the field recording, compose and record a 60-second piece intended to complement it. Refer back to your time-code notes to align composed instances with those real-world instances that you recall having distinguished your field recording. You can use whatever instrumentation you like, but it is recommended that you use no more than one or two instruments. You should not employ any field recordings in your composed piece.
>
>Step 7: When your composed piece is completed, layer the two tracks together into one new 60-second work. They should be played back at equal volume, more or less. You can adjust a little to achieve the impression of balance between the field recording and the composed work. The only editing you can do is to fade in and out, if that is so desired.
>
>Deadline: Monday, March 25, 2013, at 11:59pm wherever you are.
>
>Length: Your finished work should be 60 seconds long.
>
>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 “disquiet0064-halflive”in the title of your track, and as a tag for your track.
>
>Download: Consider setting your track in a manner that allows for attributed, commerce-free remixing (i.e., a Creative Commons license permitting non-commercial sharing with attribution).
>
>Linking: When posting the track, be sure to include this information:
>
>More on this 64th Disquiet Junto project at:
>
>https://disquiet.com/2013/03/21/disquiet0064-halflive
>
>More details on the Disquiet Junto at:
>
>http://soundcloud.com/groups/disquiet-junto/
Above photo via Creative Commons license from [flickr.com](http://www.flickr.com/photos/59405394@N06/8533408326/).
GIF in the Wind (MP3)
A guest GIFbites entry by otolythe

The GIFbites series continues to seek to locate the sonic equivalent of, the sonic score to, the phenomenon known as the animated GIF. The latest GIFbites entry, as always 15 seconds long, is a guest piece by friend-of-Disquiet **otolythe**. The uncharacteristically subdued GIF in question, shown above, could be a piece of toilet paper caught in a Levolor blind. The otolythe score is all television static, video-game sound effects, and distracted mastication — perhaps the very sounds of the living room that the Levolor in question guards from the harsh, suburban sun.
Track originally posted for free download at [soundcloud.com/gifbites](https://soundcloud.com/gifbites/mkgnao). Animated GIF via [whtebkgrnd.tumblr.com](http://whtebkgrnd.tumblr.com/post/45532135872). Rules on GIFbites submissions are at [gifbites.com](http://gifbites.com/post/37837858504/gifbites-submission-guidelines). GIFbites is orchestrated by the insightful and curious **Daniel Rourke**, more from whom at [twitter.com/GIFbites](https://twitter.com/GIFbites) and [machinemachine.net](http://machinemachine.net/).
Cues: Roden Interview, 33+ Drones, Nicolai Book, …
Plus: echoes of Gregorian chant, Disquiet satellite operations, phasers
***In Brief:*** Great interview with **Steve Roden** at [acloserlisten.com](http://acloserlisten.com/2013/03/12/sound-propositions-04-steve-roden-part-i/), and there remains a full second part, due in a week. ¶ Some albums keep on growing, even after their initial release. *3m33s*, organized by Montreal-based **Le Berger**, contains 33 drones, each three seconds over three and a half minutes in length, and each by a different participant (among them **Grzegorz Bojanek**, **Scott Lawlor**, **Cinchel**, **Nils Quak**, **Matthew Barlow**, **Guy Birkin**, **Katie Gately**, **Ted James**, **subnaught**, and the **OO-Ray**). Purchase a copy and you will also get any additional tracks that are produced: [leberger.bandcamp.com](http://leberger.bandcamp.com/album/3m33s). The music is excellent (it streams in full below), but that aside, the model is worth emulating.
¶ Lasers made from sound ([wired.com](http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2013/03/sound-lasers-phasers/)), and resulting discussion whether phonic-based lasers are “phasers.” ¶ New book from **Carsten Nicolai** (aka **Alva Noto**), *syn chron*, “brings art, architecture, and music together in one inventive project” ([gestalten.com](http://usshop.gestalten.com/shopwindow/syn-chron.html)). Sample image:

¶ The [63rd Disquiet Junto project](https://soundcloud.com/disquiet/sets/disquiet0063-gregorianorianian), which was completed yesterday evening, resulted in 24 tracks of a surreptitious Gregorian chant recording being played back in a reverberant space and then transformed through digital approximations of [echo](https://soundcloud.com/disquiet/sets/disquiet0063-gregorianorianian). The weekly project series is nearing its 2,000th track, and has had well over 300 participants. ¶ Just the occasional reminder that there are Disquiet.com outposts at [twitter.com/disquiet](https://twitter.com/disquiet) and [app.net/disquiet](https://alpha.app.net/disquiet) and [instagram.com/dsqt](http://instagram.com/dsqt) and [soundcloud.com/disquiet](https://soundcloud.com/disquiet) and [thisismyjam.com/disquiet](http://thisismyjam.com/disquiet) and [facebook.com/disquiet.fb](http://www.facebook.com/disquiet.fb) and [bandcamp.com/disquiet](http://bandcamp.com/disquiet), and (as @disquiet) on the recently released Vine.co six-second video-loop app. Among other places.