An Italian Drone (MP3)

"Elektra" by Dr. Guilty

Following up on [yesterday’s](https://disquiet.com/2013/03/02/the-fate-of-a-drone-in-the-age-of-drone-warfare-mp3/) beautiful drone by Darren Harper, here is another that builds a slow and singularly beautiful melodic exploration from what is, for stretches, easily mistakable for pure background tone. It’s “Elektra” by **Dr. Guilty**, and that so-to-speak mistake is, in fact, a willful intent, as “Elektra” ekes its sonic transitions precisely from, and within, the sort of acoustic ephemera that is so pervasive as to become virtually inaudible. It moves from prayer-bowl ripples to knife-blade glistens to near-choral density, occasionally making steep crescendos both up and down, yet never losing the sense of something hovering slightly above and beyond conscious perception.

https://soundcloud.com/dr-guilty/elektra

Track posted for free download at [soundcloud.com/dr-guilty](https://soundcloud.com/dr-guilty/elektra). Dr. Guilty is **Gabriele Quartero** of Biella, Italy, more from whom at [bandcamp.com](http://drguilty.bandcamp.com/).

The Fate of a Drone in the Age of Drone Warfare (MP3)

Darren Harper's "A Brief Reprieve from a Weary Heart"

20130302-drone

With the slow but steady rise of public concern about the development and utilization of drones for military and police purposes, the rise of a form of music coincidentally called “drone” is, quite simply, small potatoes. I in no way would make a contrary case. All I would say on the matter is that the latter drone can help us comprehend the implications, especially at a psychic level, of the former.

Part of what makes the sonic drone, the music drone, trenchant is the manner in which it explores, inherently, the notion of pervasive technology, especially as pervasive technology becomes synonymous with invasive technology. Gordon Hempton, author of *One Square Inch of Silence*, has referred to such a buzz in the real world — the buzz of power lines, for example — as the “American mantra,” and it could be argued that for all his anxiety on the subject, he is underestimating its far broader geographic ubiquity.

Putting aside means by which the composition of drones might help us appreciate the cultural impact of the military drone, the parallel is especially disappointing for the simple reason that the music drone has been coming into its own, after decades of exploration, traced in western classical music at least as far back as Terry Riley’s 1965 work “In C,” but dating back far further at a cultural level, to the bagpipes of Scotland and the ragas of India and the throat singers of Tuva, among countless other practices.

https://soundcloud.com/darrenharper/a-brief-reprieve-from-a-weary

A recent strong example of the aesthetic potential of the drone is “A Brief Reprieve from a Weary Heart,” a nine-minute piece composed by **Darren Harper** for the *Sequence5* compilation. Very much in line with the understanding of ambient music as a genre, the piece can be heard both as background music and as foreground music. The drone, as a form, is arguably more succinct in that regard, in that it can be mistaken for, appreciated as, pure tone, or listened into for both vertical (overtone-laden) and horizontal (melodic) content. Harper’s is especially rich in the horizontal regard. It has the shape of a beautiful, reflective piece for orchestra, even if it sounds throughout like its raw materials are the sort of tonal wallpaper that makes hospitals and hotels feel insular and hermetic, even threatening in their own right. There is, as well, a touch of musical reference in the work, as the drone from which this music is formed sounds at times like two key drones in popular music: the held chord at the end of the Beatles’ “A Day in the Life” and the opening chord of Yes’ “Roundabout.”

Track originally posted for free download at [soundcloud.com/darrenharper](https://soundcloud.com/darrenharper/a-brief-reprieve-from-a-weary). Purchase the full *Sequence5* album, all 42 tracks, at [bandcamp.com](http://futuresequence.bandcamp.com/album/sequence5). More from Harper at [darrenjh.blogspot.com](http://darrenjh.blogspot.com).

*Drone image up top via [wikimedia.org](http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Drone_Flying_Eye.jpg).*

Past Week at Twitter.com/Disquiet

  • Comics are a gateway drug. Playing Super Crate Box because I read about it in a Jeff LeVine comic. ->
  • Yeah, I'll definitely be doing so. MT @Le_Berger: @disquiet Will you participate in this particular Junto? Would seem beffiting somehow. ->
  • So glad you made time. RT @ethanhein: New @djunto track: my audiobiography. http://t.co/LOatfBvobW ->
  • IRCAM should start a nightclub called IRCPM. ->
  • This made my morning, to be sure: RT @iIRCAM: @soundblog @disquiet :) ->
  • The single piece of computer equipment I have used the longest is the $99 CanoScan LiDE 600F scanner I bought in 2002. ->
  • Man, this past week's Person of Interest was something. I'm much more interested in parallel narratives than musical episodes. ->
  • Almost 40 musicians talk about themselves and their work: https://t.co/nmTVAhqFRo The 60th @djunto project. ->
  • Somehow it took 60 weeks, but I just posted my first track to the @djunto group: https://t.co/KCYrcHCJ6J ->
  • And you look up and an hour has gone by during which you have just been playing with nominally 5/4 beat patterns in DM1. ->
  • "the super-swively neck further enhances the power to sample the ambient soundscape" — Owl science at http://t.co/iFxgbnAjWj ->
  • Giving a guest talk this afternoon, on sound, to a class on writing for radio at the Academy of Art here in S.F. ->
  • Movie commentary tracks ripped to MP3 are my new jam. ->
  • Continue reading “Past Week at Twitter.com/Disquiet”

Stems: Buchla Doc, Mansell/Autechre Streams, Owl Predators

Plus: designing sound, microwave pulses, Portal 2 music analysis

¶ ***Buchla Doc:*** Director **Connie Field** has launched a [Kickstarter](http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/589078128/buchla-documentary) for a documentary on **Don Buchla**, a legendary figure in the development of the music synthesizer. Her colleague on the prospective documentary is editor **Gregory Scharpen**, who records as **Thomas Carnacki**.

More on the project at [kickstarter.com](http://www.kickstarter.com/projects/589078128/buchla-documentary) and [clarityfilms.org](http://www.clarityfilms.org/buchla/). They’re looking for an initial $25,000. Goal end date is Monday, April 15, at 1:15pm EDT.

¶ ***Designing Sound:*** Over at [domusweb.it](http://www.domusweb.it/en/design/designing-sound-objects/), **Maria Cristina Didero** talks with **Domitilla Dardi**, who along with **Elisabetta Pisu** curated “Disegnare Oggetti Sonori,” which translates “Designing Sound Objects,” an exhibit presented by Fondazione Musica per Roma and the IMF Foundation about the intersection of sound and design. Parallel to it was a **Anna Cestelli Guidi**”“curated show by **Zimoun**.

>Q: Can sound also be design? If so, how?
>
>A: Sound is designed by sound designers but is also a phenomenon that guides many designers’ thinking. In the exhibition we have set up three approaches to sound design: that of Listening, through means conceived to transmit sound in absolute purity; Music, with instruments chosen for their experimentation with new ways of playing based on ergonomics, gestures and entertainment; and Sound Objects, everyday objects that associate a practical-utilitarian function, like an alert, background, or inspiration from the world of music.

This, part of the exhibit, is **Leslie Borg* and **Anita Silva**’s sensorial headphones, called “_scape” (2012):

2013-dos-borg-silva

¶ ***Birds of War:*** One of the tensions peculiar to reading about animal science is the underlying sense that the research, based in the field and enacted by individuals who generally appear to have a deep affection for their subject, is in fact at some level, perhaps discreet or perhaps quite obviously, funded by the military — that the study of life is, in fact, the study of death. This is, at a psychic level, something out of a story by Richard Powers (think of the corporate operations of *Gain*, or the computer science of *Plowing the Dark*). This sense permeates [“The Owl Comes into Its Own”](http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/26/science/long-cloaked-in-mystery-owls-start-coming-into-full-view.html), a story by **Natalie Angier** in Monday’s edition of the [New York Times](http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/26/science/long-cloaked-in-mystery-owls-start-coming-into-full-view.html). There’s much in the piece about the natural engineering of the owl’s wings, and what aeronautics can learn from them: “Researchers have traced that silent flight to several features. The bulk of the wing is broad and curved — the ideal shape for slow gliding — and is abundantly veined with velvety down plumage to help absorb sound.”

0226-sci-ANGIER-popup

There’s also a fascinating moment when Angier plays an owl call from her phone and the owls respond: “I played the call again, the male grew bored, and I was about to put the phone away when suddenly the female — the larger of the two owls, as female birds of prey often are — pitched her body forward on her perch, lifted up her heavy, magnificent wings and belted out a full-throated retort to my recorded call.”

¶ ***In Brief:*** The entire score to *Stoker*, from director **Park Chan-wook** (*Oldboy*, *Thirst*), is streaming for free at [blackbookmag.com](http://www.blackbookmag.com/blackbook-exclusive-listen-to-clint-mansell-s-stunning-soundtrack-for-park-chan-wook-s-stoker-1.59085?PQId=1.46682). Get the full track listing at [soundtracksonvinyl.com](http://www.soundtracksonvinyl.com/movie-soundtracks/stoker-vinyl-soundtrack-by-clint-mansell-milan-records/). The score is by the great **Clint Mansell**, best known for his work with **Darren Aronofsky**. The stream includes a new piano duet by **Philip Glass**, among a few other non-Mansell pieces. ¶ This weekend there are two streaming **Autechre** events in advance of the release, next week, of the duo’s *Exai* album. More info at [mixlr.com](http://mixlr.com/autechre/me). ¶ Just noticed that the productivity website [43folders.com](http://43folders.com) has an Oblique Strategy in its footer. The current one reads “Honor thy error as a hidden intention” but they may rotate. **Brian Eno** as the new **Stephen R. Covey**. ¶ The [60th Disquiet Junto project](https://disquiet.com/2013/02/21/disquiet0060-audiobio/) closed this past Monday at 11:59pm, and we ended up just shy of 55 tracks; each features a different member of the Junto talking about his or her work. This Junto project was part of a larger SoundCloud audiobio project, more on which at [blog.soundcloud.com](http://blog.soundcloud.com/2013/02/06/audiobiography/). If you participate at SoundCloud, I strongly encourage you to join in the project. ¶ Impressively thorough overview of the score to *Portal 2*, the video game, at [reddit.com](http://www.reddit.com/r/truegaming/comments/19bhun/an_indepth_analysis_of_the_score_from_portal_2/). Also includes this solid response by the author to a snide commenter: “I understand, and am flattered when others choose to read this, I understand when others don’t. What I don’t understand is others taking time to tell me that they didn’t.” *(Via [twitter.com/dpnem](https://twitter.com/dpnem/status/307100454188371968).)* ¶ **Carl Stone** links to Phnom Penh field recording he employs in his work: [soundcloud.com/larbneur](https://soundcloud.com/larbneur/phnom-penh-aerobics-in-the). File under “Cambodian Aerobics.” ¶ Via the increasingly excellent [io9.com](http://io9.com/5977895/you-can-hear-microwave-pulses), [“Yes, you can actually hear microwave pulses.”](http://io9.com/5977895/you-can-hear-microwave-pulses)