Scratch Pad: Craigslist, Oblique, Overload

From the past week

I  do this manually at the end of each week: collating recent comments I’ve made on social media, which I think of as my public scratch pad. I find knowing I’ll revisit my posts to be a positive and mellowing influence on my social media activity. I mostly hang out on Mastodon (at post.lurk.org/@disquiet), and I’m also trying out a few others. And I generally take weekends off social media.

▰ Went to the symphony. The orchestra tuned up. My friend: “This is your favorite part, isn’t it?” Me: “Yeah.”

▰ Me earlier this morning: it’d be a good week to catch up on some recent and upcoming album releases.

Autechre just now: here are a dozen new hour-long concert recordings.

▰ Definitely a first for me: I saw a pair of great used speakers on Craigslist. The guy selling them was 30 miles away. Arranging a meet-up was difficult. He was like “How about I mail them?” I was like “I trust you. Let’s do it.” They arrived today, well-packed. It’s the little things.

▰ Every morning I pick an Oblique Strategies card at random. Today’s? “Just carry on.”

▰ I pull up Brian Eno’s Thursday Afternoon (which it is, I notice after the fact), and my streaming service is like, “Oh, it’s you again. You paused at 16:46 last time. Wanna start from the beginning, or pick up where you left off? Ha, doesn’t matter. We know you’re just gonna let it loop for hours.”

▰ The odd comfort of a siren screaming by, a reminder there is a world outside my home office

▰ I know how to turn off auto-play. I don’t know how to turn off the thing that turns auto-play back on.

▰ I did make a top 10 albums list this year — top 25, actually. I’ll post it in a bit. Still reconciling it with my general disinclination to do such a thing. The main benefit, for me, was how it’s helped me think about tracking my listening slightly differently. Maybe something good will come of that.

▰ Readers: “You never write negative reviews anymore.” Me: “I do. I just only send them to the publicists.”

▰ The hard part about there being so much music is that there is so much music that sounds nearly the same. In 1996, a record of birdsong and ambient tones stood out; now there’s like 10 a week. Ditto arpeggio-heavy synths. And jazzy breakbeats. And laptop-baked “avant-pop.” And so forth. The overload isn’t about numbers; it’s about a handful of siloed monocultures within which the differences between albums has become somewhat minimal.

While I’m at it: I think from a certain perspective, avant-pop is where something might shine through by combining elements toward a unique artistic point of view. But in the end, a lot just sounds like it’s using such elements as window dressing for what is, in effect, a fairly standard song.

▰ Turning up the white noise like a morphine drip

▰ You’d think if computers could do one thing, it’d be to count consistently. I love Obsidian as a text editor (among other features), but it persistently has these slight deviations between word counts. This file registers as both 928 words and 929. Call it Schrödinger’s calculator.

▰ Funny thing about the excellent desktop speakers I got on Craigslist (iLoud Micro Monitor) is only one has an “on” light. I find I tilt my head to the right, wondering if that one’s on. (It is. Fantastic separation.) Love my M1 MacBook Pro speakers but this levels up my desk-time listening big time.

▰ Been reading a lot but not finishing much. I finally finished reading not one but two novels: First, Charles Portis’ widely celebrated True Grit. I’ve never seen either movie (the John Wayne one or the Coen Brothers one), but I will see them now. It’s quite thick with vernacular, and the narrator’s voice is interesting, in that it is that of both the teenage girl who is driving the events of the book, and of the same person a half century later thinking back to her youthful adventure. So, the dialog is her when she was young, and yet the framing narrative is her elder self. And it’s a good story, and the depiction of the late-1800s American west makes me very glad to live in the modern world, even with all its own tensions and shortcomings.

And I finished Neal Stephenson’s brand new and refreshingly brief and breezy (some violence and horrific incidents excepted) novel, Polostan, which is the first third of a novel or, as it’s being packaged, the first book of a trilogy. Like True Grit, it focuses on a young woman who ends up teaming up with men committed to a hard life. It’s written in the third person, but the woman, who goes by several names, Russian and American, is on almost every page, to the extent that it almost feels first-person. I think the main reason it’s in the third person is that, strong as she is, she only has so much control over her life. The third person narration boxes her in, and the manner that suits the story. And, in any case, Stephenson uses — unless I am forgetting something — the third person very rarely in any of his fiction. Polostan is structured as an interrogation, and then the interview ceases and the remainder of the story proceeds. It works well, though a lot of the drama for the first two thirds involves the narrator simply not telling us what happens because, conveniently, we have to flash back to the story being told, such that the answer to whatever question spurred the given reminiscence doesn’t arrive until the end of the segment, if not later still.

And I should finish Kate Atkinson’s Case Histories shortly.

Listening Post (0026)

Autechre live, Nigerian ambient, and (virtual) driving in the rain

This issue of This Week in Sound is usually a thank you solely to paid subscribers — a bonus round, supplementing the free issues that feature a broader array of sound studies coverage. Since I missed Tuesday’s issue — due to some escapism in the form of a lot of book-writing — I’m sending this out to the full subscriber list (a little north of 4,600 people, a rewarding concept, let me say). Here’s this latest virtual mixtape of highly recommended ambient and (somewhat) adjacent audio. Enjoy. (I’ll post the three recommendations here over the coming days, too.)

Disquiet Junto Project 0671: In the Air Tonight

The Assignment: Make an atmosphere of your own.

Each Thursday in the Disquiet Junto music community, a new compositional challenge is set before the group’s members, who then have five days to record and upload a track in response to the project instructions.

Membership in the Junto is open: just join and participate. (A SoundCloud account is helpful but not required.) There’s no pressure to do every project. The Junto is weekly so that you know it’s there, every Thursday through Monday, when your time and interest align.

Tracks are added to the SoundCloud playlist for the duration of the project. Additional (non-SoundCloud) tracks also generally appear in the lllllll.co discussion thread.

Disquiet Junto Project 0671: In the Air Tonight
The Assignment: Make an atmosphere of your own.

Step 1: Rather than record music, in the traditional sense, you are going to spend time assembling a sonic environment, what might be thought of as an atmosphere. Think about what that might entail. Please begin this process with the understanding that you will create the atmosphere from scratch, which is to say: not using field recordings of existing environments.

Step 2: Think about the sort of atmosphere you want to make. It might help to experiment by first making some quick rough drafts, in order to see what sorts of atmospheres your skills and equipment lend themselves to.

Step 3: Now record the atmosphere you decided upon in Step 2, adhering to the directions mentioned in Step 1.

Tasks Upon Completion:

Label: Include “disquiet0671” (no spaces/quotes) in the name of your track.

Upload: Post your track to a public account (SoundCloud preferred but by no means required). It’s best to focus on one track, but if you post more than one, clarify which is the “main” rendition.

Share: Post your track and a description/explanation at https://llllllll.co/t/disquiet-junto-project-0671-in-the-air-tonight/

Discuss: Listen to and comment on the other tracks.

Additional Details:

Length: The length is up to you. How long do you want to hang out in your chosen environment?

Deadline: Monday, November 11, 2024, 11:59pm (that is: just before midnight) wherever you are.

About: https://disquiet.com/junto/

Newsletter: https://juntoletter.disquiet.com/

License: It’s preferred (but not required) to set your track as downloadable and allowing for attributed remixing (i.e., an attribution Creative Commons license).

Please Include When Posting Your Track:

More on the 671st weekly Disquiet Junto project, In the Air Tonight — The Assignment: Make an atmosphere of your own — at https://disquiet.com/0671/

To the Disquiet Junto

A note from tomorrow's project email newsletter

I want to thank everyone — present and past — who participates in the Disquiet Junto. This ever-changing and growing — and yet consistently paced — community of musicians around the world has been running since the first week of January 2012. The Junto projects are very centering for me to work on each week, and I know the Junto is of benefit to those who participate regularly, and to those who drop in occasionally, and to those who simply like reading the new assignment each passing week. I want to thank you all, as always, for your time, creativity, and curiosity — and in equal measure. Be good to yourselves, and each other. The Junto projects go out every Thursday so you can depend on them: they are available for you to join in when you have the opportunity and the interest.

Note: Disquiet Junto assignments are distributed via the juntoletter.disquiet.com email announcement newsletter.

Harmony & Balance

From Nigeria's Ibukun Sunday

I joke that since I’m not very handy, after the apocalypse my main utility will be sending out a community newsletter. It occurs to me I can also, when duty calls, serve as a DJ in the no doubt much-needed chill-out room. Let’s kick things off, then, in our virtual decompression zone, with the album Harmony / Balance by Nigerian musician Ibukun Sunday. The record opens with children’s voices heard playfully chatting amid woozy synth lines (“Half-Brothers”), and proceeds through glacial choral music (“Enemy of My Enemy”), gracefully echoing arpeggios (“The Chariot”), and much more, rarely enough to raise one’s pulse. The track titles can seem off-putting (“Arrayed on the Battlefield,” “To Fight With”), but don’t let them disincline you.

[bandcamp width=642 height=472 album=2278599399 size=large bgcol=ffffff linkcol=0687f5 artwork=small]

The album, Sunday’s debut full-length, was released on Spirituals, a sub label of Phantom Limb, in late September.