15 Minutes

Courtesy of Modular Ambient

Another fine 15-minute slice of ambient modular synth from the appropriately named Modular Ambient station/channel/account/ethos/vibe on YouTube, all shimmering tones and light glitch that throbs and pulses, shifts and drifts, in accordance with the lights of various bits of kit. It’s been a while, for whatever reason, since I added a video to my massive YouTube playlist of (currently 225) live ambient performances, but this one made it immediately.

The Christophers

Soderbergh x Holmes

I don’t often go to the movie theater these days, but when there’s a new Steven Soderbergh joint, you can bet I’m gonna do my best. I really dug The Christophers, in no small part due to the director’s renewed collaboration with the excellent composer David Holmes, who also scored Soderbergh’s Black Bag, from last year, but prior to that the two hadn’t worked since 2017’s Lucky Logan. Holmes’ second professional film score was Out of Sight, in 1998, and a few years later he famously set the tone for Ocean’s 11, and returned for the two sequels. The score in The Christophers was particularly prominent, in part because of the numerous sequences that otherwise silently surveyed various artists’ homes and studios. Also prominent: a certain considered debt to Radiohead.

On Repeat: Aarset, Potter, 2022 KMRU

Home/office playlist

On Sundays I try to at least quickly note some of my favorite listening from the week prior — things I would later regret having not written about in more depth, so better to share here briefly than not at all.

▰ Electric guitarist Eivind Aarset’s quartet is a gift that keeps on giving. The two drummers (Erland Dahlen, Wetle Holte) are so tight with drummer Audun Erlien that it sounds like a much more compact group than it is.

▰ The saxophonist Chris Potter assembled a remarkable ensemble, featuring Bill Frisell (guitar), Nate Smith (drums), Burniss Travis (bass), Rane Moore (clarinet), Zekkereya El-magharbel (trombone), and Sara Caswell (violin), and on top of how great they sound together, the video does a solid job of introducing them one at a time in a manner that slowly exposes how much is going on sonically.

▰ This live video of KMRU performing solo in Milan, Italy, dates from 2022, but appears to have only just popped up on YouTube. It’s 45 stellar minutes of drones and noise, lightly glitched, and atmospherically entrancing.

Scratch Pad: Temptation(s), Earth, Tortoise

From the past week

At the end of each week, I usually collate a lightly edited collection of recent comments I’ve made on social media, which I think of as my public scratch pad. I tag on what books I may have finished reading. Knowing I’ll revisit my social media posts, I’ve found, serves as a positive and mellowing influence on my online 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.

Been pretty low-level on social media since I got back from New York.

▰ Today in barbershop music: “Get Ready” by the Temptations. Usually there are more songs, but the barber who selects the music was on a lunch break for most of my time there, and the other barber enjoyed the temporary reprieve.

▰ Happy Earth Day. Open a window and listen. What do/did you hear?

▰ I usually read during lunch, but Tortoise on Amoeba’s What’s in My Bag? series on YouTube got 12 of my minutes immediately.

▰ Read a bunch, finished nothing, but wrote a lot, again, and that makes it O-K.

20 Solos and (I’m) Counting

Tracking the Junto trios

Most weeks, a given Disquiet Junto music community project essentially runs itself. Nearly 15 years into the process, the scenario is set: I post the prompt shortly after midnight, Pacific time, on Thursday, and folks who see it online or receive it via email have until the following Monday at 11:59pm to post a track in response to the prompt. As of this week’s project, we’ve done it 747 times in a row, week after week.

The one time a year I have to keep a close watch on things is when we do this current “trios sequence,” which is the one where someone posts a solo, and then the next week someone adds to it, and the week after that someone completes the piece as a trio. Except it’s more than one solo, one duo, one trio. The first week there are dozens of solos, and the second week there may be multiple duos based on individual solos, and so on the third week with the trios based on various duos. To facilitate the process, I maintain a close watch on the tracks as they’re added, and I regularly update a public matrix of the activities, a detail of which appears below.

This year I’ve added something to the matrix, which is that alongside the track URL, which is usually on SoundCloud, I share the message board link for the Lines (or llllllll.co) BBS, where discussion takes place. Those Lines posts are where there is often additional information about a given track, such as key, BPM, chord changes, and instrumentation. More details on this week’s project at disquiet.com/0747.