This appeared in the March 21, 2024, issue of the This Week in Sound email newsletter, also the newsletter’s 22nd Listening Post.
I don’t talk about the Disquiet Junto too often in my This Week in Sound emails, but each Tuesday I do list the latest project. Today I want to mention the current project while it’s just getting underway.
For background, the Disquiet Junto is a music community I initiated back in January 2012. Each Thursday I send out a music composition creative prompt, and then participants — as many as 70 and roughly as few as 20 — record tracks responding to those instructions. When describing the Junto, I usually take a moment to paraphrase music educator and longtime Junto participant Ethan Hein, who said that the Junto is a situation where I review records that don’t exist, and then internet strangers go ahead and record them.
One of my favorite Junto experiences each year is a sequence of projects that unfold over the course of three weeks. The first week, everyone records a solo piece. The second week, musicians take the resulting solo works, pan them to the left speaker, and then record their own addition, which they pan to the right, resulting in a duet with a lot of space in between. The key thing is that, all along, these musicians know that they’re working — collaboratively and asynchronously, very much in the spirit of the Creative Commons, as I discussed as a guest on a recent episode of the Artists & Hackers podcast — toward eventual trios. The first musician leaves room for two others, and the second for an imminent third. Come the final week, which began today, March 21, participants listen to the duets from the previous week and begin to turn them into trios. This time around, they have nearly 65 to choose from, built on nearly 50 solos from the first week.
Part of what I love about these projects is the multiverse-like listening experience. As the second week proceeded, when the duets were being recorded, you could hear the same initial track in numerous settings. Here, for example, are four different duets from last week’s project, all based on a solo piece by encym:
There’s also a fifth version of the encym original, by the Australian musician bassling, on YouTube rather than SoundCloud:
Right now, musicians are turning many of those duets into trios. Already two trios have resulted from duets based on encym’s original piece:
As the three weeks proceed, these projects become a sort of listening garden of forking paths. You can listen along as the trios surface in the discussion forum at llllllll.co. The project ends on Monday night, March 25, just before midnight.
