Scratch Pad: RSS, Egan, Noise

From the past week

I do this manually at the end of each week: collating (and sometimes lightly editing) most of the recent little comments I’ve made on social media, which I think of as my public scratch pad. Some end up on Disquiet.com earlier, sometimes in expanded form. These days I mostly hang out on Mastodon (at post.lurk.org/@disquiet), and I’m also trying out a few others. I take weekends and evenings off social media.

▰ I reset my RSS reader, looking at switching to Reeder/iCloud, removing Feedly from the signal flow. As a result, seeing how many feeds went dead over the years. Not a reflection on RSS, per se, since most new websites still automatically produce an RSS feed, but so many sites have come and gone. And of course in addition to the dead feeds are the zombie feeds that now spew generic posts about real estate, gambling, and other such topics, courtesy of someone — or somebot — out there having claimed the pre-existing URL.

▰ I’ll soon finish Jennifer Egan’s The Candy House. The title is appropriate, intentionally or (likely) not, in that it’s a treat after the more challenging A Visit from the Goon Squad. I’d totally subscribe to something where Egan sends out a new sliver of her imagined world each week/month. (The earlier book is more challenging in that it trained the reader, so when you get to Candy House the reading of connected fragments comes naturally. I get that the idea of subscribing to slivers of Egan’s world doesn’t do justice to the care she takes to adjust the various sections so they correlate. Still, “Good Squad as a Service” is enticing. Side note: two of my favorite writers are thoughtful world-builders named Egan: Jennifer and Greg.

▰ I’ve read a bunch about the idea of a “/now” page as a distinct thing on blogs/websites/etc., and I’m intrigued, but I’m also not convinced it’s meaningfully different from an /about page. Can’t you just — don’t you just? — include what you’re up to as part of your /about page?

▰ My experience with Reeder/iCloud instead of Reeder/Feedly is that Reeder/iCloud is much slower, to the point of being problematic. I’ll keep giving it a go, but so far I’m guessing I’ll be going back to Reeder/Feedly.

▰ Passkeys is a solution to a problem that manages to add another problem: you’re away from home without the tablet your account turns out it’s locked to (excuse me, protected by), and so aside from waiting “3 to 5 business days” you can’t access your account

▰ The game in which you add an album to the laptop running as a Plex server and then you check occasionally to see when the album evidences itself on Plex apps on other devices

▰ [Reads many books.]

“I won’t buy another book until I finish this one.”

[Reads faster and more frequently.]

▰ Being able to schedule the sending of the Disquiet Junto project emails is such a comfort. The issue goes out right on schedule — while I’m asleep — along with the automated posting of the instructions on my website (via Buttondown and WordPress, respectively).

▰ Actual language from a bank’s online interface: “The status is already pending. Hence cannot send one more add request.” That is the complete message.

▰ I was finishing an essay today, and I found myself writing in the most un-AI way I could imagine, with pauses and breaks and internal rhymes and rhythmic asides, with cultural references, some elided playfully

▰ After spending time listening to a Brahms cello sonata I put on some Brad Mehldau to remind me that a piano is a complex mechanism, capable of more than brute chords and wispy arpeggios

▰ Me last night: “Hey, maybe tomorrow I’ll record some spoken material and then I can stitch together a podcast episode.”

The city this morning: “You know how we’ve had markings and signs on and off for about three years suggesting we might demolish and rebuild the sidewalk? Today’s the day!”

▰ One of my favorite old-school Dropbox jams: “Reconnecting to the internet. This may take a moment.”

▰ I have two pairs of glasses, one for regular use and one for “computer” use. So it’s not really a Clark Kent / Superman situation. It’s more like a Clark Kent / Other Clark Kent situation. (And scrawnier in any case.)

▰ Update on sidewalk construction noise: so, I go to the teeny tiny office I rent, and of course next door they’re also doing construction. I truly don’t know what I’d do without noise canceling headphones, and white noise, and Godflesh.

▰ I finished reading two graphic novels this week: Daniel Clowes’ Monica, the end of which felt oddly familiar, and the interstitial narrative-adjacent (and -oblique) short stories a little filler-ish, and the “Why didn’t I just hire a private detective?” aside a bit defensive/anticipatory, but still it’s solid Clowes. Volume 3 of the Lemire/Sorrentino graphic novel horror series Gideon Falls, in which time and space get all the more splintered and things begin to take on a bit of a Lost vibe — with a classic horror baddie.

▰ And I finished another novel, The Candy House by Jennifer Egan. It’s the sequel to her fantastic A Visit from the Goon Squad. The sequel is a lot nicer, a lot sweeter, a lot simpler. It’s all endings, in a way, and warm ones at that. Central to the book is the concept of the Collective, in which countless people upload their consciousness, yielding potent shared experiences. I read the book on a Kindle, meaning I saw the moment in the book when its title appears within the story, and the sentence was highlighted™ by nearly 2,000 people: the Collective in nascent form. How many novelists can sound like William Gibson and Don DeLillo and themselves all at once? The last chapter in The Candy House seems like a paean to the opening of DeLillo’s Underworld, and my eyes filled with water at the closing sentence.

Crafting a Prompt

Not the AI kind

It’s funny how words get usurped. We talked about drone music long before the word “drone” came to be associated with small flying objects. And in the Disquiet Junto, we used the term “prompt” to refer to creative composition concepts for individual and collaborative music-making projects for a decade before the term became widely associated with engaging a nascent artificial intelligence to respond with some desired output. But the older meanings linger, especially in communities and scenes where a definition is baked into the lingua franca. In such realms, the earlier meaning can still evolve in its own way, even when the newer meaning gains prominence. On the discussion board llllllll.co (aka Lines), where a lot of Disquiet Junto community discussion takes place, someone raised the topic of a visual equivalent to the Disquiet Junto — that is, weekly composition prompts aimed at visual artists, rather than at musicians. In the resulting (and ongoing) conversation, a longtime Lines and Junto participant, Jason Wehmhoener, made a comment about the development of prompts, the substance of which I appreciated:

I think there’s more to be said about building a community around creative prompts. I’ve attempted, privately, to build up a backlog of weekly prompt ideas for visual arts, and I’ve spoken with @disquiet at length about what makes a good prompt, and I have to say, I personally found the task to be an immense challenge. One of the things Marc really emphasizes in his prompts is accessibility. He takes care to make prompts that don’t necessarily require specialized skill, or prior experience. There’s a very zen like beginners mind approach to the Junto, an aspect of the experience that I think may be under appreciated. I think it explains a lot of the Junto’s success. Anybody can jump in anytime. And yet it’s always engaging and often surprising.

It’s often the case that I learn the most about the Junto not just by watching people participate and listening to their work, but also by witnessing what participants themselves say about the Junto: how they describe it, how they position it, what stands out to them. The language they use is often language I later adopt myself.

Disquiet Junto Project 0634: Bust a Move

The Assignment: Record a piece of music on top of a muffled recording of a piece of classical music.

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 appear in the lllllll.co discussion thread.

These following instructions went to the group email list (via juntoletter.disquiet.com). 

Disquiet Junto Project 0634: Bust a Move
The Assignment: Record a piece of music on top of a muffled recording of a piece of classical music.

Step 1: Locate a public domain recording of a piece of classical music, perhaps at archive.org.

Step 2: In some manner, muffle the original until it sounds like it is being heard from underground or through a thick wall. Perhaps run it through a low-pass filter. Or actually record it through a thick wall.

Step 3: Listen closely to what remains of the recording after Step 2.

Step 4: Record a piece of music on top of the audio that resulted from Step 2, leaving that foundation audible to some degree.

Tasks Upon Completion:

Label: Include “disquiet0634” (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-0634-bust-a-move/

Discuss: Listen to and comment on the other tracks.

Additional Details:

Length: The length is up to you. Optimally, it will be exactly the same length as the source audio.

Deadline: Monday, February 26, 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 634th weekly Disquiet Junto project, Bust a Move — The Assignment: Record a piece of music on top of a muffled recording of a piece of classical music — at https://disquiet.com/0634/

The image associated with this track is in the public domain, via Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Beethoven_bust_statue_by_Hagen.jpg

Looking for Sound

A fox in the spectrogram headlights

In this past Friday’s issue of This Week in Sound, I shared a link to an example of a field recording practice in which spectrograms aid in the isolation of instances of activity within massive amounts of audio. Mat Eric Hart, whose work I had linked to, subsequently gave me permission to share examples of that technique. 

This is the appearance of a fox:

This marks the arrival of a little grebe:

And this is an owl:

I love the concept of looking for sound in advance of hearing it, since the approach reverses how the brain can work — we experience sound more quickly than we might see something. I also love how these images resemble objects surfacing in a night vision camera. Visit Mat’s post to hear audio from the session that yielded these results.