
In a Word
An ongoing series cross-posted from instagram.com/dsqt


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.
▰ A ringtone went off that I’ve never heard before and now I am, apparently, living in a very boring movie scored by Vangelis
▰ I’d record the rain but mostly you’d hear the cars
▰ Listening to the album The Gamble by Nonkeen in the rain which is redundant since The Gamble always makes me feel like it’s raining. (Nonkeen is the trio of Frederic Gmeiner, Nils Frahm, and Sepp Singwald.)
▰ I’ve seen attack ships on fire off the shoulder of Orion. I’ve seen a star explode and send out the building blocks of the universe. But I’ve never — until today — seen a web account security feature that directed me to wait an hour and to then log back in from the same browser on the same computer.
▰ Perhaps for the best, YouTube doesn’t tell me the combined playing time of the currently 2,008 videos in my “watch later” playlist
▰ The irony of receiving 75 advance notices about upcoming albums and not hearing back with audio for the one you’ve taken the time to prioritize and reach out about
▰ I’m loving Plex as a personal cloud jukebox, but I still can’t sort out why sometimes it takes 10 minutes for it to recognize an album I’ve added to the hard drive, and other times it can take an hour. I think I have all the scanning settings correct, but that remains the case.
▰ Wishlist: I do wish Plex had iOS widgets. Are there third-party Plex players with additional features that I should know about? Thanks.
▰ Somewhere out there is the sound designer who worked on the episode from the 7th season of The West Wing in which Alan Alda’s character, having shaken too many campaign-trail hands, eases his pain in cold water from a bathroom sink, and the depressing room tone of the tile-lined lavatory is perfect
▰ There will eventually be an entire field of science dedicated to how a Nintendo DS can hold its charge for so long when just sitting in a drawer untouched
▰ January 2024 closes with new albums from both Abdullah Ibrahim (age 89) and Philip Glass (age 87), both pianists. So inspiring.
▰ In addition to my paper notebooks, I keep a single text file (.md, actually) open on the left side of my laptop screen, into which I drop stray thoughts. It can reach upward of 30K words before I break it into segments and store/utilize them as intended. Today I’ve got it down to just under 4,000. (Whew. Got through all of it. Have a good evening.)
▰ Your favorite web browser if you’re on a MacBook and own an iPhone and find Safari has gotten sluggish? Been trying Brave, Edge, Arc, and Firefox, currently leaning toward Brave. Thanks.
▰ Talking about Macs on their 40th anniversary: I got my first Mac freshman year of college. I had a TRS-80 before it, all of high school. First thing I did on my Mac was to recreate in MacPaint the inner sleeve of King Crimson’s album Starless and Bible Black. I had the Mac for another five years.
▰ I remember the first person to show and explain an MP3 player to me, and I remember the first person to rip and burn a CD (a mixtape, not a one-to-one duplicate) in my presence
▰ I think sometimes I could ditch social media with a subdomain (on disquiet.com) or a new site. It’d be something slim and static, like blot.im. You could follow me via RSS and respond via commento.io, or on your own site, which I could follow via RSS. That’d be a nice simple social media, or NSS. (And, per correspondence on Mastodon, maybe maybe webmention.io for webmentions?)
▰ My inbox was several times more full than usual this morning, meaning it’s Bandcamp Friday. And that doesn’t count the folder I have most Bandcamp email automatically sent to, bypassing the inbox. And the folders I have most publicity email sent to, also bypassing the inbox.
▰ I’m fairly certain a new USB will hit the market in the next month, since I just replaced what I’m pretty sure is the last cable I had that required a dongle
▰ In the process of switching the Disquiet Junto project email announcement newsletter over to Buttondown, because TinyLetter is being shut down. On a positive note, I’ll be able to send out emails more often. On a negative, it does cost something. But so be it.
▰ On the one hand, this album I’m listening to is totally relaxing. On the other, I may be overdosing on tremolo.
▰ I finished reading one novel this week, my fourth of the year: Allie Rowbottom’s Aesthetica. In some ways, Aesthetica is as harrowing as Fernanda Melchor’s Hurricane Season, in part because it was more realistic, in part because it focused almost entirely on one person (with others as collateral damage), and in part because of its aligning need with numbness. I’d heard of the author’s prior book, and read this debut novel after seeing it on Steven Soderbergh’s list of what he’d read in 2023. I stopped 15% of the way through, took a breather, and returned to it.
▰ Finished reading three graphic novels this week: Greg Rucka and Mike Henderson’s The Forged, Volume 1: Not my favorite Rucka, but aspects of the art kept my attention. Among the best parts, visually, was the depiction of communications and monitoring, the sort of data visible on the head-up displays of the mecha characters appearing, in turn, within the comics panels. Volume 7 of Katsuhisa Minami’s manga The Fable. And the initial collected edition of Tom King and Elsa Charretier’s Love Everlasing, which turns the eternal promise of romance comics into a curse. The first volume doesn’t particularly come together, but there’s more meta where this came from, so I’ll be reading volume two for sure.
This short essay was part of the set of liner notes commissioned for the Audio Obscura album Music for Airports in the Age of Climate Change, released today, Friday, February 2, 2024. Design by David Barrington.

Brian Eno recorded his secular psalm to the protracted liminal state of mid-journey — that is, the album Music for Airports, released back in 1978 — for a very different world than today’s.
Flying — or, more to the point, preparing to fly as well as lingering afterward — is no longer a placid, refined, out-of-body experience, nor for at least a generation of travelers has it ever been.
Flying — by which we’ve always meant not merely the time spent airborne, but also when engaged in the overall multi-stage process of air travel — is no longer widely viewed as an extended moment filled with opportunities for reflection and, alternately, anticipation.
Flight is, quite the contrary, fraught — and inherently so.

The host of causes for this significant cultural shift in attitudes are numerous, ranging from the existential (air rage, terrorism, disease) to the practical (cramped quarters, cost, privacy).
All of which concerns pale in comparison to the stated focus of the return trip that Audio Obscura has embarked on to Eno’s original work: climate change.
For what once was a weightless experience is now freighted with the matter of carbon emissions, among various other environmental factors.
The result of which is that the time-passing wait for a flight is no longer inherently a form of enforced stasis.
Instead, the wait is, for many, a ticking clock, its second hand echoing on an epochal scale; it is a countdown to rising temperatures, to rising seas, and to the impact they will have not just on humanity, but on the planet as a whole.
Like much science fiction — and what was Music for Airports other than a work of very-near-future science fiction, a concept album about technology’s ability to elevate humans not just physically but philosophically — Eno’s long-ago vision is now a portrait of an alternate future, one from which our present, nearly half a century on and well into the subsequent millennium, has irreparably diverged, tragically so.
Our present is one in which the damage incurred by travel is as easily assessed as — if less easily addressed than — the calorie count on a box of chocolates.

And yet …
And yet, for all that anxiety, the tension that fleshes out Music for Airports in the Age of Climate Change is seductive, meditative, and even comforting in its own way.
Built from field recordings, digital effects, new music, and copyleft creative reuse of pre-existing takes (composting being apropos), the new album summons up its own form of reflective state. The voices of flight alerts combine with glitchy textures to layer not merely apprehension but also experienced aesthetic factors onto the original work — and in those additional facets, Audio Obscura finds new sources for philosophical consideration.
Where the original was leavened by bits of “Frere Jacques” courtesy of pianist Robert Wyatt, a nursery rhyme this modern retelling isn’t, not by a long shot — but nor is it trafficking in fear-mongering or catastrophe porn. Audio Obscura instead finds beauty in the fraught, loveliness in the tension, and peace in the tight quarters.


Each Thursday in the Disquiet Junto music community, a new compositional challenge is set before the group’s members, who then have just under five days to upload a track in response to the assignment. 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. It’s weekly so that you know it’s there, every Thursday through Monday, when you have the time and interest.
Deadline: This project’s deadline is the end of the day Monday, February 5, 2024, at 11:59pm (that is, just before midnight) wherever you are. It was posted on Thursday, February 1, 2024.
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 out to the group’s email list (at tinyletter.com/disquiet-junto). Note that this service will change shortly, likely to Buttondown, due to Tinyletter shutting down.
Disquiet Junto Project 0631: In a Silent Waveform
The Assignment: Take one held tone and make it dance slowly.
There is just one step to this project: Take one held tone and make it dance slowly.
As with any Junto project, interpret as you see fit.
Seven Important Steps When Your Track Is Done:
Step 1: Include “disquiet0631” (no spaces or quotation marks) in the name of your tracks.
Step 2: If your audio-hosting platform allows for tags, be sure to also include the project tag “disquiet0631” (no spaces or quotation marks). If you’re posting on SoundCloud in particular, this is essential to subsequent location of tracks for the creation of a project playlist.
Step 3: Upload your tracks. It is helpful but not essential that you use SoundCloud to host your tracks.
Step 4: Post your track in the following discussion thread at llllllll.co:
https://llllllll.co/t/disquiet-junto-project-0631-in-a-silent-waveform/
Step 5: Annotate your track with a brief explanation of your approach and process.
Step 6: If posting on social media, please consider using the hashtag #DisquietJunto so fellow participants are more likely to locate your communication.
Step 7: Then listen to and comment on tracks uploaded by your fellow Disquiet Junto participants.
Note: Please post one track for this weekly Junto project. If you choose to post more than one, and do so on SoundCloud, please let me know which you’d like added to the playlist. Thanks.
Additional Details:
Length: The length is up to you.
Deadline: This project’s deadline is the end of the day Monday, February 5, 2024, at 11:59pm (that is, just before midnight) wherever you are. It was posted on Thursday, February 1, 2024.
Upload: When participating in this project, be sure to include a description of your process in planning, composing, and recording it. This description is an essential element of the communicative process inherent in the Disquiet Junto. Photos, video, and lists of equipment are always appreciated.
Download: It is always best to set your track as downloadable and allowing for attributed remixing (i.e., a Creative Commons license permitting non-commercial sharing with attribution, allowing for derivatives).
For context, when posting the track online, please be sure to include this following information:
More on this 631st weekly Disquiet Junto project, In a Silent Waveform — The Assignment: Take one held tone and make it dance slowly — at: https://disquiet.com/0631/
About the Disquiet Junto: https://disquiet.com/junto/
Subscribe to project announcements: https://tinyletter.com/disquiet-junto/
Project discussion takes place on llllllll.co: https://llllllll.co/t/disquiet-junto-project-0631-in-a-silent-waveform/
These sound-studies highlights of the week originally appeared in the January 30, 2024, issue of the Disquiet.com weekly email newsletter, This Week in Sound. This Week in Sound is the best way I’ve found to process material I come across. Your support provides resources and encouragement. Most issues are free. A weekly annotated ambient-music mixtape is for paid subscribers. Thanks.
▰ CLONE WARS: “Your group should set up a password for situations where you need to confirm identities over the phone. Let’s say it’s ‘raspberry beret.’ If you get a call from a loved one in trouble, you can say, ‘Look, there are scams, and we talked about this — what’s the password?’ The password should be something familiar that’s easily remembered but not associated with you online. A family joke can be good. You don’t have to be strict about them getting it perfect—you’re not verifying their nuclear launch code authority.” —Glenn Fleishman shares advice for avoiding the trap of voice deepfakes.
▰ FRINGE SCIENCE: Science still has much to learn about how owls fly so silently: “Previous studies have found a link between noiseless flight and the presence of micro-fringes in owl wings. These are referred to as ‘trailing-edge’ (TE) fringes. These appear to be the crucial factor in quiet owl flight. … ‘Despite many efforts by many researchers, exactly how owls achieve silent flight is still an open question,’ says senior author Professor Hao Liu from the Graduate School of Engineering at Chiba University in Japan. ‘Understanding the precise role of TE fringes in their silent flight will enable us to apply them in developing practical low-noise fluid machinery.’”
▰ QUICK NOTES: FM Blues: A radio station, WERA 96.7 in Arlington, Virginia, has been playing lofi beats on loop non-stop since the start of December 2023, due to delays in the station’s relocation. (Thanks, Mike Rhode!) ▰ Long Now: A “639-year organ performance” of a work by John Cage continues apace in Germany. (Thanks, Alan Bland!) ▰ Water Log: Sonar may — keyword: may — have discovered the remains of Amelia Earhart’s plane. ▰ In Sync: A musician and sound designer waxes rhapsodic over the moments when the two blend. ▰ Ah Om: A friend of one of the creators of the Buddha Machine shares some stories about their development. ▰ Ear Witness: Shazam can now identify what song you’re listening to while you have headphones on. ▰ Good Fences: A lovely blog entry, complete with ample photography and audio examples, by Sean Julian on making “vibration recordings,” in which he listens to fences. (Thanks, Grant Wilkinson!) ▰ Cold Truth: These date back to September of last year, when the Clean Arctic Alliance launched a campaign about underwater noise pollution:

I only had room for one of these in the issue, but here’s a second Clean Arctic Alliance infographic:
