Scanner 2/4: Joy Re-division

2nd of 4 free Scanner tracks in a row: Joy Division reworked


It’s an orchestration minus the orchestra. It’s an imagined myriad-instrumental version of a proto-electronic song rendered here as an electronic protype. It’s early post-punk re-imagined in light of post-rock’s affection for classical music. What it is is Scanner’s version of the band Joy Division’s song “Heart and Soul,” heard as a lightly glitchy expanse, with a gurgling undercurrent. Scanner, aka Robin Rimbaud, explains in a brief liner note that it’s an unreleased demo for the Live_Transmission project with Heritage Orchestra: “This is my early studio demo that was then arranged for the orchestra and live band to be performed on stage at the Brighton Festival in May 2012.”

Track originally posted for free download at soundcloud.com/scanner. More on Scanner at scannerdot.com. More on Heritage Orchestra at theheritageorchestra.com.

And, for reference, the original song, from the album Closer (1980):

Scanner 1/4: Voices in the Ether

1st of 4 free Scanner tracks in a row: collage of early work


Some 600 hours of previously unreleased material, newly digitized and awaiting a broader set of ears — this is the status of Scanner’s archival project, which has him diving into his earliest recordings, dating back to 1977, as he describes the situation in a brief liner note to Colofon & Compendium 1991-1994 (Sub Rosa), a compilation that has resulted from this ongoing effort. The album is due out October 30, but in the meanwhile there is “Colofon & Compendium (redux).” It’s a medley of material from the album, an “exclusive collage,” as he puts it. This music dates from the era when Robin Rimbaud earned the name Scanner, in that he used a police scanner to pull voices from the ether and then, in real time and in the studio, would add music to dramatize the overheard conversation, lending emotional and narrative weight and context. Scanner doesn’t employ the scanner as often as he once did, but for longtime listeners to his work, this early eavesdropping gives additional meaning to his subsequent employment of spoken and sung information.

Track originally posted for free download at soundcloud.com/scanner. More on Scanner at scannerdot.com.

Disquiet Junto Project 0042: Naive Melody

The Assignment: Use your oldest and newest instruments in recording an original track.

Each Thursday at the Disquiet Junto group on Soundcloud.com a new compositional challenge is set before the group’s members, who then have just over four days to upload a track in response to the assignment. Membership in the Junto is open: just join and participate.

This is a set of the tracks created in this project. At the time of this update, there were 24:

The assignment was made in the afternoon, California time, on Thursday, October 18, with 11:59pm on the following Monday, October 22, as the deadline. (There are no translations this week.)

These are the instructions that went out to the group’s email list (at tinyletter.com/disquiet-junto).

Disquiet Junto Project 0042: Naive Melody

You will employ just two instruments in the production of this week’s track: (1) the instrument you have used for the longest period of time and (2) the instrument in your possession that is newest to you. You’ll record a backing track with the oldest instrument, and overlay on it a simple melody of your choosing performed on the newest instrument.

Definition: The term “instrument” can be interpreted as broadly as you’d like; ultimately this is a project about the restraints inherent in the gadgets, tools, and software that you have obtained or created.

Background: The inspiration for this project is the song “This Must Be the Place (Naive Melody)” by the band Talking Heads off the album Speaking in Tongues. For that song, the band members traded instruments, each playing something they were significantly less familiar with than the instrument they normally performed on.

Restrictions: You can use any source material, any instrumentation, except the human voice.

Deadline: Monday, October 22, at 11:59pm wherever you are.

Length: Your finished work should be between 1.5 and 3 minutes in length.

Information: Please, when posting your track on SoundCloud, 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.

Title/Tag: When adding your track to the Disquiet Junto group on Soundcloud.com, please include the term “disquiet0042-naivemelody”in the title of your track, and as a tag for your track.

Download: Please consider setting your track for free download.

Linking: When posting the track, be sure to include this information:

More on this 42nd Disquiet Junto project at:

Disquiet Junto Project 0042: Naive Melody

More details on the Disquiet Junto at:

http://soundcloud.com/groups/disquiet-junto/info/

The image up top is a still from the original video for the Talking Heads song “This Must Be the Place (Naive Melody).”

Sound and the Tactile Ear

One of five essays for a new artists' book by Paolo Salvagione

On November 2, 2012, at the San Francisco Center for the book there will be a combination book preview and exhibition opening for artist Paolo Salvagione. His forthcoming book is a contemporary Wunderkammer, or cabinet of curiosity, titled One for Each. As pictured above, while still a work-in-progress, it is a box in the form of five drawers, made of English buckram and black leather. Each drawer contains a different self-contained work, one for each of the five human senses. (More on the opening event, which will run from 6pm until 8pm, at sfcb.org.)

Each drawer also contains a letterpress print of a short essay I wrote for the specific work enclosed therein. Here is the essay I wrote for the “sound” drawer, which contains a series of talking tapes, pictured above; when you rub your nail against one, a spoken phrase can be heard.

“Sound and the Tactile Ear”

All senses are tactile, sound no less so than its four siblings.

Sound is the physical registration of pressure in the ear. Sound is often mistaken as ephemeral. Blame and credit for this confusion date, in equal parts, at least as far back as the conception of the Music of the Spheres: the consensually perceived geometric purity of objects moving harmoniously in the vacuum — sonic and otherwise — of space.

Sounds may count as ephemera, as fleeting, but sound itself is experienced physically. That pressure in the ear differs in no particular or meaningful way from an unfamiliar and flexible physical object against one’s hand, from a vermicelli-width piece of plastic in one’s palm, from a thin strip of raised edges against one’s rigid, determined, and vaguely curious fingernail.

Pull one’s nail along that strip and, self-evidently, a rough sound will be produced. What one hears is not simply words but a voice, a specific voice. Encoded in those ridges, in that rudimentary textural data, isn’t merely syllables and words and grammar, but tone, nuance, association. The sound is rough — appropriately so for something that results from texture. The result is a second layer of information: first a phrase; then meaning, by way of affect.

The item in One for Each itself, the object in hand, adds a third layer, one of novelty. The talking tape, as such items are called, registers as the sort of thing that one might have, once upon a time, exchanged a nickel for in a gumball machine. It would have come wound up tight in a small, semi-opaque eggshell. The talking tape registers as the sort of thing advertised in comic books of yore, when Charles Atlas was king and sea-monkeys ruled the oceans.

The object is a novelty, a curiosity from days gone by. It’s a modest wonder whose primary effect isn’t wonder at the object so much as wonder at the era in which such an object could conjure wonder. Your nail remains curious, and it scratches again and again, hoping to get at the grain of truth.

The other four short essays are titled “Sight and the Media of Immersion,” “Smell and the Threat of Action,” “Taste and the Mechanization of Civility,” and “Touch and the Visceral Silhouette.” I may publish them here at a later date.

More on One for Each at salvagione.com. The project’s typography is by Boon Design (boondesign.com).

Update 2012.10.20: Some additional photos of the letterpress process:

Chicago Hip-Hop Built from Paul Simon Sample

Joshua Wentz digs his way out of the crates.

“My landlord gave me a stack of records that a tenant had left in a vacated apartment,” writes Joshua Wentz by way of introduction. “Most of them are really scratched, but a few are not too scratched.” The following track, “Piano Slum,” is one of the pieces that resulted when Wentz dug into the vinyl and came up with a variety of instrumental hip-hop excursions. This particular example is built on a small loop of a familiar Paul Simon song. Even as he cuts it and moves parts around, even as he creates a new melody from old, culturally entrenched note formations, he retains the original organ’s loose, analog wavering. As he describes his modus operandi, “I figured these albums would be a good way to scratch a musical itch: create some instrumental hip hop tracks with these albums as the foundation.”

Track originally posted for free download at soundcloud.com/joshuawentz. More on Wentz, who’s based in Chicago, Illinois, at joshuawentz.com. Another Wentz track, in which he played along with a passing train, was featured here last month.