Scanner/Rimbaud Live “Hands-On” (MP3)

Robin Rimbaud, better known as Scanner, performed a live, fully improvised set earlier this month on the radio at WGXC 90.7-FM in Hudson, New York. It’s an hour long, and varies widely as it proceeds. There’s the mix of stuttered beats and sibilant synthesis at the half-hour mark, pulsing romanticism at the quarter hour, the reflective drone with which the work closes, and that’s just a few of the elements. Particularly memorable is the mix of simulated (or sampled) pizzicato strings and glitch at around 35 minutes in.

The piece is billed as being from “Hands-On Radio,” a rubric that seems especially appropriate to a live solo laptop performance such as this. Turns out, the name is not that of a specific show on which Rimbaud played, but of the radio station as a whole.

The performance does suggest itself as a kind of format: different accomplished musicians performing a solo live improvisation on the air for an hour with only as much equipment as they can carry in a backpack. It would be interesting, week after week, to hear how different artists would handle the assignment, and how audiences would react.

Over on youtube.com, Rimbaud posted this humorous little bit of video, just 37 seconds, that someone shot of him performing. Not inappropriately, it is titled “Dancing Feet”:

Track originally posted for free download at Rimbaud’s soundcloud.com/scanner account. More on Scanner at scannerdot.com. Visit the radio station’s site at wgxc.org.

Time of the Sines (MP3s)

The sine wave is arguably the most rudimentary building block of electronic music. It is the source for various forms of synthesis: a simple sonic object that can be tweaked, prodded, processed, and layered to create new sounds. Simple as its sonic makeup is, that undulating up and down cycle, it can be, in the hands of some musicians, an object of intense aural attention unto itself. C. Reider has made a prolific habit of using constraints as a means toward creative ends, perhaps most notably in the employment of early drum machines in the production of music for which rhythm is not the main point. On his recent freely downloadable album Formerly Sine Drones, released by the Modisti netlabel, Reider makes several different sine waves do marvelous things.

The tracks range from wildly active to deeply sedate. The latter is the case with the album’s final cut (MP3), titled “777 Hz.” All the tracks are named for the frequency of the sine wave from which they are built, ranging between “12 Hz” to “3456 Hz,” as chosen by followers of his twitter.com/vuzhmusic account when he put a call out for random numbers.

[audio:http://www.vuzhmusic.com/water/777hz.mp3|titles=”777 Hz”|artists=C. Reider]

The processing of each frequency uses the most basic of tools: “The sine waves were altered only by changing equalization (EQ changes, and/or low & hi pass filtration), and dynamics (volume, panning and compression),” the Modisti site reports.

Love Hz: Spectrum analysis for the track “777 Hz” shows how the original tone has been overshadowed.

After listening to the album, I asked Reider to describe what he was up to with the sine waves, and he provided the above spectrum analysis of the “777 Hz” track and this description of the process that led to it:

As with all of the tracks, the original sine wave went through many passes of high- and low-pass filtration and equalization, just pushing the original frequency out of the way more and more with each filtration pass until it’s barely noticable, but still there. The new dominant frequencies are 97 Hz & 334 Hz. You can see the two new peaks there, but the tiny little bump off to the right is the remains of the original 777 Hz frequency. The final filtration pass was a low-pass filter and I manually sweeped the control around to get the bass tone surges you can hear in the piece.

In other words, that tiny little bump about midway between 500 Hz and 1000 Hz is what is left of the original sine wave from which the towering peaks to the left were derived during the course of Reider’s production.

More on the release (all seven tracks of which are available as a 48.9MB Zip file) at the releasing netlabel, modisti.com, and at Reider’s vuzhmusic.com website.

The Happy Mutant Cassette Tape Loop (MP3s)

The cassette tape loop is an elegant tool from a more civilized age, not as clumsy or random as its modern, digital equivalent. In the time before easy access to digital audio tools, it provided an inexpensive means to achieve continuous layering: one tape head writes while another reads. Each time around, new sounds are accrued while previous sounds get slowly buried in the mix. The length of the loop has several determining factors, key among them the length of the piece of tape on which the sounds are being recorded: how much time passes before the splice comes around again.

Last year I wrote about Marcus Fischer’s elegant five-spindle adjustment of the common cassette tape, the result of which wasn’t just supremely practical, but also quite visually lovely. In order to loop endlessly, the cassette is altered to bypass one of its two spools, and the three additional spindles (the traditional cassette has two) maximize the length of tape within the cassette casing. The end result has the slightly off-the-norm appeal of such happy mutant icons as the album cover to Todd Rundgren’s Nearly Human, in which a human hand’s sixth finger isn’t immediately evident, or the darkly whimsical silhouettes that serve as interstitial cards in the TV series Fringe.

Here is Fischer’s device:

Innovation begets innovation, and so now we have Jared Smyth‘s seven-spindle cassette tape, which he reports, at uprlip.com, to be capable of a nearly 30-second loop:

Smyth also posted an MP3 of some of his sound experimentation. It’s a slow, lulling work, with a sing-song undercurrent that brings to mind the early tape loops of Brian Eno and Robert Fripp, in particular their Evening Star collaboration. To listen to the loop slowly take on additional elements is an enjoyable process, as bell tones, small figurations, and light textures begin to combine.

[audio:http://uprlip.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/07/186-cassette.loop_.mp3|titles=”cassette.loop (seven spindles)”|artists=Jared Smyth]

Smyth sent me a note making me aware of his experiment, and I asked him if he would post a video, so people could see (and hear) it in action. He quickly provided this, and in it you can see, about every 19 seconds or so, the white vertical strip of the splice making its rounds:

Smyth says he communicated with Fischer, who gave him some splicing advice. The seven-spindle project builds on an earlier, six-second tape loop that Smyth created, perhaps the most basic of cassette tape loops in that it only uses the two spindles that are part of the standard cassette tape structure:

He also posted a short piece recorded on the six-second looper (MP3):

[audio:http://uprlip.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/02/041-cassette.loop_.mp3|titles=”cassette.loop (two spindles)”|artists=Jared Smyth]

And Smyth’s adventures aren’t nearly over. In addition to learning to master splicing, he reports of his desire to increase the spindle density: “I really think I could squeeze two more in there.”

Tape loop originally announced on Smyth’s website, uprlip.com.

The Salvage Yard Piano

The salvage yard piano seems like a fictional device, but Marcus Fischer‘s photographs, reproduced at the top and bottom of this post, make it clear that such a thing exists. Yet even if it exists, the salvage yard piano is an idea. It’s the idea of a regal instrument left to rot. It’s not just rusty wires, and keys that look like cracked finger nails, and wood warped with mildew and age. It’s the aura of that instrument, the original beauty peeking through the decrepit husk.

And in Fischer’s 3:49-long track titled “110327,” piano and aura combine into a thing of intensely fragile beauty:

He describes, both on the track’s source page and on his own website, in a post titled “Lonesome Piano,” how the piece came to be. His young daughter, Gemma, played the piano, which is stored at what he describes as a “building salvage warehouse” in the neighborhood of Portland, Oregon, where he lives. Apparently the same piano provided some source material for his excellent 2010 album, Monocoastal (on the 12k record label). He writes of the instrument, “it was nice to visit it again and see that it still sits in its same lonesome corner of the building.” The melody is Gemma’s, and he then transformed it into the track we hear here. Apparently the audio is lifted not from a straight audio recording, but from a video of Gemma playing. The melody is spare, a few notes hit according to a gentle rhythm, mixed with high, sheer sound, the aural equivalent of the lens flare, and filtered through a scrim of field recordings barely distinguishable from white noise.

Track originally posted at soundcloud.com/mapmap. One warning: the downloadable version is massive, a 62.93 MB file in the aiff format. More on the piece, including a third photograph, in addition to the two shown here, is at Fischer’s website, unrecnow.com.

Marcus Fischer’s Monocoastal was one of my favorite commercial recordings of 2010. Full list here: “Best of 2010: 10 Best Commercial Ambient/Electronic Albums.”

Past Week at Twitter.com/Disquiet

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  • RT @vuzhmusic Saw this headline, thought it was a @disquiet post: Tender Noise-Sensing & Mapping the Ambient Noise in SF http://t.co/KlnI5Ak #
  • When unsubscribing from Madonna's email newsletter, you're asked why. One option is "Not interested in material." No girl, just material. #
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  • Accidentally used the Long message option in TweetDeck. Had no intention to, and won't again. 140 characters is more than enough to … #
  • When "Budweiser Opening Act PResents" (perhaps the cap R is purposeful?) gets in touch via MySpace it may finally be time to end the account #
  • Afternoon sounds: the simultaneous whirs of a distant motorcycle, an airplane, and the desktop computer fan. #
  • The peculiar gray area in comment moderation: between "not appearing like you're trying to have the last word”¦ (cont) http://deck.ly/~97NPz #
  • Many images of goats being prepped for dinner have been added to my short story on the execution of Mexican Emperor Maximilian goo.gl/P8E9X #
  • One possible benefit of data-visualization craze: by making numbers "pretty" it may reduce the numbers=facts/words=opinion prejudice. #
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