Jóhann Friðgeir Jóhannsson MP3

Jóhann Friðgeir Jóhannsson says he took his music-making moniker, 7oi, from an attempt to spell his nickname, Jói, on a pocket calculator. Despite this, the music he makes isn’t by any means an exercise in retro 8bit activism. Case in point: his track “Wsps,” the title of which can be read as an attempt to spell the word “wisps” as if it were the name of an Autechre song. That wouldn’t be a far off description. It has the appropriate amount of artful artificiality. It comes across as an approxomation of glistening background ambience that sounds like a purposefully remote simulacrum, a CAD rendering of a beautiful afternoon. It has, of course, none of Autechre’s nervous energy. In its place is a relaxed sensibility, leading to an especially attenuated close that is so quiet and peaceful, it might actually make you a tad anxious.

Track originally posted at soundcloud.com/7oi. More on 7oi, who is from Ísafjörður, Iceland, at sevenoi.com.

Sounds from an Exhibition (MP3)

The sound artist John Kannenberg asked me to write an introduction to his forthcoming album, A Sound Map of the Egyptian Museum, due for release on April 22 on the label 3leaves, run by Ákos Garai. The album is an hour-long assemblage of field recordings that Kannenberg made in and around the main museum in Cairo. It is drawn from the same material that comprised his tribute to slain musician Ahmed Basiony, which I wrote about shortly after his death earlier this year. Though the raw materials are just that, straight-to-the-mic audio of people talking and moving amid the structures that define the museum, and of the ambient sound of that space, Kannenberg’s finished work is a thoughtful and thought-provoking edit, in which abstract and representational audio is sequenced with a sense of narrative and the hallmarks of sonic composition.

This is my text:

“Reflections and Transformations”

Fifteen minutes into John Kannenberg’s extended, hour-long sound map of the Egyptian Museum in Cairo, the setting subsumes the sound. More to the point, the setting becomes the sound. His sound map is constructed from field recordings he made in and around the museum, and the museum at that moment moves from structure to participant, from frame to portrait, from context to subject.

Voices had been heard up until that point, a rumbling and slow-moving pack of adult humans, but those voices are suddenly transformed, dramatically, at the quarter hour. The rapturous transformation is, presumably, the result of the architecture. The human voices are no longer discernible as such, and instead congeal into a chaotic frenzy as their sound is reflected off some hard, high, voluminous ceiling.

Something about that ceiling, arched and closed in by thick walls, absent of anything with absorptive characteristics, no fabric or wood, shoots the collected voices around like balls in a pachinko game, all the sound scattering and intersecting with such speed that it becomes a single thick blur of noise, resplendent noise.

That description of cause and effect is entirely conjecture, of course.

The recording is solely audio, and we do not know for certain what we are hearing. We don’t know how many people, if they’re adults, or what the characteristics of their environment is at that moment. Much as a passing bus can be mistaken in our own daily life for a child’s cry, we do not know exactly what these sounds are, or what is transforming them. It is a fact that the shape and constituent parts of a building will enact changes on the sounds emitted within it — but it is no less true that our knowledge of the place frames how our ears and brains perceive the sounds, lends them meaning, fills in the considerable gaps in our factual knowledge. This hour-long montage of field recordings is an illusion of reality, an illusion during which Kannenberg plays with our imaginations.

The key word above may not be “transformation” or “architecture,” but “reflected.” It’s a word we’re more likely to associate with light than with sound, and thus is the perfect fulcrum point for Kannenberg’s art, the art of the phonographer actively challenging the photographer for the primacy of the senses.

The label website provides a brief excerpt of the final work, and while it doesn’t showcase the manner in which Kannenberg produced a fictional reality in sound, it does provide a glimpse at what he worked with: a docent speaking of ancient kings, murmurings, water, foot traffic (MP3).

[audio:http://www.3leaves-label.com/files/cairo_excerpt.mp3|titles=”A Sound Map of the Egyptian Museum (Excerpt)”|artists=John Kannenberg]

It sets the stage for the finished release, in which those and similar fragments are woven into a considered whole.

More on Kannenberg’s Egyptian album at 3leaves-label.com.

Top 10 Posts & Searches from March 2011

Top 10 most read posts of the past month, during which there were 33: (1) Joshua Treble‘s new new wave (or is it post post punk?) guitar + electronics; (2) the madrigal cumulus that is the work of Spheruleus (aka Harry Towell); (3) the drones of Cinchel harboring illusions; (4) the sea-worthy drones of Radere; (5) the light-infused, metaphoric, fringe-venturing instrumental hip-hop of Barcelona’s Outra G; (6) Finnish downtempo; (7) how a drone is like a sausage wrapper (proposed parallel resulting from a listen to new work by Benjamin Dauer); (8) a consideration of what constitutes “digital embouchure” (resulting from a listen to ambient trombone work by Mystified); (9) sci-fi noise from Lesser; (10) and a considerartion of the contemporary koan “Does All Work and No Sound Makes Jack a Dull Typist?” (related to the keyboard recordings associated with a great Windows shareware tool called WriteMonkey).

The most read post of both the last 60 and 90 days was John Kannenberg‘s memorial to slain Egyptian musician Ahmed Basiony.

Top search results of lat month: jingle, alan morse davies, absence of wax, justin varis, software, 3D music, a ambient, autechre, download app, hip-hop, outra-g, pessoa, wordpress, Zen bound, absence of sound.

Past Week at Twitter.com/Disquiet

  • Thanks, @tobiasreber The epic fail of 1965 Cage/Bernstein event is all I ever read about. I'd like more on the event itself. @geetadayal #
  • .@geetadayal Like to know more about 50-channel mixer Matthews made for the 1965 Bernstein/NYPhil production of Cage's Atlas Eclipticalis. #
  • RT @soundscrapers Reviewing a set of mechanical drawings today, i came across something called an elbow silencer. #
  • Loving the word "co-belligerent" on WWII memorial in Golden Gate Park. #
  • Fresh from a visit to the Academy of Sciences, where the intense HVAC gives voice to all the resident sea creatures. #
  • This is the "before" of the One AM Radio track remixed by Prefuse 73: http://t.co/cdc3boO #
  • Foghorn sounds like Odin set his cellphone on vibrate. #
  • Free Prefuse 73 remix of One AM Radio http://bit.ly/eotQRi via @rcrdlbl I don't hear the #folk tag but he crunches their dreampop splendidly #
  • Sounds after midnight: light electronic buzz, night bus, car running stop sign, TV creaking as it cools. #
  • Continue reading “Past Week at Twitter.com/Disquiet”

Two Bands in Iowa / Accidental Charles Ives (MP3)

In his recollection of conducting a work by Charles Ives, “Three Places in New England,” the encyclopedic musicological figure Nicolas Slonimsky discusses the manner in which he accomplished Ives’ vision. The work requires an orchestra to imitate two marching bands playing different pieces of music simultaneously. As Slonimsky describes it, he taught himself to keep pace for one “band” with one hand, and the second “band” with his other. The orchestra, he reports, had no difficulty with the work, which he conducted at least three times. As for the audience, he allowed, “The reaction varied from spellbound enthusiasm to speculation as to what the chambers of commerce in New England would say of this dissonant portrayal of its natural attractions.”

The irony inherent in the reception of much so-called avant-garde music is that it seeks no more or less than presumably conventional music to illuminate the everyday. The forward-looking nature of Ives’ adventurous composition can be exaggerated, when we make the mistake of thinking too little of the world in which he came of age (he lived from 1874 to 1954).

Case in point, the intersection of two bands is no long since faded incident of a halcyon era. Just today, Mark Rushton, a prolific sound artist who lives in Iowa, posted a field recording that could very much be an Ives performance, were it not in fact real life captured in a microphone. As Rushton describes it:

Recorded on Monday, March 28, 2011 – a field recording – while waiting for my daughter to finish school band practice, I realized that another band of older students was practicing nearby. This is the overlap, plus some hallway sounds.

Track originally posted at soundcloud.com/markrushtoncom. More on Rushton at markrushton.com.