Noise from J Lesser (MP3)

Noise from J Lesser — a mix, as he explains on the track’s page, of two devices: the MeeBlip (“the hackable digital synth) and the Skreddy Echo pedal (“tape-like” delay). Those quotes are not from Lesser, but from the promotional pages for the individual pieces of equipment. Lesser’s noise is like that of a private BBC Radiophonic Workshop, a science fiction soundtrack, all hovering UFOs and robot-overlord alarmism, rendered with the lo-fi charm of a 1950s movie lightly glossing on Cold War concerns with pancake makeup, silver overalls, and threats of alien invasion.

The specifics of the equipment would mark this as music-for-gearheads a decade ago, but the facts of the web are that simple searches yield clues about not just make and model, but culture and context, in this case a match-up between the small-brew tech world of DIY engineering, and the old-school world of shredder footwares.

Track originally posted at soundcloud.com/lesser. More on the two devices at meeblip.noisepages.com and skreddypedals.com.

The Un-Googled Recording (MP3)

There is much that Google has yet to google. Just as for every book in Google Books there are countless personal handwritten journals moldering in attics, so too for every MP3 are there countless home recordings.

The ephemera that resulted from the novelty of recording, of hearing one’s voice, of emulating recording artists — not as karaoke, but simply through the modest yet powerful act of having committed one’s voice to tape — is the subject of “Untitled,” a piece of sound art by Graham Dunning from 2010 (MP3):

The recording is a composed collection of sounds from discarded reel-to-reel tapes dating from the 1950s to the 1970s: people singing nursery rhymes and popular songs alongside hiss, hum and crackle from the analogue recording process. The installation features three tape machines paying these disembodied sounds, calling into question the function of archiving and the relationships between sound, memory, loss and nostalgia. ‘Untitled’ was first exhibited in April 2010 at ‘Lost Language’ at Kraak gallery in Manchester, UK, and most recently at ‘Time Pieces’ at the Peter Scott Gallery at Lancaster Institute for the Contemporary Arts in March 2011.

[audio:http://ia600403.us.archive.org/15/items/modisti_21/modisti_21_GrahamDunning-TapeGhosts.mp3|titles=”Untitled”|artists=Graham Dunning]

It consists of two sounds: voices and technology. Lyrics are sung with a masked bravado, and then people are heard joshing each other about their undertaking, their affect, their talent, or purported lack thereof. The technology is all surface noise and rusty machinery, the deep sonic thumb print of a far less frictionless era than our current one.

More on the work at the releasing netlabel, modisti.com.

Sketches of Sound 12: Gustavo Alberto Garcia Vaca

Every month for the past year, Disquiet.com has hosted a project called “Sketches of Sound,” in which illustrators are invited to draw a sound-related object. I post the drawing as the background of my Twitter account, twitter.com/disquiet, and then share a bit of information about the illustrator back on Disquiet.com. Call it “curating Twitter.”

For the 12th entry, Gustavo Alberto Garcia Vaca, who is based in Los Angeles, California, drew perhaps the simplest object of sound that he or I could imagine: a sine wave.

He will debut a new zine, titled Pasithea, at WonderCon the weekend of April 2 in San Francisco. Pasithea will feature a dystopian short story and artwork inspired by Edgar Allan Poe’s “The Raven,” “The Raven” illustrations by Gustave Dore, Los Caprichos and Los Disparates print series by Goya, Japanese yokai paintings, and Gothic ornamentation.

Gustavo Alberto Garcia Vaca is a writer/visual artist whose work is published in various books and literary anthologies, including Graffiti World: Street Art From Five Continents (Abrams Books), Reproduce and Revolt (Soft Skull Press) and Typography 30 (Collins Design). He also created a comic/manga for Wax Poetics Japan magazine. His artwork is exhibited in art galleries and museums including the Institute of Contemporary Arts (ICA) in London, UK; Los Angeles County Museum of Art (LACMA) and graffiti/street art gallery Crewest, both in Los Angeles, California; and Parco Museum and the Museum of Emerging Science and Innovation, both in Tokyo, Japan. In Japan, he has created artwork for projects with Medicom/Be@rbrick, Beams T, abahouse, and SOPHNET. He also collaborates visually with Detroit Techno record labels Los Hermanos and Jeff Mills’ Axis Records; Francois K’s Deep Space dub record label; the John and Alice Coltrane Foundation; and others. His website is: chamanvision.com.

Also, he curated the Infinite Libraries exhibit at Crewest, in which I exhibited a sound-art work I titled “Re: Selected Holdings from the Instrumental Music Library.”

The previous “Sketches of Sound” contributors were, in alphabetical order, Brian Biggs, Leela Corman, Warren Craghead III, Dylan Horrocks, Megan Kelso, Minty Lewis, Natalia Ludmila, Darko Macan, Justin Orr, Hannes Pasqualini, and Thorsten Sideb0ard.

Electronic Fish Phenomena (MP3)

Last year, Michael Esposito teamed with Carl Michael von Hausswolff to create a new wax cylinder, and in the process explore matters of Electronic Voice Phenomena, which involves sensing communication signals in the white noise of electronic static. The latest touchradio.org.uk podcast features another Esposito EVP project, this time teaming him with sound artist David More, as well as Heidi Harman. The source of the electronic noise this time around is biological: Gnathonemus petersii, “an Elephantnose fish native to the Niger River in West and Central Africa.” According to the brief Touch Radio liner note, this fish “emits a weak electrical field from electro receptors covering its body. These receptors allow the fish to send a sonar-like electric pulse similar to the bat’s use of echolocation.” Esposito and company tapped into that sonic source material, augmenting with other EVP recordings, and yielding a mix of industrial noise and watery backing sounds (MP3).

[audio:http://www.touchmusic.org.uk/touchradio/Radio59/Radio59.mp3|titles=”Ghost of Gnathonemus Petersii (2011)”|artists=Michael Esposito & David More & Heidi Harman]

More details at touchradio.org.uk.

The Sonifying of Japan (MP3s)

Like many, I found my productivity dwindle this past weekend as I read, watched, and (more on this in a moment) listened to as much as I could in regard to the situation in Japan, a country I visited with some regularity between 2004 and 2009, when I was involved full time professionally in one of its great exports and local delicacies, manga.

The earthquake and resulting tsunami of March 11 have literally and figuratively reverberated around the globe. Just south and north of where I live, in San Francisco, there was damage, even death, though not on any scale remotely like what is occurring across the Pacific. I live just one mile from the ocean, and the night of the event, as dusk approached, my family and I walked to the edge of San Francisco and watched as turbulent surf gave no significant signal of what was happening elsewhere. We also marveled at just how few witnesses stood with us. The sea offered no knowledge. For that, we turned back, back to the Internet and television.

Wrapping one’s head around catastrophe is at once numbing and aggravating, emotional and emotionless. We look for metaphors as filters, much as we employ pinhole cameras to witness a solar eclipse. As the author Richard Kadrey reminded me several years ago, science fiction is the literature of catastrophe, in a formulation by the late Susan Sontag. And few countries are as accomplished as Japan in such dire imaginings. Manga and anime in particular are — no disrespect intended to the romance, salaryman, and sport varietals — categories largely built on post-apocalyptic visions. (This is the country whose language gave us the word “tsunami,” and whose single most emblematic visual image is a drawing of a crashing wave that looks like nothing so much as the hand of an angry god.)

In my reading, one of the most informative of such documents is not a manga but a novel from the early 1970s titled Japan Sinks, or Nihon Chinbotsu, by Sakyo Komatsu. (It was later adapted, twice, as a movie, The Sinking of Japan.) The slim volume has long served me as a useful codex of native anxiety. It plays out the scenario of Japan slowly, as the result of seismic activity, returning to the sea. In the end, the book is concerned with matters of cultural identity — how will a nation so intensely homogeneous exist when it no longer has a single geographic locale? The very element that gave the island nation of Japan its heightened sense of self-identity, the sea, is the one that proves its undoing. Cultural diaspora is barely, in 1973, even imaginable — at one point, about halfway through the book, some discussion takes place as to whether the Jewish people can serve as an example.

Among the many tools we’ve had to experience the torment currently facing Japan is sonification, an increasingly prevalent mode in which recorded data is transformed into something listenable. Mikah Frank produced these audio translations of data taken from the recent quake, precise numbers turned into rough noise, our own inability to collate the rush of information rendered as a soundtrack of dread and momentum:

More at his site, micahfrank.com, and soundcloud.com/micahfrank.

For a related listen, at soundcloud.com/treehouses is a sonification of the 1995 Kobe earthquake (and, along with it, a discussion, in the comments, about the appropriateness of such an artistic creation). There is also a simultaneous video feed of six major news networks in Japan at timelordcardiff.com that, when played at once, provide their own audio evocation of events.

(Quake sonifications located via twitter.com/geetadayal, dangerousminds.net, twitter.com/xenijardin, and boingboing.net.)