Hey Hey, We’re the Nothingists (MP3)

“They didn’t like to use that word because in Russian ‘dada’ means ‘yes yes,’ contradicting their nihilism.”

With this exceedingly memorable sentence, the host of the Wavelength show on Resonance FM ventures into a nothing-themed episode. Seinfeld, it isn’t. The episode includes examples of sound poetry by these early-U.S.S.R.-era Nothingists, who had to balance their internationalist enthusiasm with chance comparative-linguistic misfortune, and of course the episode drops in the classic in giddy Western art-rock negativism, the Fugs‘ “Nothing” of their debut album — and there’s “Outer Nothingness” by Sun Ra from The Heliocentric Worlds of Sun Ra Volume 1, released the same year as the Fugs album.

[audio:http://podcasts.resonancefm.com/podpress_trac/feed/3849/0/wavelength24Apr09.mp3|titles=”Wavelength: Nothing”|artists=Various]

The Wavelength show isn’t restricted, however, to verbalized nothing or composed musical explorations of nothing. It finds common ground between sound poetry, music, and sound art by including “3’34” by Pavel Büchler. The work is a sound composition consisting of the silences in 10 different vinyl John Cage record albums, the grooves that lead in and out, the unrecorded parts, the transitions. It takes Cage’s lens of silence-less silence and focuses it back on his recorded output, serving in turn to comment on the peculiar nature of a Cage recording, how it must reconcile the indeterminate and the fixed (MP3). Also mentioned is Yves Klein‘s 1959 art object, Prince of Space, an album with no sound on it — which makes it one more or fewer levels of meta than Büchler’s, depending on your point of view:

More on the Wavelength episode at resonancefm.com.

Previous coverage here of Büchler: his win of the Northern Arts Prize last year, and his collection of recordings of applause.

(Above image Yves Klein’s Prince of Space from this past auction: ebay.com)

Does All Work and No Sound Makes Jack a Dull Typist?

The New York Times’ lead consumer electronics reporter, David Pogue, mined simultaneously two of his major interests this week: gadgets and musicals. The theme was what he (or the editor) titled his column: “The Fading Sounds of Analog Technology.” In itemizing all the sonic cues slowly disappearing from what once was, not so long ago, daily life, he noted the “rewind/fast-forward gibberish” of tape, the scratching of vinyl, the dial tone, and “modem-dialing shrieks.”

And he opened his article with this description of the opening of Stephen Sondheim’s 1970 musical, Company. Its first sound is that of a phone’s busy signal:

After a few repetitions of that insistent, one-note beep, the overture begins building off its rhythm. The busy signal became a musical theme for the entire opening number.

But when I went to see the revival of the show in 2006, the busy signal was gone. Mr. Sondheim later told me that nobody knows what it is anymore.

Sounds, of course, don’t always get forgotten. Sometimes, as Pogue himself notes, they move from fact to metaphor: “Cash registers don’t go ‘ka-ching’ anymore, either. But we still say ‘ka-ching.'” Much as we say that phones “ring off the hook,” even if they don’t ring, and even if there is no hook.

Pogue did not mention Jean Cocteau’s play “La Voix humaine,” which Francis Poulenc adapted as an opera — it’s performed solo by a woman on the phone, talking to her lover. One wonders how the work would have been shaped had it first come into existence today, in the age of the cellphone: rather than trapped in a room, the phone cabled to the wall, she might wander the streets, having the conversation on a cellphone — perhaps not even speaking, but texting. Perhaps such an adaptation has already occurred.

Pogue also didn’t mention the typewriter, but the very first commenter on the Times post, someone from Brooklyn who went by Brooklyn Guy, did:

Also add to the list, sounds of typewriters or impact printers used in action movies when some text needs to be displayed on the screen.

Well, the sound of typing’s past, at least, is having something of a digital afterlife. Word processors are increasingly employing it for verisimilitude. The iPad, for example, comes with the volume of its clackety virtual keyboard turned on. The shareware software Write Monkey (available for Windows 7), which I use daily, offers a variety of typing-sound sample sets (“schemes,” they’re called) as a bonus for paying customers. These include a teleprinter, an Olympia, a daisywheel, and, among others, a bubble keyboard. Though the implementation requires payment, over a dozen of the schemes are available for free download as Zip archives of millisecond-long WAV files at writemonkey.com.

Personally, I type silent. No disrespect to the developer of Write Monkey, which is a fine program, but I think of the canned typing noise as the data-processing equivalent of Instagram, a retro flourish of nebulous nostalgia.

That is, I don’t opt to turn on software-enabled keyboarding sounds. My laptop makes a typing sound, as does my desktop computer. Virtual keyboards are another story, but I also don’t employ sounds to augment the near-frictionless surfaces of my mobile touchscreens. The devices aren’t truly silent. These aren’t sounds we once thought of as typing, certainly, but they are sounds that we will, in the future, realize we had thought of as typing.

(Above photo by Paulo Brabo, thanks to the Creative Commons, at flickr.com. He titled it the “piano of letters” — well, “piano de letras.”)

What’s Digital for Embouchure? (MP3)

When is a trombone not a trombone? Never — certainly gauging by “Bone Drone” by Mystified, aka Thomas Park. It’s a rich, eerie drone, and one that’s seeming as far from the trombone as could be. Yes, it mines the familiar depth of the instrument, but also spends a lot of its energy investigating upper frequencies. Followers of Park have wondered what this trombone would sound like. This past February 19, he tweeted “Just bought a trombone. Haven’t played one of those in years” at
twitter.com/mystified131, and then just this morning “Earlier today, New trombone arrived. Box was beat up, horn and case are fine. Now to work on my chops.” There are two chops at work: his trombone playing, and his digital efforts. It makes one wonder, what is the digital equivalent of embouchure?

Track originally posted at soundcloud.com. More on Mystified at mystifiedmusic.com.

A Different Kind of “Local” App

Thicket app co-developer Morgan Packard currently lives in Denver, Colorado, and a local alternative weekly for which I do some writing, the Colorado Springs Independent, picked up my interview (“Being Decimal: The Anticipatory Pleasures of the Thicket App”) with him. The app is his co-creation with Joshue Ott. The new version has a different introduction and has been trimmed for a more general audience, and it includes some additional information about the local community he’s found in the area, having moved there from New York with his wife. Packard focuses on the Communikey Festival (communikey.us), to be held next month and at which Monolake, William Basinksi, and Radere (Carl Ritger), among others, many from Colorado, will be performing. Read the piece (“There’s a Thicket for That”) at csindy.com.

Ai Weiwei on Ai Weiwei (MP3)

Sun Studio: Listen to the sound of Ai Weiei’s Tate installation of millions of handmade sunflower seeds.

Following up yesterday’s entry on Susan Philipsz, another recommended entry from the Tate Museum’s extraordinary podcast series: Ai Weiwei is by no means categorized as a sound artist, but he is a protean figure in contemporary art, and sound is neither an inconsequential nor an infrequent aspect of his creative work. In the past on this site, I’ve noted the soundscape aspect of his video work “Beijing: Chang’an Boulevard” (2004). And here in an extended conversation dating from last October, Weiwei engages an interview with Katie Hill, starting off with the famous piece involving 100 million handcrafted ceramic sunflower seeds in the Tate Modern’s Turbine Hall (MP3).

[audio:http://www.tate.org.uk/onlineevents/podcast/mp3/2010_10_12_Ai_Weiwei.mp3|titles=”Tate Modern Interview (October 2010)”|artists=Ai Weiwei with Katie Hill]

The podcast appears to have been recorded before visitors to the Tate site were cordoned off from the installation due to health concerns. The sound of footsteps in those seeds had been noted in reviews and other coverage of the exhibit. And once the exhibit was closed off from public interaction, its silence became an unintended yet intrinsic part.

More on the podcast at tate.org.uk.