Warren Ellis, Ubu.com, Serial Storytelling

Every month, the great ubu.com gets someone to curate its content. The vast Ubu archives are, as the site’s Alfred Jarry”“inspired name suggests, an incredible trove of the avant-garde. Last month, December 2010, the curator was Warren Ellis, best known as a writer of comics, but also a major out-cultural omnivore and evangelist, with a more than passing interest in electronic music.

The monthly curation involves the selection by an individual of ten items from the catalog. Ellis’ ten touch on various themes in his work, from technologically mediated art to the ramblings of end-of-life geniuses to tribal ritual to transcendent dreamstates.

They are: (1) the Balinese “Ketjak: The Ramayana Monkey Chant”; (2) Vassili Silovic‘s 90-minute The One Man Band (1995), comprised from unreleased segments of work from late in Orson Welles‘ career; (3) Sun Ra: The Berkeley Lectures, 1971 (yeah, you read that right); (4) Tuvan throat singing from a 20-year-old collection; (5) the four segments of John Berger‘s BBC TV series Ways of Seeing; (6) Samuel Beckett‘s Film, which started Buster Keaton; (7) early works from the 1970s by minimalist composer Charlemagne Palestine; (8) Dreams, a collaboration between famed BBC Radiophonic Workshop’s Delia Derbyshire and Barry Bermange; (9) peculiar flyer esoterica from modern day Chicago; and (10) music by Eliane Radigue.

These aren’t cultural objects selected at random. Nor do they simply correspond with various aspects of Ellis’ fiction (the mad memories of an aged man in Desolation Jones, the spirit drummer in Planetary, the street culture of Transmetropolitan and countless other fictions). They also correspond with other hints of where Ellis’ head is at, based on his numerous Twitter posts (at twitter.com/warrenellis), and his blogging, such as a recent spate, at warrenellis.com, focused on the Radiophonic Workshop.

With some writers-who-tweet, such as William Gibson, the Twitter activity tends to correspond with periods of inactivity — it’s generally understood that Gibson blogs when he’s done with a book, in part to reconnect with the world beyond his laptop, but also, no doubt, to build up some cultural steam.

With a writer like Ellis, there is virtually no on and off; he’s always producing, and almost always present in the public forum that is the Internet. When he posts online that he’s going dark, he tends to clarify which of his myriad Internet connectivities will be active (direct messaging on Twitter, but not casual @ mentions; via the Whitechapel forum at freakangels.com/whitechapel, but not via email — or vice-versa). Watching Ellis work — which is, in effect, what we’re doing when we follow his Twitter account and read his blog posts — is a kind of social-media version of the serial storytelling of yore. Instead of reading Dickens chapter by chapter in advance of the work’s collection as a proper book (or perhaps in addition, since that is the model by which most graphic novels are produced), we watch Ellis’ stories take shape from the raw materials on his mental desk (or as he has called it, his “outboard brain”), into something finished and formidable. The December 2010 Ubu curation is not just what he listens to (and watches) while he works, but what will become his work.

The Top 10 Posts from 2010

These are the top 10 most viewed posts on Disquiet.com for the entire year of 2010, during which 409 posts were published on the site.

Sonic Downturn: What does this picture sound like?

Two full-length albums in the site’s Listen? section: (1) Despite the Downturn: An Answer Album, which was a produced quickly in response to an uninformed article by Megan McArdle in The Atlantic about the record industry (which she confused with the music industry); and (2) “Soothing Sounds for (My) Baby,” about an amazing compilation of infant-friendly music made by some very generous musicians on the occasion of the birth of my and my wife’s first child this past August.

MP3 Club: The year’s most discussed albums

Three MP3 Discussion Groups, in which a panel of guests along with various readers converse about a given recording: (3) Oval‘s Oh, (4) the reissue of Thomas Köner‘s Permafrost, and (5) Autechre‘s Move of Ten EP.

No Laptop: The computer-free set-up of Throbbing Gristle’s Chris Carter

Three entries in this site’s Downstream section of freely, legally downloadable music recommendations, posted each weekday: (6) Chris Carter: No MIDI, No Keyboards,” (7) “Indian Call Center -> Sound Art,” and (8) “What the New Brian Eno Album Might Sound Like.”

And two “quotes of the week,” (9) one on issues of “acoustemology” (“local conditions of acoustic sensation, knowledge, and imagination embodied in the culturally particular sense of place,”in Steven Feld‘s definition) raised in a New Yorker story, and (10) another on a great letter in the New York Times humorously correcting a story about animals that beep.

Top 10 Posts & Searches from December 2010

The top 10 posts of December 2010, out of a total 49 posts, were:

(1) Lowlands: A Sigh Collective, a compilation of responses-in-sound to a nasty rant by the Daily Telegraph’s art critic, Richard Dorment, on the occasion of Susan Philipsz winning the Turner Prize for her sound work “Lowlands Away.”

Two posts regarding the Inception app, a reactive-audio spin-off of the summer brain-twister of a popcorn flick: (2) an introduction (“Liked the Movie, Loved the App: Inception”) and (3) a survey of the programmers and designers who made the app and its precursor, RjDj (“The Best RjDj (& Inception) App Scenes (& Dreams) — According to the Developers at RjDj”).

Speaking of apps and music, two related to Bloom, the app developed by Brian Eno and Peter Chilvers: (4) “A Bloom Is a Bloom Is a Bloom” and (5) “Bloom + Birdsong” (and, had it not just gone live on the 30th of the month, chances are that “Bloomsong: A Bloom Song” would also be up there).

In Bloom: A video demo of the Eno/Chilvers iOS app. Is it an instrument or a toy or a game? Or does it invite entirely new questions?

Two pieces related to stalwarts of contemporary classical music: (6) a comparative look at the waveforms of the winners of a Steve Reich remix contest and (7) an overview of recent John Cage activity (“Biography, Hit Single, Website”).

And, finally, three of the four year-end best-ofs: (8) “10 Best Commercial Ambient/Electronic Albums”, (9) “8 Best iOS Sound/Music Apps”, and (10) “Best of 2010: 10 Best Film Scores” — and I’m sure if it hadn’t just been published yesterday, the fourth of the four (“10 Best Netlabel/Free/CC Releases”) would also be on the list.

The top post of last 60 and 90 days was our MP3 Discussion Group focused on Brian Eno’s recent album, Small Craft on a Milk Sea.

The top searches for the month were: topic (this one appears frequently, and I have no idea why), eno, Buddha Machine, aairria, alan morse davies, Autechre, ringtone, roach, string quartets, argentina drone, atari punk console, Autechre Envane, brian eno, eleh, horchata, inception, mystified, nu jazz.

Happy New Year / Looking at Fireworks

This is what fireworks look like when they go off:

But this is also what fireworks look like when they go off:

The difference is that this second set of images is all visualizations of the sound of fireworks, not photos of the fireworks in the visual spectrum. And nonetheless, they are spectacular, these controlled explosions. Here’s what they sound like, clockwise from upper left:

[audio:http://media.freesound.org/data/110/previews/110391__soundscalpel.com__firework_explosion_fizz_preview.mp3|titles=”Fireworks”|artists=soundscalpel.com] [audio:http://media.freesound.org/data/109/previews/109753__SoundCollectah__tre_hit_long_preview.mp3|titles=”Fireworks”|artists=Soundcollectah] [audio:http://media.freesound.org/data/109/previews/109749__SoundCollectah__multi_hits_distant_orchestra_preview.mp3|titles=”Fireworks”|artists=Soundcollectah] [audio:http://media.freesound.org/data/99/previews/99200__dobroide__20100612.fireworks_preview.mp3
|titles=”Fireworks”|artists=dobroide]

They’re by soundscalpel.com (freesound.org), SoundCollectah (freesound.org), SoundCollectah (again: freesound.org), and dobroide (freesound.org). Happy new year.

(Top photo by photobunny, aka Earl, from flickr.com, used per Creative Commons license. Technically, those are Labor Day fireworks, not New Year fireworks.)

PS: Another fireworks-related entry from earlier this year, documenting the relaxation of a fireworks ban in China: “Chinese Red Glare & Blare.”

Best of 2010: 10 Best Netlabel/Free/CC Releases

There seemed to be more music than ever this past year — commercial and free alike. In order to make a list of best free music, it’s helpful to narrow the field a little. Not everything below is from a netlabel, but the netlabel spirit infuses it — that is to say, this is all music intended by the musicians for free distribution. Much of it is associated with the Creative Commons and all is selected from this site’s Downstream department during 2010.

Listen Up: The Estonian hangar in which Thomas Ankersmit recorded his live performance

To constrain the field, to make it knowable, this list is limited to recordings that are “of the web.”The following were not considered for inclusion: individual promotional tracks (and excerpts) posted from existing or forthcoming commercial albums (special “mixes”were considered for inclusion, as were situations in which entire commercial albums were made available for free download, as in “choose your price” scenarios in which zero is an accepted amount), downloads that were placed online for a stated limited period of time, audio that is streaming-only, and dated archival material (work that would be considered a “reissue” in the commercial world, such as the majority of what is housed at ubu.com). Also not considered for inclusion were tracks whose links have subsequently gone offline. (An intelligent case has been made that there is no such thing as “streaming” — that all audio is downloaded, in that it is at some point resident on your computer. However, for the purposes of this list, the focus is music that is fully intended to be downloaded.)

All of which is to say, everything on this list is of recent vintage and is available to download, for free, right now.

These 10 are listed here in the reverse chronological order in which they appeared on Disquiet.com. Given the fluid nature of publication, attribution, and collation on the Internet, I cannot be certain that these audio files first appeared online in 2010, but many if not all of them did. And if some of them are older than that, at least this mention might gain them a new audience. Click through to each original Downstream entry for more information, and to the release’s source to get the tracks.

1. Site-Specific Estonian Deep Listening: Based on a recent recording by Berlin/Amsterdam-based saxophonist Thomas Ankersmit, he can be added to the list of Deep Listening devotees. Earlier this year in the Estoian city of Tallinn, he filled a reverberant, abandoned seaplane hangar with echo upon echo of his solo horn. The performance was captured (not just as audio, but in the color photos) by John Grzinich on May 29 of this year.
Downstream: October 8, 2010.

2. Halls of Silence: John Kannenberg visited 11 of the world’s best-known museums, and all we got was 11 blank tapes. Well, not really — what we get is recordings of silence, each 4’33” in length. That’s silence with an implied capital S, silence as in John Cage’s framing of unacknowledged sound, the background noise of real life. Each track — from the Art Institute of Chicago’s Modern Wing to the Van Gogh Museum in the Amsterdam — contains 4’33” of uninterrupted, unedited semi-silence (“unmanipulated phonography,” as the liner note puts it). And with a sly nod, the collection ends at that bastion of popular noise, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
Downstream: October 1, 2010.

3. Where Drone and Orchestration Meet: Saiph‘s Diffusion limns that space where electronic drone and classical orchestration meet. There is no doubt, in “Einsames Element,” that those are, indeed, tremulous strings amid the woodsy percussion, even if the strings are playing a role more likely to be handed to a synthesizer these days. And even on repeat listen, the knowledge of those traditional, symphonic materials doesn’t make it any more clear what, exactly, is the source of the light gusher of white noise, the fizzy wonder with which begins “Der Letzte Mensch.” Saiph’s melding of these elements puts guesswork aside, in favor of a contemplation of the inherent narrative, as when after-dark ambience, brush fire, footsteps, and horror-show voices collide late in “Mensch” for a truly filmic enterprise.
Downstream: August 12, 2010

4. A Netlabel Retrospective: The variety on Elisa Luu‘s recent release, The Time of Waiting, from the netlabel known playfully as La Bèl, is enough to suggest less an album than a reel — less a collection of interrelated music than a set whose lack of self-evident correlation serves the primary purpose of expressing the wide range of which Luu is capable. And to that end, it more than succeeds. There are playful beats, distorted as if through a watery mirror. There is quasi-orchestral extravagance, shot through with a theremin-like lead. But if one track must be selected, the keeper is the set’s opener, “r735,” which has four distinct elements that balance each other perfectly.
Downstream: July 19, 2010

5. A Solar Salute: There are 25 tracks on the compilation One Minute for the Sun, each 60 seconds in length, and each paying tribute, in one manner or another, to that great blinding fireball in the sky. Sublamp, a woozy, deep drone, offers thick bass-heavy undercurrents, while Koutaro Fukui’s track, which directly precedes it, is a watery burble, like a dozen frogs gargling before bedtime. A lot of the tracks traffic in a certain gauzy ambience, but the best of them disrupt it, like so many rays piercing a cloud.
Downstream: July 15, 2010

6. When Ennio Met Primo: Texas-based lawyer-cum-beatmaker (and, more recently, San Antonio City Council candidate) Diego Bernal returned with Besides …, nearly a dozen tracks of downtempo, hip-hop-infused, crate-digging goodness. Lightly strummed guitar at the opening of “A Long Second” suggests some regional flavor, as flanging light noise and a raspy drum kit kick in, followed by wisps of r&b horns that sound more like memories than like samples. “Blue Neon,” a particular favorite, makes the most of a back beat, a hi-hat, a vocal call-out, and some sour organ playing. The music is the like some secret side-project team-up between Ennio Morricone and DJ Premiere, mixing atmospheric melodrama and rough beats.
Downstream: April 8, 2010

7. Electronic Free Improvisation: If only there were a thin line between electronic music and European free improvisation. Instead, there’s more of thick, broad line — a gulf at times, really — between digitally processed music and the rich culture of abstract ensemble play. It’s a gulf occasionally, and increasingly, bridged by individuals like Ikue Mori and bands like Diatribes. The latter, consisting of d’incise (laptop & treatments, objects, percussions) and Cyril Bondi (drums, percussions), recently teamed up with the trio HKM+ (Ludger Hennig: laptop & software instruments; Christof Knoche: bass clarinet, live electronics; and Markus Markowski: prepared guitar, laptop & software instruments) and three other musicians: Piero SK (saxophones, metal clarinet), Robert Rehnig (laptop & software instruments), and Johannes Sienknecht (laptop & software instruments). The result is spectacular.
Downstream: April 5, 2010

8. A Jazz/Hip-Hop Rematch: The feedback loop between jazz and hip-hop takes another enticing spin in the work of the Chicago quartet Spinach Prince. As heard on its recent self-titled album, the group has come up with a highly potent recipe that mixes jazz touches (trap-set rhythms, meandering woodwinds, instrumental soloing) and the basic building blocks of old-school beat-making (samples of found vocals, emphasis on texture, tight metric loops).
Downstream: March 22, 2010

9. The Dark Side of Fusion: The murky and atmospheric noise-jazz of Leandro Ramirez‘s album jaja sh represents the dark side of fusion. His loosely strung instruments play rough, sour chords and single-note riffs in a manner that traces its mode back to that of Ornette Coleman, the great jazz saxophonist. Even though there’s no saxophone heard here, there’s something in the way Ramirez’s melodies seem to move backwards, as if feeling their way up a creaky staircase, that brings to mind Coleman’s more outward-bound experimentation.
Downstream: January 27, 2010

10. Every Photograph Has Multiple Soundtracks, Don’t It: As part of a new experimental series (titled simply Synaesthesia — i.e., the confusion of senses) at his musicofsound.co.nz site, Tim Prebble asks his readers to compose works that are suggested by a given image. Three audio segments were uploaded when I first wrote about the music inspired by a photograph shot at Tanah Lot in Bali. Martin’s is a dirgey drone supplemented by echoed vocals and a slow, noisey rhythm. The track by üav works in bell tones and kettle-style drums and otherworldly halos of sound. And a piece by ccu is more fragile and closely mic’d than the other two, a mix of taut ringing sounds (perhaps from a kalimna) and rough surface texture.

Play Bali: The photo that Tim Prebble challenged musicians to provide a score to

All three, especially when heard with Prebble’s photograph in mind, suggest rituals at dawn or dusk. A fourth track was added after I first wrote about the series. This year-end acknowledgment is as much for Prebble’s assignment-based project overall as it is for this particular episode thereof (it dates from very late 2009). The series is currently up to its ninth edition.
Downstream: January 7, 2010

And three others:

¶ WHY?Arcka‘s 26-track Exhibits A-Z compilation of experimental break beats was still a work in progress when I listed it, last year, as one of 2009’s best. This year, he completed it: arckatron.bandcamp.com.

¶ This easily ranks as one of my favorite releases of the year, but since I was directly associated with it even if entirely uninvolved in its creation, I took it out of the running for the ten best: Soothing Sounds for Baby: luvsound.org.

¶ Every year there is at least one track that I listen to repeatedly yet never manage to write about. I will at some point sum up what is great, in my estimation, about “Homage to Jack Vanarsky,” a duet for viola and motorized gadget on the album Solo Viola d’Amore by Garth Knox (volume 5 at shskh.com), but until then, just go give it a listen.