Truman Peyote’s Blissful Pop Noise (MP3)

If Super Mario Bros. were to turn on, tune in, and drop out, they might just sound like Truman Peyote. As heard in a recent podcast from the great Phoning It In series (MP3), the group plays psychedelic pop noise, a mix of overclocked keyboards and numerous unidentifiable sound sources whose muddy, blissfully ritualized affect is all the more lo-fi, humble, and evocative thanks to this particular mode of distribution. See, the modus operandi at Phoning It In is to have acts play their sets, literally, over the phone line to KDVS radio in Davis, California (where I had a radio show many years ago myself). What vocals there are are filtered through enough equipment to make Tom Waits’ megaphone seem like a crystalline representation.

[audio:http://www.phoningitin.net/files/shows/KDVS/2010/Truman%20Peyote%20-%20Phoning%20It%20In%2006_07_10.mp3|titles=”Live on Phoning It In (June 2010)”|artists=Truman Peyote]

The Boston-based (and, according to this recording, Los Angeles”“bound) group’s MySpace page lists it as consisting of Eric Farber and Caleb Johannes and a handful of occasional supporting musicians, and this particular performance features Johannes, Miles Coe, and Sydney Howard.

More on the group’s performance at phoningitin.net. More on Truman Peyote at myspace.com/trumanpeyotemusic and twitter.com/tptptptptptptp.

MP3 Discussion Group: Autechre’s Follow-Up EP

The Disquiet.com “MP3 Discussion Group”returns with its first full-length-recording consideration since pondering Oh, Oval’s recent return to commercial recording in almost a decade (see: disquiet.com). This time around, we’ve been listening intently to Move of Ten, the new EP by Autechre, the duo of Rob Brown and Sean Booth — it follows quickly on Autechre’s full-length album Oversteps. The 10-track Move of Ten has characteristic titles like “pce freeze 28i,” “ylmo0,” and “Cep puiqMX” — what sonic characteristics it shares with previous Autechre releases is up for discussion.

Participating with me in this week’s MP3 Discussion Group are:

Alan Lockett: “I write music reviews and commentary on ambient/drone, the more adventurous end of techno/house, post-dub, and IDM. Based in Bristol, epicentre of the Dub-zone in the Wild West of England, I can mainly be read on igloomag.com and furthernoise.org.”

Joshua Maremont: “I record as Thermal and pursue my musical and other obsessions in San Francisco.”

Tom Moody: “I am a visual artist who also makes music, and blogs at tommoody.us. My informal ‘statement of musical principles’ can be found at tommoody.us. All my music is at tommoody.us.”

The conversation will play out in this post’s comments section, below.

A little note on the MP3 Discussion Group format: This is by no means a closed conversation, so do feel free to join in. The initial posts by participants were all written before they had an opportunity to see each other’s take on the release in question, but after that it’s intended to play out in real time.

More on Autechre’s Move of Ten at the website of its releasing label, warp.net. It’s available now as a download. Physical release will arrive July 12.

Kate Carr “Pin Prick” MP3

You’ll forgive yourself if you look over your shoulder as the four-minute point approaches in Kate Carr‘s desolate “Pin Prick,” a track she’s posted in recent months at her soundcloud.com/katecarr account. After a distant metallic patterning, mechanical urgings, a voice cuts in — not a voice in the speaking sense of the word, but a groan, a moan, a cough, the slightest sound that, in most contexts, would be invisible, dismissible. But following — amid — all that most minimal techno, the sound of the human voice is vivid, deeply human, thoroughly alive. Don’t consider this alert a spoiler. Each time around, the voice is a surprise, a whisper over your shoulder.

Track originally posted at soundcloud.com/katecarr. More on Carr at myspace.com/k8carr. The track was released as part of the Things Are Bad in Haiti compilation at pertin-nce.com.

Vuvuzela: Just Bleat It

If “vuvuzela” isn’t the Word of the Year, expect to hear a lot of Bronx cheers. Past winners, which are determined by the American Dialect Society, have included “tweet” (2009), “subprime” (2007), and “y2k” (1999). It’s certainly difficult to recall a single sound as widely discussed as the “vuvuzela.” The word refers to the long, tapered, plastic horn that resembles an over-sized golf tee, and whose continual playing by thousands upon thousands of fans has been the white-noise backing track to this year’s World Cup.

Just as one gauge of the vuvuzela’s place in the public consciousness, take a look at the development of its wikipedia.org page: there have been twice as many updates to the entry in 2010 as there were between 2006, when the subject first arose (during the previous World Cup), and 2009. (Will the history records of Wikipedia entries replace article counts in LexisNexis as the new measure of a subject’s ubiquity?) In the New York Times (nytimes.com), Rob Walker (friend of Disquiet.com) noted the depiction by Jemele Hill, at espn.com, of the horn as “a major subplot of the World Cup,” and the advice, via createdigitalmusic.com, on how to filter out the sound. A professor at George Mason University named John Nauright suggested that the horn may have roots in “the traditional kudu horn used to call villagers to gatherings” (according to smithsonianmag.com). Composer/sound-artist Andreas Bick took issue with interpretations of the horn’s significance that emphasize a rowdy underclass: “Can anyone from the townships of South Africa afford a ticket for a … match?”

And as of Saturday, there were 32,072 members of a Facebook group named “Ban football from vuvuzela concerts.” While there’s humor in that association (the widely despised noise as music), some have taken it seriously — at least seriously to mix the sound into something composed, in an abstract-electronic way. Alec Vance, back on June 15, posted at aleatoric.backporchrevolution.com just such a recording (MP3), and while doing so, he noted a particularly interesting aspect of the word “drone”: “I am not sure, but I am pretty sure that it’s not a coincidence that the word ‘drone’ is used both for male worker bees and the droning sound that bees make.”

[audio:http://aleatoric.backporchrevolution.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/06/15-Vuvuzela.mp3|titles=”Vuvuzela”|artists=Aleatoric (Alec Vance)]

Vance’s track takes about 15 minutes of the U.S. England game and echoes it into a dirgey wonder, a spinning noise without center. The track, notably, doesn’t fetishize the horn. Quite the contrary, it makes clear that the horn is part of a broader array of sonic artifacts at a Word Cup event: there’s the play-by-play of announcers, the beeping of whistles, and foremost the roar of the crowd, which at certain point rises just as the sound of the collective vuvuzelas dies down: you can’t blow your horn and yell at the same time.

Past Week at Twitter.com/Disquiet

  • Morton Subotnick's Silver Apples of the Moon among 25 recordings newly added to Library of Congress. Also: Tupac, Wagner: http://is.gd/de14t #
  • Just love the idea of "smart crates" in Serato. #
  • Fascinated by how even slight movement of a headphone cable can be so amplified in isolation earbuds. Maybe Bluetooth is the way to go. #
  • RIP, hip-hop pioneer and gothic futurist Rammellzee (b. 1960) http://is.gd/ddXFd #
  • 32,072: Number of members of the "Ban football from vuvuzela concerts" Facebook group: http://is.gd/ddWfV #
  • Just realized I was in New York for 57 consecutive hours last weekend & never heard Billy Joel, Bruce Springsteen, Jay-Z, or Bon Jovi once. #
  • Morning sounds: car passing, two hard drives (laptop, Tivo),
    fridge, unidentified distant engine. #
  • RIP, music publisher/producer Francis Dreyfus (b. 1940), influential in career of Jean Michel Jarre & others http://is.gd/ddasp #
  • RIP, tuba player Aaron Dodd (b. 1948), troubled formed member of underappreciated jazz ensemble 8 Bold Souls http://is.gd/ddatn #
  • Neat. With the exception of a month when an @drumc0rps write-up became a spam magnet, last month was the biggest yet at Disquiet.com. #
  • Autechre's Oversteps still not growing on me. #
  • Golden Gate Park aircraft-drone update: apparently they were hunting two dogs that had attacked someone. #
  • Either there's an under-publicized drone concert going on in Golden Gate Park, or aircraft have been circling slowly for half an hour. #
  • Bum speaker on Muni 31 bus in SF is adding fizzy snare-drum reverberation to every beep and automaton vocal that the vehicle emits. #
  • Just realized how much extra stuff is packed into reissue of Un”‹-”‹Herd Vol”‹.”‹1, awesome avant-hip-hop by @whyarckahttp://bit.ly/165DJq #
  • RT @tobiasreber hi marc, did you hear about this? care to share? http://tinyurl.com/2fhabxl [I hadn't — thanks for spreading the news.] #
  • Desktop fan came on suddenly and loudly, signaling a 200mb cut'n'paste. #
  • RIP, Allyn Ferguson (b. 1924), Hollywood composer, third-steam proponent: http://is.gd/d858K #
  • RIP, Parliament-Funkadelic's Garry "One Nation Under a Groove" Shider (b. 1953): http://is.gd/d8arT #
  • When's insta-translate coming to @twitter to help me follow musicians like @ichiro_0414 & @ryuichisakamoto etc.? #
  • The loungey in-plane soundtrack on @virginamerica turns most night-time landings into little Michael Mann films. #
  • Sounds at 35,000 (or so) feet: engines, cabin personnel, bleeding headphones, cackling children, typing (mine), occasional overhead beeps. #
  • Really, I need to install bloatware @realplayer in order to get audio notes (amr files) to play in @evernote on my Win7 netbook? #
  • S__> is the statusicon (staticon?) for being stuck in airplane on runway. S15__> is when stuck with 15 planes ahead of you, as I am now. #
  • When statusicons supplant emoticons, among the first will be "stuck in airplane on runway." #
  • Can now break cover during surprise trip to NY for dad's 75th bday. Enjoying LIRR sounds now ("Syyyyyy-oset," "Bable-en") en route to JFK. #
  • Subscribe to @emusic? Then the 19-track Grand Valley State University Terry Riley: In C Remixes costs just 9 credits/linden/clams/whatever. #
  • For the Win by @doctorow — a teen thriller that's actually a strong defense of unionizing. Detailed take on video-game economics, too. #