Frippertronics with Keyboard, Circa 1980 (MP3)

The looping of musical segments that we take for granted today has many pre-digital precursors, key among them King Crimson founder Robert Fripp, whose homebrew Frippertonics instrument allowed him (and his listeners) to revel in the steady accrual, and dissolution, of layers of recorded sound.

The work Fripp did with that analog, tape-based tool, beginning in the 1970s, is almost entirely associated with the electric guitar. He’d use various techniques to limit the guitar’s attack — the pluck of a string or the strum of a chord — and thus let the guitar tone alone fill the recording, but it was nonetheless the guitar, his primary instrument, emitting the sound. After doing so, he’d then wail virtuosically atop the bed of ambient sound, but there was nothing any less virtuosic — only less showy — about the manner in which he layered those initial “background” pieces.

Up recently at the Fripp website, dgmlive.com, is a recording in which Fripp applies the looping to what is, reportedly, a Roland keyboard (MP3). It provides an opportunity to hear the tape loop in a different setting than usual — same sing-song effect, same harmonious sway, but different tonal flavor:

[audio:http://www.dgmlive.com/tickles/rf19800101-0101-Keyboard_Loop.mp3|titles=”Keyboard Loop”|artists=Robert Fripp]

Here’s a diagram of how Frippertronics functions:

Writes Alex Mundy, a dgmlive.com archivist, of the Roland track:

Found amidst a clutch of unmarked cassettes by the intrepid Mister Stormy, here we have Robert with his trusty Roland keyboard trying out some ideas. Although there’s no indication of a date or location here, what we can be sure of is that the chords and lines being deployed occupy the same luscious melodic richness as the gorgeous title track of Evening Star. Can’t you just hear a yearning guitar solo going over the top of this?

The entry puts the date at January 1, 1980, but Mundy’s note says there’s no certainty regarding when it was taped. The track is currently available for free download, but these free downloads are teasers for the site (“hot tickles” is the dgmlive.com term), after which they go behind a registration firewall. For future reference, here is the file’s permanent URL: dgmlive.com.

The above image is from Erik Tamm’s book Brian Eno: His Music and the Vertical Color of Sound (Da Capo Press, 1995), via an essay by Rob Doyle at brunel.ac.uk.

What Eyjafjallajökull (Might Have) Sounded Like (MP3)

This is what Eyjafjallajökull, the fierce volcano that erupted in Iceland and grounded planes around the world, might have sounded like on a good day (MP3):

[audio:http://silentlistening.files.wordpress.com/2010/04/mt-yasur-volcano.mp3|titles=”Mt. Yasur 2004″|artists=Andreas Bick]

That’s not a recording of Eyjafjallajökull itself, but of a different volcano, on Mount Yasur on Tanna Island in Vanuatu in the Pacific Ocean, made by sound artist Andreas Bick. Bick writes about his experience on the lip of the volcano as follows:

I had the chance to go to the rim of the volcano for three nights and to stay longer then the tourist crowds who would have spoiled the recordings with their “aahs”and “oohs”. Suffice to say that it was a bone-chilling and mesmerizing experience which is not really carried along with this uncompressed and raw sound recording if heard at normal level ”“ so please turn up the volume for a bigger effect (and imgine the smell of sulfer crawling up your nose)”¦

During my stay on the island, Mt. Yasur was on a low activity level ”“ the breathing of the volcano almost feels peaceful, like a hyperventilating giant with occasional sighs and coughs.

The recording is a mix of rough wind and occasional eruptions that sound like hard breezes hitting large sheets of plastic, or cold waves breaking against a concrete shoreline.

Bick’s original post, dated April 19, 2010, at his website: silentlistening.wordpress.com. Above photo by Reuters photographer Lucas Jackson, housed at boston.com.

Back in March 2009, Bick’s work with the droning room tones of the Holocaust Tower at the Jewish Museum in Berlin was covered here: disquiet.com.

Subterranean Space Music (MP3)

The duo of Margarida Garcia, on electric double bass, and Aki Onda, on a small set of electronics, produce subterranean space music. Her amplified cello saws deep, thick drones while Onda wrestles with intangible static and, at times, wrangles snippets of vocals captured thanks to technologically enabled eavesdropping. Garcia and Onda are heard here in a live performance recently held at Fotofono, an art space in Brooklyn, New York (MP3).

[audio:http://www.m-i-c-r-o.net/fotofono/fotofono_media/snd/100418/100418ff2.mp3|titles=”Live at Fotofono”|artists=Margarida Garcia and Aki Onda]

According to a brief descriptive note at the Fotofono website, Onda’s tool set consisted of “one tube amp, a Line Six and a hand-held radio.” The result of his inventive machinations might be likened to ghostly appearances, but why limit oneself to the unknowable, to the mystical, to superstition? The bits of radio noise seem all the more trenchant when thought of as just that: windows to the sound and signals that hover all around us, all the time. Garcia’s cello roots the performance in the earthy world, while Onda plucks his source material from the aether.

More on Lisbon, Portugal-born Garcia at margaridagarcia.blogspot.com, and on Japan-born Onda at akionda.net.

Also featured that night was a solo set by Byron Westbrook (electronics), as well as a quartet featuring Tucker Dulin (trombone), Bryan Eubanks (electronics), Andrew Lafkas (double bass) and mpld (aka Gill Arno, on light and processed sound from slide projectors), all of which is at the original post: fotofono.net.

Fotofono was previously featured here, back in mid-January (disquiet.com).

Ian Johnson at the Start of the Rainbow

Most drawings and paintings of legendary musicians, as with those of other public figures, are based on photographs. Whether you’re in an art gallery perusing graffiti-inspired pictures of Charles Mingus and John Coltrane, or down in Tourist Town surrounded by secular iconography of Marilyn Monroe and James Dean, there’s usually a photographic foundation to the image you’re looking at.

These drawings-from-photos generally aren’t examples of photo-realism. They’re something quite different: the practice of producing from photographs new images that suggest themselves to be fully original portraits (or, in another context, still-lifes). Photo-realism is about reconciling the pre-photographic traditional of painting with the documentary capacity inherent in photography. This other mode is about instilling photographic documentation with the expressionistic artistry of painting. The best of such photo-derived drawn and painted images transform the original photos into something that speaks to the artist’s own perspective. Individually they may “transcend” the source material, but that’s a broad term that suggests no single approach.

The end result is a kind of visual remix, the original photo an example of image-as-sample. These matters of artistic appropriation are particularly resonant in images that depict musicians, such as those by illustrator and painter Ian Johnson, whose dedication to his subject matter is apparent in numerous ways.

Here, to provide one example of his work, is his drawing of trumpeter Don Cherry and bassist Henry Grimes:

Johnson has a solo show currently up at the gallery/store Park Life in San Francisco, titled Of the Living Sky. It opened April 2. The show features two dozen drawings by Johnson of jazz legends, including the one of Cherry and Grimes, plus a sculpture (more on that later). There aren’t just the standard figures, like Miles Davis and Thelonious Monk, but relative (if nonetheless highly accomplished) outsiders, such as the Art Ensemble of Chicago, the Jazz Composers Guild (great to see a young John Tchicai smiling proudly), and the avant-garde clarinetist and saxophonist Anthony Braxton, who is featured in not one but two drawings.

One marker of Johnson’s achievement is that the lesser-known figures are no less resolutely drawn than are the commonly recognizable ones. The firm, thin line with which he gives shape to the aged beauty of Chet Baker’s grizzled face is no less assertive, no less precise, than the line that traces the contours of saxophonist John Gilmore, shown standing in one picture next to storied bandleader Sun Ra. (The Park Life exhibit’s title is a nod to the Sun Ra track “Portrait of the Living Sky” — kudos to Johnson, or whoever named the show, to have thought to remove the word “portrait.” The Gilmore/Ra picture is on the exhibit’s promotional postcard.)

The source images may be familiar. In many cases, they appear in the very first page of a Google Image Search for a given artist — that’s the situation with Cherry/Grimes, shown in this photo, which clearly served as the template for Johnson’s drawing:

But no matter their provenance, all 24 portraits are part of a single, whole catalog — Johnson’s catalog, Johnson’s vision.

In addition to that firm line, Johnson introduces a prismatic color effect to almost all of this work. Bringing color to these images is a complicated affair, since so many of the original photos were taken, or at least broadly reproduced, in black and white. In most cases, the major figure in an image is shown as the originating source of a kind of radial halo of colored lines; the symbolism is part holy, part musical, though for Johnson those two may be one and the same. These prisms appear as hard, stiff, geometrically certain vectors.

Here are four more images from the Park Life exhibit, clockwise from upper left showing Braxton, Chet Baker, Braxton again, and Charlie Parker:

Note not only the consistent use of these colored lines, but the potential they have to suggest an editorial voice on Johnson’s part. Do the lines that intersect above Parker’s head suggest some higher purpose for the undisputed legend? Do the crisscross ones around the elder Braxton speak to the increasingly experimental nature of his vast output, in contrast with the calm, rich colors and pattern of his youth? Could the tragic figure that is Baker be placed in a manner that any more clearly telegraphed his martyr-like status?

The effect throughout is beatific, even if it can’t help but imply a hierarchy. For example, in the image of John Gilmore and Sun Ra (shown directly above), the lines clearly are centered solely around the latter, even though he stands in the background. In the image of Don Cherry and Henry Grimes, the majority of the lines emanate from Cherry, but some shoot out of Grimes, too — and the places where the lines intersect serve as a testament to their collaboration. These lines are as intrinsic to Johnson’s approach as they were to the late minimalist Agnes Martin’s, though of course with a very different impact.

All of which (sampling, symbolism, minimalism) leads back to the image of Cherry and Grimes, and to this detail of that image:

In the photograph that served as the source for the picture, Grimes is shown holding a piece of sheet music, dotted with notes. In Johnson’s transformation, the musical staff lines remain, but the notes have been replaced with all manner of colors and patterns, a synaesthesia that willfully confuses image and music. It’s a kind of jazz Fantasia. This is simply Johnson at his best — filling these once static images with the vibrancy of their subjects. It probably isn’t lost on him that the score he has created in the Cherry/Grimes picture looks very much like the sort of graphic composition that Anthony Braxton helped instigate.

This idea of music as color, notes as lines, prisms as symbols of all that is holy, if not sacred, finally escapes direct association with any particular musician in “No. 3,” a sculpture that one could easily miss if one doesn’t look up. It appears at Park Life above a pipe near the gallery’s ceiling, long poles painted in Johnson’s rainbow palette, each color splayed across the wall where an individual pole ends. Johnson thus treats his audience like he does Charlie Parker, making the music something to aspire to, whether we create it, listen to it, or pay tribute to it. That sculpture is the “living sky” of the show’s title:

More on Johnson at ianmjohnson.com. A monograph on him,
Beauty Is a Rare Thing, has been published by paper-museum.net, a project of Park Life. More on the Park Life gallery, which frequently has music-themed shows, at parklifestore.com/gallery.

Images of the Week: Piano Etude for the Hive Mind

This is not Chris Ware’s rejected cover for the next issue of The Journal of Music Theory, nor is it a Christoph Niemann editorial illustration for music issue of the New York Times Book Review:

What it is is a diagram of “Piano Etudes” by composer-technologist Jason Freeman. Here’s a detail, for closer inspection:

Freeman writes about the project at opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com. He’s created a piece of music that is, more factually, pieces of music — pieces intended to be organized in any manner by anyone. There are four of these etudes, each consisting of multiple fragments of piano recordings. The approach to composition can be traced back to the “open score” mode of composers such as Terry Riley and Earle Brown, as Freeman explains. He has taken that approach and upgraded it for the Network Era, with the help of Akito Van Troyer:

In “Piano Etudes”(2009), I use technology to make the open score accessible not only to performers but also to audiences, inviting everyone to experience and participate in the work’s creative process. I notated these four short piano pieces as sets of musical fragments connected by arrows. The structure is reminiscent of a choose-your-own-adventure novel, of a flow chart, or of the hyperlinked structure of the Internet. Each version of the piece simply follows the arrows to create a unique path through the score. There are an almost infinite number of possible versions.

You can make your own version of any of the four etudes at turbulence.org. The project also brings to mind the instructional scores of artists and musicians involved in Fluxus, and confirms that there is a direct lineage from the instructions-as-score of John Cage, Yoko Ono, and others, and the code-as-score of people like Freeman.

Disquiet.com readers with long memories will recall Freeman’s “Shakespeare Cuisinart,” which I wrote about back in July 2001: disquiet.com.

More on Freeman at jasonfreeman.net.

Thanks to Mike Rhode (of comicsdc.blogspot.com) for the tip.