Quote of the Week: Do Electric Cars Snore?

This is an engineer at Nissan talking about adding noise to silent cars:

    “We decided that if we’re going to do this, if we have to make sound, then we’re going to make it beautiful and futuristic.”

The engineer, Toshiyuki Tabata, was interviewed at bloomberg.com on the subject of the Nissan Leaf, an electric car so quiet that, as with many electric and gas-electric hybrids, it was deemed a potential threat to unsuspecting pedestrians. After consulting with the composers of film scores, the Nissan team opted for noises similar to those in the Ridley Scott film Blade Runner. No word yet on a commercial electric hovercar from Nissan. (Thanks to twitter.com/lucent2cents for the tip.)

Past Week at Twitter.com/Disquiet

  • Headed out shortly to afternoon performance by Jim Haynes, William Fowler Collins, & others at On Land Festival at SF’s Cafe du Nord. #
  • Morning sounds: bus, hard drive, some little animal on the roof. And, shortly, my copy of Method of Defiance’s album Nihon (RareNoise). #
  • All week pondered tonight’s tough concert choice: Joan La Barbara or Bill Laswell? Laswell wins, based on Toshinori Kondo’s participation. #
  • Excellent @boccalone sandwich from its bike-powered cart at @vegaatlangton today. Love the San Francisco utilitarian mobile food activity. #
  • Thanks to @mmaddencomics & @wcraghead for Yo Gabba Gabba! tip. Someone had previously, & I feel bad I don’t recall who: http://bit.ly/7phA0 #
  • RIP, Leon Kirchner (b. 1919), whose 1967 Pulitzer Prize was for a piece for string quartet and tape. http://is.gd/3pIUn http://is.gd/3pIWN #
  • Best part of SFEMF concert last night was watching Don Buchla enjoy Lukas Ligeti rocking Buchla’s Marimba Lumina: http://is.gd/3ooeZ #
  • Officially addicted to Pandora’s Tribe Called Quest channel. And to making playlists of instrumental versions of hip-hop tracks in fizy.com. #
  • RIP, Mary Travers (b. 1936). I learned a lot at a young age from Peter, Paul, and you about tight harmony and pop psychedelia. #
  • Headed to opening night of San Francisco Electronic Music Festival. Always comes around near anniversary of my return to this great city. #
  • Disquiet.com due for upgrade. Reader input requested: http://is.gd/3lDm1 Subjects = ambient music, sound-as-art, reactive sound. #
  • If you use @audioboo on your iPhone/Touch, consider joining a small geo-coded sound army: http://is.gd/3ldSB #
  • Morning sounds: hard drive, buses flying by at unusually fast pace, general (which is to say minimal) traffic. No birds, no planes. #
  • Wishing I could watch Echolalia, the invented Werner Herzog movie introduced in first chapter of Chronic City, Jonathan Lethem's new novel. #
  • That old dog whining outside turns out not to have been a dog — it was a steel door being lowered. #
  • RIP, punk poet Jim Carroll (b. 1950), who has joined all the "People Who Died" RT @richard_kadrey #
  • Why are the On Land Festival & the SF Electronic Music Festival the same weekend? (Plus, Bill Laswell's in town with Toshinori Kondo.) #
  • Listening to piano-tronic soundbed by @hecanjog — I got it for helping fund @kickstarter tour of him & @alwaystokyo http://is.gd/3e4Cc #
  • RIP, saxophonist Luther Thomas (b. 1950). His Defunkt & James Chance work helped condition ears to fractured rhythms http://is.gd/3dTka #
  • Cooking first meal in brand new oven — as the chicken bakes, acquainting myself with new button beeps and timer alarms. #
  • Finally got USB audio hooked up to Vista 64 machine (Windows 7 on near horizon, of course). The UA-25EX pipes clean, static-free sound. #

Second Annual International Ambient Industrial Music Festival (San Francisco)

Made it last night, albeit late into the evening, to the first night of the second annual Second Annual International Ambient Industrial Music Festival in downtown San Francisco. The two-night event was advertised on that Bible of Bay Area out-music activity, bayimproviser.com. The location was posted, with a certain air of post-rave mystery, as being “Within 4 blocks of Powell BART station in downtown San Francisco.” You had to send an email to an address that was half Aleister Crowley, half Burning Man in order to obtain the physical address, which turned out to be a former warehouse and now residence, with ancient wood floors, old but cozy couches, an OK sound system, and at least one man in full body paint making sound with a heavily processed Nintendo DS.

Shortly after I arrived, Thomas Dimuzio was joined on the makeshift stage by three others in a jam, an artfully blunt collision of analog oscillators, PC-driven noise-making, and torqued vocals. Dimuzio was on guitar, which he had explained earlier was being simultaneously sent to various speakers around the room, each speaker presenting the signal through a different effect. Also on the bill that evening was Kwisp, Noisepsalm, Cursed Chimera, and Ure Thrall. That’s Dimuzio second from the left in this photo, shot in the relatively dark confines of the performance space:

The second night is tonight, Saturday, September 19, featuring Free Rein, Nux Vomica, Voice of Eye, and Death of the West on what’s billed a s a “full octophonic sound system.” Details at iamindust.com.

Method of Defiance, Live in San Francisco

Bill Laswell brought his traveling noise-reggae fusion collective Method of Defiance to San Francisco last night, September 18. They played for an hour and a half at the Regency, an old hall on a desolate stretch of Van Ness Avenue that used to be home to regal car dealerships. The crowd was small but enthusiastic, and for every attendee, there are certain to be a dozen friends who will learn just how special a night they missed out on.

The band included Bernie Worrell on Clavinet, synthesizer, and organ. Skeletal thin, his bandanna and earring suggesting a role in a future Pirates of the Caribbean movie, the Parliament-Funkadelic keyboardist brought a genial funk to the proceedings, though it was surprisingly more Ray Charles than George Clinton, more Genius + Soul = Jazz than Chocolate City. He greeted the audience with an opening play on “I Left My Heart in San Francisco,” and late in the show he took a solo that moved quickly from song to song, from Parliament, to a bit of Talking Heads (with whom he toured and recorded), to chamber music, to Jimi Hendix. Hendrix died in 1970 on the day of the concert, September 18. Born in 1944, Worrell is, to put things in historical perspective, just two years Henrix’s junior. (On drums was Guy Licata, who, to complete this chronological tangent, was born eight years after Hendrix passed away.)

And, of course, on bass was Laswell, whose hulking presence matched the gaping-maw echo on his deeply dub-dense instrument, a chest-rattling sound that he milked in a solo late in the show, when he played the riff from Black Sabbath’s “Iron Man.” The catalyst behind Method of Defiance, he is more éminence grise than band leader, more lurking backing figure than front man.

Two vocalists were present, Doctor Israel and Garrison Hawk, both of whom made strong impressions, especially Israel, who doubled on dub effects.

The key reason I attended the concert (there was a lot challenging it that evening, including the third night at the San Francisco Electronic Music Festival, where Joan La Barbara was scheduled to perform, as well as the willfully under-publicized Second Annual International Ambient Industrial Music Festival) was the presence of Japanese trumpeter Toshinori Kondo, who is perhaps best known outside Japan for the album Ki-Oku. That album was a collaboration with Japanese turntablist DJ Krush, who is also a member of Method of Defiance, though he didn’t make it to the U.S. for this tour. (Krush will be back, solo, in time for the October 17 Treasure Island Music Festival in San Francisco.) Ki-Oku, released a decade ago, fused Kondo’s Miles Davis–inspired, effects-laden trumpet playing with Krush’s ever-rarefied beats, which have the feel of hip-hop whittled to the bone.

Live, Kondo is, simply put, a monster. There were enough effects on his trumpet at the Regency last night to fuel a Michael Bay movie — streaming ribbons of sound emanated from his horn, from which he would produce shimmery scales, violently rapid flurries, and, on one occasion, a wisp of static electricity that sounded like a candle being squelched. He swayed in place, remaining seated for most of the show, his face stern and deep in concentration. One highlight of the concert was a duet with Israel. (Though Method of Defiance played as a band throughout the night, there were numerous temporary duos and trios interspersed.) Israel stood at the front of the stage with his Macintosh open, and let loose an unadulterated recording of the Who’s “Who Are You” — just the first 15 seconds or so, and as the stereo-scoping organ (thank you, Rod Argent) came, in its unnatural repetition, to resemble some pulsing Terry Riley or Steve Reich composition, Israel then began to effect his own live mix on the original, turning it into a dubstep breakdown, while Kondo injected taut, brutal trumpet jabs.

There’s an admirable looseness to Method of Defiance. Watching them play is in part like a jazz performance, with the song references, the temporary pairings of musicians, and the improvisatory intentions. Reggae’s roots in dub, in studio innovation, is also very much a concern, which is why Kondo’s unnatural sound is so critical to the group’s overall success. The only time in the entire show that Kondo’s trumpet sounded like a trumpet was when Israel playfully stuck his microphone into its bell.

SFEMF Night 1/4: Dokuro, Masaoka, Ligeti, Neuberg

There was a buzzing sound upon entering the Brava Theatre in San Francisco on Wednesday, September 16. It was the first night of the 10th anniversary of the San Francisco Electronic Music Festival, but that buzz was not the sound of an errant connection, of some last minute work by stagehands deep inside the Outer Mission theater’s elegantly crumbling main hall. It was a base tone of an installation by the duo Dokuro.

Dokuro consists of Agnes Szelag and the Norman Conquest (the latter aka Norman Teale), and their installation involved a noise — that un-ignorable buzz — that was, in turn, disrupted by the presence of people as they entered the Brava’s foyer. The microphones and speakers were hidden in plain sight, embedded inside a pair of heads that looked like the tops of white C3P0 mannequins. There was one inside the decorative ceiling enclosures on either side of the foyer.

On stage, upon entering the hall, was a lone figure dressed in a luxurious white kimono, holding a long white pole. One sleeve of the kimono was embroidered with some reflective material. The white costume was the “LED Kimono” designed by Miya Masaoka, and worn by her daughter, Mariko Masaoka-Drew. Masaoka was one of the founding members of the SFEMF, as the festival is known, and though she now lives in New York, she was invited to be the first performer at the event.

One SFEMF founding member would appear each of its four nights, with Pamela Z, the longest-running member of the organization, due to perform the last set of the fourth and final night, September 19. Masaoka’s performance opened with computer-enabled loops of a koto (visible stage left in the photo below), and then descended into rich, pure, dreamy synthesis, while Masaoka-Drew’s sleeve depicted patterns related to the sounds, which played on the LED like some wearable stereo equalizer. (There’s a better photo of the kimono at sfemf.org.)

Then came Lukas Ligeti, son of the late composer György Ligeti, with whom he shares an impish sense of humor, even if he more closely resembles a young Rick Moranis. Ligeti played on a MIDI-controlled mallet instrument called the Marimba Lumina, created by Don Buchla, who was in the audience (only three seats from me, and visibly enjoying the work). Ligeti played a handful of pieces that allowed the marimba to trigger all manner of noises, few if any of them the sort of sounds generally associated with a mallet instrument. There were field recordings, and unfamiliar percussion, and synthesized tones. His sense of humor was a key compositional element — dramatic welters of noise were upended with jokey little melodic cues, and his enthused facial expressions were pretty much all the explanation the music required, though he did thank Buchla from the stage, and mention that many of the sounds were recorded by him in Africa (he didn’t get more specific about geography).

Amy X Neuberg closed the show with new and old songs, which characteristically mix pop-cabaret lyrics, sonic effects, and her own gifted vocal range. The first one opened with a joke about emoticons.

More on Agnes Szelag at aggiflex.com, on Norman Conquest at thenormanconquest.net, and on their duo Dokuro at myspace.com/dokuromusic. Lukas Ligeti at lukasligeti.com, and information on the Marimba Lumina at buchla.com/mlumina. Amy X Neuberg at amyxneuburg.com.

More on the San Francisco Electronic Music Festival at sfemf.org.