Homebrew 8bit 3D-sound MP3

It’s always worth keeping an eye, and ear, on what Christopher Abad is up to at twentygoto10.com. He’s always tinkering with homebrew software and tech, building rudimentary audio tools, programming them, and posting his results for general consumption.

Abad has an arcade-era aesthetic, dating to when electronic music was limited by processing power, memory, and language. Even in our current era of terabyte hard drives and cloud computing, Abad abides by lo-fi techniques. In no way, though, does that make his work simple.

His latest experiment is in 3D spatialization of audio, an example of which sounds like your head is stuck in the middle of an old Mario Bros. console as a mid-tempo blippy rhythm circles around you (MP3).

[audio:http://www.the-mathclub.net/demos/3daudio.mp3|titles=3D-sound simulation|artists=Christopher Abad]

Writes Abad of his experiment:

    “I came up with some basic demo that models sound in a fake 3d environment. I primarily modeled it with what i know from physics and sound and I also came up with some arbitrary transform for the phenomenon known as head shadow where sound on the opposite side of the head as the source is attenuated based on frequency, pretty simple concept.”

Read the full post (and access Abad’s source code) at twentygoto10.com.

Sound Journal by Justin Hardison (MP3s)

The head of 12k records, Taylor Deupree, isn’t the only person this year running a series of found sounds (see 12k.com/onesoundeachday and disquiet.com). Justin Hardison (aka My Fun) has been publishing a “sound journal” on his blog, true to his interest in “finding beauty in the everyday sounds and the pleasure in slowness.”

Among the most recent is a recording of an apartment (MP3), which he did as part of a call-for-entries by sound-artist o.blaat (details at nmartproject.net — due date is tomorrow, April 3) and a tape made near Hawk Mountain, in the Appalachians of Pennsylvania (MP3).

[audio:http://thelandof.org/blog/theapartment2.mp3|titles=”The Apartment (2)”|artists=My Fun] [audio:http://thelandof.org/blog/hawkmountain.mp3|titles=”Hawk Mountain”|artists=My Fun]

Together, the tracks are study in contrast: inside versus outside, music in the background versus birdsong, human presence versus its (relative) absence, the presence of technology and its (again, relative) absence, and so on.

More at Hardison’s thelandof.org site.

Top 10 Posts from March

The top 10 posts for the last 31 days are as follows, grouped here for the sake of comparison:

As always, free music (i.e., free MP3s) is a major draw, though it’s rewarding, personally, that just three of this month’s top entries come from the site’s daily Downstream section: (1) Serial, asynchronous collaboration with street sounds at freesound.org; (2) DJ /rupture remixing Langston Hughes; and (3) Japan’s Fjordne remixing piano.

(4) Also in the free-music category, the third in this site’s new “Listen?” series, which provided an hour-long selection of remixes of tracks by David Byrne and Brian Eno, from the 2006 compilation I commissioned, Our Lives in the Bush of Disquiet.

Two “Quotes of the Week”: (5) the late novelist David Foster Wallace on the sounds of an I.R.S. office, and (6) comic-book writer (and novelist, and cultural critic, and all-around Internet presence) Warren Ellis on the siren song of outer space.

Two “Images of the Week”: (7) one of a doll made in the image of tinkerer and musician Raymond Scott and (8) one of Marina Vendrell Renaut‘s sound-emitting soft sculptures.

(9) Also up there, my announcement that I was participating in a week-long (March 15 -19) online discussion at artsjournal.com of Lawrence Lessig‘s book Remix. (Thanks again to discussion host/moderator/cruise-director Molly Sheridan for the invitation.)

(10) And, finally, the announcement of an exhibit at the Los Angeles gallery Crewest, where I’ll have an audio piece featured from April 4 through April 30. The opening is this coming Saturday — if you’re in L.A., please do try to drop by. I’ll be there, as will the artist and writer who is the focus of the exhibit, the extraordinarily talented Gustavo Alberto Garcia Vaca. (And no, this is not an April Fool’s joke.)

Unintended Solo Gintas K Album (MP3)

The recent Con-V netlabel release When the Drummer Is Smoking is credited to two musicians: Gintas K and GyS. Thing is, it only has Gintas’s music on it. Why? Let’s have Gintas explain:

    “In 2006, me and GyS talked about collaboration, in which we could use each other’s material. We exchanged the raw files. I completed my part, composed from his sounds (mostly guitar sound). In the middle of GyS’ work his computer crashed and all his work was lost. Only my part left, and it is on this ep.”

While this isn’t a joke (certainly not to GyS, who lost his work in the process), it’s not without its inherent humor, so it’s as close as I’m going to come to having an April Fool’s prank on Disquiet.com this year. (April 1 is the day each year I do my best not to even look at the Internet, as I almost always fall for something — like back in 2004, when the story circulated that Brian Eno had signed on to update the theme song to the long-running BBC soap opera, The Archers.)

To listen to When the Drummer Is Smoking is to hear half a performance, whether the rattling bell and slow bass line on the opening track (MP3), or the wildly looping static and curt riffs on the second (MP3). The EP has five tracks, numbered one through five, with the exception of number four, which bears the EP’s title. It’s a thick, wild synthesizer fantasia (MP3).

[audio:http://www.archive.org/download/cnv52/cnv52_-_gintask_gys_-_01-01.mp3|titles=”01″|artists=Gintas K & GyS] [audio:http://www.archive.org/download/cnv52/cnv52_-_gintask_gys_-_02-02.mp3|titles=”02″|artists=Gintas K & GyS] [audio:http://www.archive.org/download/cnv52/cnv52_-_gintask_gys_-_04-when_the_drummer_is_smoking.mp3|titles=”When the Drummer Is Smoking”|artists=Gintas K & GyS]

Get the full set at con-v.org. And visit Gintas K at gintask.dar.lt.

Blasts of Silence

A subdued chord, and a subsequent quiet. A hovering drone, followed by a compelling absence of sound. Filaments & Voids is the title that Kenneth Kirschner gave to this collection of his music, four pieces composed and recorded, true to their titles, between September 11, 1996, and June 10, 2008. And true to its title, Filaments & Voids is comprised predominantly by one or the other, by carefully constructed audio of lingering delicacy or by singular silences of ambiguous depth.

Kirschner explains that the title of the album is of cosmological provenance. The term, he says, refers to the “largest-scale structures of the universe.”Though the relative spatial dimensions are not directly correlative, the music heard on the album is, like the night sky, a broad and dark space inhabited by dispersed and luminous materials. And as in the night sky, there are patterns. The constellations of Kirschner’s music follow a pattern as perceptible as Orion’s belt: a motif repeats, interspersed with framing silences. That mode serves as the foundation for three of the album’s four pieces. The sounds that bookend Kirschner’s blasts of silence are a pure breed of composition, artfully sculptured nuggets of sonic effluence suspended in air. Kirschner asks the listener to consider each on its own merits, as well as in sequence, each sound sharing the proceeding timeline with a measure of soundlessness.

Over the course of the album’s nearly two and a half hours, he focuses the listener’s attention on the silence inherent in his sounds, and the sound implicit in the silences. Take, for example, the longest work on Filaments & Voids, “March 16, 2006,”which is built from recorded piano. The piece is dedicated to the late neuroscientist James H. “Jimmy”Schwartz, who employed Kirschner for many years, and whose affection for classical music suggested the piano as source material. The short, plaintive riffs are heard against a grainy backdrop, a weather-beaten timbre fitting for a requiem. Kirschner achieved this effect by re-recording the music onto his iPod via an inexpensive microphone. The result is a piano caught amid the presumed silence of real life, an anarchic silence set in contrast with the digital blankness that arrives at each splice, sometimes quite abruptly. Each repeat of the piano reveals it to be subtly transformed by Kirschner’s technology. The effect is as if the silence is slowly eating away at the music.

The broad, organic silences of “March 16, 2006”contrast with those of both “October 19, 2006”and “September 11, 1996.”The former is a sequence of synthesized, prayer-bowl-like sounds that play against the silence, from which they emerge and into which they fade again. The latter leaves the expected calm at a tantalizing distance — an intimated silence, rather than the other work’s cushioning one. Only one of the four pieces doesn’t bear the telltale signs of silence, “June 10, 2008.”It is, instead, a glistening marvel, built, Kirschner explains, from impossible string instruments modeled in a software package. While the work travels its entire 20 minutes without the pregnant pauses that distinguish the majority of Filaments & Voids, the knowledge that these strings reverberated originally in the artificial space of a computer’s processor provides yet another vantage on the whole concept of silence — a digital silence, the studio as virtual clean room.

It’s necessary at this juncture to say something about the striking photo that accompanies Kirschner’s album. The image was, like those on many 12k releases, shot by the label’s founder, Taylor Deupree. Kirschner says that when Deupree first showed him the image — that stark white room like one of Robert Ryman’s white canvases folded into a cube — he immediately put dibs on it to lend a pictorial reference for his music. Kirschner’s affinity is obvious; the barren space on which Deupree trained his lens embodies absence. It’s a bleak room, lacking evidence of human presence, reduced to texture, bleached by the sun.

However, much like the prescient title of one of Kirschner’s compositions included here, the photo carries unforeseen resonance. Shortly before the release of Filaments & Voids, the apartment where Kirschner lived in New York City was destroyed as a result of a fire, and along with it some of the equipment on which this album had been recorded. I first saw Deupree’s photo prior to the fire. After Kirschner informed us of this loss, I found it impossible to again look at the image as simply architectural or beautiful; henceforth, the image has demanded that I consider what had previously been in that room. Before the fire, the image looked to me like a peaceful if desolate place, a kind of secular ruins. But after the fire, I can’t help but ponder what it had contained, what furnishings and lives had inhabited it, what events had transpired there. Much like the silences that abound in Kirschner’s music, the room is no longer empty to me — what it contains is a chilling, indefinite absence.

More on the release at 12k.com.

Visit Kirschner at kennethkirschner.com.