Quote of the Week: RZA on Hayes

In the year-end double issue of Entertainment Weekly, obituaries of the recently deceased were written by their peers and disciples, such as Rick Moody on David Foster Wallace, and Pete Townshend on Bo Diddley.

This is RZA (that is, Robert “RZA” Diggs, as EW identifies him, of the great rap collective the Wu Tang Clan) on Isaac Hayes (1942 – 2008) as both muse and producer:

    One Isaac Hayes song has made over 20 hip-hop songs. Look at “Walk On By.” It’s a nice three-minute song by Dionne Warwick, but when Isaac got ahold of it, it became soulful, pimp-daddy, ride-in-your-car, lean-back, 12-minute song, restructured with organs and a flute.

And Townshend noted this of Diddley: “You can’t copyright a rhythm, but if you could, Bo would have passed on a richer financial legacy.”

Japan-U.S. Noise Duo MP3 (Kumakiri, Rylan)

There’s a real funk hidden deep in the squelchy, super-lo-fi noise of Hiroshi Kumakiri (of the Japanese duo Nerve Net Noise). He tweaks his home-made synths, connected by a Silly String mess of audio cables and patch cords, into something that sounds a lot like robot babies crying for their batteries to be changed. The open-wire fritzes and short-circuit blurps are mere happenstance noises on first impression, but in time the internal rhythms become apparent: jokey, burpy, jolting passages that have an internal cohesion. And just as importantly, the tones he achieves are addictive, despite their seeming simplicity.

Thanks to the Rare Frequency podcast, Kumakiri can be heard both on his own and, later in the recording, collaborating with U.S.-based noisemaker and gadget-hacker Jessica Rylan, whose own emphasis on subtle if anarchic flurries make an inspired contrast to Kumakiri (MP3). Judging by some photos up on the Rare Frequency flikr.com page, Rylan’s equipment included her own home-brew device, the Little Blue Boy (more info on that in a previous Disquiet Dowstream entry). Visit Rare Frequency at rarefrequency.com.

PS: My error — Nerve Net Noise is no longer a duo. Tsuyoshi Nakamaru (aka Tagomago) has left the group. More on remaining member Kumakiri in an interview at rarefrequency.com. (Thanks for the additional info, Mike.)

11 Things I Wish My iPod Could Do

I have a fifth-generation iPod. I wish it could do the following. I realize there is third-party software that can, unofficially, implement some if not all of these. I wish this was, more simply, part of the system. Perhaps some of it already is, and I’m just mistaken.

1. I wish the tags included a field for record labels. This is how I mentally sort much of my music.

2. I wish you could apply multiple genres to tracks and to albums.

3. I wish I could easily sync from two computers to one iPod. If I purchase a CD on a trip, I’d like to be able to rip it to my iPod from my laptop, and then have that work seamlessly with my home computer — including having it copy the files to my computer when I sync upon return home.

4. I wish album covers showed up in menu view. This is part of the new system, and I wish it would port back to older iPods.

5. I wish, when showing the “full screen” view of an album cover, it could drop the “now playing” top bar to provide more screen room for the image.

6. I wish it could play two tracks simultaneously.

7. I wish I could edit track info (song, artist, genre, etc.) on the fly.

8. I wish I could find out more information about a given track: bit rate, format, BPM, composer, release date, etc.

9. I wish it could play OGG, FLAC, and other such file formats.

10. I wish playlists could group tracks by album in the menu view, like genres do.

11. I wish I could click a button on my iPod, which is connected to my computer via a cable, not a dock, and that with that click I could disconnect it, rather than having to do so through iTunes or the operating system.

Cello-tronic Live Performance MP3

More than four months have passed since we checked in with Ted Laderas, whose Oo-Ray takes an improvisatory, extended-technique, technologically enabled approach to the cello. Uploaded at the tail end of 2008 to his website, 15people.net, is a half hour live performance recorded just a few days prior (MP3). It’s necessary listening. This isn’t just a matter of looping, so that he can play against himself, deeply bowed moments plotted atop tremulous backing textures, but that’s there aplenty. Nor is it just about convincing audiences that the cello is no less a feedback-friendly instrument than a Stratocaster, which he proves to be the case. Laderas digs deeply into the cello’s vocabulary, and plays up its rougher features, making a clear parallel between the resonant strings and the corrugated noise he prods from them, thanks to various laptop-powered processes.

Tokyo, 2008.12, Part 1/5: Hawtin, Kitsune in Chiba

Saturday night, December 20, 2008, my next to final night in Japan on a recent trip, I was fortunate enough to find myself in the city of Chiba, because that same evening, Richie Hawtin was headlining a concert at Makuhari Messe, a massive convention center around which Chiba’s downtown area has seemingly been constructed.

I don’t know if the sound at the rave-like event was actually more quiet than at the American equivalent. Perhaps this was an aural illusion, fostered by text messaging, and having nothing to do with geography. All I know is that people certainly moved around differently in these dark, conversation-curtailing spaces than they used to. The room didn’t have the sense of immersion that seems essential to the true 2:00am DJ experience. I came to wonder, over the course of the evening, and as morning approached, if text messaging has ruined the rave. The whole impression of remoteness, and the tension between that remoteness and the contrary knowledge that you’re an integral part of the crowd, are diminished when you can just type “Meet me near the keg” and send it to a friend.

There were two rooms at the Makuhari hall, the smaller one for DJs of a more danceable variety, and the larger where Hawtin played — at least I presume it was him — as 3:00am approached, a dank yet arid, darker, more minimal techno than anything else heard that evening. The event was called Womb Adventure, with over a dozen performers on the bill. (Details at womb.co.jp.)

I started off, shortly after midnight, in the smaller room, where Kitsune was doing a tandem performance. Kitsune is Gildas Loaëc of France and Masaya Kuroki of Japan, and their poppy techno provided a peculiarly incomplete return to techno’s roots. This inherently automated music that has of late been turned into pop by Daft Punk (with whom Loaëc has worked), and subsequently absorbed into hip-hop by Kanye West, was suddenly left on its lonesome, pretty much back in its raw state. And yet the whole pop aura still hovered about it. This was in part because Kitsune wasn’t shy about dropping in the occasional proper song, but all the more so because now those sounds, the big beats and candy-colored lo-rez audio synthesis, simply bring to mind what might ordinarily appear on an FM radio station.

The videos that unfurled behind Kitsune on a wide, stage-spanning screen had a retro-future feel, these images of foxes — the band is named Kitsune after all — rendered in a vector-graphics style, clearly intended to suggest old video games, like Asteroids or the early Star Wars arcade fave, the one in which you reenact Luke Skywalker’s flight down the Death Star trench. But the images also, with their pinprick geometry plotting rudimentary animal forms, resembled constellations. Of course, for this crowd, at this time of night, whether it’s 25 years ago or 3,000, it’s all just ancient history.

The Kitsune set was oddly inexpert. It was fun, certainly, and they mixed in the familiar and the unfamiliar, but there were certainly no new tricks, and sometimes songs were left to play for extended periods. There was a lot of dramatically precise knob-twiddling, which the crowd ate up, and there was one extended silence that was pretty impressive, one of those moments when a vacuum fills the room, and you sense just how much music there had been seconds earlier.

There was considerably less dancing than there might be at a U.S. equivalent of such an event. And I don’t say that just to comfort myself because I don’t really dance; I mostly go to hear the music on a louder sound system than I could possibly have at home, to feel it in my chest as much as to hear it, maybe more so the latter. I’m still convinced the sound wasn’t as loud as it could have been. I felt no need to wear ear plugs, and my chest never had that resounding-cavity vibration.

As for Hawtin, it was a thrilling sight, that many people on a floor that large, while he played the most minimal of beats. I wonder, when I take in minimal techno like his, what exactly fills the space between the beats. Is it a shadow cast by immensity of the beats themselves, is it a beauty in the interspersed silences, or is it just a matter of personality — in this case, is what is between the beats merely the fact that “Richie Hawtin” is making those beats? Are the beats, in other words, set against a mental backdrop of star power?

For Kitsune the projected images were antique technology, and for Hawtin they were of-the-moment: high-tech, minimal geometric patterns, like some over-sized iPhone application. Yet if any single vision distinguished the event from what might take place in San Francisco or L.A., it was this: at 3:00 am you walk out past an interior field of clear plastic bags the size of beach balls, perfectly round beach balls, tightly wrapped, each with its own number designating its rightful owner, and packed inside everything from purses to backpacks to jackets to shoes, glimpse-able in these Saran Wrap pods. No hulking security guards, no fear of theft, just hundreds upon hundreds of balls, time capsules for a musical space voyage.

As for Chiba, it couldn’t provide a more perfect setting for Richie Hawtin’s techno. It’s one of those cities with nothing but malls and corporate skyscrapers, concrete as far as the eye can see. There’s nothing but commerce there, commerce and concrete. Imagine a middle-class Dubai, or an Anaheim bereft of Disney.

The architecture is concrete and glass. The key distinguishing feature is a maze of walkways that provide a second-story means to navigate the area, human monorails founded on the assumption that there would be more traffic — foot and car — than there is. Tall buildings circle the downtown, each bearing a corporate logo. There is Sharp, and Fujitsu, and IBM, and NTT, and Sumitomo, and others marked by unfamiliar multinational sigils.

Chiba is, famously, the location identified in the title of the first chapter of William Gibson’s genre-defining cyberpunk novel, Neuromancer. He describes the sky as being tuned to a television set on a dead channel — and for this port town, with its inclement winter weather and all the industrial activity, it’s not an inapt comparison.

The morning after the concert, I found myself facing this sign, which had nothing to do with the Hawtin concert, yet summed it up perfectly. It’s actually the name of a small “shopping arcade” for electronics:

Greater Tokyo, of which Chiba is a part, lends a unique context to Hawtin’s music. This is because Tokyo is a place where you are surrounded if not by electronic music, then at least by electronically produced sounds, all of it virtually devoid of hard edges — it’s just soothing tones, the saccharine mall melodies and the unique chimes that ring in subway stations. Hawtin’s music, that chiaroscuro of resolute beats, offers a kind of photographic negative image of the sonic life of Tokyo.