Scratch Mouse

Name: cymbalism.com Ӣ Rating: Cool Ӣ Format: Online Software Ӣ Play

Scratch mouse. Online mixers are proliferating. The tool at cymbalism.com distinguishes itself with a smart scratching format. The system consists of three batches of musical material: four “drum” loops, eight “instrumental” loops and eight samples, all of which can be triggered with your computer’s mouse or keyboard. The drum loops can be overlaid, but you can only play one instrumental loop and/or sample at a time. If you trigger the samples with your keyboard, you can then “scratch” them on the provided sample pad; the pad provides a visualization of the selected sample, and by moving your mouse you can back up or advance the sample.

Slice of Pi

Name: Sound of Pi Ӣ Rating: Very Cool Ӣ Format: Online Software Ӣ Play

No, not the movie. This elegant program produces sounds based on the unfolding stream of digits that is Pi (i.e., 3.14159 …). When it first loads in your browser, it recites the sequence in French (“trois, point, un, quatre,” etc.), but there are 20-plus other options, including harpsichord tones and morse code. The program was produced in 1996 as a Java applet by Stephen Braham and Terrance Yu. It is housed on the web page of the Centre for Experimental and Constructive Mathematics at Simon Fraser University in Canada, hence the French-language default. (Be warned that this tool occasionally goes offline.)

Best CDs of 2000

1. Supermodified
Amon Tobin
(Ninja Tune)
Much has been made of Tobin’s country of origin, Brazil, but what matters most is where he’s headed. He’s one of the electronic avant-garde’s favorite populists, and the dance floor’s favorite experimentalists.

2. Alina
Arvo Pärt
(ECM)
Classical music composed since the advent of the synthesizer isn’t necessarily informed by technology. The five austere, modern pieces heard here are electronic only to the extent that they were recorded with the consummate attention that listeners have come to expect from Pärt’s longtime association with ECM Records and its founder/producer, Manfred Eicher. That said, these are as stark and contemplative as any digitized ambience, and both fields — the techno-philic and the traditional — benefit from being heard in a common context.

3. Quondam Current
Jake Mandell
(Mille Plateaux)
Once of America’s strongest electric voices, Mandell has one-upped himself with this strong application of brittle sounds and buoyant beats.

4. Kid A
Radiohead
(Capitol)
Admittedly, something of a tough choice. A British band long (and deservedly) critiqued for ripping off the anthemic self-flagellation of U2 enters the 21st century by, all of a sudden, pixelating itself. In the process, it gets critiqued for ripping off the dyspeptic digitizations of Aphex Twin. True, the “newness” of this album will depend entirely on the range of the listener’s experience with so-called “intelligent dance music.” Anyone with a passing familiarity with Autechre or Oval will experience deja vu. Nonetheless, Radiohead deserves credit for not merely grafting electronic affects to pop songs, and for managing to bring considerable song craft to digital composition in a manner comparable to the electro-acoustic accomplishments of the Beastie Boys and Nine Inch Nails.

5. Rosa
Thomas Brinkmann
(Ernst)
Brinkmann produced a series of 12″s, each with a woman’s name, that involved a rarified flavor of techno music. This album collects an assortment of material from that project. Ironic takes on metronomic dance music are common. What’s special about Brinkmann’s remote techno is how downright catchy it is, how much fun he accomplishes with such meager materials.

6. Multila
Vladislav Delay
(Chain Reaction)
Yes, more haunting, near-anemic techno music from one of the more prolific musicians out there. It’s minimal, indeed, but slow as molasses, too, and distorted to the extent that any single element produces sonic consequences that ripple out toward infinity.

7. Brown, Blue, Brown on Blue (For Mark Rothko)
Bernhard Gunter
(Trente Oiseaux)
An expressive, burnished ambient expanse, devoid of time signatures, exploring time slowed down to a deep wallow.

8. 3
Pole
(Matador)
Jamaican dub remains as close as electronic music gets to an organic, rootsy sound. Pole (born Stefan Betke) is dub’s strongest Information Age proponent, and his thick, blurpy instrumentals suggest the satellite surveillance of swamp life.

9. Clicks + Cuts
Various artists
(Mille Plateaux)
Two CDs packed with experiments in microsonic composition, stark music that explores the crevices within sounds with the same dedication that jazz musicians like Thelonious Monk brought to blue notes and that microtonal composers like Harry Partch brought to standard Western temperament. Contributors to this collection include Kit Clayton, Kid 606, Sutekh, and three musicians listed elsewhere in this top 10 of 2000: Pole, Jake Mandell and Vladislav Delay.

10. Requiem for a Dream
Clint Mansell
(Nonesuch)
Mansell brought a dark techno sheen to Pi, the debut film by director Darren Aronofksy. For the duo’s second creative collaboration, a tale of multiple drug addictions, Mansell managed to lure the esteemed Kronos Quartet into his studio. The resulting soundtrack is nearly three dozen miniature compositions combining Kronos’ well-honed strings with Mansell’s pneumatic beats and sampled noise. Aronofsky has since been attached to the Batman franchise, and the thought of him and Mansell taking on the Dark Knight is enough to give movie fans a little faith in the future of Hollywood; Aronofsky is reportedly developing a script with comics auteur Frank Miller. It’s also worth noting that Mansell was a founding member of the band Pop Will Eat Itself, who once sang an ode to one of Miller’s comic-book peers: “Alan Moore knows the score.”

Antarktika Stream

Beautiful streaming audio of an hour-long industrial-ambient set by Antarktika (born David O’Toole), recorded on January 22, 2000. Mentioned as a streaming offer in the July issue of the Disquiet.com newsletter; now available for download (for free). In the Toshoklabs label site’s “download area” (toshoklabs.com)