On the Line

Some favorite recent sentences

“One of my very favorite sounds in the world is made by split-flap displays, also known as Solari boards after a well-known manufacturer. The 'screen' shuffles to show each of the letters and numbers in a row of text, pauses to show the information, and then shuffles again — clickety-clickety-clickety — to reflect updates.”

That is from Deb Chachra’s excellent new book, How Infrastructure Works: Inside the Systems That Shape Our World. This is one of my favorite sounds, as well. (Note: the “clickety-clickety-clickety” is italicized in the original, but the formatting here doesn’t allow for it.) In a manner of speaking, this book is Deb listening to the world’s hum.

. . .

“I find music a useful distraction. A focus tool. Keeps the inner voice from wandering.”

From the trailer to director David Fincher’s upcoming movie, The Killer, the words spoken by the title character, played by Michael Fassbender, screenplay by Andrew Kevin Walker, from a series of graphic novels by writer Matz and artist Luc Jacamon. As I’ve written here many times, some of the most evocative writing about sound can be found in thrillers about spies and killers, because they must listen carefully both to get their work done and to survive.

. . .

“You knew that part of what was bothering him was the noise; his hearing wasn't as good as it used to be, probably from all the loud machines at his work, and he didn't like to have to turn up the television, whose speaker distorted when the volume got too high.”

That observation is from John Darnielle’s novel Devil House, which I’m enjoying. I’m reading a few too many books at the moment, but I’ll return to normal mode (three tops: one paper, one ebook, one audiobook) soon. Or soon-ish. Darnielle is the musician who goes by Mountain Goats, and it’s no surprise when sound and song surface in this book.

Scratch Pad: Buddha Machine, Phones, Criterion

From the past week

I do this manually at the end of each week: collating (and sometimes lightly editing) most of the recent little comments I’ve made on social media, which I think of as my public scratch pad. I mostly hang out on Mastodon (at post.lurk.org/@disquiet), and I’m also trying out a few others. And I take weekends off social media. 

▰ “If you would like to hold without music, please press *”

“*”

▰ Kinda stoked I passed 3,600 subscribers to my sound-studies / ambient-music newsletter, This Week in Sound

▰ Me: OK, I’ve bought enough books for the year.

Also me: Oh, there’s a new dozen ebooks selected by Nick Mamatas on Story Bundle for $20. So much for my resolve.

▰ Yeah, I bought another Buddha Machine. Couldn’t resist the 2023 edition of the debut model.

▰ It’s 2023, so one gets messages in one’s ear like: “Someone with a 415 area code has sent a thumbs-up emoji.” Even better is the odd pause between “sent” and “a” — it’s just there because that’s how the message is stitched together, but the result is like patter from the most mundane game show ever.

▰ First: Kinda obsessed with the Criterion Closet videos.

Then: Kinda obsessed with the HVAC room tone of the Criterion Closet videos.

Side note: Why hasn’t Steven Soderbergh done a Criterion Closet video?

▰ “I find music a useful distraction. A focus tool. Keeps the inner voice from wandering.”

Yeah, I’m looking forward to The Killer, the upcoming movie from David Fincher.

▰ Well, that’s one fewer social media platforms to keep an eye on: pebble.is (previously T2, its temporary name) is closing down on November 1, 2023. It was a good spot. I met some folks there, even one in real life, and we had some solid discussions going. I’m sure more such companies will fall, and rise.

▰ I’m really enjoying Duolingo (German, currently), but yow has it cut into my “pleasure reading” time