Back to Modular

Cuidado for sure

This should have gone out last night, but I’ve been having on and off backend issues with my site’s CMS (content management system). Posting this backdated.

What my modular synthesizer looks like after I’ve spent most of my time in the software version, aka VCV Rack

On Repeat: Keinseier, DAFAKE, Corruption

Home/office playlist

On Sundays I try to at least quickly note some of my favorite listening from the week prior — things I would later regret having not written about in more depth, so better to share here briefly than not at all.

▰ The feeds are stuffed with the riches of Jamuary. This is Keinseier, based in Hamburg, Germany, doing up some glitchy ambient.

▰ Paris-based Antoine M, aka DAFAKE, goes deep and dark, bringing to mind some of the work of Sussan Deyhim and Richard Horowitz.

▰ Been a while since I checked in on Corruption, whose Soundcloud account has topped 2,000 tracks, and the latest appears to be of the field recording variety in a particularly reverberant space. (The embed isn’t working, so go right to the track.)

Scratch Pad: (Sorta) Back

From the past week

At the end of each week, I usually collate a lightly edited collection of recent comments I’ve made on social media, which I think of as my public scratch pad. I tag on what books I may have finished reading. Knowing I’ll revisit my social media posts, I’ve found, serves as a positive and mellowing influence on my online activity. I mostly hang out on Mastodon (at post.lurk.org/@disquiet), and I’m also trying out a few others. And I generally take weekends off social media.

I took an extended social media (and adjacent) break, from mid-November through the start of January 2026. I’m now back.

Or perhaps back-ish. This past week felt a little off. I didn’t post much, not on social media, that is, and less so than usual in discussion groups I’m on. I posted a little bit more than elsewhere on Facebook, which is purposefully a bit of a wall of garden, but even then not much. I did, as was true to varying degrees through my hiatus, have the instinct to continue to “post” things in my scratch pad, things I hadn’t on social media. Which is good. It’s a way to still capture things and share them publicly on a weekly basis, just not in the social media mode, which is more in-the-moment. I won’t here dissect my thinking, but I am reflecting on it. And to be clear, I take heaps of notes over a given week on a variety of topics. This scratch pad mode is just its own loosely defined narrow subset.

▰ Siri is set on my iPhone to the female South African voice, which to my ear is the available female voice in the lowest register. At some point recently, this voice’s tone appears to have changed. It is less oddly playful, and the change is perfectly fine by me. The way it used to say “okay,” which it does frequently, used to be like it was saying “Okay, cheeky monkey.” Now it says “okay” more matter-of-factly, like “Okay, I’ll continue adding amino acids to this peptide.”

▰ When I speak to machines over the course of a given day:

  • MacWhisper on laptop to transcribe stray thoughts
  • MacWhisper on laptop to get rough transcripts of conversations
  • Whisper Notes on iPhone to transcribe stray thoughts
  • built-in Apple MacBook, iPhone, or CarPlay speech-to-text, the latter requiring Siri

▰ A particular highlight of the holiday break was playing a bunch of new-to-me games, notably the card game Compile, which I am just loving. Anyone else out there playing it? Metal is my go-to protocol, and Gravity and Death are great, too. Been exploring the two three-protocol expansions, as well.

▰ Apparently you can, in Buttondown, schedule way far in advance, because for a moment I had the next #DisquietJunto project set to go out on January 8, 22,026. Fortunately I caught the error.

▰ Is it too late to start this year over?

▰ Finished the first book I’ve read in full this year, Flesh by David Szalay. It’s a novel, a rags-to-riches story, in which the majority of people, when asked how they are or how something is, reply “Okay.” This word can be read as a signal both of how they’re not entirely sure, and of how they don’t really have much vocabulary, or much in the way of awareness, to form a response. Occasionally, if things are going well, they may say “Nice.” They may choose between things and state one is a favorite; in search of conversation, they may ask one another which is their favorite. Apparently this book was the favorite of the Booker Prize committee this past year. The novel is taut and, in terms of literary sensibility, often monotone, which makes sense in the context of the main character, who is quite damaged, but the tone remains pretty much the same even when the story oddly ditches him to portray moments between other characters that the (anti-hero-ish) protagonist doesn’t observe. He is almost absurdly magnetic to women, up there with James Bond and Neil Diamond, and if this book becomes a movie with, say, Michael Fassbender or Alexander Skarsgård as the lead, when he sleeps with the next-to-last person with whom he does in the book, the audience may, unless serious directorial precautions are taken, laugh out loud. In the New York Times, Dwight Garner says “It’s a very complicated plot.” I have no idea what he’s talking about. The best thing, and the closest thing to complication, about the storytelling is how Szalay introduces gaps: time jumps ahead, and you have to sort out how much time has passed, not that Szalay keeps any such period secret for long. So, how is the book? It’s okay.

Jamuary 2026 06–09

Four more

Hey, I’ve made it nine days into Jamuary. (More on what Jamuary is here.) I’m not going to post all of these as individual posts, more likely as batches.

▰ 06\31 — “Traveller Feller”: This is a step forward from yesterday. Rather than two source field recordings, there are three. The beat, per se, is a pair of white noise equivalents (interior drone of a refrigerator and a fan in a bathroom) cut up and swapped back and forth. The third element is the same street musician as last time, pitched differently and brought more to the foreground. As the track proceeds, the speed at which the sampling of that third element occurs gets faster, which alters the way it sounds in playback (a little more cut-up, even jittery). And then, as with yesterday’s track, at the end it goes back to the original speed, which is a shortcut to a kind of closure. This was a lot of fun to put together, and especially interesting was trying to locate patterns that surfaced the most musically interesting elements of the source audio.

07\31 — “Monk Chip”: Continuing to push the same patch forward, the Patch of Theseus, switching one after another module as I move ahead. Tried to apply some automation to the pitch of all three samples. It’s rudimentary, but turned out kinda fun.

▰ 08\31 — “Trumpet Tantrum”: This might be a good mode: Making a patch at the start of a week, and nudging it a bit forward each day, and then starting over for the next week. In any case, the differences between today and yesterday are two. First, this is now a public domain field recording of a street musician, a trumpeter, in the “lead” spot. Second, that same “lead” recording appears twice: once using the same treatment as earlier, and the other using a granular module.

▰ 09\31 — “Quad Rat”: Probably the final, at least for now, variant of this seed. I may go back and label them as such. This version has four sample sources, drawn from the previous rounds, all but one now through a granular module, the other “merely” chaotically pitched. All in VCV Rack. At first it’s just three samples, and the additional one is introduced about halfway through.