The Modular Radio

A listen to a new synthesizer item

When the voice kicks in at the 14-second mark, you will likely be hooked. It is at that point when the initial scattered beats are suddenly supplanted in part by something verbal, and the rhythmic incomprehensibility is enticing. What is heard is unclear. The language is pure syllable, not words, just elements of words. These elements suggest the origin may itself have been a chant. There is something to them, some sense of echoing, of group effort, but at this level of phonic chaos it could just as easily have been a recording of someone defending their dissertation on quantum something or other. As the piece proceeds those voices are subsumed, lightly muted; the pace doesn’t slow, but it feels more glacial. There is motion in the service of stasis, like white noise slowed and mapped to a percussion and vocal ensemble. All manner of material resounds as semi-tuned percussion.

What it all is is prerecorded audio material being sorted and scattered by a new audio tool that is likely to pop up in the rigs of some of your favorite musicians, if in fact some of your favorite musicians play with modular synthesizers. The devices is the Music Thing Radio Music module, designed by Tom Whitwell. What it does is store audio on an SD card and allow that audio to be funneled through and triggered by other synthesizer modules. You can watch it in action [here](https://vimeo.com/113050279):

The word “radio” refers not to the audio source, because all the sounds are prerecorded. It refers to that dial at the top of the device, which allows the user — the musician — to move between audio tracks, which all are playing in sync, so if you move away from a spoken word segment to listen to a jazz track, when you return two seconds later to the spoken word segment it will be two seconds further along.

Now, Disquiet.com is a technology website, in that it’s about the role of technology in art and it’s about the role of art in technology. What it isn’t, by and large, is a gadget site, or a gear site — which is to say, it’s not about technology from the standpoint of consumer guidance. That said, it is not gear-agnostic or, more to the point, gear-ignorant. In the interest of decreasing gear ignorance on my part, I’ve been slowly accumulating a modular synthesizer. I try not to say “building” a modular synthesizer because that’s a bit like saying you “rebuilt” your engine when, in fact, you paid someone else to do it. Still, I’ve been accumulating the pieces and learning how they work, and this Radio Thing is soon to be part of [that rig](http://www.modulargrid.net/e/racks/view/139419).

Track originally posted at Whitwell’s [soundcloud.com/musicthing](https://soundcloud.com/musicthing/radio-music-gamelan-library-demo) account. If you want to dig into this more, there is a page on the module’s development site, [musicthing.co.uk](http://musicthing.co.uk/modular/?p=1087), collecting various video and audio documentation. (Thanks to Marcus Fischer for having first introduced me to this module when it was a public work-in-progress.)

Strata of Biological Development

A metaphor for a piece's structure

Ian Haygreen’s track “Thin on the Ear” isn’t thin by any means. It has three layers at the very least. There is an underlying tick tock of a beat, a slow-paced melody atop it, and then in between a slightly out-of-sync gurgle, all rumbly and hard to fully get a sense of, both as a result of its constant motion and it being out of sonic focus. They all strike the ear, collectively, as being akin to strata of biological development. The beat is purely mechanical, rote, while that gurgle seems primordial, maybe without consciousness but most certainly alive. The melody is the most developed, according to this structure. It is simple enough, just a note at a time, that it feels more eked out than composed, like it is finding its way, like something that has just pulled itself on land and is getting to know the territory. The tentative life forms find balance with the routinized machine.

Track originally posted for free download at [soundcloud.com/ian-haygreen](https://soundcloud.com/ian-haygreen/thin-on-the-ear). More from Haygreen, who’s based in Northwest Essex, at [twitter.com/IanHaygreen](https://twitter.com/IanHaygreen) and [borealechoes.wordpress.com](https://borealechoes.wordpress.com/).

Fragments of Serbian-Finnish Sound Design

Belgrade-based Svetlana Maraš posts a work no longer in progress.

20150201-svetlanamaras

Svetlana Maraš, who is based in Belgrade, Serbia, has been filling her SoundCloud account with bits and pieces of film scores and sound design projects, some finished, others from efforts that never reached completion, stalled at unforeseen junctures. Five shared fragments of trumpet soundings and quotidian atmospherics are sourced from one of the uncompleted ones, which Maraš describes as “a beautiful, experimental film by a Finnish director.” She writes, “Unfortunately, the film never went into the post-production and was never finished. However, the soundtrack remains.” These include two “soundscapes” and three spots of trumpet, the latter of which blur the line between soundscape and sound design by emphasizing tone and the slurry space within notes over melody. The room in which the music was played is as much a part of the recording as is the trumpet itself. She lists the constituent elements as “Trumpet, objects, glitch, noise,” and references Nenad Markovic as the trumpeter. Markovic plays the trumpet, while Maraš plays the room.

Maraš is quite active and prolific, and a Vimeo page (vimeo.com/svetlanamaras) tracks some of her efforts, such as this short video of a live improvisation on small electronic devices, including a Korg portable and a Buddha Machine, with the ticking of an alarm clock providing the back beat, such as it is:

Set originally posted at soundcloud.com/svetlanamaras. More from Maraš at svetlanamaras.com. More from Markovic at nenadmarkovic.net.

An Extract, a Diary, a Symphony

One of Marcus Fischer's occasional sound entries

20150131-mapmapnyc

Marcus Fischer has not been updating his SoundCloud account ([soundcloud.com/mapmap](https://soundcloud.com/mapmap/)) with the regularity of Taylor Deupree, who throughout 2014 maintained a near daily journal of sounds from his studio ([soundcloud.com/12k](https://soundcloud.com/12k)), and who has begun to do so again this year. But like Deupree he has been sharing brief instances, [58 seconds of modular synthesizer activity](https://soundcloud.com/mapmap/468-modular) here, [two minutes of guitar and cassette tapes](https://soundcloud.com/mapmap/464-three-strings) there. Some of the tracks are considerably lengthier than Deupree’s entries, and seem closer to finished work. And then there’s an occasion where their journals — or at least the circumstances of their journals — collide, as on this piece from Fischer’s account. It is drawn in part from a show he performed recently with Deupree. The image up top, source from [Fischer’s Instagram account](http://instagram.com/p/yAYmjun6cO/), is from that show.

It isn’t from the live performance, per se. It is source audio that Fischer developed for use in the performance, a rich wavering resonance that meanders this way and that, ever so slightly, for the length of its one-minute run, like an orchestra heard from the bar in some grand but dilapidated symphony hall.

Track originally posted at [soundcloud.com/mapmap](https://soundcloud.com/mapmap/460-deupree-fischer-cassette). More from Fischer, who is based in Portland, Oregon, at [mapmap.ch](http://mapmap.ch/).