- These Divergent movie posters were designed to remind me what a role Robert Heinlein played in young-adult sci fi. ->
- 5 years ago this week Max Neuhaus died and I first wrote about Diego Bernal's music: http://t.co/zCD4N5tyKQ. 15 years ago I wrote on "NP." ->
- Arvo Pärt cover ("Fratres") attributed to A Winged Victory for the Sullen and ACME Ensemble: http://t.co/ff7kAZMk4v. ->
- RT @hecanjog: First listen to SAWII after reading the first half of Marc Weidenbaum's SAWII book! #nowplaying ->
- Fun is writing about a live event only to have someone who attended chime in in the comments: http://t.co/yZYl2PwJV1 ->
- Hopeful that Alexandre Desplat's Godzilla score is more Syriana and less Monuments Men. ->
- We should read JG Ballard's High Rise as San Francisco's One City One Book 2014. (Last year it was @doctorow's Little Brother.) ->
- Yes, I paused the Guardians of the Galaxy trailer for the trailer in order to get a glimpse of the raccoon. ->
- RIP, Bob Casale (61) of Devo: http://t.co/onRDD0Plgj ->
- Tuesday noon siren in San Francisco: http://t.co/FrVmKgO1Mx ->
- "A Rusty Obelisk Made Out of Angel Sighs": @editaurus has folks praise Aphex Twin SAW2 on its 20th: http://t.co/l3FEcCrkwh ->
- Meant it more as a joke yesterday, but today just mean it: the 2014 One City One Book in San Francisco should be JG Ballard's High Rise. ->
- My early experience of Devo was on tapes dubbed from vinyl by a friend. Years later I discovered the tapes were faster than the originals. ->
Aphex Twin SAWII Book in The Quietus, The Stranger, and More
Some recent coverage of my new book
I’ll post references to my Aphex Twin 33 1/3 *Selected Ambient Works Volume II* book on occasion. Here’s a batch that occurred during the book’s first week of publication. It came out on February 13, a week ago today.
The writer Ned Raggett at [thequietus.com](http://thequietus.com/articles/14552-aphex-twin-selected-ambient-works-volume-ii-review) has written up an extended reflection on Aphex Twin’s *Selected Ambient Works Volume II*. He says, while pondering the wonderful track that has come to be known as “Rhubarb”:
>If the ghost of figures like Eno inevitably hangs over anything that could be called ambient – much less a term that at the time seemed to only be a bad joke of a hangover, new age – what James did here, like others elsewhere, was to translate the impulse and suggest other ways to work with it. Miles away from ‘Digideridoo’, a whole universe away from ‘Windowlicker’ or ‘Girl/Boy’, it’s as close to ambience as gentle balm as one could want, but even then it’s not really that, enveloping in its stripped down beauty but so stately, so focused, warm and cold at the same time.
He also, thoughtfully, mentions my work:
>A new entry in the 33 â…“ book series by Marc Weidenbaum does deeper delving into the album than I can even attempt here, so I encourage you to consider that if you want something more rigorous, as well as this 2012 interview preparatory to its release, where Weidenbaum notes something key I’ve turned over a few times as well: “I want to probe the one thing that is pervasively understood about this record, the “fact” that is synonymous with Selected Ambient Works Volume II, which is the idea that it has no beats. This is commonly asserted about it, that it has no rhythmic content. I think this is, simply, false. Much of the album has rhythmic content, even a consistent beat, if not two or more beats working against yet in concert with each other. I want to explore the perceived tension between ambient sound and rhythm.”
>
>Weidenbaum hits this point that’s easy to forget, yet is terribly clear — there is rhythm throughout the album, actual beats at points as noted, but more often creating the kind of intertwined obsessive exploration that seemed – at least to me at the time – to be matched solely by the work Robert Hampson was doing more and more via Main. Where that duo, and eventually solo act, had as its sometime motto ‘drumless space’, there was never absence of rhythms, the space was disciplined, shaped and mutated constantly, an ever shifting nervousness. James had his own approach, and comparatively SAWII is more recognisably a world of ‘songs’, shorter in length, focused on key fragments or elements that never departed. But the further you went in, the further it wasn’t drumless space indeed – it was often just space. A black cold space, seemingly antithetical to the white cold space of the sleeves, but just as alien, and just as unnerving.
There was such a strong series of reader comments on the Quietus post and over on a thread at Facebook, that Ragett did a follow-up post on his [Tumblr account](http://nedraggett.tumblr.com/post/77298022831/well-having-teased-the-mention-of-this-macross).
Rob Sheffield (*Rolling Stone*) has written what I think may serve as [the first proper blurb of the book](https://twitter.com/robsheff/status/436689081297555456):
@_markrichardson @disquiet curious what you will think. love how it evokes the way music circa 1994 was suffused with unknowable data.
— rob sheffield (@robsheff) February 21, 2014
Over at [Sactown magazine](http://www.sactownmag.com/Blog/2014/Aphex-Twin-marc-weidenbaum-book/), Stu VanAirsdale interviewed me about the book. I lived in Sacramento at the time of the release of the album, back when I was an editor at the music magazines at Tower Records. The article reads, in part:
>“Half, if not more, of the book is about what happened after the record came out—how it’s been used in culture,”says Weidenbaum, speaking via phone from his home in San Francisco. “It’s about how fans were responsible for putting names to the tracks, which were originally untitled. It was about how filmmakers and choreographers and comedians have used his music in their work, and how classical composers have taken the music and done things with it.”
>
>In his book, Weidenbaum describes SAW2’s sonic quality as “vaporous”—“hovering waves of sound” that float and rise and roil in a kind of haze or passing mist. But even in its relative shapelessness, Aphex Twin (the nom de plume of English musician Richard D. James) helped shaped a perspective on music that Weidenbaum seeks to refine for the audience of novice listeners and ardent fans alike.
And over at [The Stranger](http://www.thestranger.com/lineout/archives/2014/02/18/a-rusty-obelisk-made-out-of-angel-sighs-aphex-twins-selected-ambient-works-volume-ii-turns-20&view=comments#18912180), Dave Segal constructed a reflection — with the absolutely splendid title “A Rusty Obelisk Made Out of Angel Sighs” — on the album on its 20th anniversary with his own thoughts (“perhaps the most interesting, strange, and affecting advancement of Brian Eno’s mid-’70s ambient strategies to date”), extended quotes from various musicians and DJs from the Pacific Northwest (including Lusine, Solenoid, and Jeremy Moss, among others), and a reference to my study:
>In his new book-length study of SAW2 for Bloomsbury’s 33 1/3 series, Marc Weidenbaum accurately observed that it “is a monolith of an album, but one in the manner of Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey, one that reflects back the viewer’s impression”¦. It is an intense album of fragile music.”And it is seemingly impossible to get sick of it. So many people have told me that they would play SAW2 every day for long stretches of time.
Disquiet Junto Project 0112: Calendrical Score
Turn your week's dayplanner into music.

Each Thursday at [the Disquiet Junto group on SoundCloud.com](http://soundcloud.com/groups/disquiet-junto/) a new compositional challenge is set before the group’s members, who then have just over four days to upload a track in response to the assignment. Membership in the Junto is open: [just join and participate](http://soundcloud.com/groups/disquiet-junto/).
Tracks by participants will be added to this playlist as the project proceeds:
This project was published in the evening, California time, on Thursday, February 20, with 11:59pm on the following Monday, February 24, 2014, as the deadline.
These are the instructions that went out to the group’s email list (at [tinyletter.com/disquiet-junto](http://tinyletter.com/disquiet-junto)):
Disquiet Junto Project 0112: Calendrical Score
This week’s instruction is simple: Your past week’s calendar (February 13 – February 19) is your score. Each hour is a note or chord. Each quarter day is a measure. Please post an image of your calendar in the process — feel free, of course, to block out anything personal you don’t want to share.
Deadline: Monday, February 24, 2014, at 11:59pm wherever you are.
Length: Your finished work should be between 2 minute and 5 minutes.
Information: Please when posting your track on SoundCloud, include a description of your process in planning, composing, and recording it. This description is an essential element of the communicative process inherent in the Disquiet Junto.
Title/Tag: When adding your track to the Disquiet Junto group on Soundcloud.com, please include the term “disquiet0112-calendrical”in the title of your track, and as a tag for your track.
Download: It is preferable that your track is set as downloadable, and that it allows for attributed remixing (i.e., a Creative Commons license permitting non-commercial sharing with attribution).
Linking: When posting the track, be sure to include this information:
More on this 112th Disquiet Junto project (“Turn your week’s dayplanner into music”) at:
More on the Disquiet Junto at:
Join the Disquiet Junto at:
http://soundcloud.com/groups/disquiet-junto/
Photo associated with this project by Anita Hart, used via Flickr.com with a Creative Commons license:
http://flic.kr/p/5PoijB
Elizabeth Veldon’s Winter Drones
Emanations from Glasgow
Elizabeth Veldon, a Glasgow-based musician, has been posting a series of winter-themed drones with titles like [“glengoyne surrenders to winter and all the valleys fill with snow”](https://soundcloud.com/elizabethveldon/glengoyne-surrenders-to-winter) and [“a winter song for faze (sleep, sleep/ snow had fallen)”](https://soundcloud.com/elizabethveldon/a-winter-song-for-faze-sleep) and [“the lower levels of angels, even, are bathed in grace (for lilly).”](https://soundcloud.com/elizabethveldon/the-lower-levels-of-angels) They sound true to their titles: warm, long, hovering explorations of spaciousness and timelessness. They are luxurious things intended for immersive listening. The “glengoyne” one is 50 minutes in length, the others 30 minutes and 20 minutes respectively.
Track originally posted for free download at [https://soundcloud.com/elizabethveldon](https://soundcloud.com/elizabethveldon/glengoyne-surrenders-to-winter). More from Veldon at [elizabethveldon.tumblr.com](http://elizabethveldon.tumblr.com/), [twitter.com/elizabethveldon](https://twitter.com/elizabethveldon), and [elizabethveldon.bandcamp.com](http://elizabethveldon.bandcamp.com/).
Track by Track: Aphex Twin’s Selected Ambient Works Volume II
All 25 posts in one handy place

What follows are links to 25 distinct posts, each about a different track from the album *Selected Ambient Works Volume II*, which Aphex Twin released in 1994, and which I published a book about, two decades later in 2014, as part of the 33 1/3 series. I posted theses pieces in reverse order, from track 25 to track 1, in the 25 days leading up to the February 13, 2014, release of my book. This post serves to put them all in one place. Each entry includes streaming audio, alternate takes, and some initial track analysis drawn from my substantially more detailed research notes. With the exception of “Blue Calx,” the tracks are all untitled on the official release, but as in the book I employ the “fan” titles, derived from the album artwork, here:
[1 “Cliffs”](/2014/02/13/aphex-twin-saw2-countdown-track-1-cliffs/)
[2 “Radiator”](/2014/02/12/aphex-twin-saw2-countdown-track-2-radiator/)
[3 “Rhubarb”](/2014/02/11/aphex-twin-saw2-countdown-track-3-rhubarb/)
[4 “Hankie”](/2014/02/10/aphex-twin-saw2-countdown-track-4-hankie/)
[5 “Grass”](/2014/02/09/aphex-twin-saw2-countdown-track-5-grass/)
[6 “Mould”](/2014/02/08/aphex-twin-saw2-countdown-track-6-mould/)
[7 “Curtains”](/2014/02/07/aphex-twin-saw2-countdown-track-7-curtains/)
[8 “Blur”](/2014/02/06/aphex-twin-saw2-countdown-track-8-blur/)
[9 “Weathered Stone”](/2014/02/05/aphex-twin-saw2-countdown-track-9-weathered-stone/)
[10 “Tree”](/2014/02/04/aphex-twin-saw2-countdown-track-10-tree/)
[11 “Domino”](/2014/02/03/aphex-twin-saw2-countdown-track-11-domino/)
[12 “White Blur 1”](/2014/02/02/aphex-twin-saw2-countdown-track-12-white-blur-1/)
[13 “Blue Calx”](/2014/02/01/aphex-twin-saw2-countdown-track-13-blue-calx/)
[14 “Parallel Stripes”](/2014/01/31/aphex-twin-saw2-countdown-track-14-parallel-stripes/)
[15 “Shiny Metal Rods”](/2014/01/30/aphex-twin-saw2-countdown-track-15-shiny-metal-rods/)
[16 “Grey Stripe”](/2014/01/29/aphex-twin-saw2-countdown-track-16-grey-stripe/)
[17 “Z Twig”](/2014/01/28/aphex-twin-saw2-countdown-track-17-z-twig/)
[18 “Window Sill”](/2014/01/27/aphex-twin-saw2-countdown-track-18-windowsill/)
[19 “Stone in Focus”](/2014/01/26/aphex-twin-saw2-countdown-track-19-stone-in-focus/)
[20 “Hexagon”](/2014/01/25/aphex-twin-saw2-countdown-track-20-hexagon/)
[21 “Lichen”](/2014/01/24/aphex-twin-saw2-countdown-track-21-lichen/)
[22 “Spots”](/2014/01/23/aphex-twin-saw2-countdown-track-22-spots/)
[23 “Tassels”](/2014/01/22/aphex-twin-saw2-countdown-track-23-tassels/)
[24 “White Blur 2”](/2014/01/21/aphex-twin-saw2-countdown-track-24-white-blur-2/)
[25 “Match Sticks”](/2014/01/20/aphex-twin-saw2-countdown-track-25-matchsticks/)
Get the book at [amazon.com](http://amazon.com/Aphex-Twins-Selected-Ambient-Volume/dp/1623568900) (paperback and Kindle) or wherever 33 1/3 books are sold.
*Thanks to boondesign.com for the sequential grid treatment of the album cover.*