Stems: ~50Hz Forensics, Italian Horror, url2.la

Plus: quick notes on records, books, interviews, art, war, and Android

â—¼ ***Power Station:*** Fascinating piece at [bbc.co.uk](http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-20629671) on how forensic police detection can use the ~50Hz hum of the power grid as a date/time-stamp for confirming legitimacy of audio evidence:

>This buzz is an annoyance for sound engineers trying to make the highest quality recordings. But for forensic experts, it has turned out to be an invaluable tool in the fight against crime.
>
>While the frequency of the electricity supplied by the national grid is about 50Hz, if you look at it over time, you can see minute fluctuations in the order of a few thousandths of a hertz.

â—¼ ***Italo Horror:*** Trailer for *Berberian Sound Studio*, directed by **Peter Strickland**, about a sound engineer employed by an Italian horror-film studio (thanks for the tip, [apeshot.tumblr.com](http://apeshot.tumblr.com/)). The score is by **Broadcast** ([guardian.co.uk](http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2013/jan/03/broadcast-berberian-sound-studio-review)):

http://youtu.be/_ZRhi7IbVKs

â—¼ ***Scanner Patrol:*** Nice to see **Eric Eberhardt**’s [youarelisteningtolosangeles.com](http://youarelisteningtolosangeles.com/) (and other cities, including New York, Chicago, Montréal, San Francisco, Boston, San Diego, Philadelphia, Atlanta, Detroit, Houston, Minneapolis, Portland, Austin, Baltimore, Denver, and Phoenix), which layers streaming music with police scanners, getting some coverage: [latimes.com](http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/music/posts/la-et-ms-lapd-radio-signals-ambient-music-haunting-collage-20130107,0,6901582.story) rightly brings [Michael Mann’s films](http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/music/posts/la-et-ms-lapd-radio-signals-ambient-music-haunting-collage-20130107,0,6901582.story) into play, while [nsfwcorp.com](https://www.nsfwcorp.com/dispatch/nypd-snooze) does some [dream analysis](https://www.nsfwcorp.com/dispatch/nypd-snooze). The site also goes by [url2.la](http://url2.la).

â—¼ ***Junto Records:*** A lot of [Disquiet Junto](http://soundcloud.com/groups/disquiet-junto/tracks) folks involved in the weekly creative-restraint music projects have made sets on SoundCloud of their efforts, such as **Carlos Russell** ([carlosrussell.bandcamp.com](http://carlosrussell.bandcamp.com/album/disquiet-times)), but **Grzegorz Bojanek**, with *Constraints*, goes the step further with [a physical release](http://www.etalabel.com/index.php/bojanek-constraints/). Here’s a shot of the cover being printed:

20130112-bojanek

You can soon order *Constraints* in digital and/or physical form here: [etalabel.bandcamp.com](http://etalabel.bandcamp.com/).

â—¼ ***Tome Report:*** Make note of [nochpublishing.com](http://nochpublishing.com/): “a publisher for expanded listening”; edited by **Daniela Cascella** (whose *En abîme: Listening, Reading, Writing. An Archival Fiction* was published by Zer0 Books last September) and **Paolo Inverni**. Also: [twitter.com/nochpublishing](http://twitter.com/nochpublishing).

â—¼ ***Turntable Manipulations:*** Odd New York Times correction to story about turntables: [nytimes.com](http://www.nytimes.com/2012/04/19/technology/personaltech/how-to-enjoy-turntables-without-obsessing-over-them.html) (via [twitter.com/GlennF](https://twitter.com/GlennF/status/283002182255640576)).

â—¼ ***Ava Moderne:*** Great interview with guitarist **Ava Mendoza** (by **Michael Ross**) at [guitarmoderne.com](http://www.guitarmoderne.com/artists/spotlight-ava-mendoza). The Nels in this quote from her is **Nels Cline**:

>Nels’ playing when I was a teenager sort of helped me understand that classical-esque guitar playing, shreddy solos, and walls of noise were not necessarily unrelated and could actually be good friends

â—¼ ***Sound URL:*** Visit [artsy.net](http://artsy.net/), which recently switched URLs from [art.sy](http://art.sy/), the .sy suffix originating in Syria and reportedly causing some issues ([techcrunch.com](http://techcrunch.com/2013/01/04/confirmed-art-sy-has-permanently-moved-to-artsy-net-due-to-ongoing-syrian-unrest/)). The site’s [“sound” coverage](http://artsy.net/gene/sound) has slowly expanded, though it still has only two artists listed under [“sound art.”](http://artsy.net/gene/sound-art)

â—¼ ***De-Coding:*** SoundCloud’s API is among those now part of Codecademy’s lesson plans ([fastcompany.com](http://www.fastcompany.com/3004642/codecademys-new-api-lab-lets-wannabe-devs-tinker-npr-twilio-soundcloud-and-more) and [codecademy.com](http://www.codecademy.com/blog/52-introducing-api-lessons), via [dianakimball.com](http://dianakimball.com)).

â—¼ ***Cloud Stream:*** Dropbox has purchased Audiogalaxy, which some ([theverge.com](http://www.theverge.com/2012/12/13/3762456/dropbox-acquires-audiogalaxy-future-cloud-music-service), [gigaom.com](http://gigaom.com/2012/12/12/dropbox-audiogalaxy-acquisition/)) quite reasonably suspect means a cloud-listening service.

â—¼ ***Sonic Weapons:*** The [sound of war](http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-20400030), as [described by the BBC’s **Vanessa Barford**](http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-20400030):

>”A major sound of war is the sound of white noise. If you are a commando, it’s always in your ear, and every base location or operations room has that crackle of radios,” says Godfrey.
>
>[Patrick] Hennessey cites the “whirl of generators” as another constant at modern patrol bases, while in a “surreal juxtaposition”, whatever is playing on MTV can become a soundtrack to a war.

Presumably that bit about MTV is meant in anecdotal or associative terms, since what’s playing on MTV these days, and for some time, has been anything but music. (Godfrey is Amyas Godfrey, “an associate fellow at the Royal United Services Institute.” Hennessey is described as “an author and former captain in the Grenadier Guards.”) The article as it appears [online](http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-20400030) is packed with example audio-video recordings.

One particularly memorable detail opens the article:

>In Gaza, correspondents have described the whine of Israeli drones overhead. In Arabic they’re known as “Zananna”, literally “whining child”.

Full piece at [bbc.co.uk](http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-20400030).

â—¼ ***Listen, NASA:*** There’s a proposal by **Damara Arrowood** as part of [NASA’s open-call idea-generation project](http://nasaweb.ideascale.com/a/dtd/Data-access-to-Digital-Artists+Collaboration-with-Scientists/299221-19702):

>”Provide open source archival data+live feeds to new media artists to create aesthetically rendered data visualizations (data as both source and artistic medium) Artists and scientists working together unique method to explore and showcase new discoveries. Artist residencies?”

It’s received just one comment: “With this you run the loss of science data in the images. That is not what the NASA website is about.” That person should read “Shhhh. Listen to the Data” in the May 2012 [physicstoday.org](http://www.physicstoday.org/resource/1/phtoad/v65/i5/p20_s1?bypassSSO=1), about Wanda Díaz-Merced’s xSonify:

>“When I get the data, I convert it to sounds. I can listen for harmonics, melodies, relative high- and low-frequency ranges,”she says. With NASA’s Swift satellite, for example, Díaz-Merced “was able to hear [previously overlooked] very low frequencies from gamma-ray bursts. I had been listening to the time series and said to the physicists in charge, ”˜Let’s listen to the power spectra.’”

(The xSonify project was covered [here](https://disquiet.com/2011/05/12/wanda-diaz-merced-studio-360/) back in May of last year.)

â—¼ ***Art Worlds:*** My friend **Raman Frey** has started a new blog. In a recent post, he pondered where art is headed in our brave, still new-ish world of networked, geographically disperse, lightly overlapping micro-communities. I weighed in with a comment about how the art world is different from, for example, the music industry and the journalism trade: [ramanfrey.com](http://www.ramanfrey.com/the-artist-and-technologist/). In part:

>One key difference is that music and journalism, again just to take two examples, didn’t really court digital media as a subject to anything remotely resembling the extent that the art world did. In a way this helps, because the art world has a library of jargon and learning at hand about understanding digital media. In another way, it makes the transition all the more difficult, because after how many years — what, it’s been 40-plus since Jasia Reichardt’s *The Computer in Art*, just to suggest one milestone — the art world less than other worlds can’t claim ignorance to the generational forces at work. It can’t, like the flailing business known as publishing, just say, “Well, this is how we’ve been doing things for so long,”because part of what the art world has been doing for so long is embracing, exploring, and promoting digital media.

â—¼ ***App Yap:*** This is a bit of a tangent, but I have a new phone, as of one month ago. It’s my third Android phone in a row. I spent about two years with the G1, then about two years with the Samsung Galaxy S (aka the Vibrant), and now I begin life with the [Nexus 4](http://www.google.com/nexus/4/). So far, my one-word review is: Wow. My main disappointment is the report that Jelly Bean, the 4.2.1 version of which resides on my phone, has given up on [USB On-The-Go](http://www.usb.org/developers/onthego/), which allowed Android devices to connect with USB devices like keyboards, mice, and thumb drives. As for apps, my main task-oriented software is: the stock email (K9, an alternate, for the moment seems unnecessary), HootSuite (for Twitter and Facebook posts, and potentially Google+ if I can get the time to set up a proper page), OfficeSuite (for formal document writing) and Epistle (for .txt, which is my primary medium for writing), FBReader (for DRM-free ePubs — plus OverDrive for library ebooks, and the Kindle and Google Play Books apps; I wish they’d all adopt the “scroll” reading mode recently introduced in Apple’s iBooks app), Dropbox and (Google) Drive (for storage), and Google Reader. And I’ve begun fiddling with iDisplay, which like AirDisplay lets you use your phone (or tablet) as a second screen to your laptop/desktop — and, better than AirDisplay, it works via USB in addition to wifi. (By “task-oriented” software, I mean that I am not counting things like the dedicated reader for theverge.com, or the Instagram app, or games and music/sound-making software.) One reason I stick with Android over iOS for my phone is the widgets — I have an iPad and an iPod Touch, and there’s something disorienting about the expansive grid of app icons that makes me feel like a hungry person walking into a supermarket: “Er, which first?” As for me, I prefer how Android lets me view information, and to update information, front and center. I rely on the stock calendar widget, on a “sticky notes” variant called seNotes Plus (which combined with the Jelly Bean voice-to-text software is pretty killer), and on the stock Reader widget (to keep me up to date on a handful of priority RSS feeds). Other widget favorites: Easy Voice Recorder, Extended Controls (which lets me set up one-touch things like screen dimming, screen always-on, screen lock, battery level, and so forth). Also: Ultimate Rotation Control, which among other things lets you set the homescreen/desktop of your phone to landscape mode. That about covers it. My needs are fairly minimal. If you use Android and have any favorite apps or gear, let me know.

Björk Beat Battle in Damp Sacramento Alley (MP3)

Ethan Hein makes something of a recent field recording.

20130106-sacwires

You never know what will come of a field recording, but less than a week on, one that I’d made in a Sacramento alley last Sunday has been listened to over 300 times, and has spawned at least one reworking.

This is the original track, recorded in downtown Sacramento, off 15th Street. It’s half a minute of the drip of a drainpipe at the corner where the alley meets a heavily trafficked street. Such things tend to waver, the pace and volume of the drip varying due to numerous variables. In the case of this pipe on this morning, though, the sound was consistent, even mechanical. It was also quite quiet. The drain wasn’t what had drawn my attention in the first place. I’d ventured into the alley to photograph an array of wires that looked like something out of a Predator film (see up top, and at [instagram.com/dsqt](http://instagram.com/p/UKDi-ArIn3/), and larger still at [flickr.com/photos/disquietpxl](http://www.flickr.com/disquietpxl/8355480186/)). From the street, the drain pipe had been inaudible, but after breaking from the stare of the wire creature, I noticed that the relative silence of the alley drew my attention to the drainpipe beat:

**Ethan Hein** has now made the beat the foundation of a mashup, which he identifies in the associated text as follows: “Björk vs Marc Weidenbaum vs Glen Velez vs Thelonious Monk vs Cannonball Adderley vs Miles Davis vs Oscar Peterson. The basis for this track is the ‘Mecha-Organic Drum Machine,’ a field recording Marc made of water dripping from a drainpipe.”:

https://soundcloud.com/ethanhein/hidden-place-remix

Hein mentioned the track on his [twitter.com/ethanhein](https://twitter.com/ethanhein/statuses/290115499004657664) account. Track originally posted for free download at [soundcloud.com/ethanhein](https://soundcloud.com/ethanhein/hidden-place-remix). More from Hein at [ethanhein.com](http://www.ethanhein.com/).

Past Week at Twitter.com/Disquiet

  • My favorite sign in the Haight. http://t.co/ZwT2U63Z ->
  • Afternoon score: sleeping toddler's breathing, light rain hitting car, nearby traffic, passing plane. ->
  • Woke to 19 tracks, 4 from 1st-timers, in @djunto 53 (ice music). Nice to think it's part of folks' 2013 resolutions: https://t.co/cT1yi384 ->
  • Waking in Sacramento: hotel HVAC drone, housekeeping politely tapping on doors, the zing of card-key fails. ->
  • Indeed. She went to town on it. RT @_muncky: My other @djunto standout from this week's work: http://t.co/ml0Mlicw ->
  • Recorded this morning: "Mecha-Organic Drum Machine": http://t.co/HPR4qdoA ->
  • We'll see. Often difficult to isolate the sound. Hear a tree, record a forest. RT @jaybuls: @disquiet Are you going to do more like that? ->
  • If you use SoundCloud, this is where you can set your default license http://t.co/GCu7uY2b — say, to allow for derivative works. ->
  • The 54th @djunto project will be #audiotextual. It just went to the translators. If you wanna help out, lemme know. ->
  • At Chinese restaurant for lunch you discover your favorite new music. Except it's a Hong Kong soap-opera score playing on a glitchy TV. ->
  • Imbue. That's the word. ->
  • Continue reading “Past Week at Twitter.com/Disquiet”

Pop Hook Theory (MP3)

The latest from Sarah Brown's series explores Taylor Shift's dance with dubstep.

There aren’t many podcast series that inspect the post-country pop of mall diva **Taylor Swift** while touching on dubstep, word painting, reversed piano, early-17th century composer Thomas Weelkes, and synthetic instruments, but **Esbie**’s (aka San Francisco”“based **Sarah Brown**) sure does. The latest from her “Pop Hook Theory” spends 20-plus minutes investigating Swift’s “I Knew You Were Trouble,” emphasizing music theory over tabloid speculation (though some enters in toward the end), which given the subject matter puts Brown in rare company. She investigates the song note by note, delineating its chord structure, rhythmic play, and instrumentation, narrating the progress and occasionally dropping in related audio reference material, or playing sequences on keyboard herself. There’s a remarkable attention to detail in an area where details are rarely attended to (her previous entry looked at Maroon 5’s “One More Night”).

Track originally posted for free download at [soundcloud.com/esbie](https://soundcloud.com/esbie/pop-hook-theory-shorts-one). More from Esbie/Brown at [twitter.com/esbie](https://twitter.com/esbie). Previous Esbie coverage here has included [a “pseudo song” drawn from subterranean documentary footage](https://disquiet.com/2011/03/25/esbie-undertracks-undercity-wonder-duncan/), San Francisco [cable car tropes](https://disquiet.com/2010/05/20/cable-car-tropes-mp3/), and [“the sound of an empty Petron bottle, pitch shifted over 3 octaves.”](https://disquiet.com/2009/12/05/soundcloud-comments/)

Disquiet Junto Project 0054: Audio-Textual

The Assignment: Create an original musical score for the day's news.

Screen Shot 2013-01-10 at 4.57.49 PM

*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/).*

This assignment was made in the early evening, California time, on Thursday, January 10, 2013, with 11:59pm on the following Monday, January 14, as the deadline. Below are translations into eight languages in addition to English: Afrikaans, Croatian, French, German, Japanese, Polish, Spanish, and Turkish, respectively by [Kurt Human](http://kurthuman.com/), Darko Macan, Éric Legendre, [Tobias Reber](http://tobiasreber.com/), Naoyuki Sasanami, [Grzegorz Bojanek](http://etalabel.com), Norma Listman, and [M. Emre Meydan](http://emremeydan.com/).

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 0054: Audio-Textual
>
>This week’s project is to produce an original score. The score will not be for a video; it will be for a piece of text. Instead of an audio-visual project, it is an audio-textual one.
>
>These are the four steps:
>
>Step 1. Select a short news article from a prominent, local-to-you news website. It should originate from the day when you begin this project. The article should be approximately 700 words in length. (You can employ a portion of a longer article if you so choose.)
>
>Step 2. Time how long it takes to read the article aloud at a reasonable, everyday pace.
>
>Step 3. Create an original score to accompany the reading of the article. (To be clear: don’t include the sound of the article being read.)
>
>Step 4. Post the track, along with a link to the article. Or, if you’re comfortable doing so, include the original text in the post, along with your track.
>
>Deadline: Monday, January 14, 2013, at 11:59pm wherever you are.
>
>Length: Your finished work should be between around 3 or 4 minutes long, though the length ultimately will be determined by step 2 of this project.
>
>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 “disquiet0054-audiotextual” 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 54th Disquiet Junto project at:
>
>https://disquiet.com/2013/01/10/disquiet0054-audiotextual/
>
>More details on the Disquiet Junto at:
>
>http://soundcloud.com/groups/disquiet-junto/
Continue reading “Disquiet Junto Project 0054: Audio-Textual”