Posts Tagged ‘Experimental’

Field Notes

Thursday, May 20th, 2010


From a cultural history of hearing, we know that hearing, as a sense of information and orientation, was ranked before seeing. The gods, first and foremost, could be heard (if one could set eyes on them at all). From the sounds of thunder and lightning – though one can not see their origin – one reads the wrath of the gods. The invisible fires one’s imagination. Ulysses does not succumb to the singing of the sirens since he has allowed himself to be tied up at the mast of his ship. He does not see the sirens, he only hears them. Its invisibility renders the singing dangerous. It is the potentiality which the invisibility attributes to it, that which is not used, the innominated attender. It is this which drives Ulysses wild. Cristoph Korn


What is the difference between noises and music? Does every sound that is not recorded for scientific purposes automatically become music? Field recordings have only recently been recognized as a bona fide artistic genre. A field recording is generally used to describe any recording captured outside of a recording studio, it often involves the capture of low level, complex and ambient noise. Field recordists and sound artists listen to sounds of the world and record them. They can present their recordings unedited or sometimes collage and manipulate them – arrange them into compositions, create installations and sound sculptures.


Our series on online PDF magazines continues with a publication which focuses solely on the subject of field recording. The first two issues have many interesting articles and essays from a diverse range of artists, philosophers and academics. It also contains some pleasing pictures of locations in which field recordings take place. So go ahead and download those first two issues here. Or check out their website if you would like to download the German version.

Jeff Mills – Fireside Chat, Part 3 of 3

Thursday, May 20th, 2010

Here is part 3 of our radio transcription of an interview Jeff Mills gave to RBMA. You can check out parts 1 and 2 here. You can listen to the radio show in full here or download it here. The accompanying tracklist is as follows:

Jeff Mills – Landscape (Utopian Dream) – Tresor
Jeff Mills – Blue Print – Tresor
Underground Resistance – Eye of the Storm – Underground Resistance
Underground Resistance – Predator – Underground Resistance
Underground Resistance – Base Camp Alpha 808 – UR
Underground Resistance – Final Frontier – Underground Resistance
X-101 – G-Force – Tresor
X-102 – Ground Zero (The Planet) – Tresor
X-102 – The Rings Of Saturn – Underground Resistance
Jeff Mills – Perfecture (Somewhere Around Now) – Tresor
Jeff Mills – The Bells – Axis
Jeff Mills – Transformation B (Rotwang’s Revenge) – Tresor
Jeff Mills – Robot Replica – Tresor

Click the vinyl sticker pictures to hear the tracks.

Life in the Jeff-set

We started with Saturn, we chose it mainly because of the physical aspects of the planet, in that it resembled a record. We were interested in using very small things to relay certain messages so the label design was used as the main part of the explanation of the release and the music would explain or support it – in the grooves. So the Rings of Saturn was a perfect release. The rings, like a tree when you cut it open and look a the rings of time it tells the history of the tree itself. We looked at the planet as the rings telling the history of it. Months and months of research about the planet, and then we began production in the summer of 1992. From X-101 we learned that each of us have a very unique way of producing music. We designated who would do what for that particular release. Rob didn’t have that much experience at the time. He had set up a small studio in the corner he had very small pieces of equipment but very interesting sounds. So we designated that he produce very simple, very minimal type of tracks. Mike would produce more orchestrated strings because he could player better than both of us. And my job would be to have the more experimental parts. We would put all these things together and that would be the album. X-102 would be something we always wanted to finish we never thought that we ever finished that release. So that brings us to the year 2009 so we decided to go back and revisit it, update the album and create a performance.

Ring ding

I got an offer to move to New York as a resident DJ at a couple of clubs. Part of the deal of my moving to New York was that I would have to have an office so that I could run the label from there. When I moved and realized that Mike did not want to bring UR to New York, I had all these resources – and office, telephone, all these free things that this club had given me. With all this I should start a label myself! After a few months of thinking about it and thinking about the type of music I would like to do I came up with the idea of Axis. Until then the music was very song structured so you would have the introduction and bridge, even though they were instrumentals you got the idea that if someone was to sing on top of these songs that would be OK, they were structured in that way. So I thought that being a DJ it would be great to produce music that was more simplified so that you could manipulate it more. By limiting how layered the tracks would be – it would be better. Back then as DJs we used to really seek out dub versions and instrumental versions so that we could extend and create our own songs. I thought that producing in this way would set a tone with DJs. It was always my intention to make a label where the music was more simple, easy for the DJ to play and program. I asked Rob who was recording on his own label in Detroit, if he would do the first recording on the label jointly with me. It was called Tranquilizer, it was so different it did not take off so well. The second release which was Inner Sanctum by Rob only, did a little bit better as it was more danceable. By the third release which was Step To Enchantment, the Mecca EP, things began to take off, at that time.

Mecca steps

The label Purpose Maker was created soon after I had moved to Chicago from New York. I had no friends, I was basically alone, so I had plenty of time to produce a lot of music. I thought I can produce so much that it would be interesting to produce a case of records just for me. So records that were even mastered, pressed. But no one had any copies, I had all the copies. I had begun to make music just for me to play. Things like The Bells, Alarms, they were just for me. I had begun to play them as I was making this box, as I was playing them DJs were asking what these songs were. I got the indication that The Bells was something people really responded to and DJs wanted to have. So I said ok. Maybe I should make it available to release these tracks. That’s how I started the label Purpose Maker. Once I got he notion the DJs understood exactly what the music was for, and began to hear other producers and DJs try to emulate it. I thought the task is done, now I can move on to the next.

The bells, the bells!

Metropolis is an epic film by Fritz Lang that was produced in 1929, it’s become on of the most popular science fiction films of our time. There were many years that brought me to the point of working on that project. There were many discussions about how electronic music could play a role in cinema, where it might serve cinema the best and vice versa – what type of films it might work the best for. After so many discussions with so many people I thought that someone should do something, so I’ll try to produce an entire soundtrack for an entire film! Just to see what happens, even if it doesn’t turn out too well at least the news that I tried to do something, if that news got round to other producers, maybe it would give them some indication that somebody’s trying to do something to broaden and expand electronic music into different areas. So without permission from the film company I just went and bought a VHS tape of Metropolis, took notes, divided it into 12 different parts and produced music for each section. Many different versions for each section and chose one that would work. I went to an editing studio, taking the VHS tape and put the music that I produced to this tape. Then I began to search and find out who might have a contact to the film company in Munich that maybe IU could show this film to them of what I did and maybe that they would allow me to show it to other people. I did that, being lucky enough find a contact through Tresor Records in Berlin who knew someone who knew someone, who knew someone that worked at Transit Films in Munich. Luckily someone in that office was young enough, maybe an intern or something to know who I was as a DJ. They decided to say ok, they would give me rights to show the film for academic reasons, just for the example of putting electronic music to this film, we could have one of rights to show the film. That’s how the project came. That’s how I did it.

Tresor – Official Site

Red Bull Music Academy Radio

Axis Records – Official Site

Underground Resistance – Official Website

Jeff Mills – Fireside Chat, Part 2 of 3

Thursday, April 22nd, 2010

Apologies for the rather long wait for part 2 of this short series, it won’t be so long until part 3 we promise. There’s not much intro needed to (cliché as it is) one of the godfathers of techno music. Incase you do, check out the informative intro in part 1. In this transcript (part 2 of 3) of a recent interview he has given to the Red Bull Music Academy Radio. Listen to the radio show in full here or download it here. The accompanying tracklist is as follows:

Jeff Mills – Landscape (Utopian Dream) – Tresor
Jeff Mills – Blue Print – Tresor
Underground Resistance – Eye of the Storm – Underground Resistance
Underground Resistance – Predator – Underground Resistance
Underground Resistance – Base Camp Alpha 808 – UR
Underground Resistance – Final Frontier – Underground Resistance
X-101 – G-Force – Tresor
X-102 – Ground Zero (The Planet) – Tresor
X-102 – The Rings Of Saturn – Underground Resistance
Jeff Mills – Perfecture (Somewhere Around Now) – Tresor
Jeff Mills – The Bells – Axis
Jeff Mills – Transformation B (Rotwang’s Revenge) – Tresor
Jeff Mills – Robot Replica – Tresor

His Jeffness

His Jeffness


Other than my trip to Berlin to perform with Final Cut we did not have too much information as to what Europe was like. We could only hear what Kevin, Derrick and Juan were saying about what was happening in the UK, Belgium and places like that. It was the time when the invention of the fax machine had just come out, we thought that that would be an interesting way to communicate with people. So we developed a way of communicating through the fax machine by distorting letters and images. We knew early on that there was a lot of potential for a certain type of fan base so we got into merchandising and started making t-shirts. We treated that at the same level as the music – we started exploring.

It wasn’t until maybe about a year after that we had the opportunity to go to Europe together as a unit. So for a year we were working blindly, we were working off of what we imagined Europe would be like. We thought that America would be the same as Europe. We were working with Urb magazine on the West coast and Billboard magazine in New York. It wasn’t until we got a call from a guy whom neither of us really knew, we knew of him, we knew about him. Joey Beltram called us and introduced himself. He said he had just got back from Belgium and had played one of our records and it was doing really good, he had played it to a crowd of thirty thousand people and we should make more things like that. We were like, “Who the hell is Joey Beltram?”, but “OK” so we took his advice, make more things in that direction and see what happens.

Military attire in early Underground Resistance days

Military attire in early Underground Resistance days


We found a medium of attire, which happened kind of naturally. I was dressing that way anyway at the time, some of it comes from Final Cut which was really in that direction, our attire was really more military. Some if it comes from Mike ['Mad' Mike Banks], and the job that he used to have. He used to put people out of their houses, he was part of a team of guys that used to go to a house when someone didn’t pay their bills and he would physically move the people out. So he would have to dress in that way, he wasn’t a police officer, but very close to it. He had that type of experience so we mixed it together. We were both very much into hip hop, Public Enemy and all those other things so we kind of adopted that. We got a couple of offers to perform in New York at the Limelight and a couple of other places. We thought that maybe it would be interesting to hide our faces, so that people had no idea. They wouldn’t look at us as if we were a group of black guys and the music would stand out more than what we look like. It’s America so it’s very big on pop culture, it’s very easy to conclude what we are by what we look like – this is just a country that really excels in that. We thought that by taking that away we would put more emphasis on the sound and what the music is.

Hood, Mills, Banks


Robert Hood came in, we hired him as an assistant to work within the label at administration. He was a rapper, he was a hip hop rapper at the time. So I think we somewhat influenced him when he first came, he was really into rap. We were like, “That’s fine. But your message must be positive!” We’re not into that certain type of rap. So we brought him in and he started to work for us. We set him up with his own setup to produce music. We taught and showed him how to record it how to program it. He began to work on projects with us (with Mike and I) and then eventually started his own label called Hardwax. We worked with him a little bit to get that label started and then he took it on himself. In a week we could produce maybe twelve to twenty tracks and so we decide to do something different, something we don’t remember or didn’t hear coming from Detroit at that time. Things that we more experimental. So we decided to designate so much time to producing compositions in that way, exploring and using the equipment and machines in different ways. We decided on a name of the project as X for experimental. We would treat it somewhat like a college report, your instructor would give you a subject and you would have to report so we adopted this 101, 102, 103 as if it were a paper. So the first project was X-101, there wasn’t really any concept we just wanted to see if Mike, Rob and I could work together in this way – if we were all on the same page. It went really well so we decided to create X-102. This time we had the idea that maybe this release should really be about something connected to all people, not just certain cultures. We chose the Rings of Saturn.

Red Bull Music Academy Radio

Axis Records – Official Site

Underground Resistance – Official Website

Outsider Music – Harry Partch

Monday, March 15th, 2010

I had been away from the part of the world I generally consider home for six years. In the seventh year I found a studio in the unused Pioneer Hatchery in Petaluma, California. However sentimental or Oriental that many sound, the fact remains: it was the time of falling petals, and this music followed. – Harry Partch

Partched


One of the most individualistic composers of all time, Harry Partch was not only a great composer, but an innovative theorist who broke through the shackles of a tuning system of all Western music which had lasted for many centuries. He created dozens of incredible musical instruments for the specific peformance of his music and was a dramatist who wrote his own texts for dance-theatre extravaganzas based on everything from Greek mythology to his own experience as a hobo. Between 1930 and 1972, he created one of the most amazing bodies of sensually alluring and emotionally powerful music in the 20th century: music dramas, dance theatre, multi-media extravaganzas, vocal music and chamber music – mostly all performed on the instruments he built himself.

Could Chamber Bowls


The picture to the right is of an instrument created by Partch called Cloud Chamber Bowls. The bowls themselves are 12-gallon Pyrex carboys, suspended from a redwood frame on ropes. These difficult to find and impossible to tune glass gongs are played very carefully by a percussionist who risks the anguish of of a shattered disaster. The original bowls were found at the Radiation Laboratory of the University of California, Berkeley, and had been sued as cloud-chambers to trace the paths of sub-atomic particles.

Considering the earlist known letter written by Harry Partch dates from 1931, when he was already 30 years old, very little is knows about his pre-mature life. As a child, living in various areas of the American southwest, Partch was exposed to a variety of influences from Asian to Native American. He spent his childhood in remote tones in Arizona and New Mexico where he heard and sang songs in Mandarin, Spanish and American Indian languages. After dropping out of the University of Southern California, he began to study on his own and to question the validity of the tuning and philosophical foundations of Western music. He believed the standard system was unsuitable for reflecting the subtle melodic contours of dramatic speech, and as a result, he burned all of his early works. Partch was always clear that this burning of his early music was of tremendous symbolic importance to him, and he speaks of it as an act of purification, a ritualistic purging by fire.

During and after the Great Depression, he was a hobo and itinerant worker, riding trains, all the while keeping a musical notebook of his experiences named Bitter Music which he later set to music.The entries frequently included overheard bits of everyday vernacular speech. Partch always said his reason for developing his microtonal scales was to try to replicate and demonstrate verbal expression.

Corporeal creations


In 1930, Partch broke with Western European tradition and forged a new musicology, based on a primal, corporeal integration of the elements of speech with music, using principles of natural acoustic resonance (Just Intonation) and expanded melodic and harmonic possibilities. He began to first adapt guitars and violas to play his music, and then began to build whole new instruments based on his new microtonal tuning system. Over his lifetime he built over 25 instruments as well as numerous small hand instruments and became a brilliant spokesman for his ideas. Largely ignored by the standard musical institutions and industry, he criticised concert traditions, the roles of the performer and composer, the role of music in society, the 12-tone equal-temperament scale and the concept of “pure” or abstract music. To explain his philosophical and intonational ideas, he wrote a treatise, “Genesis of a Music” which has served as a primary source of information and inspiration to many musicians for the last half century, considered the standard text of microtonal music theory and takes the concept of Corporeality, the fusion of all art forms with the body, as its central focus.

The album we’ve uploaded for you to download and listen to here is the most extended all instrumental work by the microtonal guru. The Haiku-like title may sound metaphysical but has a prosaic explanation. In 1962, Partch returned to California after six years in the Midwest. Returning to his roots in the seventh year was like a sabbatical. He was getting tired of frequent moving: “The spectacle of me and two tons of musical instruments wandering around the country is becoming almost comical. He had to find a spacious and cheap studio and living space, and his former landlord in Sausalito, California in September 1962 allowed him to use an empty chick hatchery. When he visited the building the walkway leading to the place was “… strewn with petals – roses, camelias, and many others” and the title of the new work came to him. “It was a time of falling petals and the music followed.” He had to attract a group of committed musicians who could be relied upon to put in the time, learn how to play the unusual instruments, learn how to play the written parts (in special notational systems), develop the ear to play music where there are many “extra” notes besides the familiar 12 they had learned, and finally learn to play their parts.

Partch was notorious for going beyond instrumental and intonational uniqueness. He communicated to the members of his ensemble the “extra-musical” attitudes and actions he felt lead to an experimental performance. He would show how to approach an instrument with the proper physical inclination, not unlike the motivation of an actor for his part. The physical approach would reflect both the nature of the notes and phrases themselves, and the dramatic or musical intent of the passage. He taught respect for the instruments and how to coax the best and worst sounds out of them. In doing so he wanted to see a transformation of his musicians from passive translators of his scores to active, engaged participants. Partch would often speak of not only “caressing the instrument, but raping it too.” The physical relationship between player and instrument is crucial to the corporeal performance. The musician must transcend their role as instrumentalist and become more fully formed performers, ready to move, act and live the part. To create the corporeal performance.

Partch and some loyal supporters recorded most of Petals in 1964 while the premises they were recording in was literally being bulldozed around them, often begging operators to stop for a minute to make a take. Often the duets are played by Partch on both parts, through overdubbing. The recording was resumed in San Diego in 1966, and the tapes were painstakingly overdubbed for a CRI records release. This results in a useful introduction of the sound of Partch’s instruments. But Petals suffers a bit from its form. At one-minute intervals the music comes to a stop, and half the time resumes in the same tempo and with the same harmonic patterns. Performance and tape synchronisation problems involved in the production of this recording were of an extraordinary level of difficulty, calling for more than a hundred hours of editing. Although the rhythms are wonderfully irregular, this predictability offsets the fascination of the wonderful sounds of Partch’s instruments.

Dirty Harry


So download the album here, check out our other favourite Outsider music here. And remember what Harry said…

This is my trinity: sound-magic, visual beauty, experience-ritual.

Resonance FM

Thursday, March 11th, 2010


Although in the past we have featured only online radio broadcasting, this time we look at a station still doing it on the airwaves in London. Resonance104.4fm makes public those artworks that have no place in traditional broadcasting. A radio station like no other, that is an archive of the new, the undiscovered, the forgotten, the impossible. It is an invisible gallery, a virtual arts centre whose location is at once local, global and timeless. And that is itself a work of art. Imagine a radio station that responds rapidly to new initiatives, has time to draw breath and reflect. A laboratory for experimentation, that by virtue of its uniqueness brings into being a new audience of listeners and creators. All this and more, Resonance104.4fm aims to make London’s airwaves available to the widest possible range of practitioners of contemporary art.


The service includes “radio artworks” made especially for and exploring the medium of radio. The music based output places an emphasis on alternative and experimental music with a bias towards the avant-garde (how many broadcasters are willing to devote programming to found sounds and field recordings?). The speech based output includes discussion, alternative news, documentary and literary spoken word. Subjects covered include anything from cultural theory to pensioners’ rights and mental health to visual arts. The station provides a service for practising artists and engaged consumers whose interests fall outside the mainstream media or for those whose access to media is restricted or limited due to cultural bias or lack of formal training. The multicultural service transcends age barriers, it’s youngest regular broadcasters are 16, it’s oldest 77, from communities as diverse as Brazilian, Serbian and Congolese who are encouraged to initiate and realise their own programming.


You can hear nonsense sound poetry recorded halfway up a mountain on the Isle of Jura, a preacher in Glasgow or a Babylonian Jewish Choir, a huge variety of unique spoken word radio basically. That’s not to mention great specific music shows such as Is Black Music, featuring maverick black musicians who are involed in non-commerial, alternative outside of the industry mainstream. The program broadcasts Black folk, country, avant-garde, classical and rock music. It encourages the promotion of unusual black music such as Urb Alt and Afro Punk, and is a good way to challenge industry, artist and consumer stereotypes.

Resonance104.4fm started broadcasting on May 1st 2002, established by London Musicians’ Collective. Its brief? To provide a radical alternative to the universal formulae of mainstream broadcasting. Resonance 104.4 fm features programmes made by musicians, artists and critics who represent the diversity of London’s arts scenes, with regular weekly contributions from nearly two hundred musicians, artists, thinkers, critics, activists and instigators. You can also listen online or download one of their various podcasts for maximum aural pleasure.

Future Sounds – Tenori-On

Tuesday, December 1st, 2009

I want to handle both light and sound simultaneously and pleasantly, as we play music or draw pictures. This is a theme I have been working on for a long time. Pursuing this idea further I have been developing the Tenori-On with particular attention given to the beauty of the light and sounds, the ease of performance, and as a musical instrument for the future – the design and quality of the instrument as a whole. In days gone by, a musical instrument had to have a beauty of shape as well of sound, it had to fit the player organically (the violin springs to mind). All these elements were once considered indispensable. Modern electronic instruments don’t have the inevitable relationship between the shape, the sound, and the player. What I have done is try to bring back these, once indispensable elements and build them in to a try musical instrument for the digital age. – Toshio Iwai

Ten out of ten tenori

Ten out of ten tenori


Artist Toshio Iwai and Yamaha have collaborated to develop a musical instrument for the 21st century – the Tenori-On. A 16×16 matrix of LED switches creates a “visible music” interface allowing music to be played intuitively. The switches function as individual displays emitting light that emulates the related sound. When you push a switch for a short time, a ripple of light spreads out from the switch to others – corresponding with the sound you have chosen. If the switch is held down for slightly longer a dot of light remains indicating that the light & sound will play repeatedly – looped. People seem to quickly understand the relationship between the sound and light, thus even novice or non musicians can enjoy improvising and composing immediately. To play notes, you plot points on the dot-matrix as if you were drawing a picture.

Artists as diverse as Pole, Four Tet and Battles are queueing up to endorse this quite revolutionary instrument. Singer-songwriter Little Boots from Blackpool, England with her striking performance and electro-pop sound has been recently propelled into the public eye – scenes of her playing the Tenori-On at home on YouTube caught the attention of music lovers: “It’s a visual thing, live editing and building a beat onstage – people can see what they’re hearing. I’m personally quite fascinated by song structure it’s great when people can see how the layers combine through the animation. Also, I’m a sucker for futuristic gadgets – you could say there are two Tenori-On – one is a retro toy, the other is an advanced musical instrument.”

One of the best uses is free improvisation. Electronic music has a reputation for being boring to watch live, anything that can be done to get away from that, to make it as exciting as watching a rock band – to make it a physical process and demonstrate sound must surely be a good thing. It is a wonder why, with all the technological advancement and miniturization of studio technology that little has been done by way of live instrumentation. It may be that the designers of such things see sound, audio and by extension music as a laboratory exercise, and why it has taken a media artist such as Toshio Iwai to collaborate with an electronics giant like Yamaha to create an intuitive, advanced instrument such as this.

Wired.com Article on Futuristic Instruments

Interview with Little Boots – Yamaha

Tenori-On – Wikipedia

Delia Derbyshire

Wednesday, November 25th, 2009
Dealing with Derbyshire

Dealing with Derbyshire

I was there in the blitz and it’s come to me, relatively recently, that my love for abstract sounds [came from] the air-raid sirens: that’s a sound you hear and you don’t know the source of as a young child… then the sound of the “all clear” – that was electronic music. – Delia Derbyshire

Regarded by many as the mother of electronic music, Delia Derbyshire was a sculptor of sounds. The electronic music pioneer graduated from university with a degree in mathematics and music. On approaching Decca Records in 1959 she was informed that the company did not employ women in their recording studios. In 1960 Delia joined the BBC as a trainee studio manager and then requested to be attached to the newly created Radiophonic Workshop (whose most familiar contribution to the world is the Dr. Who theme tune) where she influenced many of her trainee colleagues. The idea was to have a department providing, at low cost, theme and incidental music plus sound effects for radio & TV series. Today some of this stuff sounds quaint and dated but Delia’s work stands out thanks to her ultimate resource – a limitless imagination. Delia combined her interests in the theory and perception of sound, modes, tunings and the communication of moods purely through electronic sources.

Deal or no Dealia?

Deal or no Delia?


The Radiophonic department was initially always run by someone with a drama background. Derbyshire was the first person there of a higher musical qualification. However, much of her early work remained anonymous under the credit of “special sound by the BBC Radiophonic Workshop”. Delia was called upon to create music for any area where an orchestral composition would be out of place – the distant past, an unseen future or deep in the human psyche. Desmond Briscoe, founder of the department notes: “Workshop was then a very popular word among theatre ‘types’, and it gave away the Drama Department origins. It was originally going to be called the Electrophonic Workshop, but it was discovered that ‘electrophonic’ referred to some sort of defect of the brain, so it had to be changed! A board was set up to see that the place was run properly. Unfortunately, one board member had a doctor friend, who advised that three months should be the maximum length of time that anyone could work there, as staying any longer could be injurious to their health; like they’d go mad, or something.”

Recently an archive of 267 tapes has come to light including an experimental “dance track” which Derbyshire prefaces with: “Forget about this, it’s for interest only.” Orbital’s Paul Hartnoll says it is “quite amazing … That could be coming out next week on Warp Records … It’s incredible when you think when it comes from [the 1960s]. Timeless, really. It could be now as much as then.” She created her music before the invention of synthesisers using oscillators, signal genterators and loops, literally cutting, pasting and reversing segments of magnetic tape.

Delia fell out of love with the BBC in the mid 70s when her productions were being declared too lascivious and lustful for childrens television. She began to experiment in London’s psychedlic underground scene forming a band with founder of synth manufacturer EMS, Peter Zinovieff. Some of their gigs sound like crackers, how about the two-day “Million Volt Light and Sound Rave” at the Roundhouse? The association with Peter Zinovieff had already led to the BBC buying three VCS3s, and in 1970 the Workshop took delivery of an EMS Synthi 100 modular system. It was the biggest voltage-controlled synthesizer in the world Christened ‘The Delaware’, after the road outside the studios, it had 16 oscillators and even incorporated its own oscilloscope and frequency counter. As with the VCS3, there were no messy patch cords: instead were provided two 60×60-way ‘pin patch boards’. There was a digital sequencer too, which could store up to 256 events. The massive control surface presented a sea of knobs to twiddle, but one of them, labelled ‘Option 4′ was actually a dummy. Not connected to anything at all, it was occasionally tweaked to appease awkward producers who wanted to get ‘just the right sound’.

Her works from the 60s and 70s continue to be used on radio and TV 30 years after their creation. She has legendary cult status amongst electronic music fans in Sweden and Japan. Derbyshire is regularly cited, credited and covered by acts such as Aphex Twin and The Chemical Brothers. Its believed her infectious enthusiasm for experimental sound has transferred to others during meetings with Paul McCartney, George Martin, Pink Floyd and Brian Jones.

A complete list of her works has yet to be compiled, but amongst other things she has mentioned involvement in the earliest electronic music events in England – proto-raves perhaps? Before Delia, electronic music had a reputation for sounding ‘ugly’; she proved that it could also be extremely beautiful.

What we are doing now is not important for itself, but one day someone might be interested enough to carry things forwards and create something wonderful on these foundations. – Delia Derbyshire

Delia Derbyshire – Official Website

BBC Article on Delia Derbyshire

The Story Of The Radiophonic Workshop

VintageSynth.com

Future Sounds – Hang

Tuesday, November 24th, 2009
Hanging out

Hanging out

Is it a wok? Is it a UFO? No it’s a Hang. Created in 2000 the Hang is a young musical instrument. It was created by the PANArt Company in Bern, Switzerland. It is the result of many years of research into resonating percussive instruments from around the world such as: gongs, gamelans and cowbells. Each Hang is tuned individually, players are encouraged to design their own “tone circle” thus the musician becomes part of the creation and customisation of the instrument, meeting their creative needs.

The top side of the Hang (the Ding) contains eight tone fields which form the “tone circle”, this circle surrounds a central dome which sounds like a gong. The underside (the Du) contains a hand sized hole for sound resonance and modulation. Players invite their hands to discover the instrument with their fingertips, thumbs and the heel of the palm. The creators say there are no rules for playing except one: the joy of music! This marriage between art and science creates a somewhat haunting but playful tone. A resonating harmonic note binded by the sound of the steel.

If you are interested in buying one, it may take some time. There are only two people in the world, the Hang makers (Sabina Schärer and Felix Rohner), who know how to wield the hammers on deep-drawn steel sheet blanks, which are then processed using a hardening procedure in a kiln. Periods when people can visit the Hangbauhaus and pick their Hang are already planned. The Hang makers are sending letters inviting those who are able to purchase a Hang. The letters contain a statement where they outline their point of view regarding the instrument and listening device. Felix Rohner and Sabina Schärer characterize the central aspect of their work as “harmony, equilibrium and proportion”. With the purchase agreement they engage in with their customers they want to establish a culture of trust and respect. The agreement PANArt has required since 2008 requests first rights to purchase back a Hang and discourages resale of a Hang by the owner at a price higher than at which it was obtained.

A statement from Hang makers Felix Rohner and Sabina Schärer

A Hang fan site

PANArt Research & Development Papers

Buying a Hang

Hangblog.org

Buddha Machine

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009
Lotus listening

Lotus listening

Every so often a gadget comes around that manages to transcend the cheap plastic frame in which it’s encased. Little known Chinese firm FM3 have created an ambient loop-playing machine which has gained coverage in the New York Times. The $25 Buddha Machine is the size of a cigarette pack, with one button, an on-off dial and a rather small speaker. Inside is a chip containing nine digitally encoded music loops. The button allows the listener to switch from one to another, but that’s the extent of user control over the experience, leading some observers to refer to the thing as the anti-iPod, attracting music fans, design fans, gadget fans and those who view it as something of a fashion item.

Noise band Throbbing Gristle have recently released their own version designed in conjunction with FM3, featuring more loops and a wider frequency range than the Buddha Machine. They have entitled their custom box GRISTLEISM, with a tracklist featuring intriguing names such as Maggot Death, Rabbit Snare, Sex String Theory and Thank You Brain. GRISTLEISM is described as part Industrial sound machine, part noise instrument.

At a moment when the unused abilities of feature-loaded computers, cellphones and even microwave ovens pile up faster than we can keep track of them, it’s satisfying to know that once you’ve turned the Buddha Machine on, you are using it to its full capacity. From the Sunday New York Times Magazine by Rob Walker.

The Buddha Machine 2.0 comes in three colours: Burgundy, Grey and Brown.

Om

Om

New York Times

Throbbing Gristle

FM3 Buddha Machine

Machines To Enlarge The Ears

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

Say what?

Say what?


We found this over at Noise For Airports. It’s a blog run by Nick Seaver who’s research focuses on experimental uses of recording media (his undergraduate thesis was about the relationship between social conceptions of noise and recording technologies.) He also makes experimental compositions of pop music such as Britney Spears and Rhianna informed by the procedures of 1970′s composers such as Steve Reich.

The blog itself is a mix of short form link posts and longer-form sound theory with historical examples and contemporary ideas.

The post which caught our eye is about some amazing machines invented apparently to improve human hearing by upgrading the ear. Have a look here. “During the World War, many blind men, with ears trained to special acuteness in compensation for loss of sight, volunteered for this service in Britain, and it is likely that such sightless soldiers are again helping their companions to locate enemies in the dark.” – A 1939 issue of Science News Letter.

Machines To Enlarge The Ears

Noise For Airports

NickSeaver.net

Pop Studies