Archive for the 'filler' Category

Klaus Nomi — ‘The Cold Song’

Klaus Nomi performs “Cold Song” from his 1981 self-titled debut album, a selection originally composed by Henry Purcell for his 1691 baroque opera King Arthur.  Manhattan’s East Village experimental music community provided a refuge for Nomi’s (Klaus Sperber) bizarre, operatic pop-punk.  It was in the East Village that Klaus Nomi’s music caught the attention of David Bowie, who made possible the production and release of Nomi’s two studio albums.

This stunning December 1982 live rendition of Purcell’s “Cold Song,” performed alongside a full symphony orchestra in Munich, was to be one of Nomi’s last live appearances.  Shortly after returning to New York City in 1983, Nomi died of an illness complicated by AIDS.

What power art thou
Who from below
Hast made me rise
Unwillingly and slow
From beds of everlasting snow.
See’st thou not how stiff
And wondrous old
Far unfit to bear the bitter cold.
I can scarcely move
Or draw my breath
Let me, let me
Freeze again
Let me, let me
Freeze again to death.

(h/t Klaus to the Edge)

further reading:

Klaus Nomi by RUPERT SMITH (from ATTITUDE, vol 1 Number 3, July 1994, London, England) — Like a shooting star, he exploded into the world then fell from the heavens after a glittering, all-too-brief career. Now largely forgotten, Nomi remains rock music’s queerest exponent, who outshone the many acts following in his wake.

Bowerbirds — “In Our Talons”

In support of Bowerbirds recently released debut album (technically a re-release) Hymns for a Dark Horse on Dead Ocean — home, also, to Will-Oldham-analogue Phosphorescent and indie-dissonance-rockers Dirty Projectors — the label releases a stunning stop-motion music video for ‘In Our Talons’.  Since touring with John Darnielle’s Mountain Goats last year, the North Carolina trio have been attracting a great deal of attention from pop-folk observants.  If this video is any indication, the album must be pretty splendid.

Directed by Alan Poon and inspired by films like Microcosmos [clip] and The Planet Earth series, the video takes the visual spectacle of a nature documentary and puts it into a stop-motion animated world. The video explores three magical creatures from three different lands, equally beautiful, yet doomed by the hand of man.

Not only is the result stunning, but the process is equally impressive. The stop-motion puppets were custom made for this video. The bird alone took over a month for the puppet fabricators to build with over 300 feathers manually sized and glued on. For the animals to come to life, the puppet is put into position, a picture is taken, then the puppet is moved slightly and another picture is taken. This is done 24 times for one second of animation, shooting approximately five seconds per day. Most of the miniature sets were made out of foam and clay and then painted, while the clouds were made from cotton. Watch the stunning results on Subterranean’s blog below, or wait for Saturday, August 9th and see it in the comforts of your own home on MTV2. — 08/06/08 Bowerbirds video premiere on MTV’s Subterranean

Under the account SecretlyJag, the Dead Oceans, Jagjaguwar and Secretly Canadian labels have cozied up on youtube, publishing videos together under the single collaborative account.  The channel has a veritable goldmine of content already available.  Black Mountain’s “Wucan“, another recent SecretlyJag upload, is yet just one more pleasant example of the great content emerging from the label conglomerate.

also: BBC’s Attenborough on the ‘Bower Bird

Paavoharju — ‘Tyttö tanssii’

Paavoharju’s ‘Tyttö tanssii’, yet another highlight of the year from Finland.

Colleen — I’ll Read You a Story

“I’ll Read You A Story” taken from The Golden Morning Breaks and Colleen Et Les Boîtes À Musique. The video was made by Jon Nordstrom

Fire on Fire, Live @ Portland’s Space Gallery

Fire on Fire released their first EP on Michael Gira’s Young Gods Records a few months back.  The group is packed with Portland, Maine folk fixtures, notably Big Blood’s Colleen Kinsella and Caleb Mulkerin, amidst a serving of fellow Cerberus Shoal alumni like Chriss Sutherland (who released a stunning solo release of his own with Digitalis around the same time).

Skip James

Some critics and historians have stated that Skip James’ sound emerged from a “Bentonia school” of blues performers noted for falsetto vocal delivery, elaborate finger picking on the guitar, and dark lyrical thematics, creating what David Evans described as “…some of the eeriest, loneliest, and deepest blues sounds ever recorded” (13). James’ musical development was indeed influenced by the presence of blues artists in and around his hometown, and the styles of other Bentonia musicians, notably Jack Owens, are quite similar to that of James in terms of vocal delivery and instrumental technique. However, the idea of region as a overriding force in the creation of blues musical styles, while doubtlessly accountable for certain instrumental and musical consistencies within individual areas of the country, can nonetheless be at least partially discounted by the reality of the early twentieth-century bluesman’s lifestyle. As Stephen Calt describes him, the bluesman of the period was often only a semi-professional performer, playing for a few extra dollars (or sometimes just a hot meal) at juke joints and plantation parties after long days as a sharecropper, timber cutter, or levee worker. Steady jobs were scarce in the South at this time, and men were often forced to travel to wherever work was available, their music accompanying them on their journeys. Therefore, even an isolated “plantation town” like Bentonia was sometimes host to performers from all across the South, and this mobility allowed different blues styles to travel to and influence musicians throughout the region (14). This puts the idea of a wholly unique “Bentonia sound” within the domain of reasonable doubt, and thus the “Bentonian” elements within the music of Owens and others from the region can be regarded not as the manifestation of a regional stylistic phenomenon, but as a conscious emulation of the music of Skip James, which is the only music from the “Bentonia tradition” that has truly endured and which was itself influenced both by the work of migratory musicians like Henry Stuckey and Rich Griffin, and by the influential recordings of performers like Leroy Carr (James himself recorded a memorable version of Carr’s “How Long Blues”). It was James’ unique utilization of the stylistic properties of blues music, rather than the influences of a particular regional style, which gave his work its unparalleled formal distinction, and which made it unmistakably his own. — Can’t Find No Heaven: The Mysteries Of Skip James by Matt R. Lohr

Gypsy Jazz

‘Down there in the Gypsy camp a banjo was jiggling with a popular melody.., one had the impression of distant dance music, dizzying waltzes one the sweetness of an accordion. Camp fires were everywhere, each with its cooking pot. Everywhere chickens were stewing and banjos going wild…’

This was the setting in which Django grew up - in a world that today has become the stuff of legend, the world of the bohemian and the vagabond on the doorstep of a great city… — Django Reinhardt a biography by Alain Antonietto

Django featured with the Quintet of the Hot Club of France and performing ‘Swing’ (1939)

also: profile, longer version of video above & NPR’s Django Reinhardt: A Gypsy Legend

Terrastock Seven delights

The continued vitality of microlabel experimental, psych, drone and folk is perhaps best witnessed in the continued success of live festivals like Terrastock 7 or Bottled Smoke.  Both festivals, unfortunately, were outside my reach.  Thankfully, Terrastock and BS event hosts have been thoughtful enough, with the festival chaos and crowds dispersed, to remember their most geographically challenged followers, sharing the musical spoils with photos and videos aplenty.

Windy & Carl @ Terrastock 7 (Ned Raggett)

Terrastock is not just a festival, it’s a family. There’s a feeling of community that you won’t get anywhere else and you can’t help but feel caught up in it all. This isn’t Boneroo, Lollapalooza, or Austin City Limits. People aren’t here for spectacle or to be seen - they are here for the music and the community that surrounds the psych genre whose umbrella is the zine Ptolemaic Terrascope. That sense of community extends from the biggest acts to the smallest. This is, when you get down to it, nothing more than a big house party at (founding editor of PT) Phil McMullen’s pad. The pad this year just happened to be in lovely Louisville, Kentucky in the Mellwood Arts and Entertainment Center - a former factory turned multi-use facility. — Ramon Medina, TX

Wooden Shjips (alt)

Windy & Carl (1/2) (2/2)

Mike Tamburo

Kinski, Sharron Kraus w/ United Bible Studies, Mono (pt.1, pt.2), Grails, Tara Jane O’Neil (pt.1, pt.2, pt.3), Ignatz, Pelt, The Black Twig Pickers (alt), Paik, Makoto Kawabata (pt.1, pt.2), Sleeping Pill (Yo La Tengo), Black Forest/Black Sea (pt.1, pt.2), Terrastock 7 @ flickr & Terrastock 7 flickr group (yahoo ID required)

Windy & Carl live photo courtesy of Ned Raggett, used under Creative Commons license

(h/t narikiri, greatest youtube user ever)

Ben Burtt, godfather of Hollywood sound, breathes life into Wall-E

Ben Burtt, four time Academy Award winning sound designer and voice of ET and R2-D2 — among others — explains the unique challenges in developing Pixar’s Wall-E character.  While Burtt’s R2-D2 robotic vocalizations have already successfully translated human emotion into beeps and boops, these same electronic flourishes were stretched to an extreme for Wall-E.  Burtt’s abstract vocalizations, sounding something like a toddler speaking through a vocoder, needed to stand on their own for the entire first third of the film.

Burtt’s work has always distinguished itself, making a profound impression on audiences, despite tough competition from the industry’s best storytelling, cinematography and special effects accompanying his work, diversions that could easily overshadow less accomplished sound creations.  Wall-E, for the first time, truly makes Burtt’s sound creations the central focus of the film.  Lovers of sound and music absolutely must see Wall-E.

Mix Sound for Film Feature: WALL-E

The trick has always been to somehow balance the human input to the electronic input so you have the human side of it. In this case, for Wall-E, it ended up being my voice because I was always experimenting on myself sort of like the mad scientist in his lab, you inject yourself with the serum. After weeks and months of experimenting it was easier to try it on myself as we worked it out. You start with the human voice input and record words or sounds and then it is taken into a computer and I worked out a unique program which allowed me to deconstruct the sound into its component parts. We all know how pictures are pixels now and you can rearrange pixels to change the picture. You kind of do the same thing with sound.

I could reassemble the Wall-E vocals and perform it with a light pen on a tablet. You could change pitch by moving the pen or the pressure of the pen would sustain or stretch syllables or consonants and you could get an additional level of performance that way, kind of like playing a musical instrument. But that process had artifacts in it, things that made it unlike human speech, glitches you might say, things you might throw away if you were trying to convince someone it was a human voice. That’s what we liked, that electronic alias thing that went along with it, because that helped make the illusion that the sound was coming from a voice box or some kind of circuit depending on the character. — Ben Burtt Interview, Wall-E

“The characters’ voices were the hardest because people are highly critical of voices and hear them differently than sound effects. We’re experts at interpreting voices and the emotions behind them. I built special circuitry for my computer that allowed me to record my voice, digitally break it down into component parts, and reassemble it … processing the sound as if it were a musical instrument. The trick with robot voices is to retain the human element so people can identify and care while also giving it a machine-like quality—you don’t want the audience to think it’s just an actor in front of a microphone. That was my biggest challenge.” — If A Robot Falls On A Deserted Planet, Does It Still Make Noise?

also: Ben Burtt: The man behind R2-D2 and Wall-E’s beeps by Tom Russo

& Exclusive: Ben Burtt’s WALL-E Sound Masterclass.  The world’s most renowned Sound Designer teaches RT by Ben Burtt

(h/t usoproject)

Trunk Records to release collection of John Baker recordings

Thanks to Trunk Records, BBC Radiophonic Workshop composer John Baker — standout amidst the station’s slew of early electronic pioneers — is receiving the individual attention his recordings deserve, at long last.  The John Baker Tapes, a two disc cd collection along with a vinyl issue of highlights, is scheduled for release in July and August, featuring previously unreleased Radiophonic material, soundtrack materials and home recordings.  Considering the BBC’s notorious ineptitude at properly preserving the Workshop’s recordings, and the scarcity of information about John Baker’s career more generally, this Trunk release is a great relief.

John Baker hard at work at the BBC Radiophonic Workshop BBC, manipulating sounds in June 1965

Along with information about the scheduled July and August releases, Trunk includes a wonderful biography penned by John Baker’s brother, Richard Anthony Baker.

At the start of 1963, he joined the Radiophonic Workshop, which had been founded by Desmond Briscoe five years previously. In the early days of electronic music, its pioneering work of developing new and different sounds was greatly in demand by programme makers.

John invented many techniques. He recorded onto reel-to-reel tape the sound of everyday objects, such as the twanging of a ruler on a desk or a cork being pulled from a bottle. By changing the speed of the tape, he could alter the sounds’ pitch and was then able to compose a melody from these sounds by, for instance, making a minim fill four inches of tape, a crotchet, two, a quaver, one, and so on. More cleverly, if he wanted to introduce a jazz feeling to the tune, he cut a note slightly short so that it anticipated the beat. The work was painstaking and demanded a steady nerve. But it was the job for John. He loved it and was never happier.

additional reading/listening:

John Baker samples @ last.fm & BBC’s Radiophonic Workshop feature, Four sound effects that made TV history

(h/t Gutterbreakz)