Tag Archive for 'electronic'

Matt Elliott — Howling Songs (Ici d’ailleurs, 2008)

Matt Elliott's 'Howling Songs'

Just over eighty-eight years ago, at the outset of an unprecedented era of American economic prosperity later known as the “Roaring Twenties,” a small group of Italian-American anarchists detonated a horse-drawn cart, loaded with one-hundred pounds of high explosives, on the doorstep of financial giant J.P. Morgan & Co.  The resulting explosion killed thirty and wounded many more.  More jarring than the loss of life though, was the deep-seeded populist rage exposed by the Wall Street Bombing.  A violent backlash on Wall Street, the very heart of American prosperity, unveiled the violent discontent concealed by America’s swelling wealth and progress, built largely on the bare backs of wage slaves, child laborers, and struggling working class debtors.  It’s with an allusion to this violent moment in history, titled ‘Bomb the Stock Exchange,’ that Matt Elliot concludes Howling Songs (Ici d’ailleurs, 2008), his latest album in a trilogy of dark, anachronistic songwriting.

Such were the new surroundings in which Elzbieta was placed, and such was the work she was compelled to do. It was stupefying, brutalizing work; it left her no time to think, no strength for anything. She was part of the machine she tended, and every faculty that was not needed for the machine was doomed to be crushed out of existence. There was only one mercy about the cruel grind—that it gave her the gift of insensibility. Little by little she sank into a torpor—she fell silent.  (Upton Sinclair, The Jungle)

Previous Matt Elliott albums have managed to inexplicably capture in music, as Charles Dickens and Upton Sinclair have in writing, the textures, imagery and struggles of the Industrial Revolution’s urban working class.  Drinking Songs, Elliot’s first fully realized songwriting album, was remarkably powerful, to the point of really affecting the listener with its heart-wrenching, mournful tone.   Its drunken melodies felt composed in a salty harbor pub, tinged with the steam, grit and stinking sweat of a broken spirit.  Failing Songs, Elliot’s follow up, extended the emotional palette to some degree, notably the electric guitars and furious Gypsy whirlwinds from “Broken Bones,” “Desamparade” and “Good Pawn;” in the end though, Failing still sounded too similar to Drinking Songs to really distinguish itself.

“There is no wilderness where I can hide from these things, there is no haven where I can escape them; though I travel to the ends of the earth, I find the same accursed system—I find that all the fair and noble impulses of humanity, the dreams of poets and the agonies of martyrs, are shackled and bound in the service of organized and predatory Greed! And therefore I cannot rest, I cannot be silent; therefore I cast aside comfort and happiness, health and good repute—and go out into the world and cry out the pain of my spirit! Therefore I am not to be silenced by poverty and sickness, not by hatred and obloquy, by threats and ridicule—not by prison and persecution, if they should come—not by any power that is upon the earth or above the earth, that was, or is, or ever can be created.”  (Upton Sinclair, The Jungle)

Howling Songs still contains much of the familiar introspective songwriting so prevalent in earlier Elliott records.  Slavic, Iberian and more generic European pub, harbor and wandering influences are prevalent once more, again serving as the eerie, restless life animating Matt’s timeless songwriting.  While Ici d’ailleurs calls Howling the trilogy’s most introspective record yet, it’s precisely the broader range of emotions and hues that distinguishes this record from its predecessors.  “The Kübler-Ross Model,” the twelve minute album opener, is an early example of this new flexibility; in fact, the track title itself is even an allusion to the cycle of human emotions displayed in response to a tragedy or loss (i.e., denial, anger, bargaining, depression, acceptance).  The track’s lyrics, lamenting sorrowfully the passing of an unnamed loved one, and the feelings of helplessness and confusion in mourning, occupy only two-thirds; howling, alongside a ferocious orchestra of electric guitar, drums and flurried Gypsy acoustic guitar bring ‘Kübler-Ross’ to a rousing conclusion, foreshadowing the album’s newfound aggression, and channeling that anarcho-socialist outrage that fueled much of the early 20th century working class backlash.  It’s this frightening collision of introspection and anger that distinguishes Howling from Matt’s previous albums.

Incidentally enough, the aforementioned ‘Bomb the Stock Exchange’ is the album’s finest example of Howling Songs‘ emotional complexity.  The lyrics are characteristically introspective, a predictable soliloquy of personal anguish — “When all of your memories are sad / Forgotten the dreams that you had / Friends are a lie, who don’t care if you live or die / What to do but cry?”   Elliott’s upbeat, veritably sunny delivery though, and dark, humorous closing lines — “If you’ll top yourself anyway / Why not bomb the stock exchange?” — contrasts wonderfully with the trilogy’s overwhelming emotion, adding some depth to what could have been a relatively shallow affair, and casting a shadow of self-critical humor on the whole mopey affair.

While much of the album still mimics territory already covered exhaustively in Drinking and Failing, it’s Howling’s comparative abundance of fresh ideas that leaves a lasting impression.  Aside from the opener and closer, ‘A Broken Flamenco’ is another of the album’s standout, and the finest example of Howling’s memorable aggression.  The lyrics are brief, but defiant — “When faced with a flame / We’ll turn our face / What use recoiling from an infernal rage / We’ll burn as we wait” — and alongside the screams of Elliot’s electric guitar and relentless pace of the acoustic guitar, ‘Flamenco’ sounds like a fitting tribute to or representation of the explosive, uncontrollable energy of the angry mobs worldwide that pried a share of the American dream from the country’s greedy power brokers.  As our modern financial markets come tumbling down, with the wreckage falling largely on the backs of our working class and middle class, this mix of genuine outrage and self-deprecatig humor is uniquely tuned to these trying times, increasingly known as the second Gilded Age.

Put together — from the familiar songs of introspective contemplation, rousing populist rage with hints of cynical humor — Howling Songs is simply a brilliant conclusion to Matt Elliott’s already spectacular series of songwriting releases. The album is available late October from Ici d’ailleurs on cd and, for the first time, on vinyl.  Darla Records looks to be distributing the album exclusively in the United States; in Europe, the label itself would likely be the best source, while Cargo Records looks to be distributing copies in the UK.  The 2LP comes in a cardboard gatefold sleeve, on clear 180g vinyl, with two lovely inserts.

Bombing the Stock Exchange & A Broken Flamenco

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Beggar's dog - Hoboken (LOC)

Beggar’s dog - Hoboken (Library of Congress)

Crowd of strikers menacing strike-breakers, Lawrence, Mass. (LOC)

Crowd of strikers menacing strike-breakers, Lawrence, Mass. (Library of Congress)

Mendiant balayeur-Angleterre/Londres

Mendiant balayeur-Angleterre/Londres (George Eastman House)

Steve Hauschildt — Rapt for Liquid Minister c20 (Arbor, 2008)

No Fun Fest — New York City’s annual, earth-scorching, three day noise music event — is the sort of hedonistic celebration of niche-noise that could only flourish in an handful of cities across the world.  It’s here that Emeralds made their first major east-coast live appearance in support of Solar Bridge, the group’s proper release debut; the Cleveland trio of Steve Hauschildt, Mark McGuire, and John Elliot performed on stage alongside the luminaries of noise, kraut, electronic and drone, including canonized genre pioneers like Cluster, Thurston Moore, and Tony Conrad, and celebrated contemporaries like Keith Fullerton Whitman.  After two years toiling in relative obscurity, with dozens of limited run releases on microlabels over the past two years, Emeralds have now released one of the year’s best drone albums, and performed admirably alongside the genre’s giants in New York.  With Rapt for Liquid Minister (Arbor, 2008), an album of sparse dronescapes and heady moog jubilation, Steve Hauschildt proves perfectly capable of enhancing an already sterling reputation as part of Emeralds with stunning music of his own.

Krautrock and analog-synth adulation abound here; ‘Cybernetic Inevitable‘, the album’s ten minute climactic closer, bears an uncanny resemblance to Popol Vuh’s unforgettable 1975 album Aguirre (specifically, Aguirre II), opening with an ethereal chorus of vocal drones.  Aside from Rapt’s additional layer of familiar tape fuzz, the Popol Vuh and Hauschildt tracks, recorded generations apart, mirror each other wonderfully, and together echo No Fun Fest’s testament to krautrock’s enduring vibrancy.  Just as S.H. seems to be settling into a familiar foggy drone piece five minutes into ‘Cybernetic’, the track departs abruptly from Aguirre and the vocal chorus with a blinding, colorful orchestra of analog-synths.  Too brief Cluster or Göttschingand scale analog-synth jaunts, like those found at the tail end of ‘Cybernetic’ and enveloping the album opener ‘Indoor Travel’, prove to be Rapt’s most alluring feature.  Rapt for Liquid Minister is balanced nicely with an equal serving of abundant open, droning soundscapes, best represented by the album’s modest title track.

Aside from its unfortunate brevity, the album is a complete pleasure.  With only twenty minutes total running time, the album does feels somewhat stunted.  Considering Rapt isn’t presented as a full, proper album, however, these complaints are easy enough to dismiss.  The album’s brevity does, on the other hand, make for easy and enjoyable listening in short sittings, a rare quality in drone music.

Rapt for Liquid Minister is long OOP at Arbor, but there may still be copies in stock at Fusetron Sound and Mimaroglu Sound for the next few weeks.  Expect remaining copies to disappear quickly; aside from an earlier release on Emeralds’ house label Gneiss Things, Rapt is Hauschildt’s only proper solo-release.  Fortunately, three new releases, two cassettes and an LP, are on the way, so Steven Hauschildt — performing independently, and as part of Emeralds — should be increasingly visible in the coming months.  With any luck, Rapt for Liquid Minister will receive the attention and wider release it deserves.  Kranky would fit nicely.

cybernetic_inevitable.mp3

Emeralds @ No Fun Festival, 2008

Cluster @ No Fun Festival, 2008

picture: No Fun Fest 2008-42 by flickr user donatellodoesmachines (please don’t sue me)

Kemialliset Ystävät — Harmaa Laguuni (Secret Eye, 2008)

KEMIALLISET YSTÄVÄT - Harmaa Laguuni

HARMAA LAGUUNI is psych free-folk composed inside an iron-lung OR scandinavian bare-bones communal folk enhanced with exoskeleton.

Even before the release of their untitled late-2007 comeback spectacular, Kemialliset Ystävät had secured a place in outsider music history, recognized as one of the Finnish folk invasion’s most creative and prolific pioneers.  Jan Anderzén’s characteristic shambolic free-folk helped define the genre, and served as inspiration for countless artists within the larger (commercially at least) freak-folk movement.  Despite a dependable musical formula, last year’s untitled release — KY’s first in years — was a surprising departure from their established sound, the new album sounding like a seamless blend of the group’s familiar communal acoustics with experimental electronics in the spirit of early-electronic and musique concrète composers like Pierre Henry or Tod Dockstader.  Harmaa Laguuni — originally released as supplemental tour material –  continues Kemialliset Ystävät’s ambitious fusion with electronics.

Tervehdys Roskasakki‘ — Harmaa Laguuni’s opener — epitomizes this renewed focus on electronics;the track opens with wispy oscillator vocal-warmups, sounding like rubbery vocoder do-re-mee-fah-soh-lah-tee-’dohs.  Discernable vocoder vocalizations and a soft-focus synth organ build naturally from the opener’s breezy introduction, joining Kemialliset’s familiar hardly-tuned stringed instruments in short order, developing into an otherwordly, 21st century free-folk.  ‘Menneisyyden Tulvaisuudessa‘ provides another stunning example of the album’s abundant electric-tribalism, a simple pairing of a solitary oscillator and an acoustic ewe-style drum rhythm, like an aural précis of the group’s new approach.  As expected from Kemialliset Ystävät, experimentation and improvisation abounds here, only enhanced by the deeper lineup of noise makers.  ‘Synti Muissa Maailmoissa’ and ‘Synti Muissa Maailmoissa’ bear some resemblance to the self-titled’s edgier offerings — ‘Älyvaahtoa’ (youtube) for example, or the catchy ‘Superhimmeli’ (mp3).

New KYY featuring performances from quite a few of our favorite Finnish noisemakers, including members of Avarus, Kiila and Es. Also - Tom + Christina of Charlambidies guest! All exclusive tracks, this was released for Kemialliset Ystävät’s 2008 USA tour. LIMITED tour-only release…and NOT available in stores! Eat up. Fast. — Secret Eye

Harmaa Laguuni is simply extraordinary.  Considering the cd is still available for order at Secret Eye for only $12 (I think that’s around 43 pence in the UK, at the going conversion rate), I’d consider this release nearly essential listening.


Kemialliset Ystävät shreds (Sami Sänpäkkilä on Vimeo).

also: still working on some coherent, identifiable, and useful review format, so things will likely continue to change here.  I do like to provide a quick summary take on the album up top, a reaction to my own tendency to quickly skim through my rss subscriptions, looking for items of interest.  I find targeted summaries can be useful way of introducing content, and hope others will as well.

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)

Earliest electronic recording unveiled

Just in time for the approaching 60th anniversary of the first commercially available general purpose computer — The Ferranti Mark 1 — the BBC unveils what may be the earliest surviving electronic recording captured on that very pioneering device at the University of Manchester, some time during the autumn of 1951.  Oddly enough, the recording wasn’t even recorded separately, saved only as part of a news broadcast.

From the BBC:

Paul Doornbusch, a computer music composer and historian at the New Zealand School of Music, told BBC News.

“As far as I know it’s the earliest recording of a computer playing music in the world, probably by quite a wide margin.”

The previous oldest known recordings were made on an IBM mainframe computer at Bell Labs in the US in 1957, he said.

following the recording, a university engineer called Frank Cooper asked if he could have a copy. Unable to give him the original, the BBC team cut him another version.

“At the time of the recording outside broadcasts were recorded on to acetate disks,” explained Mr Burton. “You can hear the presenter tell the recording engineer in the van ‘lift Jim’ and that meant lift the cutter off to stop recording.”

During the session, the temperamental machine managed to work its way through Baa Baa Black Sheep, God Save the King and part of In the Mood.

Following one aborted attempt, a laughing presenter says: “The machine’s obviously not in the mood.”

The disc was eventually passed to the CCS, who, along with the University of Manchester, has released the recording to mark the 60th anniversary of the Ferranti machine’s forerunner.

Plenty of additional information about the Ferranti is available at computer50.org, including an incredible sales brochure produced originally to promote the (then very bizarre) new machine.

All machines of this type can do THREE things:

  1. They can perform all the operations of arithmetic exceedingly rapidly…
  2. They can remember a great many numbers…
  3. They can make decisions…

It can make decisions!  Wikipedia, though, makes an important distinction, noting Australia’s CSIRAC beat The Ferranti to the first electronic composition by at least several months.  While CSIRAC’s music was never recorded, original copies of the program allowed researchers to meticulously reconstruct that first recording. (note: I’ve stored the audio files below on my web space so I’m not leeching off their bandwith — see previous links to reach original document and audio files)

 
icon for podpress  reconstruction of CSIRAC's 1951 rendition of 'Colonel Bogey': Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (30)

Cherry\'s instructions for the Music Programme. N1, N2 and I are registers that are set with console switches.

(h/t AudioLemon)

Fabio Orsi’s ‘Picture Myself In a Cloud’ (ruralfaune 2008)

Any researcher looking to uncover an exhaustive list of international musical hotbeds, those alluring capitals for creativity and genre-bending developed by the contemporary music underground (e.g., Iceland, the UK, Finland, Sweden, Denmark) would probably find Italy ranked alongside the likes of Mongolia, Cambodia or the United Arab Emirates.  Until just recently, I doubt I could name many noteworthy Italian musicians myself, besides the glorious Goblin, or Luciano Pavarotti — and the latter only comes to mind because I regularly encounter his likeness featured proudly on a wall mural inside my local pizza place.  Goblin and Pavarotti are nothing to sneeze at, surely, but aren’t quite cutting edge.  Partly for that reason, discovering Fabio Orsi’s ambient work — and subsequently the work of Gianluca Becuzzi, Valerio Cosi, among others — has been especially delightful.  Encountering your favorite genre surprisingly well developed in yet another region overseas leads to a barrage of new discoveries.

Picture Myself

Fabio Orsi’s Picture Myself In a Cloud (Speaking Through Thought), his first release for ruralfaune (myspace), is the latest in an accomplished catalog of finely crafted, endlessly pleasing electro-acoustic, ambient releases from the Italian musician.  Picture Myself fits snugly alongside an already impressive catalog of under-celebrated releases on the finest of micro-labels, including LVD, Digitalis, and (the apparently Italian) A Silent Place. Continue reading ‘Fabio Orsi’s ‘Picture Myself In a Cloud’ (ruralfaune 2008)’

 
icon for podpress  Fabio Orsi - Part One (Picture Myself..., ruralfaune 2008): Play Now | Play in Popup | Download (464)