Showing posts with label noise. Show all posts
Showing posts with label noise. Show all posts

Wednesday, 30 November 2016

The Music of Possibility: A Noise Manifesto

Today's blog starts with a question: what links French composer Edgard Varese, 80s sampling supergroup The Art of Noise, Industrial pioneers Throbbing Gristle, silence-loving indeterminist John Cage, German Industrialists Einstürzende Neubauten, the creator of Musique Concrete (Pierre Schaeffer), the name of a leading Eurorack manufacturer (Make Noise), the first all electronic score for a motion picture (Forbidden Planet), the more abstract entries into the canon of German Kosmische Musik, the harsh and unpredictable sounds of circuit bent instruments, the electronic jazz of Autechre, EBMers Nitzer Ebb, the glitch madness of Richard Devine, the Japanoise of Merzbow and Masonna, the IDM of Aphex Twin, the cut up, breakbeat craziness of Venetian Snares, a Berlin festival called Atonal.... and this list could go on forever!?


The answer is NOISE.

Actually, whilst the answer is noise it is more particularly the musical use and contextualization of noise, noise as a musically useful entity. But what even is noise? If it is members of German band Faust hitting a concrete mixer or Einstürzende Neubauten using electric drills or the weird shrieks of something that has been circuit bent this seems quite obvious but how might we define it? The temptation is to describe noise as unmusical sounds put to musical uses and I'm sure more than one reader was tempted to think that. But is it that simple? As a recent blog of mine showed, such a composer as John Cage, plus other pioneers such as Pierres Schaeffer and Henry, would hardly be likely to agree with this. Cage was so extreme (as some would judge it) as to believe that all sound was music (even including the sounds you might want to call noises) whilst Schaeffer's term Musique Concrete actually means real music, music made from real sounds, or noises as we might call them.

Now it can't really be argued against that many of those who pioneered working with noises (which is directly parallel to the rise of electronics in music) did so in order to be unconventional or counter to the prevailing movements in music of their times. (They might have described it as broadening our conception of music itself, however!) Some musicians simply plugged in their electronic instruments and tried to make normal music, of course. But a large number of those utilizing electronic equipment did not. They were wise to the fact that electronics meant new sounds and noises. A stand out example for me is the work of Louis and Bebe Barron who composed not the score for the film Forbidden Planet, it didn't have one, but what is described in the credits as "Electronic Tonalities". It was likely called this because the sound FX of the film and the "music" of the film cannot be distinguished at all. It is just one endless stream of strange, otherworldly tones. Or noises. The Barrons built their own circuits to make the score and many of them were destroyed in making the sounds they made meaning the score was literally unrepeatable. So outrageous in musical terms was their sound creation for the time that they were banned from being nominated for an Oscar. This was as recently as 1956, or 60 years ago.

An even earlier pioneer with things electronic was French composer, Edgard Varese. Varese emigrated to New York City in 1915 and, as a composer, was beset by the idea of making new sounds. In 1917 he wrote "I long for instruments obedient to my thought and whim, with their contribution of a whole new world of unsuspected sounds, which will lend themselves to the exigencies of my inner rhythm." He went on to compose two avantgarde percussion pieces in the 1920s, Hyperprism and Ionisation, the first of which reportedly created a riot and the second of which used two variable tone sirens but it is in 1930, during a round table discussion in Paris, that he gives his "Liberation of Sound" manifesto and it is worth quoting at length here.

"The raw material of music is sound. That is what the "reverent approach" has made people forget - even composers. Today when science is equipped to help the composer realize what was never before possible - all that Beethoven dreamed, all that Berlioz gropingly imagined possible - the composer continues to be obsessed by traditions which are nothing but the limitations of his predecessors. Composers like anyone else today are delighted to use the many gadgets continually put on the market for our daily comfort. But when they hear sounds that no violins, wind instruments, or percussion of the orchestra can produce, it does not occur to them to demand those sounds for science. Yet science is even now equipped to give them everything they may require.

And there are the advantages that I anticipate from such a machine: liberation from the arbitrary paralyzing tempered system; the possibility of obtaining any number of cycles or, if still desired, subdivisions of the octave, and consequently the formation of any desired scale; unsuspected range in low and high registers; new harmonic splendors obtainable from the use of subharmonic combinations now impossible; the possibility of obtaining any differential of timbre, of sound combinations, and new dynamics far beyond the present human-powered orchestra; a sense of sound projection in space by the emission of sound in any part or in many parts of the hall as may be required by the score; cross rhythms unrelated to each other, treated simultaneously, or to use the old word, contrapuntally, since the machine would be able to beat any number of desired notes, any subdivision of them, omission or fraction of them - all these in a given unit of measure of time which is humanly impossible to attain."

However, there are even earlier precursors to the coming age of electronic noise than this. Around the time of Varese's emigration the Italian Luigi Russolo was writing his now famous The Art of Noises booklet. This booklet, of course, directly inspired both the name and musical practice of the 80s supergroup, The Art of Noise, who utilized the most advanced and expensive sampling technology of their time, the Fairlight and the Synclavier, to turn noises into instruments. A perfect example is their first hit, Close To The Edit. The video to this track is also highly symbolic as four characters destroy a piano with electric saws, a chainsaw and other implements. It almost seems as if traditional music, and its instruments, is being replaced by a new electronic noise music based on any sound that can be made or imagined. A technological, noisy future awaits.

But back to The Art of Noises a moment for within it Russolo describes our emergence from a bucolic past into a noisy present and future.

"Ancient life was all silence. In the 19th century, with the invention of the machine, Noise was born. Today, Noise triumphs and reigns supreme over the sensibility of men. For many centuries life went by in silence, or at most in muted tones. The strongest noises which interrupted this silence were not intense or prolonged or varied. If we overlook such exceptional movements as earthquakes, hurricanes, storms, avalanches and waterfalls, nature is silent...

Every manifestation of our life is accompanied by noise. The noise, therefore, is familiar to our ear, and has the power to conjure up life itself. Sound, alien to our life, always musical and a thing unto itself, an occasional but unnecessary element, has become to our ears what an overfamiliar face is to our eyes. Noise, however, reaching us in a confused and irregular way from the irregular confusion of our life, never entirely reveals itself to us, and keeps innumerable surprises in reserve. We are therefore certain that by selecting, coordinating and dominating all noises we will enrich men with a new and unexpected sensual pleasure."


Luigi Russolo and friend playing hand cranked noise instruments called Intonarumori which produced rattling and scraping noises. These were all destroyed during World War 2.



This narrative we find mirrored in the mid to late 1970s in the UK and Europe when "Industrial" music was born. The first thing to note about it is that it was purposely artistic. Groups such as Throbbing Gristle and Cabaret Voltaire in England were people of musical and artistic ideas. Where they differed was in the sounds they used to express these ideas and this gives them a direct link to the motivations of earlier composers like Russolo and Varese. For the Industrialists, including later ones into the early 1980s in continental Europe, especially Germany, it was the sound of a dark, industrial wasteland that was the sonic inspiration as they sought to probe and make use of sonic extremity. Noise and noises were the sonic materials that they worked with and, in a very serious and composerly way, they knitted together noisy compositions from an acute awareness of sound. It is sometimes common to regard this music as somehow a lesser kind of music because it uses instruments in non-traditional ways (for example, Cosey Fanni Tutti's playing of the guitar) but this is, of course, nothing more than the sniffy disparagement of more conservative minds.

But now we sit here at the end of 2016 and none of this seems very new. We have computers that can hold sample libraries full of terabytes of sounds if we want to. Literally any sound we can record or invent can be used musically. We have 50 years of commercial synthesis to call upon with all the amazing instruments and their timbral possibilities that go with it. Before that we passed through a brief age of music made with magnetic tape and radio equipment. Yet how adventurous are we now? The old divides are still apparent. We take on new habits and these habits become the new norms we must seek to subvert. Is there a sense that we have now done all that can be done sonically? Are the dreams of Russolo and Varese and others like Cage and Schaeffer complete? This is really a twofold question for I am asking if we have now found all the sounds there are to be found but also if we are using the totality of sound when we compose music.

A few things suggest not. One form of music which creates a harsh divide is the appropriately enough named Harsh Noise music. This even has regional forms such as Japanoise, which is harsh noise originating from Japan. This is, in as straight a form as could be maintained, the use of outright electronic noise regarded as music. It can be seen to be on the cutting edge in that so many are ready to denigrate it as either not artistic or as not music. I look forward to those who take either pathway here presenting their fully worked out definitions of both art and music for our appraisal. In a collection of electronic music lectures and documentaries I have collected together on You Tube there is one called People Who Do Noise. Its an 80 minute documentary but I wonder how many who watch it (and you should!) get to minute 80 because some of those minutes contain the harshest of noises. The comments underneath this video (which you should read) are a kind of street fight over what music is, if this is a valid form of it or if it is just, as one commenter thinks, "over pretentious, meaningless bullshit".

Of course, the accusation of pretentiousness has been heard before. In my last blog but one it was used of John Cage's very own noise experiment, 4'33". One thing that seems to link those who work with noise is their utter seriousness of interest in the noise that they make or make room for people to hear. It is often thought that those working with noise must be somehow the opposite, not at all serious or joking, because, so I assume, it seems that some cannot escape the conventionality of the view that real music is melody and harmony conventionally understood. This, of course, is not so and certainly not since the onset of electronics in music. As Varese said earlier, we can now have any scale we like. Or even none at all. From the very first electronic musical instruments, such as the Theremin (the instrument which, lest we forget, got Robert Moog interested in synthesis), electronic noise music and its exploration has been veering away from traditional ideas of music, as Varese pointed out it would have to. New possibilities mean new opportunities. It was thanks to these new possibilities that new phenomena emerged. We now associate space with weird sounds exactly because electronically generated sounds and scores seemed to better fit these mysterious places so alien to our experiences. 

And so it can be seen that noises powered by electronics come to express things that more traditional instruments and forms of music could not. They are an extension of our sonic expressivity. I personally believe that this is all to the good for human beings that always have within them the desire to break new ground, to explore. We are creatures cursed to experience a physical world and that physical world includes sound. So, to my mind, it is utterly human to want to know what can be done and to find out in the doing of it and, what's more, to use new possibilities in sound to better express the experiences of life that we have. To that end, music with electronics had to involve the bringing of noise within the fold of musical creativity and it has immeasurably enriched us all as a result. Of course, conservatism will still hold the mainstream and try to limit, curtail and push back on the noisy neighbors that seek to broaden and strengthen our artistic appreciations and impulses but the boundaries of acceptability must always be pushed if we are to advance. Who one hundred years ago would have imagined the musical possibilities of sound and noise we have today? We live in the world Luigi Russolo's Art of Noises dreamed of. 

I leave the last word to John Cage who, in 1937, prophetically uttered the following words in his lecture "The Future of Music: Credo":

I BELIEVE THAT THE USE OF NOISE

Wherever we are, what we hear is mostly noise. When we ignore it, it disturbs us. When we listen to it, we find it fascinating. The sound of a truck at 50 mph. Static between the (radio) stations. Rain. We want to capture and control these sounds, to use them, not as sounds effects, but as musical instruments. Every film studio has a library of sound effects recorded on film. With a film phonograph it is now possible to control the amplitude and frequency of any one of these sounds and to give to it rhythms within or beyond the reach of anyone's imagination. Given four film phonographs, we can compose and perform a quartet for explosive motor, wind, heartbeat and landslide. 

TO MAKE MUSIC

If this word, music, is sacred and reserved for eighteenth and nineteenth century instruments, we can substitute a more meaningful term: organization of sound.  

WILL CONTINUE TO INCREASE UNTIL WE REACH A MUSIC PRODUCED THROUGH THE AID OF ELECTRICAL INSTRUMENTS.


The question is, how much do we live up to the hopes and dreams of our musical forbears? How much of a music of exploration and possibility do we make?

For more like this you can consider joining my Facebook group Electronic Music Philosophy 

Sunday, 1 May 2016

Artist Interview: Scott Lawlor

Scott Lawlor is an artist I have been aware of for about a year. He is active both as a listener and collator of other people's music on his blog and associated podcast, The Blind Flight, (which has archives going back 3 years but has a longer history as an Internet radio show) and as a composer in his own right. Scott is a noisemaker and specializes in drone, noise and ambience. His projects can be of prodigious length (tracks of 45 minutes are not unknown nor projects that run to several hours) but this doesn't seem to bother Scott at all. I admire his commitment to what he is doing. Recently Scott submitted a track to one of my own projects and I said the piece needed to be between 20 and 25 minutes. When I received Scott's submission I chuckled as it was exactly 25 minutes in length. I felt like Scott had had to limit himself to do that! What follows is a brief interview with Scott about his music and his influences.


1. Please explain your musical history and how you come to be making music?

When I was in graduate school in 1990, I went to a local music store and purchased my first synthesizer, the Ensoniq SQ1, and after playing around with it for a while, and with some help from a friend who taught me some of the layout, I began to realize that I put sounds together much better than words. Up to that point, my ambition was to be a novelist but getting that first synthesizer was a life changing event for me.


2. What influences your music-making, both in terms of musical influences and in the tools you use?

My influences are quite varied from the instrumental music of Suzanne Ciani, who influenced a lot of my early compositions in the 90's which were more new-age in style, to people like Robert Rich and Steve Roach, who were very influential in my first explorations into space music. I am also influenced, to a large degree, by the music of John Zorn, especially in my more experimental and some of the organ works.  Merzbow is also an influence when it comes to my more recent noise concepts and then, to round it all off, there are classical composers like Chopin, Debussy and Messean who have been inspirations in a lot of my live playing.

The tools I use are pretty simple, just a Roland FA-08 (which I got in 2014, before that, it was the Ensoniq TS12) and a computer with recording software and some plugins


3. Your music is quite long, I've noticed. Is this deliberate? 

It depends on what it is I'm composing but in the beginning, when I seriously started composing ambient music around 2013, a lot of my works were longer in nature but as time went on, I tried writing tracks that were shorter.  Even when I'm playing live and I'm going for a longer track, I have to always be doing something active because my attention wanders and I can become easily bored.  That's also a motivator in trying different styles like dark ambient, ethereal ambient, space music, noise and some more experimental atonal material as well.


4. How do you form a musical idea? What is your process when working on a project?

A lot of more recent ideas are albums inspired by literature or articles from the Internet.  The collaborative works with Rebekkah Hilgraves on the Aural Films label are examples of such works whereas the Divina Commedia series with Jack Hertz was inspired by the work of Dante.

Sometimes, the inspiration of a piece of literature doesn't occur until after I've written the album and am listening to the playback. The Dark Descent and up to Reascend is such an example, and though, musically it's inspired by the early work of Pink Floyd, upon listening to the final draft, I discovered that it fit the narrative of Paradise Lost very well.

Since coming up with titles is not something I'm good at myself, I'll just start browsing the net while I'm listening to a track and find a phrase that seems to fit the mood of the piece at the time of listening.

With a lot of collaborations, I'll send someone a drone and then that person will add layers to it or the reverse will happen, at which point, we'll talk about titles and artwork and schedule the project for release.


5. If you could pick 3 musicmakers to learn from who would they be and why?

John Zorn because he also plays in a variety of styles from jazz to avant garde to classical.  I have always admired his ability to jump from one style to another and not to conform to the establishment.  If you haven't heard any of his interviews, try to find them, they are a fascinating listen.

I'd like to explore more noise music and learn from different people in the genre, not just about what equipment they use but production techniques and how they come to conceptualize the work that they do.


6. What musical ambitions do you have in the future?

An ultimate dream would be to be able to play at the drone not drones 28 hour event in Minnesota some day or actually jam with ambient musicians in a collaboration effort.  Oh yeah, I'd like to play a real pipe organ as well.  I love the sound of the organ and since I don't feel that the instrument is represented very well in ambient. I've made it one of my missions to change that.


Thanks to Scott for providing the interview. You can find his music on Bandcamp at https://scottlawlor.bandcamp.com/ and his podcast and blog at https://theblindflight.wordpress.com/ He is on Twitter @sklawlor

His track for my new project Silent Screams can be found HERE! 

Wednesday, 27 April 2016

Artist Interview: ODORBABY

Odorbaby (or maybe its ODORBABY?) is both an enigma and a phenomenon. To date, I have no idea who Odorbaby is, how many people are involved, what gender they might be or where they are. Odorbaby encourages this fact for whoever is there behind Odorbaby pulling the strings is clearly a thinker and a person of ideas. Odorbaby, as a musical act, is powered by ideas and a freeform invention. The work of Odorbaby appears to be bricolage influenced by an interest in noise. I first came across Odorbaby a while ago but I wasn't ready for it. The PR strategy is blunt and in your face and the music is no less so. But, giving it a second chance I became seduced by the complexity of it and the fact that, underneath, there is actually something there worthwhile. Odorbaby is both more and less than it appears and this is probably by design. The music is not a noise wall as it can be with some noise artists. Here a more playful and nuanced mind is at work. I appreciate Odorbaby's music as moments in time. Odorbaby is capturng life, maybe not yours or mine or even Odorbaby's, but somebody's. You could send Odorbaby's music into space as an example of human life. But enough waffle. I was lucky enough to secure an interview from the eccentric and elusive Odorbaby and what follows is Odorbaby's own cryptic answers. The caps are original to Odorbaby and, with a respectful nod towards Odorbaby, I keep them in place as Odorbaby would intend.




1. What is your history in making music? How do you come to be doing what you are doing?

ODORBABY IS ONE OF SEVERAL PROJECTS WE ENGAGE IN SOMEWHERE OVER THE MERZBOW BUT WE WILL LIMIT THIS INTERVIEW TO THE ALMIGHTY AWESOME OF THE ODORBABY DISTORTION PROTOCOL STRATEGY

ODORBABY IS THE RESULT OF TRYING TO PLAY NICE WITHIN THE CONTEXT OF THE AMERICAN MUSIC BUSINESS AND REALIZING THAT 
PEOPLE DONT WANT MUSIC THEY WANT MUSIC FLAVORED CONSUMPTION PRODUCT 
PEOPLE DONT WANT MUSICIANS THEY WANT MANNEQUINS 
PEOPLE DONT WANT ART THEY WANT DISTRACTION AND SPECTACLE 
PEOPLE BASICALLY DONT CARE THEY JUST WANT TO SEE MONEY CHANGE HANDS AND HAVE SOMETHING TO BRAG ABOUT THAT MAKES THEM LOOK SPECIAL 

EVERYTHING IS ALWAYS THE MOST AWESOME THE MOST INCREDIBLE THE MOST AMAZING THING EVER
HAVE YOU EVER BEEN TO A MUSIC FESTIVAL THEN YOU KNOW EXACTLY WHAT THIS MEANS 
ALSO HIPSTERS
EVERYBODY TRIES TO DO IT RIGHT AND EVERYBODY FAILS THEN GETS USED UP AND DISCARDED AND NOBODY REALLY CARES ANYWAY
THE WHOLE THING IS AN INTRICATELY CHOREOGRAPHED CONSUMPTION RITUAL AND LITTLE MORE THAN THAT

SO ODORBABY IS THEREFORE COMMITTED TO BEING GOOD FOR BUSINESS AND SERVICING THIS DEMOGRAPHIC IN THE MOST EFFECTIVE WAY POSSIBLE
ODORBABY LEVERAGES EFFICIENCIES BY SKIPPING STRAIGHT TO THE FAILURE AND DISCARDING STAGE AND STARTING FROM THERE

MOST OF THE PEOPLE INVOLVED IN THE ODORBABY PROJECT HAVE MUSIC MAKING OR PRODUCTION AND OR SOFTWARE BACKGROUNDS SO THE SONIC MASTERWORKS OF ODORBABY ARE A REFLECTION OF TECHNOLOGY BASED SOLUTIONS TO THINGS USUALLY

WE ASSUME THAT NOBODY CARES AND PLAN ACCORDINGLY

ITS TURNS OUT TO BE MORE FUN THAT WAY


2. Describe your music style and the aims of the music you make. What is Odorbaby about?

ODORBABY DEVOURS PROCESSES AND REGURGITATES EVERYTHING THAT CROSSES ODORBABYS PATH BLASTING THEM FORTH ALMIGHTILY 
AWESOME
THERE IS AN OVERSUPPLY IN THIS WORLD OF INFORMATION WHETHER THIS INFORMATION TAKES THE FORM OF MUSIC OR NEWS OR ESPECIALLY SOCIAL MEDIA 
ODORBABY IS THEREFORE COMMITTED TO UPCYCLING THIS INFORMATION INTO NEW FORMS OF CONSUMPTION PRODUCT IN ORDER TO RELIEVE THE PLANET OF SOME OF THE BURDEN OF THIS INFOGLUT
THIS IS THE FOUNDATION OF THE ODORBABY DISTORTION PROTOCOL STRATEGY WHICH PERMEATES EVERY ASPECT OF THE ALMIGHTY AWESOMENESS OF ODORBABY 
COUNT ON ODORBABY FOR ALL OF YOUR AWESOMENESS NEEDS

ODORBABY IS ALSO ABOUT IGNORING THE PRETENSE THAT SUFFUSES MUCH OF HUMAN ACTIVITY AND INSTEAD LAYS BARE THE SIMPLE AND SOMETIMES HUMOROUS FUTILITY OF HUMAN HUBRIS AND FOLLY 
WHY PRETEND WHEN LIFE IS WEIRD ENOUGH AS IT IS


3. What do you use to make music? What would you like to use?

EACH ODORBABY SONIC MASTERWORK HAS A SPECIFIC MEANS OF AWESOMENESS PRODUCTION

HERE IS A BRIEF LIST OF WHICH MASTERWORK IS CREATED HOW

- GOOD FOR BUSINESS

RECORDINGS FROM ODORBABY PERFORMANCES AND COLLABORATIONS IN AUSTIN TEXAS ARE EITHER PRESENTED AS THEY ARE OR ARE EDITED FOR A SPECIFIC TYPE OF SONIC EXPERIENCE NOTHING FANCY NO TRICKS JUST STRAIGHT UP NOISE AWESOMENESS

AT THIS POINT IN THE ODORBABY EPIC SAGA A LOT OF PERFORMANCES INVOLVED MICROPHONE AND SOUND SYSTEM ABUSE PLUS SMOKE MACHINES AND OTHER DANGEROUS UNCOMFORTABLE DEVICES
NOT MUCH OF THE LIVE DAMAGE SHOWED UP ON THIS RECORDING

- AMERICAN STANDARD

ODORBABYS POP MUSIC MASTERWORK EVERYTHING IS EDITED AND ASSEMBLED ACCORDING TO POP MUSIC STANDARDS SOMETIMES WITH BEATS OTHER TIMES WITH JUST AUTOTUNE BECAUSE AUTOTUNE IS AWESOME 
PLUS SOME BITS DONE WITH A SMALL MODULAR SYSTEM ODORBABY ACQUIRED IN BERLIN

- CONSUMPTION PRODUCT

YOUR DAILY MINUTES OF NOISE WERE CREATED USING THE SUPERCOLLIDER SOFTWARE PLATFORM AS A MULTICHANNEL NOISE SOURCE 
THEN THE NOISE SOURCES WERE ROUTED THROUGH THE SMALL MODULAR SYSTEM USED ON AMERICAN STANDARD TO CREATE AN AWESOME BLEND OF NOISE 
WHICH WAS THEN CUT INTO ONE MINUTE SEGMENTS AND LOVINGLY GIFTED TO THE INTERNET

- RELAX IT GETS WORSE

THIS HAS A VARIETY OF SOUND SOURCES MOSTLY DATABENT AUDIO FILES CREATED IN AUDACITY FROM AN IPHONE PICTURE OF A TREE OUTSIDE OF THE APARTMENT 
THE AUDIO FILE IS PROCESSED IN AUDACITY USING SPECTRAL MODULATION AU PLUGINS TO MAKE A PILE OF  PITCH AND TIMBRE SEGMENTS 
WHICH ARE THEN PLAYED IN TRAKTOR PRO AND MANIPULATED USING  STANDARD TRAKTOR PRO FX AND SEVERLY TWEAKING SETTINGS

- AVIATION CRAB ORCHESTRA (AN EPIC SAGA)

THIS SONIC MASTERWORK IS BASED ON THE IDEA THAT THE CREATION OF SOUND AND THE RECORDING AND PROCESSING OF SOUND HAVE NOTHING TO DO WITH EACH OTHER 
THE POINT IS THAT THE MIX IS THE COMPOSITION AND THE SOUND MATERIAL EXISTS ONLY TO GIVE SUBSTANCE TO THIS MIX
RANDOMLY ACQUIRED AUDIO FILES ARE CHOPPED UP AND REASSEMBLED LIKE YOU WOULD DO FOR A WILLIAM BURROUGHS TYPE CUT UP OPERATION INTO A SOURCE FILE NO LONGER THAN AROUND THREE AND A HALF MINUTES 
THEN THE SOURCE FILE IS SIMPLY LAID INTO A PROTOOLS SESSION WITH THE MIX ALREADY AUTOMATED AND THEN RENDERED INTO A FINAL TWO MIX
TWO MIX IS STUDIOSPEAK FOR A STEREO REDUCTION MIX

- NUL FUXGEBEN

THIS IS ALL DONE IN REALTIME WITH MULTIPLE INSTANCES OF THE GENDY INSTRUMENT IN SUPERCOLLIDER 
THERE ARE USUALLY FOUR LAYERS OF AWESOMENESS THAT ARE CONTROLLED FROM AN INTERFACE BUILT WITH LEMUR 
ALL OF THE TITLES ARE IN GERMAN BECAUSE THATS WHAT WE SPEAK HERE

FOR YOUR NONGERMAN SPEAKING READERS THE TITLE ROUGHLY TRANSLATES TO 
THE GIVING OF ZERO FUCKS
THE COVER IS A PHOTO OF THE BACK OF A FOOTBALL JERSEY THAT ODORBABY NEVER HAD MADE

- GET KILLING

GET MEANS GOAT IN SWEDISH AND 
KILLING MEANS KID ALSO IN SWEDISH 
HAHAHA ODORBABY MAKES ANOTHER AWESOME LANGUAGE JOKE

THIS MASTERWORK STARTED OUT AS A RESPONSE TO ALL OF THE GUN VIOLENCE IN THE UNITED STATES BUT HAS TURNED OUT TO BE A COLLECTION OF TRACKS MADE FOR COMPILATIONS
MAYBE ITS LIKE AN REMIX EP OR SOMETHING
MOST OF ITS DONE IN PROTOOLS USING STUFF FROM OTHER SONIC MASTERWORKS WITH SOME RANDOM INTERNET AUDIO BLENDED IN


ODORBABY WOULD LIKE TO CONTINUE WORKING ON THE ODORTRON WHICH IS A SOFTWARE BASED THING THAT WOULD MAKE IT EASIER TO CREATE AWESOME ODOR IN PUBLIC PERFORMANCE 
SOMEDAY IT WILL GET BUILT BUT RIGHT NOW THERE ARE OTHER MUSIC THINGS THAT TAKE TIME AWAY FROM ODORBABY

ALSO WORKING WITH MICROPHONES AND PEDALS IN THE OLD SCHOOL HANDS ON METHOD OF NOISE PRODUCTION WOULD BE FUN


4. You have quite a unique image. Is this just your personality or is there more to it?

ODORBABY IS NOT A PERSON 
ODORBABY IS SIMPLY ALL OF THE HYPE YOU CRAVE WITHOUT THE BURDEN OF AN ACTUAL PRODUCT TO SLOW YOU DOWN
THERE IS NEVER AN ATTEMPT TO MAKE ODORBABY BE SOMETHING OR SOMEONE OR HAVE A PERSONALITY 
BUT RATHER ALWAYS AN ATTEMPT TO REMOVE ANYTHING REMOTELY RESEMBLING PERSONALITY OR HUMANITY FROM ODORBABY 

EVERYTHING IS ALWAYS THE MOST AWESOME THE MOST INCREDIBLE THE MOST AMAZING THING EVER
ODORBABY IS PURE UNADULTERATED AWESOMENESS PAST PRESENT AND FUTURE
HOW EASY IS THAT

PEOPLE DONT WANT MUSIC THEY WANT MUSIC FLAVORED CONSUMPTION PRODUCT 
PEOPLE DONT WANT MUSICIANS THEY WANT MANNEQUINS 
PEOPLE DONT WANT ART THEY WANT DISTRACTION AND SPECTACLE
THE MUSIC BUSINESS HAS NOTHING TO DO WITH MUSIC AND EVERYTHING TO DO WITH BUSINESS HOW EASY IS THAT

ODORBABY EXISTS TO FILL THAT DEMOGRAPHIC BY REDUCING PRODUCTION COSTS IMPROVING SUPPLY CHAIN EFFICIENCIES AND PASSING THE AWESOME DIRECTLY ONTO THE CONSUMER


5. What are your musical influences?

ANYTHING AND EVERYTHING
MERZBOW OBVIOUSLY IS A REFERENCE POINT BUT ALSO 
AUNTS ANALOG 
DROMEZ 
PEASANT
POWERMONSTER
BREAKDANCING RONALD REAGAN

^^^ THOSE GUYS ARE FROM THE US
IN EUROPE TRY vvv

BEATSZ 2.0
RPT
AMMERORHEA STRAUSS
SUDDEN INFANT
ANYTHING THAT MULTIVERSAL IS CURRENTLY PROMOTING

ODORBABY ENJOYS SITTING NEAR THE TRAIN TRACKS AND LISTENING THE THE TRAINS GO BY ITS LIKE A NOISE SHOW BUT WITHOUT THE NOISE SHOW
ALSO NATURE ITSELF IS AN INCREDIBLY GIFTED MUSICIAN IF YOU CAN LEARN TO SIT STILL AND LISTEN TO IT


6. Where do you see yourself going musically in the future? Any ambitions?

ODORBABY WOULD LIKE TO DEVELOP INTO A MORE PERFORMANCE EFFECTIVE ENTITY 
AND ALSO COLLABORATE WITH OTHERS PARTICULARLY IN A BAND SORT OF CONTEXT
ALSO DOING COLLABS WITH AV/VIDEO PROJECTION ARTISTS WOULD BE AWESOME
FILM AND VIDEO WORK IS VERY ATTRACTIVE 
ALREADY SOME PEOPLE HAVE USED ODORBABY SONIC MASTERWORKS IN SMALL INDIE FILM PROJECTS
BUT WORKING WITH OTHERS SEEMS LIKE A LOT OF FUN SO YEAH MORE OF THAT

THANK YOU FROM ODORBABY



Thanks to Odorbaby for the interview. Merzbow is the performing name of Masami Akita, a famous Japanese noise artist. 

You can hear the awesome of Odorbaby at http://freemusicarchive.org/music/ODOR_BABY/ 


                                 How Awesome Is That?

Tuesday, 26 April 2016

ETM: Electronic Texture Music

ETM: Electronic Texture Music - what's that then? ETM is something I have just created, something I have decided it is what I do now. Of course, this is not creation from nothing. Nothing exists in a vacuum (except all the heavenly bodies that exist in the vacuum of space) but, more particularly, nothing creative is without forbears and influences. These forbears and influences can often be controversial or a matter of dispute. But they are always there. The story of electronic music is one of such forbears and influences. I am currently making a podcast series about it and, in episodes yet to be published, I intend to suggest some lines of influence and say how, for example, music made by Germans in the 70s leads to Trance and Techno in the 80s and 90s. But this blog is a little piece by me about what I imagine ETM to be as I have been making it for the last 6-8 months. I have come to see it as a style of music but one that comes from certain ways of seeing and being in the world. So I think that not everyone could make it because not everyone would be in the position to do so.

I begin by saying what ETM is not. ETM is not about tempo as some forms of music are. Its not House or Drum and Bass, music which needs to be at a certain speed. Indeed, as we shall see, ETM may not even be about a beat, at least not simply so or as the main focus of the music. (Nearly all music has rhythm, however, even if its subtle and in the movement of sounds.) ETM is not about melody or harmony either. As with rhythm, pitch is not the focal point of ETM. But, again, this is not to say that pitch doesn't matter. What doesn't matter is the conventional use of pitch to achieve conventional melody or harmony. And so this means that, thirdly, ETM is not about making "a song". This is another conventional notion that ETM politely avoids. 

So what is ETM about? Well ETM is fragmentary, its doesn't conceive of itself as created wholes, fully-formed or otherwise. ETM is pieces of sound. ETM is also abstract and this deliberately so. ETM has a need to be amorphous and resistant to fitting into conventional form. To ask of a piece of ETM "What is it about?" or "What is it for?" is to find few answers being given you directly from the music itself... and yet, on the other hand, all that you will ever need to answer such questions is there within it. ETM does not give itself up without a fight. It is music you struggle with to know, experience and understand. For this reason ETM is layered, a spatial form of music existing in a physical universe. This suggests that perspective is relevant to appreciate it and that it can be approached from differing angles. What do you find in it when you listen? Well where are you listening from?

ETM, sonically, is about timbre. It is timbral music focused on the mixing, contrasting and creation of timbres. This is in open distinction to music (which in the Western tradition is the norm) based on tones or pitches. This is why ETM is not tunes with melodies. Its just not the focus. Instead what is sought is timbrally interesting music that creates atmospheres or textures. The texture of the piece is the point and primary musical concern. Texture is what is being exploited here and is the musical interface for a human interaction with sound. For this reason all of sound is taken to be equally valid. There are no good or bad textures like there might be good or bad tunes. All textures are equal if different and nothing within them recommends one above any other. They are all just experiences of sounds. 

ETM, certainly as I have been making it, is often pure improvisation or the disconnected juxtaposing of sounds in an electronic context. It is a non-deliberate, anti-authorial type of music (compare free jazz). Sound is all around us. It doesn't have to be conventionally created and its creation ascribed to a writer for it to be valid. In my making of ETM I have deliberately gone out of my way to avoid responsibility for how things sound, for example, by just throwing things on a timeline and letting them be or arranging them at random and without concern for where they stand or with what. This lack of responsibility, this deliberate letting go, will upset the conventional for they then have no one to blame for the sounds they hear. Consider the uproar, for example, when John Cage "wrote" 4'33". This is a founding piece of ETM. Cage also foreshadowed ETM when he stated that "dissonance is just a form of harmony we haven't got used to yet". ETM is often dissonant, as it must be since it is created to create textures and without conventional melodic or harmonic concerns. In a way, and in one sense, we can see ETM as a kind of free jazz for those using electronics.

Why is ETM like this? For me ETM is about experiencing the world as it is rather than as we want it to be with the comfort of conventions. It is, as a must, anti-conventional music. ETM is based in a way of seeing the world. It is stream of consciousness music that does not look on things as they have been falsified and fixed but as always moving and ever-changing. There is no permanence in ETM (it cannot be notated or directed) and it is not a final word or a finished object. It is a moment that cannot be grasped, something just passing through. ETM is about noises and sounds. These things may only happen once and be forever thereafter unrecoverable. Often this is the point and much of my ETM is things that happened at one time only that I could never recreate again. ETM exists in a world just like this and gives it substance but never permanence. Noise music is an extreme form of ETM in my mind but ETM does not have to be simply noise. ETM is a means to describe the breadth of human experience through the timbrally rich world of sound. 

Where does ETM come from? Musically, I think it comes from John Cage, who I've already mentioned, Pierre Schaeffer and his experiments with Musique Concrete and the German Kosmische musicians. ETM is at its core anti-conventional. All these people created new music that stepped outside of what was expected or accepted. All received ire as "not producing proper music". And they should have. ETM is not proper music either. It is new music, music which eschews the modern day, mainstream conventions about what music should be. It is an experimental music in a world where humans must experiment to learn and progress. This makes it necessary. ETM is the desire to work with sounds and noises in unconventional and anti-authorial ways, to make things that aren't regular or conformist because it is only by not conforming that the falsity of conventional forms and standards is revealed. It is about the experience of everyone who makes it in distinction to a professionalized discipline or notion. ETM is circuit bending, soundwashes, shouting over noise, birds singing in the outdoors, abstract, bland sounds and much, much more. It is a primal connection between sounds and their human apprehension.

ETM is also ineluctably electronic. It is ELECTRONIC Texture Music. Electricity is necessary for it is the power to create (manipulate) the unreal and make it real (or vice versa). Many electronic sounds are not found in nature and yet it is nature itself, our natural world, which makes all sounds and enables us to hear them. In the electricity is the being of the sounds electronic music creates. They are an electronic moment that exists but briefly and, before you know it, is gone again. Electricity, like sound itself, is always in flux, a constant oscillation. ETM is about this natural oscillation. ETM attempts to capture and manipulate this on-going electronic succession of moments. So oscillators and samplers, electronic tools, are what ETM is made with. Electricity and electronics, the means to manipulate it, are the heart and soul of ETM.

These are but preliminary thoughts on what I take ETM to be. It is, of course, not new. Were I to write a historical piece I could flag up many forbears. It is my name for what I am doing and it has some theory and ideas behind it. It is music about embodying ideas in sound and about sound and sounds. It is not for entertainment but you can certainly be entertained by it. ETM is about experiencing what you hear more than about being entertained by it though. It is about realizing that human beings exist in a world of sound and taking each sound seriously... and then letting this tell you something about the world that is always passing away.

ETM is the sound of things constantly passing away, a reminder that things never stop, a testimony that fixity is illusion.

To hear what ETM sounds like you can go my to my Bandcamp at https://elektronischeexistenz.bandcamp.com/ 

Monday, 25 April 2016

Artist Interview: Harsh Noise Movement

Harsh Noise Movement (together with HNM Records) is both an entity releasing music of its own and the music of others. Located on Bandcamp, its the place to go for varying styles of music but with a core of, as it says on the label, harsh noise. This harsh noise is typical of Harsh Noise Movement itself (for example, on the recently released album Harshhorse). However, other albums on the account wander off into other styles but always with an emphasis on improvisation, lack of boundaries by mainstream standards and a "don't give a fuck" attitude. It is no compromise music. I caught up with Harsh Noise Movement to put a few questions and what follows is the answers I got back.


1. Can you give us some background about Harsh Noise Movement and how you come to be making Harsh Noise music?

Well, I have been doing Noise / Experimental work since the early 90's. Recording on cassettes, which were just left in my personal possession. These were various sound collages and synth noises edited together to make various tracks. Unfortunately, these have been lost over the years, which is a shame because there was so much good work included. Harsh Noise Movement started off as a one off remix project cassette in 2013. Remixing the likes of Merzbow, Heroin And Your Veins, Death Grips etc. These remixes, apart from one Merzbow remix project, have been deleted or lost. I decided to keep using the Harsh Noise Movement moniker for all my work, along with a few aliases for work that doesn't fit in with the HNM 'sound'.

I first decided to make Harsh Noise, because of my fascination with various Japanese Noise artists such as Incapacitants, Merzbow, Masonna etc. I first came across Merzbow in 1992, when I heard one of his early cassettes and then became hypnotised by the noises I was hearing. I have always, from as far back as I can remember, always been into the whole DIY Punk thing, but as time went on, I became bored with the same unoriginal sounds and needed something fresh and exciting. Sounds that challenge the listener.



2. What were your musical influences growing up and which stay with you today?

I grew up in 1970's Britain with Punk being a constant soundtrack for me. Bands like Sex Pistols, The Stranglers, Buzzcocks, X-ray Spex etc were always exciting to my ears and the whole anti-establishment stance of the UK Punk scene was something that drew me towards it. Then in the early 1980's it was Dead Kennedys, Crass, Joy Division and DC Hardcore that really captured my attention. 

Dadaism is also an influence, and my work has already been dedicated to Dadaism, in Colombia.  The track '391' on "The Danger of Being Subjective" (the split album with Wayne Rex & Ross Taylor) is named after the Dada periodical published by Francis Picabia. So, there are a lot of varying influences that can be found in the noise I create.

The Beatles were also a band that really affected me as a kid. It doesn't have to be a particular genre, if I like it thats all that matters. It's always been that way fir me, but Punk really did draw my attention the most.

Influences that stay with me today are Alice Donut, Dead Kennedys, Pistols, Crass (especially Reality Asylum) and the Japanese Noise artists I stated in my answer to the first question.


3. What is your music for and what is it about?

My noise is a way to convey aural anarchy to its listener and to destroy conventional delusions that occupy today's popular music. It is about free thinking and bringing back the whole DIY aspect that Punk started out with but gradually morphed into the unoriginal pop fueled nonsense it is today. You could say it is a statement against the corporate bullshit that litters conventional listening today. The type of trash that brainwashes young people into thinking that there is only one way of sounding and rejecting the more adventurous ways of making music. It is also about complete artistic freedom. Do what you want to do. Be original and uncompromising, no matter what you are told is or what isn't the norm.


4. Tell us something about your musical process. How do you get from idea to finished project? What equipment and instruments do you use?

I use an array of equipment, from microphone, various pedals, synths, to even guitar, along with Ableton to make my noise. I usually make short blasts of noise along with a few long blasts. Then I use the laptop to slice up the various snatches of noise and tones, then overlay it with a continuous wall of noise. I will also add samples relevant to the title of the piece I am working on. I will always have the title of the piece in mind before I even start to make the noise so I can find a sample that is mildly amusing (or at least amusing to me) that will fit the mood and add a little dark humour to the finished work. If I'm feeling lazy though, I will just let a blast of harsh noise wall continue for a good 7 minutes or so, but even then, I will hear something in the continuing noise that makes it be a necessary act.


5. A lot of your music and titles that I see running across your Twitter feed are quite provocative and "in your face". What about this aspect of what you do appeals to you? Are you trying to make any point from this, political or otherwise? I ask as I notice that noise music often has artistic or political points to make. Do you have any point to make through the music you do?

Titles of my tracks are usually thought of before I even start a piece of work. Sometimes I will be watching the TV and an old movie will pop up and that will inspire me. This happened with the track 'Lee Van Cleef' and other tracks named after classic actors. This is also a part of free improvisation. Sometime random titles with no meaning other than coming up with something that is dark in theme to match the mood of the piece. I have always been fascinated with the macabre and unsavory topics. I think this reflects in my work and what I name my tracks. 

There will be times when someone I heard mentioned pisses me off and then I will pick a title that reflects badly or insults that person. An example being my track 'Anton LaVey Was A Fucking Posing Cunt', because at the time I was pissed off with the fact that silly youngsters were still looking up to him, even though he was just some guy that obviously loved the attention and milked it.

As for political points, I wouldn't say that there are any political points behind what I name the tracks. There could be one day, but at the moment it is usually just from various things I see and think of from day to day. I tend to avoid political nonsense.


6. Where do you want to go with your music?

It would be nice to have more people interested in the sounds I make. My intention is to make even more challenging sounds. Things that make people really analyse what is going on behind the noise wall. To find different tones, voices, even melodies, trapped in the vortex. I want to make my noise harsher and more difficult. My aim is to fuck with people's brains more, and also with HNM Records, to give artists a chance to get their material out there.

It doesn't matter to me if 2 or 2 million people hear and like my noise. 2 people are just as important as 2 million, and as long as people are willing to listen, then I am willing to be making my noises.


You can catch up with the music of Harsh Noise Movement and the releases of HNM Records, at https://harshnoisemovement.bandcamp.com/  or contact on Twitter @NoiseMuzik