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Preview: NYC’s In/Out Festival, in Videos, Embraces Eclectic Lineup and Music DIY

Tuesday, November 8th, 2011

You can complain about music events and festivals as they are, dream about what you’d imagine an event could be – or you can go and make it happen. And since the latter category fits friends-of-the-site Chris Gilroy and Lara Grant, it’s well worth an endorsement for this weekend’s In/Out Festival. (For their part, both Chris and Lara have been regulars at our Handmade Music NYC series; Chris as an electronic audiovisualist, and Lara as a textile-and-sound-melding felted signal processing guru.)

If you’re in New York, hope you can make it or even help cover it for CDM. If you’re not – like, for instance, if you’ve recently moved to Berlin – we’ve got some videos here to give you a taste of this particular assemblage of musical makers.

The lineup looks rich and varied on the performance side, coupling emerging artists with known names, all in genre-bending, adventurous sound:

Daedelus, Christopher Willits, Ander, Bit Shifter, tehn (Brian Crabtree), Portable Sunsets, Nick Demopolous’ Smomid, Comandante Zero, Noizmakr, Programs, Sarah Danke: Switched, Ivan Franco

There’s also a great selection of workshops:

  • Heatit°C prototyping workshop, which uses a heat-reactive postcard for an analog circuit alongside “thermochromic and conductive inks and batteries, switches and conductive thread,” all made with a Craft Robo for producing 2D and 3D templates. (Wait… wha? Someone definitely go and cover that.)
  • How to make a contact mic
  • Kinect and movement using free software (Pd) – with Sofy Yuditskaya, who writes about Kinect and other 3D hacking today on Create Digital Motion
  • Max for Live with Christopher Willits
  • Comandante Zero on integrating live acoustic and digital instruments into performance
  • Alternative musical instrument discussion

And here I’ve assembled some of my favorite videos of the artists and past In/Out events:

Stephen McLeod turns an egg-cooking session into a live, improvisatory tune – fried breakfast you can dance to:

There is a certain sense of magic or alchemy in the way a good cook or a good musician can transform raw ingredients into something beautiful. I feel like there is a kinship between these two disciplines, and this series of videos and performances is a meditation on that intersection.

While I prepare for you a meal, I use microphones and a computer to process the sounds. These sounds combine to form an automatic composition, determined by the recipe and improvised on the spot.

A meditative musical creation by tehn, aka Brian Crabtree, creator of the monome, was a highlight for me in 2009. (I played visuals live, using my photography and software I built in Processing. Side note: the bio pic is Brian appearing at one of our first Handmade Music NYC installments, put on with friends at Etsy.com who are now based here in Berlin. Strange, the arc of time and space.)

Here’s protofuse, aka Julien Bayle (French artist also known for his Max development work and protofuse controller), playing Brooklyn’s Issue Project Room with Chris Gilroy on visuals.

Festival co-organizer Chris Gilroy jams at one of our Handmade Music NYC parties from earlier this year.

“Switch” by Sarah Dahnke (here with meredith Blouin) is a far-out dance confrontation, in which bodies augment one another with sound.

And to close out this set with a groove, here’s Switzerland-based artist Ander playing a truly futuristic-looking controller Station, which appears to be ready to operate the Death Star.

Incredibly, all this music runs US$ 20 a day, or $ 30 for a limited-edition two-day pass, with workshops priced at $ 10-15 or free.

In/Out runs at The Knitting Factory and Death by Audio in Brooklyn.

http://www.inoutfest.org/tickets


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Reed Ghazala and Circuit Sound Artists in Videos, as NYC’s Bent Festival Gets Underway

Friday, June 24th, 2011

Circuit bending has a reputation as involving far-out, unstructured experimental noise, of real violence and distortion done to instruments. And there’s probably a place for that. But Reed Ghazala, circuit bending’s spiritual father and electronic practitioner, takes a more organic, evolutionary approach.

Reed recently told me about his favorite application of his iPad, apart from exploring new experimental soundscapes with tools like the brilliant granular app Curtis. He brings it with him into the forest, using GPS for location, and tracking plants and animals, identifying the sounds of bird and beasts.

In our electronic ecosystem, fowl and beast are finding their own electro-diversity. Circuit bending, then, is giving electronic devices a gentle push toward becoming something else, into taking on a unique and individual personality. It’s evolution. So, it’s fitting that New York’s Bent Festival has become an eclectic gathering of musical makers, espousing no singular philosophy or aesthetic.

For a sense of how broad that notion spans — both in Reed’s own head and at Brooklyn’s festival — our friend Kaley at VICE points us to their Motherboard.tv series on Reed, and his 1967 breakthrough of circuit bending, as well as their coverage of last year’s Bent. The Bent Festival, for their part, provide the remaining schedule if you happen to be in the area. At bottom, the classic “what is circuit bending” video by DrRek, featuring monome artist Daedelus.

If you happen to be the area, on behalf of CDM and in recognition of my lack of a) an inexhaustible budget or b) the ability to be a pan-dimensional creature in all places at once, please take photos and videos and notes and let us know what you see! (That goes for artists, too! Find a friend!)

We’ll be at Bent today before hauling off some makers yet deeper into the woods and wilds for the Solid Sound Festival. (Well, okay, metaphor stretched, broken, and beaten — at least further afield than the middle of Brooklyn. It’s Friday. I’m letting my metaphors take the rest of the day off.)

Sound Builders: In 1967, This Guy Invented Circuit Bending [Motherboard]

Bent Festival 2011

Also, notably organizing venue The Tank is again homeless and in need of support:

“Viable spaces for artistic research and development pop up as unpredictably as wild mushrooms, and sometimes vanish just as quickly. The Tank, a hardy nonprofit arts presenter formed by recent college graduates in 2003, has adeptly navigated a terrain in constant flux, taking root in a series of locations around Manhattan.” – Steve Smith, New York Times.

Their campaign to work in conjunction with other organizations to keep programming moving forward: http://do.nr/2sX


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Sonic Pulp Fiction: The Unsound Festival, Respun as Imaginary Narrative

Monday, May 2nd, 2011

Silhouetted in a fog, Unsound in 2009. Photo (CC-BY-ND) andrej/asebest.

“This sounds crazy. I want to see this. I think I may have to see this to understand what you mean. But I want to see this.”

David Dodson, journalist, writer, and electronic musician (“Primus Luta” and, most recently at our Handmade Music series, Concrete Sound System), has just told me he wants to cover New York’s Unsound Festival, the Polish-based electronic and “advanced” music festival.

Only he wants to cover it … fictionally.

There’s a love story. There’s drama. There a bits of review, interwoven with a story. In place of the usual omniscient narrator that we find in music journalism, delivering pronouncements about the State of Music from on high and dissecting the programming, we hear reflections on the work the way you do when you’re actually there – snippets of commentary from friends outside the venue, internal monologue in your head. But these thoughts come out of the heads of made-up protagonists, who then rub shoulders with the real characters spotted at the event. (Warning: if you were at Unsound, you might make a cameo.)

It’s trippy, disorienting, frequently comical, and for me, at least, leaves me half-guiltily aching for more.

It’s worth reading all the excerpts in order in the blog format in which we’re able to present them, but a few examples to whet your appetite (or, if I’m lucky, give you some idea what the heck I’m talking about):

There are drops of sweat on her lashes when Gisella finally opens her eyes. She looks at Lil’ Man who is smiling like a man who knows he’s done good. She smiles back licking the presperation off her upper lip only slightly suggestive. Lil’ Man notices but turns to give an nod to Chancha for keeping her there with him on the dance floor. Only two other ladies, who probably arrived with Chancha, could keep up with the cumbia influenced rhythms. It didn’t keep others from moving to the beat, but even with her eyes closed, Gisella knew they had been the center of attention.
“Let’s go get some air,” she says into his ear before leading him through the crowd.
As they walk down the corridor where people are still waiting to get in, Lilo comes behind them from the back room.
“Oh my god,” she says. ”I don’t know who’s on now, but whoever was doing the last set in the back room just made my night.” There are more people outside waiting to get in and small groups gathered in nicotine circles. ”You missed him playing Madonna.”
“No way,” Gisella replies as they walk toward the curb where she recognizes Praveen and Sougwen.
“But did you see Dave Q voguing behind his laptop?” Praveen asks over hearing Lilo’s enthusiasm. The guy standing next to him responds by striking a pose.
“Do you know Dave?” Sougwen asks Gisella.
“Only by reputation,” Lilo says extending her hand.

…or…

Morton Subotnick at work in 2011. Photo: David Dodson.

“While I don’t feel cheated,” Lilo says between sips of wine, “I do feel like I missed something. I mean it was Morton Subotnick, the Buchla was there, and he performed Silver Apples on the Moon, but something was missing.”
“He didn’t patch live,” Lil Man says.
“Yes, that is it isn’t it?” Lilo thinks about it taking a sip. ”It’s funny how laptops throw everything off.”
“You couldn’t really see what he was doing,” Gisella chimes in. ”You could see it all working but you couldn’t see the work.”
“He had a controller near the laptop,” Lil Man notes. ”He was doing something with that.”
“Yeah,” Lilo says after another sip. ”I mean you have to think, why wouldn’t he use a laptop? Can you imagine how hard it must have been to create Silver Apples back in the sixties, let alone perform it. Even now with the technology we have it’s an amazing achievement.”
“Most def,” Lil Man affirms.
“But I do wish he had pulled at least one patch cable,” Lilo adds before finishing the glass.
“Most def.”

…or…

The sound of an ambulance trails off behind her. Suddenly a female voice moves in only to be accompanied by at least ten different iterations of the same voice. They are all being manipulated diferently and floating around the space. Gisella closes her eyes and could see the voices sweeping, like ghosts in a haunted house. It was clearly the Pamela Z piece, but the description didn’t really do the effect of it justice. The title and even the description made it sound out of place. What did “The Star Spangled Banner” have to do with horror? But listening to Pamela Z’s deconstruction and recomposition of voice in the surround space, at this point Gisella recognizes, Pamela is the first artist to truly create a scene from a horror movie. So why was she thinking about sex?

Author David Dodson explains the project:

I’ve been thinking of moving back into fiction writing for a few years now, but fiction that deals with real historical places and events. A few years back I wrote a novella entitled “The Moshi” which placed characters in the middle of New York during the black out of 2003. When working with fictional characters it’s always interesting to think about how they respond to ‘real life’ situations.

For “Above the Threshold” I wanted to really embrace that. Rather
than create a world in which the characters can do whatever I saw fit, I decided to create the characters and place them in our world to see what they’d do. I started out with a very simple premise – a female lead working in the music industry attends the 2011 Unsound festival. I then attended the festival myself and ‘observed’ how my characters acted within the settings that the festival presented.

During the course of the festival I penned over 50k words of this
storyline, and in essence watched the plot unfold. It will be some
time before the full piece is ready to go to print, but I’m offering
up some excerpts from it on the CDM partner Noisepages site. These excerpts may or may not end up in the final draft, but will give some glimpses of the characters, the festival and how the two came together.

I only wish fictional characters could inhabit all the events we attend. I suppose, in fact, they could.

The full work, emerging in blog form:

Above the Threshold


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The Festival on Lyris Five

Wednesday, February 9th, 2011

The Festival on Lyris Five

Former Ten Stars pilot Rick Barrett is having a bad day. Not only is he jobless and broke, in a seedy spaceport bar he has been forced into a winner-takes-all poker game with a homicidal cauliflower. Salvation is at hand in the shapely form of Irish redhead Julie Halloran. Julie has a proposition for Rick that could end his financial worries forever – but does she also have a secret agenda of her own?

The Festival on Lyris Five is a fast-moving, hilarious, science-fiction novella, where

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Decibel Log 3: Murcof, Mount Kimbie, Modeselektor, Teebs and More

Monday, October 4th, 2010

Still from Robert Henke’s set at Optical 1

Despite being the first event after an incredible night, which for many extended well beyond the 2am last call, Pravda Studios is packed early on day three for a full schedule of conference activities. It comes as little surprise though, the first workshop is one most who are involved with the release of music today are concerned with – “Creating a Digital Promotion Plan.” Led by the PR savvy Shilo Urban of DanceFever5000 and head of promotions Decibel Erica Toelle, the workshop details the direct and indirect means of promoting music. Covering issues including social networking, contacting blogs and labels, and building a promotions team, the hour long session is a crash course in self promotions.

There is little change over between the first and second session, indeed considering the subject matter perhaps the second session of the day should have preceeded the first. The title “Uncertain Future: P2P Streams and Diffusing Works in the New Media World” paints a grim picture, but thankfully the panel is able to reveal some silver linings behind the clouds covering music today. Moderated by Dave Segal of Seattle newspaper The Stranger, the panel features representatives from labels, radio and the press. While it would seem most of the labels attest to following the BBE model (Barely Breaking Even) there does seem to be enthusiasm for this time in music. Fans have become a commodity which both values music and is valuable to it, while labels have become cultural curators through which fans can filter through the deluge of releases to find the music that speaks to them.

As the next changeover happens things shift back to technology and creativity. Where previous workshops on these lines dealt with music in a live setting the next two sessions focus on production in the studio. ”Beat Production in Ableton Live” is hosted by Huston Singletary alongside Take. Some of the tips Singletary provides are rather basic for the intermediate audience, but within them quite a few hidden gems are revealed. Even more, Take seizes the opportunity to ask the hard questions of the in-house Ableton representatives, like why envelope information cannot be placed on clips. At the end the audience takes his lead to probe the Ableton team about other software anomalies including the lack of SysEx support.

The next workshop focuses the new Native Instruments Komplete 7 presented by Dubspot, hosted by Thomas Faulds and featuring Lorn. There isn’t enough time in an hour for Faulds to cover the 90GB package in total, so he focuses in on perhaps the bundles most powerful application Reaktor. Things really get interesting when the focus shifts to Lorn who gives the audience a peak inside of his creative process by breaking down some of his own productions. He turns to the layering of his drums utilizing multiple Battery instances. While layering drums is not necessarily new there is something very special about Lorn’s approach which is most evident when all the layers are put together. His drums are by no means merely stock Battery sounds.

In the heart of Downtown Seattle, the Nordstrom Recital Hall in Benaroya Hall, home of the Seattle Symphony Orchestra, has been set up for the first of three Optical events at this years Decibel. Decibel founder Sean Horton explains that the Optical events serve to show another side of electronic music. It isn’t all about keeping the dance floor moving; contemplative works of electronic music too deserve their proper place, and the concert hall serves as a perfect setting. Additionally serves another purpose which electronic music is in many ways at the forefront, and that is the integration of music and visuals. Within this setting one must expect that they like their musical counterpart need not be of the rapid fire psychadelic variety, but instead touch the audience at the same depth as the music.

Robert Henke under his birth moniker is first, though he does not actually take the stage. Instead he is positioned behind the projector at the center of the hall with a small mixing desk where he weaves sonic textures around slowly progressive visuals that pair the natural with the industrial. The synergy between the sound and visual works wonderfully as one looks for the subtle changes visually as much they are listening for them. As the volume of change in the visuals increase so too do the aural.

Murcof is next with visuals provided by Scott Sunn and from the first chord it is evident the audience is in for a ride. The chord itself is obviously symphonic, but synthetic in a way which could never be duplicated by the musicians who normally call the hall their home. The sound of it calls back to the workshop with Lorn; it is familiar but treated in such a manner as to become personalized to the artist. It is taken a step further with Sunn’s visuals, which echo each of Murcof’s chords with imagery obviously computer generated, but the fluidity of his smoke like shapes make them seem almost organic. If Sunn were standing in front of the screen with a brush one might think he is painting them, and the beautiful thing is that he actually is.

The final act for the evening Mark Van Hoen unfortunately served to exemplify one of the major setbacks of all electronic music – there will be glitches. Fortunately he is able to work his way through them to complete a performance even if not the one he originally intended. Back on Capital Hill Ill Cosby is warming up the Baltic Room for the Planet Mu showcase, Shlomo is warming up the Neumos crowd for the Red Bull Music Academy On The Floor event and the four is already on the floor courtesy of Mister Leisure in Sole Repair as Seattle’s own Trust crew aims to keep the crowd jumping all night. On the far side of town, the stage at Motor is filled with instruments as the Art of Rhythm event plans to showcase the roots of electronic rhytms through a myriad of global beat influences, laid down by the likes of Phutureprimative and Beats Antique. The selections for the evening are incredible but the distance between them less than desirable, setting up for hard decisions and sacrifice.

Apparently overnight Neumos either acquired or fixed a smoke machine, and whoever is operating it is trying to use it at every opportunity possible. The first couple of times it makes for a nice atmospheric choice, but after a while it is just annoying. Not annoying enough to take away from the stellar performance Brainfeeder Teebs is putting down. Considering the heaviness usually associated with the hip-hop beat category he is thrown into, the melodic development of his songs show that there’s far more to the sub-genre than the strict headnod. It compliments perfectly the early bubble in the crowd as he works his Roland 404, building up the energy slowly. By the end he is showing that while he may prefer the more textured approach he can lay it down heavy with the rest of them.

While the line-up for this Red Bull event is indeed spectacular, the set arrangement leaves a lot of room for improvement, evident by the strange transition from Teebs into Addison Groove. He’s billed as Headhunter, but as soon as the first thump from his Roland 808 hits, it’s quite clear this is an Addison Groove set. The crowd takes little notice of the awkward switch into his dub techno floor rockers, but instead just take the cue to start the heavy dancing for the night a little early.

Over at the Baltic Room Falty DL is laying down a rundown of electronic music genres from the 90′s to today that somehow makes a pitstop at Roy Ayers’ “Everybody Loves the Sunshine” before Starkey brings out Ikonika in a time slot an hour early. She brings the bass heavy to the dancefloor, but perhaps has taken the early slot to slip out like others are to catch the first live U.S. appearance by Mount Kimbie back at Neumos, where a longer than expected intermission between sets is doing a good job of prepping the crowd for the second awkward transition of the night.

The UK duo is without a doubt the most anticipated set of the festival. Their buzz precedes in them, and in this case has everyone in the crowd wondering if their live show can live up to the expectations of their recordings. The smoke machine would make for a funny coincidence were they to have a repeat performance of their set the previous night where electrical difficulties left the majority of their rig powered down. But there were no mirrors on the stage as they kicked into their dream like blend of every modern electric music influence imagineable. Their hold of the audience’s attention beyond being well warranted was also quite fulfilling.

For the final awkward transition of the evening the Neumos crowd is released from the downtempo post dubstep of Mount Kimbie into the all out frenzy that is Modeselektor. Gernot Bronsert and Sebastian Szary hit the stage as if it is the cockpit, standing confidently behind their controls, scoping out the air space before turning off the fasten seat belt light so the passengers could enjoy every bump of the ride.

At the witching hour Decibel has the whole city of Seattle jumping, Modeselektor is trying to push past last call to honor their European club rocking heritage. The trust party has hit full stride as Trus’Me mans the DJ booth at Sole Repair. Beats Antique is fusing sounds turning Motor into a tribal dance. At the Baltic Room Starkey is laying it all on the line with his breed of musical but still very heavy dubstep. It stands as a testament to the power and reach of the music through all of its sounds. That is until the bass booming from Baltic blows the subs. Thankfully there are still after parties.

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Decibel Log 3: Murcof, Mount Kimbie, Modeselektor, Teebs and More

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Decibel Log 2: Robert Henke, Room40 Label, Flying Lotus and Friends

Friday, October 1st, 2010

The FlyLoTrio After Rocking Decibel – Ronald Bruner Jr., Flying Lotus and Thundercat

The patter of rain against the window brings in day two at Decibel. Early afternoon coffee is the ‘tall’ to order for the conference sessions in Pravda studios. Robert Henke (Monolake) greets with a smile as he takes the podium for the first lecture “The Age of Abundance.” It is a rare opportunity inside one of the minds behind Ableton, as he thinks on the future of electronic music eleven years after the founding of the company. His talk revolves around the evolution of computer technology to the present of full realization of the infinite sonic possibilities. The pit fall he sees in this is the difficulty it can create in making decisions. Using his own Monodeck as an example he explains how the ability to do anything is limited by a hardware device, yet at the same time, limitations offer a simplicity, which allows for musical decisions. Henke will have two performances during the festival to put his philosophies into practice.

The conference continues with a workshop from Windows DJ Dave Pezzner “From the Studio to the Stage”. It serves as a continuation of the thought from Lusine’s workshop, this time focusing on adapting songs from a different DAW for use in Ableton Live for performance. Pezzner uses his own workflow from FL Studio to exemplify. Next Drumcell (Moe Espinoza) leads a session on Native Instruments Traktor Scratch Pro. He uses the Kontrol X1 and Maschine to show ways of taking the DJ platform further by exploiting a multitude of functionalities through controller integrations for his live set.

To this point, a clear line can be drawn between the various workshops, tying them directly into Henke’s lecture. Each have presented their own set of possibilities toward pushing electronic music into the world of live performance, which according to Henke is the new frontier for digital music. With a variety of platform choices, each with near infinite levels of control, finding the right balance of control and limitations to make the musical decisions required on stage proves to be the challenge. This is the hidden undercurrent of the festival, each artist bringing to the stage their own personal journey through those choices. The choices are as varied as the results, put together to give a fair picture of the state of electronic music today.

Evening rolls around and seating is rearranged in Pravda Studios to accommodate the ten year anniversary showcase for Lawrence English’s Room40 Label. The rowed seating creates an almost academic atmosphere for the experimental labels offering. The stage is filled with amplifiers, cassettes, effects boxes and a table crowded with laptops and controllers. Seattle’s own Rafael Anton Irisarri takes the stage first with a modesty becoming of the sound he brings. Beginning with a single low guitar note processed into a drone, upon which he builds layers of tones and overtones, pushed through his laptop into an ambient sound-scape.

Lawrence English takes the stage next and promptly suggests the audience abandon their chairs for spots near the front of the stage where they can lie on the floor. In a matter of seconds the seemingly academic setting is transformed to something closer to a meditation hall. Integral in English’s rig is a harmonium much like a guru would use to lead a kirtan. English’s has been constantly returned through the altitude changes while touring. He notes of piece which he composed the year before with the harmonium, “what was beautiful last year would sound like ugly dissonance today.” Fortunately he has other music prepared for today which exemplifies his own work in the realm of ambient noise for the audience now lying horizontal in near complete darkness. Using a small nano control with Ableton he builds up what sounds to the ear like the shore of some cosmic beach.

Towards the tail end of the set, as English’s manipulated ‘white noise’ is combined with the harmonium, Grouper takes to the stage and begins working in her chain of cassette players to provide a smooth transition to her own set. It begins with knob twiddling as she builds up a bed of sound sourced from her pile of pre-recorded cassettes. She then picks up a guitar to act as a blanket, warming the chill vocals which lie comfortably in between.

As Ben Frost takes the stage to perform what one member of the audience calls, a soundtrack perfect for murder, across the street a line has started forming for the “Flying Lotus and Friends” showcase at Neumos. Inside Truckasauras has filled the stage with with an assortment of analog and digital gear to lay down their breed of hardcore 8-bit. The four piece unit has the energy of fun loving party throwers, but at the same time bridge electronic and traditional performance with a layer of musicality. They are very much electronic musicians but they are also clearly a band. It’s easy to understand why they are a local favorite.

Samiyam hits the stage next fresh off a tour down under and a bit hoarse as he introduces himself before going into his set. Using a Roland 404 on batteries he performs his cross between a live performance and DJ set. Thrown in the mix are some classics from M.O.P. and Dilla, in addition to new Samiyam treats. He’s a hip-hop head at an electronic music festival, but he works his sound in, perfectly illustrating how the two no longer need be understood as separate entities.

Mary Anne Hobbes has flown into Seattle for the evening (though she will have to make a flight in the morning to play a San Francisco date before returning to the festival for her own show), and one of the primary reasons is to be able to catch the next act. Milwaukee native Brainfeeder Lorn steps behind his Maschine next to lay down what can only be described as one of the heaviest sounds on the scene. Filled in with deep basslines, spectrum defying drums and clashing synths, the set fills the room with an aggressive exuberance that the crowd goes wild for.

Eskmo hits next with a stunning set that previews his self titled Ninja Tune release out the first week of October. Lorn’s aggression is replaced by swaying melodies and Eskmo’s own manipulated vocals. While not the first to bring vocals into an electronic set, Eskmo does have a certain touch, at one time synthetic and another intimate, all over a sound which fits perfectly into the Brainfeeder lineup.

As Eskmo draws his set to a close, the crowd is ready for the headliner and Decibel veteran Flying Lotus to take the stage. Surprisingly though, as he fiinally approaches, it is who he has brought with him that garners the most attention. Wearing a red and white varsity jacket with a roaring tiger embroidered on the back, patches from the 80′s cartoon, three feathers sticking out of his ear and the tail from Davy Crocket hat hanging from his pants is Thundercat. He steps in front of the bass cabinet and plugs in his bass which also has the Thundercat emblem on the back, while his brother Ronald Bruner Jr. crosses to the other side of the stage to man the drum kit, looking like the Fresh Prince of Bel Aire on a fitness plan. Lotus stands between the two of them with his laptop propped up and his controller at his fingers to launch into a landmark trio set.

As expected the first thing that hits you is bass. As Lotus works soundbites from his new album in Ableton, he leaves the majority of their instrumentation in the mix including drum and bass which are then doubled by the live instruments. It makes for what one would think to be a cluttered mix, but as the songs build a new type of groove is found uncharacteristic of electronic music. The organic funk of the instrumentation serves to highlight the manipulated funk of Lotus’ production fusing into yet another sound to add to Lotus’ credits. There’s a connection between the musicians on stage which calls back to the classic jazz trio, trading riffs and precise improvisational timing. All of the musicians on stage come from jazz lineages, and what they have come together to produce on the stage is an upgrade of that aesthetic for the digital age. They ride in trio mode for about a half an hour, track after track perfectly mixed like a DJ set. Lotus then takes some time to solo with his standard fair before hitting back with the band through two threats from security to pull the plug.

As the Neumos staff usher the audience out, more than a few are inspecting their ears. The decibel levels have gone way past the red. Backstage as Lotus goes into his dressing room he keeps repeating “I’m deaf.” Bruner echos the sentiment sharing that he can’t hear out of his left ear. Yet both outside and backstage is all smiles. FlyLo and his friends have brought a sonic convergence well worthy of Decibel.

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Decibel Log 2: Robert Henke, Room40 Label, Flying Lotus and Friends

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Decibel Log 1: Ean Golden, Gold Panda, Mux Mool, Lusine, Pantha Du Prince

Thursday, September 30th, 2010

12th Planet

Who says laptop artist can’t connect? Decibel 2010: 12 Planet. Photo (CC-BY) VeryBadLady / Heather.

Ed. Seattle’s Decibel Festival is, as one commenter put it, a convergence of music straight out of many of our music collections. Musician, producer, and journalist Primus Luta (David Dobson) is on the scene to bring us a vicarious experience of the sights and sounds. He brings us impressions, reflections, and videos, too. Here’s the first day; coverage of the remaining festival is to come. -PK

Seattle locals will tell you, August and September are the sweet months, and walking around Capitol Hill where people are full of smiles in short sleeves with their legs exposed, you get the sense that there is merit to the claim. The festival base of operations, Pravda Studios in the heart of Capital Hill, is a large event space with strong multi-media support. In the lobby a four monitor wall display offers a live slide-show of pictures being taken during the Festival. Festival sponsor, Microsoft, have the second studio equipped with multiple machines for attendees to get the latest information. It is cut off by a room divider separating it from studio one, where the conference portion of the festival takes place.

Decibel founder is quick to note that the festival is not just about the performances, but also has an educational aspect facilitated through the Decibel Conference. The first day of the conference focuses on technology and techniques. In the first session Kris Moon gives an in-depth workshop on Serato Scratch Live, touching on techniques for adding MIDI controllers into the live turntable set-up with Serato. Ghostly International artist Lusine takes to the podium next to talk about organizing Ableton Live for performance. Where both of these sessions focused on specific platforms for live performance, in the last session Ean Golden talks controllers, specifically the MIDI Fighter platform which uses modular video game style interfaces to build custom controllers.

Ean Golden at Decibel Festival 2010 from Primus Luta on Vimeo.

Following the workshops the divider between studios is pulled back, expanding the space for the Opening Gala event where Kris and Ean share live set spots with Derek Mazzone and Introcut. As the double sized room starts filling in one begins to get the sense that indeed they are in an electronic music festival, though not necessarily the standard fair. The contemplative face was just as present as the gyrating waist, and often from the same individual. Each person in attendance acting as a microcosm of the festival’s vision.

Chatter around the room is all anticipation as participants plot out their weekend by the artists they want to be sure to catch. A common theme amongst all is that the weekend will include a few hard choices, as overlapping events make it virtually impossible to catch all the artists on ones list. A seven year volunteer for takes as much pride in the growth of the festival as Decibel founder Sean Horton. They both agree that the growth is good, but more importantly it has happened without sacrifice of the original intent to be an event which spotlights electronic artists who might otherwise be under the radar.

As the sun sets some festival goers file out of Pravda Studios and into the line across the street at Neumos where Ghostly International has a showcase lined up to christen this years festival. Mux Mool starts things off in the right direction with his breed of heavy hitting, modular hip-hop beats. Rocking a streamlined Ableton Live set-up with only the pad control under his fingers, he launches into his Tobacco remix to begin. Each track lures the audience deeper into the nights experience as heads nod and hands wave approval. The energetic give and take between Mux Mool and the crowd is accentuated the few times he takes to the mic to make sure they are ready for the nights journey – they are.

Mux Mool at Decibel Festival 2010 from Primus Luta on Vimeo.

London’s Gold Panda takes the stage next as a name most in the crowd know, but few know exactly what to expect. Once the effect heavy live intro kicks into “You” from his Ghostly EP though, they are all in his hands. Video from the performance in an upcoming CDM interview, available in the next few days. -Ed. Lusine takes the stage next with the obvious hometeam advantage. If there were any question as to why he was teaching the afternoon Ableton session, it becomes obvious once he takes the stage. His presence is calm and collected with little animation other than the smile on his face and slight head nod. He is a master of his craft, who makes getting the dance floor steady rocking seem effortless.

Lusine at Decibel Festival 2010 from Primus Luta on Vimeo.

The headliner for the night, Pantha Du Prince takes the stage in a black hooded overcoat with a scarf partially covering his face. He has a presence that demands attention and as he starts working controllers, contact mics and foot pedals into his own breed of noise music, the audience is sucked into a hypnotic trance. Through the shadows you can catch glimpses of his eyes, and then as the scarf is pulled down, his slightly opened mouth as he intently continues to build the tension. As percussive sounds slowly build into a beat that ramps up, as if queued by post-hypnotic suggestion, the energy in the room boils over.

Pantha du Prince at Decibel 2010 from Primus Luta on Vimeo.

As people exit the venue there is a sense of arrival. Each an everyone has made a journey to be here, and the sonic baptism which the Ghostly crew laid upon them fully immersed everyone of them into the experience that is Decibel. Some would find there way to after-hours events, others just to a bed to rest up. It is only Wednesday after all, and if this day stands as a means to measure there will be plenty in the days to come for which sleep will not be an option.

Read more here:
Decibel Log 1: Ean Golden, Gold Panda, Mux Mool, Lusine, Pantha Du Prince

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In Pictures: Electric Zoo, Fans, and What Touch Means in Performance

Friday, September 24th, 2010

Summer has ended, but that leaves time to look back. Among the many parties around the world, Electric Zoo was New York’s biggest electronic festival, with headliners from Moby to Flying Lotus, descending on a dusty, sunny Randall’s Island just east of the island Manhattan.

At top, I took my new Diana mini (lo-fi film camera) out for a spin amongst the music lovers, who gravitated moth-like to the camera. Never let it be said that Americans don’t like electronic music; families and a new, young generation of ravers flooded into the park. Since Moby’s set was off-limits for photography, it seemed to me only appropriate to go hang out with the music fans. And it’s good to remember that, whatever your musical genre, there’s someone whom you can make happy with your work. (Having spent the same weekend on a rooftop and in a barn with monome practitioners and lovers, yes, there’s a place for everything.) Feel free to page through the sets, especially if it’s a rainy, cloudy day.

When you face a crowd of eager fans, the desire to deliver real performance becomes all the greater. In an age of pre-configured DJ sets, it’s a chance to have the same enthusiasm as those in the audience, and yes, to actually sweat a bit. As a study in what’s possible with computer performance, I took in live, non-DJ sets by Jon Hopkins and The Glitch Mob.

Both artists use touch in their performance. The interaction with the music is reasonably limited, but that means the effect is easy to read. As it happens, we’ve profiled the setups of each of these acts before. For Jon Hopkins, multiple KAOSS Pads facilitate quick access to dramatic effects. Ableton Live is just the sound-source; the outboard gear handles both touch control and signal processing. For The Glitch Mob, Lemur multi-touch displays, tilted toward the audience, control parameters in Ableton Live.

More details:
Behind the scenes of The Glitch Mob’s Lemur setup

Jon Hopkins tells CDM about his studio, live rigs and playing the KAOSS Pad

I have to notice that the KAOSS Pads fare a bit better than the Lemurs in regards to tactile access to what you’re doing. The Glitch Mob had to make its touch areas on the Lemur fairly large just to find them; because they’re all on an undifferentiated screen, you have to find the right location by feel. But for both acts, creating big gestures is important, partly so that it reads to the audience, I imagine, but also so that it’s the kinds of gestures that feels good as a player and are easily reproduced. And even with a touchscreen, it’s possible to begin to tap into muscle memory, as was clear as The Glitch Mob used their consistent control layout in their set.

Touch alone, in each case, is augmented by tactile controls. The Korgs have physical encoders and controls, and Hopkins uses MIDI input and computer control for tactile control over sets. The Glitch Mob use Akai drum pad controllers, as well. And fun as the touchscreens are, they can’t compete with good, old-fashioned drumming: the highlight of The Glitch Mob’s new set is when they break out drumsticks and explode into lines worthy of a drum corps. (The Glitch Mob need to meet Caity at Georgia Tech.) You can tell the guys are just having a great time doing it. We talk about all the ways computer performance can become more like instruments, but, of course, there’s no reason not to simply use the traditional instruments we love alongside computers.

There’s still a sense of a divide between the virtual and the physical, the digital interface and the kinetic gesture, and maybe that’s natural. Rather than try to entirely reconcile the two, they can sit side by side – just like my digital Olympus and analog Diana.

I could say more, but I think in this case, the pictures tell the story, a little microcosm of the many musical events of this summer.

The ancient, the futuristic; an instrument you might play in a cave, and one on the Starship Enterprise. Drums and Lemurs side by side at The Glitch Mob.

Flying Lotus

There’s something to be said for the good, old-fashioned MIDI controlled and laptop combo. FlyLo makes an Akai MPD32 his axe of choice – and it makes it look damned good. Photos courtesy the festival.

Flying Lotus. Scott Kowalchyk for ElectricZooFestival.com; used by permission.

Scott Kowalchyk for ElectricZooFestival.com.

Scott Kowalchyk for ElectricZooFestival.com.

The Gear

Rockstars get a lot of speakers. Photo: Bennett Sell-Kline for ElectricZooFestival.com

Rockstars get a lot of toys. Photo: Bennett Sell-Kline for ElectricZooFestival.com

The Fans

All of this would be meaningless if fans only responded to DJ sets. On the contrary; live sets in electronic sound live and connect in a way that’s special.

All photos (CC-BY-SA) Peter Kirn, unless otherwise noted.

Link:
In Pictures: Electric Zoo, Fans, and What Touch Means in Performance

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Artist, Software Maker, monomist makingthenoise, Talks His New Album

Monday, September 13th, 2010

mtn, at work in his bedroom studio, in medium-format film glory. All photos courtesy the artist.

Artists and engineers, coders and musicians – maybe once these were perceived as separate cultures, but today, you can find people tap-dancing across the categories with ease – people like Adam. Adam Ribaudo, aka makingthenoise, is known in the monome community as the creator of SevenUp, an Ableton Live and Max for Live construction that is so named for combining seven functions. It is Navigation, Stepper, Sequencer, Controller, Looper, Loop Recorder, Melodizers, Clip Launcher, and Masterizer.

But Adam is also a force in live shows, someone who can put archaic Max contraptions or giant touchscreen virtual monomes to use and get people dancing.

The Boston-based artist is set to be part of the In/Out Festival this weekend. And he has a new album, “you can do anything. except for some things.” You can check out the album below or on Bandcamp, and it’s the subject of his chat with us.

<a rel="nofollow" target="_blank" href="http://makingthenoise.bandcamp.com/album/you-can-do-anything-except-for-some-things">you can do anything. except for some things by making the noise</a>

CDM: How does the monome fit into your workflow (if at all) on this record?

Adam: It fits in heavily for the sample creation part of the process, but not necessarily the composition and arrangement. My workflow typically involves jamming on the monome for hours at a time and recording each sound source independently so I can steal snippets from here and there to piece into a cohesive whole.

Are you using any of your own custom software in this work, after the stuff you’ve made?

SevenUp Live makes an appearance in a number of tracks including “more buttons, no problems” which is done entirely with some kalimba samples on the “Looper” page. [Ed.: See its use live in the video below, from New York's Coco66. -PK]

How do you think about rhythm here, or what has influenced your groove specifically (in terms of artists, etc.)?

I’m a beat junkie. My first love is creating new beats, shifting around the BPM, and seeing what they line up with. It’s a very mathematical and repeatable process while the melodies are sometimes a chore for me. I have yet to build a consistently good workflow for melody but maybe that’s a good way to keep things fresh.

Being my first album, I wanted the sound to be uniquely my own. I can’t say I was consciously invoking any single artist’s style but I can say I was listening to Toro y Moi’s album a lot around that time.

mtn – grind yer feet – live @ coco66 nyc 1-27-2010 from makingthenoise on Vimeo.

Obviously, you get a ton of energy out of your live shows. Has that had an impact on the way these songs are constructed?

Yessss. And no. Here we go. Performing live has been a hugely influential thing for me in terms of putting myself out there and getting real-time feedback from humans. It’s been amazing, it’s altered my workflow, and it’s changed the type of music that I’ve made for those purposes. BUT. … this album was an attempt to break out of the cycle of making songs that would perform well on stage and go back to my roots as a bedroom musician. That being said, the title track “you can do anything. except for some things” is taken directly from my live set and negates everything I just said. Live with it.

There are some great harmonic ideas in here; can you talk at all about how your harmonic conception evolves?

Lots of doubling and halving of tempos.

Can you reveal some of the sound sources here? There are some really gorgeous timbres, in particular some of the synths and pads. How do you orchestrate your tracks; how much is programming, or where do you look for sources?

80% of the melodies were either produced with one of the many community-created generators within Jeskola Buzz or by the wonderful free VST Oatmeal. Oh, and that’s Edison playing his Rhodes on the title track “you can do anything. except for some things”.

What’s your hardware and software rig for production here, both the sources and the final mix? What are you mixing with? (Obviously some liberal sidechaining in there, too…)

PC! It was all arranged and mastered right in Ableton, but the sound sources come from all over. The album is very old and new at the same time. It was entirely composed and arranged between January – April of 2010, but some of the individual sound samples and snippets date back years.

With the side-chaining, my aim was to use it more as a compositional tool than as a way to eek out a few more decibels here and there. Sometimes it’s faked by dropping the volume of one track right as another comes in. That being said, I promise to use less side chaining next time. Everyone gets one.

mtn live at Music Ecology.

Ha – that’s okay! Keep it pumping. There are a number of found sounds and narrative elements that make their way into the mix, of course. What’s the significance of this choice for you?

Yes, yes, yes. For me, it’s such a sensitive decision when I’m about to include a sample generated by someone else. Am I altering the sample, or the context of the sample, to enough of a degree to maintain a certain level of originality? Or am I just being lazy?

The first track is littered with them, including a sample from an unreleased remix I did for Thomas Piper and a speech given to a high school by a guy who calls himself the “well-rounded square”.

The album: http://www.makingthenoise.com/anything/

Software and music: http://www.makingthenoise.com/

mtn – morning light from makingthenoise on Vimeo.

See the article here:
Artist, Software Maker, monomist makingthenoise, Talks His New Album

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Reformat the Planet, Feature-Length Chip Music Documentary, Arrives on DVD

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

REFORMAT THE PLANET trailer from 2 Player Productions on Vimeo.

The journey to complete and release a documentary is a long one, but Reformat the Planet, a feature-length documentary on the chip music scene, has reached the other side. Focused on the hub of artists in New York and the Blip Festival, Reformat the Planet has had some significant success out on the festival circuit, and it’s the product of a talented team of producers called 2 Player Productions, who do some really lovely work. (Staking out a corner of the indie game world, they also have worked on the Penny Arcade video series.)

The DVD represents a more finished vision of the film, with a new cut, a new short (RTP “1.5″, excerpted below, with additional interviews from the past couple of years), a new audio mix, and bonus content.

The DVD set is US$15 and available from Fangamer. Sadly, no VHS or LaserDisc (and I’ve just heard from my sister that the family LaserDisc is working perfectly). Fangamer will also happily relieve you of the burden of additional cash and replace it with posters, pins, and other goodies.

http://fangamer.net/products/rtp-dvd

Reformat the Planet 1.5 clip from 2 Player Productions on Vimeo.

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Reformat the Planet, Feature-Length Chip Music Documentary, Arrives on DVD

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