Showing posts with label listening. Show all posts
Showing posts with label listening. Show all posts

25.4.11

ABC Radio national- Listening....

quote...'This evening we are exploring the theme of listening by asking what is listening?
We'll get hear some not so simple answers from Oslo Davis a professional eavesdropper, various ear mechanics and a couple of people with unique perspectives on the world of sound; a former music retailer Greg Hartney, who suffers from nerve deafness and radio broadcaster Glen Morrow who is legally blind.
Brain waves, sound waves, shock waves....radio waves - angels and angst, memory and message.
For music details, click on the transcript link...'
click here

22.8.08

Ubu Web (Again... KISS KISS) Gertrude Stein












Gertrude Stein's GEOGRAPHY AND PLAYS


1. For the Country Entirely - John Wanzel

For the Country Entirely is a sonic restaging of the Gertrude Stein short story of the same name. The piece is voiced by Anna Benavides, Brian Taylor and John Wanzel. Sounds and text were arranged and edited by John Wanzel.

John Wanzel is a Chicago based artist, writer and radio producer. He received his BFA from The School of the Art Institute of Chicago in 1999. He is a Co-Founded and Executive Producer of Blind Spot, a weekly live experimental radio show on WLUW 88.7 Chicago. His work has shown throughout Chicago, including Dogmatic Gallery, Deadtech, 1/Quarterly Space, The Outer Ear Festival of Sound, and Temporary Services. In 2001, Mr. Wanzel was an artist in residency at the Experimental Sound Studio, Chicago. In 1999 he founded stopGOstop.com, a portal/collective website for several writers, artists, and cultural workers living in Chicago. He has also served as the Assistant Director of The School of the Art Institute of Chicago's Gallery 2 since 2002.

2. Every Afternoon - Students from Bella Vista Elementary School and David Braden (a poem improvisation for 30 voices)

This work was created for an CD Project of poems from Gertrude's Stein's "Geography and Plays" produced by softpalate. The children are students in my class at Bella Vista Elementary in Oakland, California, located in the neighborhood where Gertrude Stein grew up. I was asking students to reach outside their own experience of time, place, and language to a world and aesthetic very different from theirs. Aware of this tension, I was curious (and skeptical) as to what connection could be made between Gertrude Stein and my 5th graders. A connection did emerge: language. Gertrude Stein's writing has a playful quality to it that children can easily appreciate. Young children respond readily to nursery rhymes, playground chants etc. And once these pre-adolescents were assured that there wasn't a meaning to get, or a quiz to pass, they relaxed and enjoyed the interplay of the dialogue and rhythm of the language. Further, I gave them permission to read only the lines that "spoke to them" in any order they wanted. Not all students connected to the poem, and their reactions were not erased in editing, but became part of the piece. Although I'm not a Stein scholar, I believe she would have approved and enjoyed these loud, soft, irreverant, ethnic, hip-hop infused, voices of her "neighbors."

Voices: Alan Peng, Angalique Gibbs, Ashley Warren, Davante Linyard, Eduardo Vanegas, Edwin Xu, Hang Tran, Henry Huynh, Jenea Enriquez, Jenny Thach, Jenny Yu, Jessica Kong, Jimmy Tang, Juan Ramos, Jun Ruan, Maw-Lay Rucker, Michael Johnson, Ming Li, Francisco "Paco" Jaime, Petty Lai, Phoung Dang, Ronald Williams, Thomas "Roy" Hernandes, Sandy Tran, Stella Hoang, Sulaiman Mohamed, Tiffany Nguyen, Tyrone Tinney, Vonica On, Xavier August.



3. Susie Asado - David Braden

"Susie Asado" was made using my recorded voice, and collaged sounds. The sounds were transformed using Audio Mulch software and edited with CoolEdit2000. Compositionally I kept the order of Gertrude Stein's poem, but divided it into 8 sections. The piece ends with all the sections mixed together simultaneously. In creating "Susie Asado" I let the text inform the editing choices. In the second section, for instance, the phrases "a lean on" "the shoe" "this means" "slipslips" and "hers" were made into separate sound files and assigned different beats and rhythms using a drum machine. The looped phrases literally slipping over each other reveal a hidden wordplay: "slip slips" and "hers" combine to "slippers." For the fifth section with a "pot" and "bobbles" and its plosive alliteration I added the sound of bubbles being blown with a straw into a metal pot. In the last section, I multiplied the voice so that the line is read in choral unison.

I live in Oakland with my family and teach elementary school. I made my first two sound poems almost 20 years ago in a college electronic music course. In 2001 I took an on-line course in experimental writing with Alan Sondheim, and began creating "wordsound compositions." My work has or is scheduled to appear in various on-line and CD magazines: Bath House, Muse-Apprentice Guild, mmzzz, and Sprechen. A full length CD "summermiragemotel" will be released by softpalate (www.softpalate.org). My written poetry has appeared in: Shampoo, Poethia: writing on-line, Moria, Aught, Sidreality, Word For Word, Vert, and Muse-Apprentice Guild


4. Miss Furr and Miss Skeene - Warren Burt

I was taken with "Miss Furr and Miss Skeene," one of the earliest texts in the collection. This short story/poem/play tells the story of two American women living in Paris, studying voice, and enjoying the cafe life of the time. They meet, fall in love, live together, have difficulties, separate, and eventually, both leave Paris. What attracted me to the text was the way Stein combined an obsessive use of language with a simple narrative structure. This seemed to suggest musical possibilities to me.

The children's animation program "Hollywood" has several different computer voice styles it calls "melodic 1" thru "melodic 5." Each of these will "sing" a text typed into the computer, always singing a particular word in the same way, with the same pitch and inflection each time it occurs. This structure, combined with the obsessive repetitive nature of Stein's language generated some wonderful found-object melodies.

The piece then, is a grand compilation of found objects - a found text, a found method of text setting, and found harmonies derived from the found melodies. In the juxtaposition of all these found objects, however, hopefully the result is greater than the sum of the parts.

This piece was commissioned by VOYS, Inc. with funds provided by the Music Fund of the Australia Council.

Warren Burt attended the State University of New York, Albany (BA, 1971) and the University of California, San Diego (MA, 1975) before moving to Australia in 1975. In Australia he has worked in academia (La Trobe University, NSW Conservatorium, Victorian College of the Arts, Australian National University), education, and radio (freelance and commissioned productions for ABC and PBAA), and as a composer, film maker, video artist, and community arts organizer. In 1998 he was an artist-in-residence at the Djerassi Artists Program, California, and he was awarded a 1998-2000 Australia Council Composer's Fellowship. In 2001 and 2002, he was Visiting Professor of Composition at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign. Currently, he is researching microtonality at the University of Wollongong, in Wollongong, New South Wales.

5. A Portrait of One - Fadladder

Fadladder has two faces: David and Noel Miller. Fadladder is an avant-art soundscape sort of thing. They both love Gertrude Stein and this is the third Stein piece they've committed to tape.

Fadladder has three CD releases. The first CD, "Windowtree", was released on Mutant Music to universal acclaim. If you haven't heard of it perhaps you are not part of the universe.

"The Five Gnossinopedies" (our take on Erik Satie) was released on Epiphany Records and a split release with our friend Datura 1.0 (www.daturaonezero.com) has also made it's CDR way onto the marketplace through www.dollarcd.com. It only costs a dollar.

David also plays keyboards in pop-rock-synth-punk band Avenpitch and he, Noel and a few others are brewing up Love Power; a rock band/love cult.

6. "He Said It" - Robert Quillen Camp

"He Said It" was recorded live (really only the broken clavichord and the tea kettle are live -- everything else is computer-triggered samples) at the Ontological Theater in NYC as part of their NOISE! Festival on July 22, 2005. The voices are: Ryan Eggensperger, David Frank, Alexis Poledouris, and Lucy Smith.


7. "Mutterbutterjinglemash" - [N]+Semble

Mutterbutterjinglemash is based on Gertrude Stein's Advertisements. The track is a medley, or "jinglemash" of various redundancies and recurring themes within the Stein work set to a somewhat jazzy/melodic score. Vocals on the track are provided by Sandy Florian.

[N]+Semble is Talan Memmott and his computer. Talan Memmott is a hypermedia writer/artist originally from San Francisco California. His literary Hypermedia work appears widely on the Internet.


8. "Sacred Emily" - Ergo Phizmiz

Turntables, Editing & Mix by Ergo P. Phizmiz

Sources: "Savoy Orpheans", "The World of George Formby", "50 Years of the BBC 1922-1972", "Songs of British Birds", "Vocal Gems from the Student Prince", "The Victor Sylvester Ballroom Orchestra", "BBC Sound Effects of Death and Horror", "Rhythms of Steam", "Oldtime Music Mit Siegfried's Mechanischem Musikkabinett", "Eddie Layton The Mighty Wurlitzer"

Text performed by Edith P. Paltrow

Recorded at the Invention Hovel, Ventnor, Isle of Wight 2005 * www.ergophizmiz.com



NOTES Gertrude Stein's GEOGRAPHY AND PLAYS

In an ongoing celebration of the roughly 100th anniversary of Gertrude Stein's Geography and Plays, softpalate (www.softpalate.org) will be matching various sound artists (audio artists, performance artists, soundtext artists, composers, radio producers, soundpoets, DJ's, re-mix artists, turntablists, etc.) with texts from Geography and Plays over the next several years.

The texts of Gertrude Stein's Geography and Plays have long eluded production. By their very nature, these texts seem almost unproduceable for the stage, perhaps written more for a theater of the mind. In spite of their apparent unproduceability, softpalate proposes taking another look at these plays, but this time as audio productions. While the physical staging of a Stein play may be difficult to envision, and even undesirable, the sonic qualities of her writing strike with an immediacy that few writings can claim, making the texts of Geography and Plays perfectly suited to the audio medium.

Audio artists of all ilks interested in participating in these productions are encouraged to contact softpalate.

- Erik Belgum, executive director, Softpalate

ebelgum@softpalate.org | www.softpalate.org



20.8.08

Biographeme WONDERFUL









archive.org :: voyageacoustiquefive :: Sirens [Train Sonor] [may 2007]

Sirens [11:36] [excerpt]

found on Biographeme click HERE for heaps of fantastic sound

2.4.08

Christof Mignon- Phonic Gaps and Gasps review by Allen S Weiss


reviewing Christof Migone...
http://www.christofmigone.com/html/main.html

“Skull partitas, glottal toccatas, ear arias, bone blues,
heart sonatas, nerve operas, blood symphonies – the
audio inventions of Christof Migone evoke the disrupted
and degenerate inner voice that so disquietingly haunts
our thought and our speech. Through the piercing and
obsessive acoustics of Hole in the Head, the possibilities
of audio montage permit vocal organisms and electronic
circuits to intersect, reflect and infect each other. These
works therefore exist in a highly charged state of
paradox and contradiction: they are impish and lyrical,
nightmarish and enlightening, abrasive and soothing.
Here, creativity occurs at that threshold where language
disintegrates and electronics peaks outs; where codes
are transgressed and nonsense elaborated; where
sonorous distortions, interferences and noises establish
a delirious, crazed, schizophonic art. The analysis of
such works demands a teratology of the voice, whose
monsters arise by means of liberating all those vocal
“accidents” that hitherto blemished the pure sounds of
bel canto and belles lettres: moans, screams, sighs,
cries, chokes, roars, gasps, mumbles, whistles, yelps,
slurps, groans, chortles, snorts, pops, clicks, wheezes,
babbles, hisses, hums, whimpers, hoots, whines, puffs,
drones, stutters, lisps, rattles, and countless other
imperfections.
As Roman Jakobson suggests in his celebrated
psycholinguistic studies on the relations between
aphasia and linguistic structure, the pathological
breakdown of quotidian speech – culminating in either
the incoherent jumble of word salad, the inarticulate simplicity
of one-word sentences, or the utter silence of aphasia universalis
– proffers new modes of poetic form." Weiss

21.3.08

listening by jean-luc nancy















"Music is the art of the hope for resonance: a sense that does not make sense except because of its resounding in itself. It calls to itself and recalls itself, reminding itself and by itself, each time, of the birth of music, that is to say, the opening of a world in resonance, a world taken away from the arrangements of objects and subjects, brought back to its own amplitude and making sense or else having its truth only in the affirmation that modulates this amplitude."

16.3.08

Tony Oursler, at Magasin 3

"Caricature", 2002.
Plastic, paint, video projector, DVD-player, performance by Constance DeJong. Exhibited at Magasin 3 Stockholm Konsthall Sep-Dec, 2002

13.3.08

eggs and all that avant garde from ubu


















All Avant-Garde All The Time - UbuWeb Podcast #2: The World of Outsiders

Listen / Download


Produced by The Poetry Foundation, UbuWeb is pleased to announce the latest in its podcast series, focusing on Ubu's hidden treasures. As the site has grown so large, these occasional audio guides might shed some light on things you may have overlooked, forgotten about or simply never knew about. This podcast gives a guided tour of UbuWeb's collection of outsider audio. Artists include Antonin Artaud, Jim Roche, Bern Porter, Francis E. Dec, Benjamin Weismann and Sean Landers amongst others. You can subscribe to our podcast here.

Komar & Melamid and Dave Soldier "The People's Choice Music" (1997) Komar & Melamid's Most Wanted Painting project was extended into the realm of music. A poll, written by Dave Soldier, was conducted on The Dia Foundation's web site in Spring 1996. Approximately 500 visitors took the survey. Solder used the survey results to write music and lyrics for the Most Wanted and Most Unwanted songs.

The Most Wanted Song: A musical work that will be unavoidably and uncontrollably "liked" by 72 ± 12% of listeners.

The Most Unwanted Song: Fewer than 200 individuals of the world's total population will enjoy this.

More details and liner notes here.

Audio Selections from The Sackner Archive: Hundreds of MP3s ripped from rare sound poetry LPs, tapes & 45 RPM vinyl. The Ruth & Mqrvin Sackner Archive of Visual & Concrete Poetry in Miami Beach is the world's largest collection of text-based art. Of the audio files here, curator Matthew Abess states: "The work presented here comprises a portion of the Sackner's tremendous compendium of sonic works. The range of geographic origins runs the circumference of the globe. The time span is nearly a century. It witnesses histories: of poetry, literature, music, visual art, technology, politics, religion, theoretical contentions and practical abstention." Artists include John Cage, Merzbow, Anton Bruhin, Laurie Anderson, Bob Cobbing, Lily Greenham, Velemir Chlebnikov, Aleksej Krucenych and Jean Jacques Lebel among dozens of others. UbuWeb is also pleased to feature a full-length documentary about the Sackner Archive, Concrete! directed by Sara Sackner.