Archive for the 'Musical Endeavors' Category

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OK FEEL GOOD

Jonathan NewmanA few weeks ago in my com­po­si­tion class at PSU, my pro­fes­sor intro­duced us to a piece called OK FEEL GOOD by a com­poser named Jonathan Newman. I was instantly taken back by it. The piece was writ­ten, as Newman states in the notes of the score, dur­ing “a year of some­what intense per­sonal dis­tress, and I was extremely tired of feel­ing bad, so I decided to write a very happy piece.”

To me it’s an amaz­ing work, full of lush melodic color and pul­sat­ing with rhyth­mic motion. I specif­i­cally state this because the motivic mate­r­ial is writ­ten in a some­what odd meter. It starts with a bar of 7/16, goes into a bar of 3/8, back into another bar of 7/16, and then fin­ishes with two bars of a more com­mon 3/4. But it man­ages to flow very well. It has many moods, no doubt due to the fact of his inten­tional tran­si­tion from dark to light, and it’s easy to her his love of jazz rhythms, per­cus­sion, and Gershwin. It’s warm and very ten­der at times, extremely sexy at oth­ers, and it reminds me a lot of a Don Ellis com­po­si­tion. It’s rad.

The seven and a half minute long com­po­si­tion was writ­ten for the Aspen Contemporary Ensemble and debuted on July 12, 1996 at the Harris Hall as part of the world renowned Aspen Music Festival. The orches­tra­tion is for a small six per­son cham­ber group: Flute (dou­bling Piccolo), B-flat Clarinet (dou­bling Bass Clarinet), Violin, Cello, Piano, and Percussion (Crotales, Xylophone, Vibraphone, Marimba, Triangle, Suspended Cymbal, Conga).

Finally I would also like to men­tion that Mr. Newman is part-founder and mem­ber of the BCM International, a con­sor­tium of four com­posers: Newman, Jim Bonney, Steven Bryant, and Eric Whitacre, who was the artist in res­i­dence at the APU School of Music two years ago. He adapted ideas and themes from Milton’s epic poem to a mul­ti­me­dia opera/dance/stage per­for­mance with live and pre­re­corded music and enti­tled it Paradise Lost. Interesting idea, sort of trendy out­put. Anyway I thought it was cool that they all work together and pro­mote each other. Something of a no brainer but refresh­ing to see for two com­posers that I had no idea were connected.

GETS CONNECTED, TOO: 2007

Each year, a cou­ple of friends and I from Sioux City always make, and trade, our (some­times not) uniquely own “Best Of” mixes from our favorites of that year. But this year I decided to make a mix­tape of snip­pets from some of the songs I really enjoyed. I must admit that I strayed from my usual stern path of check­ing out the new releases and strug­gled, or maybe bet­ter put: was tempted, to push a lot of the “pop­u­lar records” into my final deci­sion. In the end, I opted to not include some of the pop­u­lar “top 10″ records (i.e. panda bear, beriut, the national, etc.),but I did have fun with it, in fact I had a blast! Here’s my com­pressed, com­par­itvely short, last hooray for the Best Music of 2007. Check it out:

BEST MUSIC OF 2007

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I am con­sciously not includ­ing the tracks played in this mix with hopes that you will help me, by com­ment­ing the artist/song, and revel in some of the sim­i­lar­ity, or at least knowl­edge, of this years’ fruits. I open up the com­ment board to you to post any­thing you recognize.

I have also com­piled an image of scenes/posters from some of my favorite movies I saw in 2007. By far, this doesn’t include them all, nor are they in any spe­cific order. I also have quite a list I of flicks I still am antic­i­pat­ing. Some of those being: Once, King of Kong, Into the Wild, Juno, I’m Not There, The Band’s Visit, The Life Of Reilly, and many oth­ers. Here’s a pop-up of that image:

best of movies 2007 big.jpg

Whaddaya think? Let me know if you dig ‘em and please rec­om­mend your favorite screengems to me as well. As pre­vi­ously indi­cated, I once again invite you to tag the movies you rec­og­nize via flickr (link to the image, use the “add note” func­tion) and help me bet­ter under­stand your thrills from the great, heavy, and joy­ous year of our lord, two thou­sand seven. Here’s to you and, more than well deserv­ing, TO US.

GETS UNRECOVERED

Gets Unrecovered cover.jpg

Bam! Check it out!

RECORD / MOVE

Dated news for some, new for oth­ers, I moved:

425 se 3rd ave #208
port­land, or 97214, usa

and I’m finally mak­ing my first Dash! record:

Titled Gets Unrecovered, it’s a col­lec­tion of some of the new, some of the old. Eleven tracks, also show­cas­ing a kind, bonus ele­ment includ­ing a Crystal Seth -> Righteous jam and a few selec­tions from a film score that I am excited about/equally proud of. It should be ready for release, via Marriage and The Prescott Family next Wednesday, coin­ci­den­tally when I fly back to my parent’s house, and my home­town, of Sioux City.

Lots to come in the near future includ­ing a The Righteous and Harmonious Fists Tour tour blog as well as some fat videos when I treat myself to a Christmas present of a dig­i­tal cam­era, or maybe a cat, I haven’t decided yet1. Also, I’ve been think­ing deeply about going into a clas­si­cal com­posers bend of in-depth research/background/history alpha­bet­i­cally and vibeing on some shit of their’s when it hits me hardest…we’ll see, maybe a new years res­o­lu­tion, amongst oth­ers. Hope you dig it. Also, a top 10 albums/movies of the year vid/pod-cast…on it!

1 Well, actu­ally I kinda have…realistically, a exter­nal hd. ya know? shit! that’s the mar­ket to be in these dayz, damn.

COMPUTING SYNESTHESIA

snapshot.jpg

Speaking of visual and con­cep­tual rela­tion­ships, I’ve been enjoy­ing some strange trips from using a unique soft­ware called RGB MusicLab. It was clev­erly designed by Kenji Kojima who explains it quite well by saying,

RGB MusicLab con­verts RGB (Red, Green and Blue) value of an image to chro­matic scale sounds. The pro­gram reads RGB value of pix­els from the top left to the bot­tom right of an image. One pixel makes a har­mony of three note of RGB value, and the length of note is deter­mined by bright­ness of the pixel. RGB value 120 or 121 is the cen­ter C, and RGB value 122 or 123 is added a half steps of the scale that is C#. Pure black that is R=0, G=0, B=0 is no sounds.

It is not an impres­sion of paint­ings or pho­tographs of a com­poser. It reads a score from an image data directly.

So, as l recall one of the most influ­en­tial exhibits I’ve ever expe­ri­enced, here a few pieces I’ve come up with.

kit ans saw wave.jpg

Duration: 0:30
Tempo: 183
Instrumentation: 2 elec­tronic kits (right and left chan­nels), 1 saw wave (center)

hmm…an inter­est­ing start

dark.jpg

Duration: 2:09
Tempo: 440
Instrumentation: Choir (left), atmos­phere (cen­ter), orches­tral harp (right)

notice how dark the image is in rela­tion to the pitch

whoa.jpg

Duration: 1:05
Tempo: 470
Instrumentation: celesta (left), pizzi­cato strings (cen­ter), slap bass (right)

this one moves quite quick but is full of color

bigsurdriftwoodshack.jpg

Duration: 1:15
Tempo: 190
Instrumentation: music box (left), gui­tar har­mon­ics (cen­ter), wood­block (right)

sim­i­lar color through­out, crazy ending(?)

bachseal.jpg

Duration: 2:02
Tempo: 600
Instrumentation: harpsichord

Keep in mind, this is Bach’s seal in which he signed his music

dontfuckwithmechopin.jpg

Duration: 3:51
Tempo: 137
Instrumentation: Electric Piano (left), Car Engine (cen­ter), Electric Piano (right)

Spastic, yet rich and full

flush.jpg

Duration: 0:29
Tempo: 80
Instrumentation: Tubular Bells (left), Rain (cen­ter), Tubular Bells (right)

The flu­id­ity of this pic­ture seems to bring out an actual “song”

crazyassorange.jpg

Duration: 0:31
Tempo: 600
Instrumentation: Celesta (left), Dulcimer (cen­ter), Celesta (right)

I absolutely love this inter­pre­ta­tion, it is mad and fits the mood completely

princeofpeace.jpg

Duration: 1:27
Tempo: 309
Instrumentation: Timpani (left), Reverse Cymbal (cen­ter), Electric Piano (right)

Totally rad and con­ve­niently weird — a true stare.

marriageloft.jpg

Duration: 1:20
Tempo: 151
Instrumentation: Percussive Organ (left), Contrabass (cen­ter), Bottle Blow (right)

Reminds me of the moth and it’s journey

THE SIOUX CITY SYMPHONY

Although com­pleted in the spring of 2007, I have yet to show my first large-scale sym­phonic work, The Sioux City Symphony, to a wide audi­ence. I worked on it for about a year, orig­i­nally as a self-commissioned goal of sub­mit­ting it to the 2007 APU Composition Competition and lately, still with­out feed­back, I have been revis­it­ing the piece to hear how my ear has changed, for bet­ter or worse. A lot of time has passed since I fin­ished it and I had to take a big step back and let the work fer­ment. I still remem­ber going mad in my room with excite­ment and frus­tra­tion, often work­ing on it for hours late into the early morn­ing and leav­ing my eyes strained and the mark of head­phones embed­ded into my hair.

I real­ize there is a lot I could tell you about each move­ment, let alone the work as a whole. A state­ment of sorts. This is some­thing that I’ve been wrestling with ever since I started. Addressing that now, all I can say is that for the time being I’m not going to can’t say any­thing more than I already have. I will say that I’d like to share my feel­ings, as tedious and bor­ing as they might be, about dif­fer­ent sec­tions and move­ments, melodic lines, ideas, influ­ences, etc. in the future. I hope you understand.

I don’t expect a lot of feed­back and, to me, that is com­pletely jus­ti­fied. It is hardly acces­si­ble1 in many aspects, but I must show it to you! I must give it away! Keeping it hid­den2 would be much much worse, and self­ish. So I now present to you…

SCS cover art.jpg

1st Movement: Adagio (3:44)

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2nd Movement: Allegretto (2:31)

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3rd Movement: Andante con moto (3:59)

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1 I apol­o­gize for the MIDI ren­di­tion and hope it is not too much of a dis­trac­tion. What you’ll hear has very lit­tle to do with the sound. It’s all about the notes.
2Feel free to down­load a copy of the full score as well. (1st Movement2nd Movement3rd Movement) For me, read­ing scores has become very enjoy­able as well as a way to observe many more details and articulations.

With Or Without You: Frames

Part 1

So on my first day of school I wake up, begrudg­ingly, on time and reach over to grab my glasses and they’re gone.

What the hell?

But then remem­ber that I watched an episode of Peep Show on my com­puter, lying down on my bed right before I went to sleep.

Well damn-it, they gotta be around here somewhere!

I start search­ing my floor. Unfortunately my floor, which is wood and cov­ered with a dark brown rug, is the same color as my specs and I have to shuf­fle my socks so I don’t step on them. Nothing. I get down on my stom­ach and try to look hor­i­zon­tally at the ground and see them peek­ing up. Nothing. I tear my bed apart.

Are they folded in the sheets? Stuck in a pillowcase?

Nothing. So now I’m kinda feel­ing defeated, still really tired, and the bril­liant idea came into my head…

What if I reen­act the scene, maybe then I’ll get a bet­ter idea of where to look deeper.

So I doze pretty quickly, almost sure that they’ll just show up in my hand when­ever I decide to wake.

(2 hours later)

Nothing. Things start to get very frus­trat­ing for me. I’ve now missed my first class at my new school but I can deal with that, what­ever. It’s more that I’m lit­er­ally quite attached to my glasses, they have been a part of my life — my face — since I was in the 4th grade so nat­u­rally I am put in a weird posi­tion. I feel totally help­less, lazy, and a huge eye-strain headache com­ing on.

WTF?!? Why today?

So I decide to take the bus to work, I can’t drive. I adjust the com­puter mon­i­tor to the low­est res­o­lu­tion it’ll go and still scooch my nose up to the screen. But then I start to real­ize something.…

Without eye­sight, I have total free­dom. Well at least a sort of freedom…from stares, uncom­fort­able direct­ness, details.

I know I have to take advan­tage of the day, this feel­ing, and I start to enjoy being eye­less in Portland. When evening comes I play a show with Davis and Adrian at Valentines. Quietly con­tent with not try­ing to make con­tact with much more than the sounds my height­ened ears are awak­en­ing my con­scious mind to, I lis­ten to Privacy per­form one of the most beau­ti­ful shows I’ve ever heard her play. Our show is a mix­ture of me fum­bling a bit on an old Casio key­board and clos­ing my eyes and feel­ing my way around the elec­tronic drumpads. There’s a unseen energy that comes out when you for­get about look­ing. We were feel­ing it.

Even if I find those damn frames I think I’m gonna ride this day out sans sight

We go back to NoPo and Davis and I look around my room for a few min­utes. I’m check­ing the bath­room again, just in case, and Davis calls out “Hey, I found them.” I hear his voice as I walk down the hall. “These it?”, he says as he picks up my glasses from a milk crate next to my desk.

Yep, that’s them. But I’m just start­ing to let go.…I think I’m gonna fin­ish this day on my own.


Part 2

There was a pretty rad event last night on the 4th floor of the Oak Street Building, 16mm film loops by exper­i­men­tal short film­maker Devon Damonte and music from Michael and Curtis Knapp, Adam Forkner, and Adrian Orange. Co-presented by Marriage Records and our neigh­bor 40 Frames, it turned out to be, well, a lot like Damonte described it:

“Multiple pro­jec­tors manip­u­late hand­made cam­era­less 16mm motion graph­ics. Imagery is tex­tures and text forms rubbed from beach glass frag­ments onto var­ie­gated grids of engi­neer­ing plot­ting papers. Magical con­tact plas­tics, pho­to­copies and lots of adhe­sive tape are also involved.”

Read more about one of the films that was shown, “Radioactive Spider”, in an inter­view from 2002.

Here is a short video mon­tage of the event:

Mise En Abyme

Okay, so first order of busi­ness: Hot Dawgz rule the fuckin’ school!

Secondly, there are a lot of peo­ple that I really miss down in the SoCal crew. I’m not going to name ‘em all, and a lot of them are com­ing up to Portland to visit and I’m super stoked about that, but I owe a lot of hugs to a lot of peo­ple. Tons, in fact. Actually I owe a super huge hug, a deli­cious meal, a drink, a long talk, and then some seri­ous chill time to a lot of peo­ple. I really love you guys. This doesn’t always come off eye-to-eye or any­thing even close to that but I am really hurt­ing for some of that love. Just hear­ing Laura’s voice on the phone tonight made me feel like climb­ing into one of her adorable bear-hug embraces. I miss that. I miss know­ing where are all the cracks in the streets are. I miss late nights with Daniel and the Village Bakery and the euca­lyp­tus tree that smells like dill and park­ing really far from Azusa Gardens and…I don’t know.

I do feel really good about this new place — so good in fact that it’s tempt­ing to think about not leav­ing. I think often about the fact that I’m spend­ing another year, the fifth year, at school and that maybe there was some­thing I could’ve done, some class I could’ve worked harder at or some part of myself that I could’ve under­stood bet­ter to get “on track” sooner, to fin­ish in four and then now have the option, the abil­ity to run with the feel­ing I have now and begin. It’s hard to think about begin­ning this new excit­ing part of my life con­tin­u­ing on back at school. I’m feel­ing the heavy vibe of the peo­ple here and now with the drive, the pos­si­bil­ity to run. I sort of feel like when fall rolls around it’ll all be reversed into the same school year drone — and this time with­out most of my clos­est class­mates. Without a bunch the core homies. Now that ain’t no way to roll. Shit…

But a cou­ple of close bud­dies are gonna be back in the fall and my friend Kurt is one of them, a friend I’ve know since fresh­man year. This guy is music itself. He’s a timid fel­low, soft and full of light. He knows what’s hap­penin’ with music trends before it drops and he’s informed me about some­thing I’d like to pass along. It’s called Reactable and it looks a lit­tle some­thing like this:

Interactive through a camera-sensitive sur­face that com­mu­ni­cates with a mod­u­lar syn­the­sizer through objects placed on top of the “play­ing area”, it’s not a far leap from this graph­i­cal musi­cal envi­ron­ment called MAX/MSP made by Cycling ’74. I’ve been want­ing to tell ya’ll about this for a while — it’s super cool! MAX/MSP is an graph­i­cal envi­ron­ment for con­trol­ling var­i­ous mul­ti­me­dia objects, specif­i­cally designed for per­for­mance art. It can be used with light­ing schemes (make a door light up with a pur­ple hue when you walk through it at a cer­tain speed), inter­ac­tive audio pieces (read on), audio visual incest to the max kind of shit (let your mind do the math). Lucky Dragons explains it pretty well and uti­lizes it with a key idea: every­one is not only involved but shares in the unique expe­ri­ence of that exact moment’s energy. Basically, the sound is effected by peo­ple touch­ing strips of wire embed­ded into a tapes­try and when two peo­ple are touch­ing oppo­site ends — or even bet­ter, each other (!) — the fre­quency wave evolves by the ten­sion and flow of the par­tic­i­pants. The com­puter inter­acts by pro­vid­ing the sam­pling but the peo­ple act as the actual con­nect­ing wires that allow the music to be cre­ated. Together they bring the expe­ri­ence into exis­tence. Not with­out the other is this pos­si­ble. And speak­ing of metaphors, this is kinda how I feel, and I miss you…yeah, you.

A Newly Looped Horzion Every Time

After read­ing Kyle Glann’s blog called A Truly Loopy Idea and talk­ing with exper­i­men­tal music guru Adam Forkner on a recent trip to Olympia, I’ve been think­ing a lot about the idea of dif­fer­ent length loops run­ning out of sync with each other and then return­ing later on with dif­fer­ent har­monies and unin­ten­tional col­ors. As I’m sure many of you know, Terry Riley has been a huge influ­ence on my recent musi­cal endeav­ours and he’s dealt with some abstract loops as well. This par­tic­u­lar loop of his isn’t char­ac­ter­is­tic of dif­fer­ent lengths, but is def­i­nitely a trip.

So the other day I com­posed a sim­ple three layer loop: 7, 8, and 9 bars run­ning sim­il­tan­iously against each other.

This is what the foun­da­tion looks like,

and this what it sounds like. The top-heavy melody shapes the core of the idea at first but, because of the lay­ered chords under­neath, it drones out after a while. While study­ing the unin­ten­tion­ally “cre­ated” har­mony, I dis­cerned that it locks up again — after the intro­duc­tion at bar 1 — at the 169th bar. This is an odd num­ber and I can’t fig­ure out it’s sig­nif­i­cance but it’s an inter­est­ing the­ory to study and can also be found in the incon­sis­tent plan­e­tary orbits found in our solar sys­tem. Sort of like an unex­pected newly-planned hori­zon every time, if you will.