“1923”
This piece is from my set in Korea, performed at Kunsthalle. It’s the first work I’ve generated using the musical notation system I’ve been (sporadically) developing, called Braid. The software outputs OSC, which here I’m converting to MIDI and routing to a MeeBlip synth. Other than a bit of EQ and reverb, you’re hearing the raw output.
It’s not fully realized by any means (neither technically nor compositionally, and the eventual intent is to play this music instrumentally), but I’m happy with this first step. I takes me somewhere else, emotionally, than I can get to when writing on the bass. In general, it sounds very different than anything I’ve ever produced, save my early pieces at the CMC, and in fact this is a return to some of those interests.
The formal thrust here is about processes, a la Steve Reich, which are a part of the DNA of so much of the music I love, from Glenn Branca to Liturgy, Harmonia, or Oval, or Tristan Perich or Florent Ghys, or Zs, Live Footage, or … This kind of thing hasn’t shown up too much in Multitudes (but it’s definitely in there). But with Braid, I’m embedding it into the bias of the notation itself.
This summer back at Eyeofestival, I had the pleasure of talking with Casey Reas. The formalism in his work owes an acknowledged debt to process-oriented visual artists like Sol Lewitt, but he said Reich was just as much an influence. Processing is, among other things, a powerful realization of the ideas born in this aesthetic.
What’s the musical equivalent? I get into trouble here, because of course there are a trove of amazing audio software platforms. Most are elaborate visual interfaces with a set of biases I’m not interested in conforming to. The great code-based environments, SuperCollider, ChucK, RTcmix, etc, including Max/MSP and PD, are primarily concerned with timbre these days (is that fair to say?), as are hardware hacking / circuit-bending noise-centered operations. But is there something to be said for Max without MSP? I think I’m moving backwards in my software interests, or at least it’s been kind of challenging to round up MIDI gear. In any case, Braid is to be my personal Processing for musical processes. If it gets mature enough, it could be a public project down the line. (Props to Tristan for solving this with his chips.)
[Flash 9 is required to listen to audio.]
I’m a daily reader of Peter Kirn’s excellent Create Digital Music blog, so it seemed only natural when I wanted to begin fooling around with hardware synthesis to grab a MeeBlip.
This is a new domain for me, having adhered fairly strictly in my previous computer music lives 1, 2, 3 to processing realtime audio input. However, I’m embarking on a new composition project, codename Braid, centered around a python notation/sequencer I’ve nearly completed. Excited to take that in some interesting timbral directions, and the idea for now is to have that happen in hardware, so the hackable meeblip was perfect. More to come.




