"Submersible Kit"

"Submersible Kit" [mp3 removed]

a bit quieter - rearranged a Battery demo pattern - played around with some pitch shifting automation that was in the demo, applying it to other parts of the track - the bass line (Mutator-ed electribe riff) drifts in and out of tight sync with the rest

pre-Rant on formalism

Formalist art criticism and the politics of meaning
(hat tip schwarz)

Haven't read all this yet but am saving the link to come back to. Don't think this critic understands the art he or she is calling "formalist."
And possibly confuses the extremes of late Greenberg theory with the studio practices Greenberg chronicled early on.

Greenberg believed that the subjects of the visual arts should be their respective media. Painting should be about paint, and sculpture about the materials of sculpture. It follows that politics and narrative, as extraneous to the art media, debase the purity of visual art. Formalists evaluate art according to physical qualities such as color, size, shape, line, texture, and so on, and treat the ideational content of works as irrelevant. They view themselves as being mainly protectors and upholders of high aesthetic standards.

This is an idiot's view of abstract art and the reasons for doing it. Greenberg was not this unsophisticated, didactic as his later criticism became. To reject verbal narrative, theatrics, etc in art isn't to reject "ideational content." It is to recognize that the ideas of many paintings are expressed non-verbally and require new kinds of metaphors. Greenberg adopted and codified the language he heard artists using in mid 20th Century studios ("push-pull," etc.). Much of this language centered on the properties of media but only hack artists stop there. The ones who wrote, such as Mondrian or Newman, tended to the philosophical. Unfortunately, reduced to writing, you have to deal with such ideas as writing. Trained as a writer, Greenberg had little use for windy bloviation and therefore insisted on what was verifiable or falsifiable.

Abstract art is just as difficult and radical a proposition now as it was fifty years ago, and still drives social critics crazy, such that they have to make its practitioners and advocates into pedants quoting Ralph Mayer's The Artist's Handbook (a text on methods and materials) as some kind of governing philosophy.

Georg Herold

georg herold

This image has long been a favorite--first saw Herold in this pose with that wood thing about 15 years ago. Petzel gallery has a jumbo, polished print version of the photo. This is my lo-fi scan version.
Previous posts on Herold: 1 / 2

Misc. Tracker References

as in "tracker music," very low res files played on home computer via text commands

(outgoing email) Thanks--I just saved a bass note [in Modplug tracker--woo]. I cracked up when Cubase asked me if I wanted to convert it from 8.303 Khz to 44.1 and from 8 bit to 24. Now I understand how so much info is packed into the mod files.

(another email) One of my favorite tunes on [mazemod.org] is "Groovedoos" by the Fox II. I found the .mod [for it] and opened it. In the comments it says it was made in [Dec] 1996 and the samples are "from the Roland mc-303 and my old breakbeat records--the 'aohaa' sample is from Chyrilian"

(twitter) just realized CiM has a myspace page with a tracker self-remaster of "Hitachi," CiM-ized version of "Popcorn" (!), Reference outtake & excellent, doom-y track titled "course."

(email) [UK producer CiM is] sort of Miami/Phoenicia nervous electro beats with really sweet pads. [Incredibly consistent, recognizable sound from one song to the next. CiM is the bomb.]

Night at the Ex

"Night at the Ex," video by Jacob Stein: [YouTube]

Cropped clip [405 KB .gif -- looping]

Cropped clip [881 KB .mp4 -- html page removed -- no loop]

The Stein vid was posted in the comments to Nasty Nets. It's a camera following a girl in battery-operated devil horns as she walks around a fairground with Beck's "Gamma Ray" on the soundtrack. Banal, ordinary but very watchable, lots of depth and multilayered movement. In the clip I made, note all the levels of action going on simultaneously: boys running through funhouse tube, jumping, turning to the right, tube rotating, girl swiveling head, devil horns blinking, carousel lights flashing in the background, guy at back of tube who might be filming (?). De Palma-esque trigonometry on a budget.