"Caesura Salad"

"Caesura Salad" [mp3 removed -- a newer version is available on Bandcamp]

Another on the "modular" rhythm synth. See previous post--same methodology. Some weird commercial electro beat samples were added to one of the "stanzas." The line breaks of the various stanzas are actually not caesuras but the pun had to be used.

"Audrey the King (Beats)"

"Audrey the King (Beats)" [mp3 removed]

Back to my "modular" rhythm synth. Decided just to record the Vermona drum machine with almost no effects at the recording stage (just some filtering on the bass). Then light use of a compressor plugin on the recorded file to make those kick/toms more punchy. Got this bare bones piece before filling it up with piano and such for "Audrey the King."

Precognitive Science Writing

Our world may be a giant hologram. An experiment by a certain Dr. Danzmann offers proof of an unrelated conjecture by a certain Dr. Hogan that the universe is a giant holographic projection, encoded on a vast 2D surface (such as a black hole event horizon), much like a shimmering rainbow globe on a debit card, and that it is possible to identify and measure the grain of this projection (the stuff of spacetime, as it were).

Or maybe not.

However Danzmann is cautious about Hogan's proposal and believes more theoretical work needs to be done. "It's intriguing," he says. "But it's not really a theory yet, more just an idea." Like many others, Danzmann agrees it is too early to make any definitive claims. "Let's wait and see," he says. "We think it's at least a year too early to get excited."

A year before we know--can we wait?

Related posts on precognitive news and criticism--a new genre of writing and reportage, somewhat akin to Carlos Castaneda's approach to anthropology (only concerning future realities rather than present ones), or "applied Derrida" (writing meant to be read against itself): man-eating snakes, Fame in the age of social media, and a Kandinsky tie-in multimedia show (sorry BD--eventually yours will drop off the list).

since when can you paint on a computer?

photo02

Lauren Cornell on the topic of critics perennially finding this gosh darn Internet thing: "Internet art is also troubled by a problem of perpetual discovery: while its history evolves, it is often not elaborated, but instead rediscovered, again and again, by the critical establishment."

Cornell is responding to a BBC critic's impassioned admission of ignorance: "as far as I am aware, no contemporary artist has yet harnessed this extraordinary technology to make a significant artwork. Of course, maybe I'm wrong and am missing something great [etc]"

Perhaps we should start a list of "shocked by technology" articles or quotes. Consider this essay by Lawrence Weschler in the New York of Review of Books on David Hockney's cell phone sketches. The succulent drawings completely pop (see above) but Weschler can't get over the fact that Hockney drew them with one of them there computer gadgets. He even tells us the brand--it is mentioned 11 times in the article.

It might rattle Weschler to know also that the string quartet score he was enjoying in a movie last night was made by people clicking little squares in a sampler! And that whole books can now be read on a "digital reader"! And that the supermarkets have this scanner thingy that "reads" your groceries and tallies up your total!

[hat tips cpb and afc]

[reposted after correction of egregious typos]

"this psychopath"

left a comment defending Rip Torn--the American Klaus Kinski?--on this blog. We love to build up our idols and then tear them to shreds when they slip. 40 years of great work and now tabloid fodder. Not that 80 year olds should be running around with guns, breaking into banks (if that's what happened). Watch the Maidstone clip. (hat tip Schwarz)