Re:sampling

September 10, 2010 9:24 pm  /  Music

After writing that post a few day ago about experimenting with the EPS-16+ sampler, I listened to a friend’s podcast which happened to be about sampling as an art form. It got me thinking: there’s definitely something about the overall sound of the early sampling era that is both distinct and difficult to replicate (authentically, IMO) using modern production techniques.

As I mentioned in my post, early samplers could only record a few seconds of audio; you had to build a groove out of many layers of sonic fragments. If you wanted to record longer passages of music (or simply a greater number of different sounds) you had had to lower the sample rate (record at a lower quality setting) to get the best mileage out of the sampler’s limited memory (~1 megabyte in the case of the EPS-16+).  At the same time, recording at a lower sample rate obscured the sounds, making them darker, grainy, distorted.

But as “better” samplers became available for less money, higher fidelity meant samples weren’t necessarily obscured by the act of sampling itself.  Larger storage capacities meant it was possible to assemble entire libraries of crystal-clear samples and long phrases. Both factors would have meant that samples were easier to recognize within a mix unless a producer went out of the way to edit and intentionally obscure them.  Moreover, having long, clear phrases makes it a lot easier to build a solid (though potentially more “derivative”) groove from pre-fabricated parts of other songs.

It makes me wonder what kind of correlation might have existed between the rise of sampling-related lawsuits and improvements in the technology.

In an aimless mood tonight

September 7, 2010 10:04 pm  /  Music

09.07.2010

Just goofing around with layering some synths and samples.

New to You: The Wikimixes

September 3, 2010 8:57 pm  /  Music, Radio

It’s Friday night, so I’m going to make this one short.

Earlier this summer I put together a project that I called “Wikimixing” for the Megapolis Audio Festival. Here is a blurb I wrote about it at the time:

“Mixing on a computer is usually a solitary endeavor: one person controlling one mouse and keyboard making one decision at a time. We’re going to try to fix that.  Part workshop and part experiment in “crowd-sourced” audio art, this is like editing Wikipedia but with sound instead of text. We’ll … collectively mix and manipulate sounds as a group in real-time using a bunch of colorful customized keyboard controllers, all connected to a single computer. The idea is to get as many hands/ears/minds at once collaborating (and competing) on the same soundscape, so that whatever strange, beautiful, or frightening noises that emerge are the product of our group’s collective will. Everyone is in control at the same time and yet no one is!”

You can read more about the ideas and technical aspects of the project here. But for whatever reason, I never got around to posting the final mixes on my own site…until TODAY.  So unless you’ve been to the Megapolis 2010 Archive, they’re NEW TO YOU!

Saturday Mix A

Sunday Mix A

Sunday Mix B

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My love for vintage keyboards knows no bounds

September 2, 2010 9:54 pm  /  Music

Look what I found while searching for the electricity meter in our basement a few months ago:

Who's obsolete?

It’s an Ensoniq EPS-16+ sampling keyboard from the early 1990s. Ok, so 1990 probably isn’t “vintage,” but it was one of the earliest (affordable) samplers capable of recording and playing sounds at 16-bit “CD quality.” For what it’s worth, it was RZA’s sampler of choice on the early Wu-Tang albums.

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Listening vs conversation

April 18, 2010 8:53 pm  /  Music, New York

What a serendipitous weekend. Since Thursday I’ve seen three very different but equally inspiring concerts (1, 2, 3) at some of New York’s best stages.  I’ve met some equally interesting and inspiring people. One of whom–an accomplished composer–asked me if I had been writing any music of own. In a kind of self-deprecating half-truth, I told him, no, I hadn’t. “But how can you NOT write?” he asked, visibly concerned.

To say I’ve been having a “musical crisis” would be melodramatic; in truth I’ve continued to write little modular riffs, progressions, beats, loops, all sorts of disconnected scraps. But then I try to stitch them together into something larger (by myself, in a vacuum on the computer) and am often disappointed with the results. It doesn’t feel like “writing music” anymore at least.

Listening to the aforementioned composer talk about his own (unlikely?) journey as a musician made me think of something one of my composition professors once told me, that great composers need to inhabit two contradictory personas: the analytical self-critic and the egomaniac. According to him, you need to be able to deeply examine and reflect on your work, but also need to be able to turn that critical voice off completely from time to time. In a Jekyll and Hyde transformation, you must become unabashedly self confident and have glimpses of what my professor called “momentary infallibility.” You are the artist, you have the vision, and you can do no wrong. To hell with the critics.

These past months I’ve been thinking a lot about music, about writing, and about thinking about writing and music far more than I’ve actually been writing or writing music. Generally speaking, I’ve spent the past few years out here in New York in “listening” mode…or at least listening far more than I have been speaking. Indeed, much of my work as a recordist requires that I be a “fly on the wall,” capturing other people’s thoughts but never dialoging with them. And in terms of my own music and writing, I thought I should absorb as much of the world around me as possible in order to make an informed, articulate statement of my own.

But this “listening in preparation for an intelligent response” approach (or whatever I’m going to call it) is like snail mail. More to the point, it’s nothing like having a real conversation. We communicate not despite of but through our interruptions, digressions, and (very often) instincts based on fragments of information. In order to sustain a conversation, we often speak regardless of whether or not our response is completely measured, accurate, or even articulate. Conversation is improvisational, forcing us to keep stringing along new ideas, to examine for brief moments, and to answer. Maybe this is alternating between self-critic and egomaniac at a faster or pace, but perhaps it’s just acting like a whole, balanced person.

As a producer, I’ve become pretty good at shaping and augmenting other people’s ideas, being critic or maniacal advocate on behalf of someone else’s material. So it would seem I should be capable of giving my own ideas the same treatment, right? Should I start having more conversations with myself? It seems I’m arriving at some of the same conclusions as in the past: I should probably keep a journal (offline, for myself), and I should start making a point of going out on a limb and sharing some of my ideas (musical and otherwise) with others.

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Crimson Grail pics, video

August 11, 2009 10:55 am  /  Music, New York  /  , ,
Brendan @ Rhys Chatham's Crimson Grail, 2009

Photo credit: Tim Griffin from Brooklyn Vegan

There are some good pics of the Rhys Chatham concert over at Brooklyn Vegan.  And a video of the finale via YouTube: