Category Archives: Music

Music

New Tracks Summer 2011

I’ve made a couple new songs recently, both of which are a practice in film composition. The first is a study on the work of Eduard Artemyev, a Soviet composer who worked with the director Andrei Tarkovsky on the film “Stalker.” Here, I’m attempting to copy the affect of the films opening sequence, for which Artemyev wanted to create a mixture of eastern and western aesthetics.

[audio:http://amusesmile.com/old/sound/rasa.mp3|titles=Stalker Rasa]

From Wikipedia: “[Artemyev and Tarkovsky] finally found the solution in a theme that would create a state of inner calmness and inner satisfaction, or as Tarkovsky said “space frozen in a dynamic equilibrium.” Artemyev knew about a musical piece from Indian classical music where a prolonged and unchanged background tone is performed on a tambura. As this gave Artemyev the impression of frozen space, he used this inspiration and created a background tone on his synthesizer similar to the background tone performed on the tambura. The tar then improvised on the background sound, together with a flute as a European, Western instrument. To mask the obvious combination of European and Oriental instruments he passed the foreground music through the effect channels of his SYNTHI 100 synthesizer. These effects included modulating the sound of the flute and lowering the speed of the tar, so that what Artemyev called “the life of one string” could be heard. Tarkovsky was amazed by the result, especially liking the sound of the tar, and used the theme without any alterations in the film.”

The second is a track I made entirely from the sampled first measure of “In a Sentimental Mood” by Ellington and Coltrane. I thought of it as appropriate for a busy city street scene, but a close friend of mine says it sounds more like someone is loosing his/her mind. The beat starts at 0:36.

[audio:http://amusesmile.com/old/sound/July2011.mp3|titles=July 2011]
Music

Violin Experiment

So out of the blue yesterday, one of my friends sold me a violin for 75 bucks. Random right? I didn’t ask where he picked it up…

Anyway this is my first experiment with the instrument. Since I can’t play the violin to save my life, I’m using an improved version of my remix software to turn simple plucking into a coherent beat.
[audio:http://amusesmile.com/old/sound/violin_augment.mp3|titles=Violin Augment]

Music

Sonic Digitalization

Working in Max I built a performance interface for analyzing and chopping live samples based on attack points, change in frequency, etc. This allows you to “perform” the sample by playing it back through a series of sequencers while adding effects, changing playback speed, and generally tweaking all sorts of parameters on the fly.

I’ve done this alone and as a duet with other performers. Usually it works by having them play ~10 seconds of material into the program which I then use to improvise an accompaniment that they can perform over. I enjoy the effect of “trapping” an acoustic instrument into a digital medium and sound. When done right it sounds more organic than an electronic piece, but less so than an actual human performer.

Flute:
[audio:http://amusesmile.com/old/sound/flute5.mp3,http://amusesmile.com/old/sound/fluteBassM.mp3,http://amusesmile.com/old/sound/fluteBreathM.mp3,http://amusesmile.com/old/sound/fluteDuetM.mp3,http://amusesmile.com/old/sound/fluteHalfM.mp3|titles=flute chop 5,sub two step,breathy stutter,duet,flute chop 4]
Saxophone:
[audio:http://amusesmile.com/old/sound/hyperSax1.mp3,http://amusesmile.com/old/sound/saxElectric.mp3,http://amusesmile.com/old/sound/saxTranceM.mp3,http://amusesmile.com/old/sound/saxTrance2M.mp3,http://amusesmile.com/old/sound/saxCom.mp3|titles=hyper,breathing machine, trance, trance 2, unison at the fourth]
Drums:
[audio:http://amusesmile.com/old/sound/alienDrumM.mp3|titles=stellar tabla]
Bass:
[audio:http://amusesmile.com/old/sound/mingusChop.mp3|titles=mingus chop]
Water:
[audio:http://amusesmile.com/old/sound/dripM.mp3|titles=drip]

Music

Folie à Deux

For midi piano and any melodic instrument
2009

Score

This piece uses my MaxMSP based “com_poser” automated performance/composition tool. For each movement, the basic tonal area and length are chosen to begin with. Parameters are also set to determine form: tempo, rhythmic type/sporadicity, harmonic depth, number of voices, number of rhythmic voices, volume range/sporadicity, and harmonic range/sporadicity are all graphed in time before hand in order to control the midi player piano’s improvisation. This creates the skeleton of the piece which the performer uses to improvise his/her own accompaniment.

Philosophically, this plays on the idea of interactivity: since parameters are chosen before hand, often by the player him/herself, is there really any interaction, or is this just some sort of elaborate solo? It also works as a musical demonstration of the Turing Test: many people unfamiliar with player pianos assume the recording to be of an actual human player. Those familiar with computer music can’t always tell whether the piano is actually responding to the instrumentalist or vice-versa or both. What does it mean when we can no longer tell?

I. Contagion
[audio:http://amusesmile.com/old/sound/fol1.mp3|titles=contagion]
II. Folie imposée
[audio:http://amusesmile.com/old/sound/fol2.mp3|titles=folie imposée]
III. Afferent Feedback
[audio:http://amusesmile.com/old/sound/fol3.mp3|titles=afferent feedback]
IV. Paracusia
[audio:http://amusesmile.com/old/sound/fol4.mp3|titles=paracusia]
V. Folie simultanée
[audio:http://amusesmile.com/old/sound/fol5.mp3|titles=folie simultanée]