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From:
Glenn Bach
To:
SoCalExp List , Microsound List
Cc:
IDM List
Date:
Tue, 14 Mar 2000 12:34:58 -0800
Subject:
(idm) some thoughts on lo-fi improvisation
Msg-Id:
<38CEA272.53C6E1E3@csulb.edu>
Mbox:
idm.0003.gz
As a writer and visual artist with a lifelong passion for music but no traditional training in music practice or theory, I have discovered sound collage and improvisation as windows into the world of music. Informed by the work of conceptual artists and experimental composers, who opened up composition to allow the score to function as a set of conditions for events or improvisation to happen rather than a fixed musical experience, I have embarked on a journey of experimentation and collaboration in music and sound. As a newcomer to music-making, one issue in which I am particularly engaged is the recontextualization of electronic music into a lo-fi environment. Electronic music is primarily associated with the technology used in its creation, an embrace of the high-tech sheen afforded by sequencing software and digital signal processing (DSP). The extreme example of this is microsound, or "glitch," where the very mechanisms and keysounds of the operating equipment become the music itself, with its pops and whirrs and skips of digital operation and malfunction, a genre of music entirely impossible a generation earlier. But what happens when electronic music is removed from the context of the high-tech and placed in the realm of the lo-fi? When electronic signals, originating from a drum machine or an old analog synth for example, are directed not through a sequencer or sound processing software but through a chain of guitar effects pedals? Or the vibrations from the strings of a bass guitar are transformed to the point that they resemble electronic or digital sound? What happens when electronic music is approximated or referenced, lifting it from the linearity of tracks unfolding to the grid represented by the software interface? If the style, or effect, or "feel" of electronic music is co-opted for other uses, would it still be electronic music? Would it be more than merely an offshoot of prog rock? I hope so. There is a purity to electronic music (and laptop music in particular) that I respect and admire, and my explorations into lo-fi sound are not meant as a critique of the digital. There are genres of electronic music that can only exist because of computers, with effects and sounds impossible to create in the non-digital world. What interests me more, however, is the interzone where the two meet and spin off the other, electronic and electric. Where conversations happen between "jazz" and "rock" (not fusion). Between song structure (verse chorus verse) and loop-based drones or unmetered clusters. Between purpose and chance. This is where I find myself drawn. Rather than invest in a computer, sequencing software, a high-end sound card, soft-synths, programming modules, etc., I'm more interested in taking the lo-fi back-road, building up my chain of pedals: phaser, flanger, delays, reverb, chorus, compressors, distortion, fuzz, amp emulators, tremolo. Instead of running everything from a laptop, twiddling virtual knobs to shape the sound, I could run an "old school" drum machine pattern through the chain, tweak it, loop it, build layers by hand and in real time. Most importantly, what happens when I bring this aesthetic into the group setting? What musical directions might my partners take in response? Or me to them? What happens when I run a "glitch" loop (perhaps achieved through the popping static caused by a short in a guitar cord, as opposed to a DSP filter on the computer) as a rhythmic track and a live drummer/percussionist drops in? Perhaps I could swing back in the other direction and use a laptop to run a preliminary sequence as a structure on which to build other non-digital components. The electronic, then, would become a starting point rather than a self-contained operating system. The key, I think, is improvisation, and an openness to the fluidity of boundaries. As an artist whose creative history is exemplified by multidisciplinary drifting, I find that these are truly exciting times as a sound collagist and budding musician. The lo-fi improvisation of electronic music offers me an inroad into the world of music as a maker rather than merely a listener. Through sound I approach music from a visual or linguistic perspective, in small increments, tiptoeing the fuzzy line where sound becomes music, engaging in a dialogue with other musicians who come from a more developed musical background. The resulting soundscape is ideally that much richer and engaging, for both performer and audience. Although these ideas may be revolutionary to me, they may be old news for others, so I welcome feedback, critique, or even suggestions of other artists working in this vein. Thanks. G. --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org