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Sound Traffic Control

3 messages · 3 participants · spans 25 days · search this subject
1994-10-18 20:31Michael Wertheim Sound Traffic Control
1994-11-12 07:05Bobby Tribble Sound Traffic Control
└─ 1994-11-12 18:46Handiboy Re: Sound Traffic Control
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1994-10-18 20:31Michael WertheimThe subject of Naut Humon's Sound Traffic Control was mentioned briefly on this list a few
From:
Michael Wertheim
To:
Date:
Tue, 18 Oct 1994 13:31:38 -0700
Subject:
Sound Traffic Control
permalink · <9410182031.AA08503@martha.sybgate.sybase.com>
The subject of Naut Humon's Sound Traffic Control was mentioned briefly on this list a few weeks ago. Sound Traffic Control is putting on two performances in San Francisco. Here's some info about them... ------------- SOUND TRAFFIC CONTROL's "THRONE OF DRONES" and "RE-IMMERSION" Thursday 10 November & Friday 11 November, 1994 Club Townsend, 174 Townsend Street, San Francisco "THRONE OF DRONES" and "RE-IMMERSION" are two of the more unusual electronic/ambient music events you'll see/hear this year in San Francisco. The shows, presented by SOUND TRAFFIC CONTROL (a Bay Area-based media arts collective), feature a unique real-time spatial audio system through which musicians, engineers, conductors, vocalists and DJs form an interwoven, surround-sound orchestra. Anyone who heard the Mixmaster Morris/Spacetime Continuum presentation last spring will find these to be a great follow-up. Sound Traffic Control's audio/visual system is a 3D sound reinforcement network that projects music and audio animation throughout the room, creating sonic environments that stretch the boundaries beyond the THX audio arrays used in many theaters. "Sound Traffic Control" is also a metaphor: the "air traffic controllers" in the 3D Surround Hub pilot airborne "musical cargo ships" from different parts of STC's "sound world" utilizing separate/simultaneous "taxis," "takeoffs," and "landings." The audience members are "passengers" who roam runways intersecting the dynamic musical trajectories. Thursday's "THRONE OF DRONES" features the ISO-AMBIENT ORCHESTRA, a group of instrumentalists from numerous local bands and international solo projects whose real-time virtual performance is akin to an Internet-style online experience. Iso-Ambient Orchestra members include: Joe Gore; Chris Muir; Michael Belfer (Torcher); Anton Newcombe (Brian Jonestown Massacre) and Larry LaLonde (Primus) and a host of others. Later on the same bill is David Darling, solo cellist, whose evocative music provides an atmospheric melancholy. Those familiar with his CD releases on the ECM and Hearts of Space labels should witness his inauguration into the 3D sound field. Along with this, arrives the Acid Karaoke of Carl Stone and oriental singer Mien Xiao-Fen. Stone is an internationally-known electronic music composer who has traveled extensively and released many wild and whimsical works for New Albion and other labels. His music, in combination with Mien Xiao Fen's exotic vocals, should transform the event into a department-store frenzy. DJs for the night are not your usual fare: ethnic/world specialist Cheb i Sabbah will create a multilayered tribal/space mix; Jonah Sharpe is back from England with a fresh new collection of tracks; and debuting on "digital transport" will be the creator, co-ordinator and curator of Sound Traffic Control, Naut Humon. The Drones begin at 9 p.m., tickets are $6. Friday's RE-IMMERSION, presented in conjunction with Ambient Jungle, adds a festive element to the occasion. Appearing with STC will be Spacetime Continuum, a techno-ambient convergence from the Astralwerks label guided by Jonah Sharpe, whose aural exploits include collaborations with Bill Laswell, Peter Namlook and Deep Space Network. The evening's lift-off will be provided by Reflective Records' Single Cell Orchestra, who explore the mysterious underside of the ambient phenomenon through chromatic transpositions and narrative form. For those who continue to dance, DJs Mark Farina, Thomas and Felix will spin atypical house- and techno-beats in the Dubzone. Macross Vision by Hyperdelic will fill the Dubzone with synaesthetic color and light. Doors open at midnight, tickets are $10. On both nights, the 3D sonic habitat will be punctuated by Perry Hoberman's "Symphonic Appliance System," which animates a garage-sale full of household gadgets including projectors, radios, records and electric tools in an audio/visual atomic-age setting. The Audio Engineering Society (AES) convention for pro audio gearheads at San Francisco's Moscone Convention Center will run concurrently with the shows, so anyone looking for a futuristic sampling of audio technology outside the convention site need look no further. Sound Traffic Control uses a Level Control System from LCS, Inc. that sends multiple Macintosh digital audio workstation outputs live to discreet DSP mixer posts which are then forwarded to a 3D loudspeaker diffusion matrix. For more information, contact Sound Traffic Control at (415) 522.7380 ..
1994-11-12 07:05Bobby TribbleShow in SF mentioned a little while ago on the list... > SOUND TRAFFIC CONTROL's "THRONE O
From:
Bobby Tribble
To:
Date:
Fri, 11 Nov 1994 23:05:27 -0800 (PST)
Subject:
Sound Traffic Control
permalink · <199411120705.AA02220@planecrash.berkeley.edu>
Show in SF mentioned a little while ago on the list...
quoted 3 lines SOUND TRAFFIC CONTROL's "THRONE OF DRONES" and "RE-IMMERSION"> SOUND TRAFFIC CONTROL's "THRONE OF DRONES" and "RE-IMMERSION" > Thursday 10 November & Friday 11 November, 1994 > Club Townsend, 174 Townsend Street, San Francisco
Just wondering if anyone made it, and if so what it was like. This was something I would have liked to been able to go to... - Bobby Tribble
1994-11-12 18:46HandiboyIt was alright. The whole set up was pretty cool, but the overall opinion I got (and of th
From:
Handiboy
To:
Bobby Tribble
Cc:
Date:
Sat, 12 Nov 1994 10:46:17 -0800 (PST)
Subject:
Re: Sound Traffic Control
Reply to:
Sound Traffic Control
permalink · <Pine.3.89.9411121042.B29649-0100000@taz.hyperreal.com>
It was alright. The whole set up was pretty cool, but the overall opinion I got (and of the 4 or 5 other people I talked too) was that it was a little bit too "artsy" for me. Nothing really grabbed me that hard. When we got there there was this woman singing and someone was looping her voice and playing it back (acid karoake I think it was). It was kind of interesting in the beginning, but after a while I lost interest, and it became a little annoying. There was this huge set up of shelves with all sorts of appliances on it (blenders, beaters, radios, 8 tracks, other things) that someone played. That was interesting for a while too, but I got the impression that he hadn't practiced or this was the first time it had been set up. He had some really cool funky/electro/weird/mechanical/wacked out grooves going, but then he'd kind of ruin it for me by playing something that didn't sound that good together. I think with a little practice, it would have sounded a lot better to me (maybe he did practice though). After this there was some good DJing and some interesting effects going on... We didn't stay the whole time and ended up leaving a lot earlier than I thought we had left (I thought it was 2:30, 3...it was 12:30!...but by the time we had left and figured out what time it was...we were too tired to go back). I head that after we left though, things got a bit better... -John Did someone say Squishy? \|/ / (@ @) ------------oOO--(_)--OOo-------------------------------------------------- ``` ''' http://hyperreal.com/~handi Squishy Info Line: (415) 566-0863, ext 4