imomus: (Default)
[personal profile] imomus


Toog caught the train from Paris to Berlin this weekend to sign to Karaoke Kalk, the esteemed boutique label and home of cute formalists like Takeo Toyama. On Monday Toog was in Kreuzberg mastering his new album 'Lou Etendue', a somewhat Gainsbourgian homage to Asia Argento produced by Digiki.

Apart from clocking the Amplify festival with its rustling, crackling and scuffling sounds, we also admired the trous de balle at the Pergamon Museum (where an archeologist from Oakland asked us both for autographs!), lunched with my sister, whose boyfriend is in Berlin shooting production stills on the new film from Fernando (City of God) Meirelles, looked at photos of Trabants and Hitler in the new I.M. Pei-designed Deutsches Historisches Museum (they currently have a nice show tracing the history of German advertising), caught an intimate turntable performance by Otomo Yoshihide at the Neurotitan record store and gallery in Mitte, hung out with Donna Summer (aka WFMU's Jason Forrest; he's just found a big apartment in Mitte and plans to stay here in Berlin for several months), saw new East European art at Kunst-Werke and the tail end of the Designmai exhibition, as well as an Anne Laplantine turntable installation, again at Neurotitan.

By the way, congratulations to Anne for the honorary mention she gets for her Hamburg album in the 2004 Ars Electronica prize list!

the a.laplantine technique

Date: 2004-05-19 04:56 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dopplerivets.livejournal.com
oh yeah... in the pic. where anne is mixing(?) on the dex'. is she playing records with layers of textures and tones of her own material she has had pressed separately to vinyl, with locked grooves, maybe? this is something i have always wanted to try, on my modified fischer prices but haven't figured it out-about getting discs made in such limited pressings-yet. i read a blurb, a super-long time ago, in Wallpaper(i think), about a personalized etching device and assumed i would always be way too poor(poor me) to afford such a luxury, i guess. curious to know how it can go.

Re: the a.laplantine technique

Date: 2004-05-19 09:25 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] theilybinilwys.livejournal.com
There is a guy in New Zealand, Richard King, who hand-cuts vinyl at a very reasonable price. Since he does them individually, you can get, like 10 made, or probably 1 if you ask nice and pay him. And since they're made of acetate test disks, they're all clear, and you can get weird 9 inch triangles or whatever. But it's cheap, since there's no metal master setup fee.

Catch is, he's not on the internet; you have to call, write, or fax him and ask him. I think someone publishes his price guide online; if you search for Richard King Records New Zealand on Google, it's pretty easy to find.

Re: the a.laplantine technique

Date: 2004-05-20 07:08 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Could a similar thing be done more cheaply by burning sections to a series of CDRs then playing them on a series of boom-boxes, switched to single track repeat. Might not work the same as using vinyl - preseumably, all Cd players will have a slight sound gap as they whizz from the end of the track back to the beginning, whereas I assume groove-locked vinyl would play continuously (?). I suppose it would be kind of similar to the Flaming Lips 4CD Zaireeka? Whenever I've set that up, the accidents involved in coordinating 4 cd players are always more interesting than when it plays right!

(no subject)

Date: 2004-05-20 11:04 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] dopplerivets.livejournal.com
i agree. the accidental,(paraphrased) is a way of putting parameters (or parentheses) around the difference between what is ideally intentended and what is perceived contingently(the way things work, or don't, as it happens). i used to make use of this strategy(oblique?)too. in the time before big science(samplers and cdr's) or at least my awareness of it/(them), i used to make 'audio collages' out of recorded radio static and other random tidbits put to tape(household appliances, interceptions of neighbors telephone conversations by my radio shack walkie talkies, candy bars etc.) then i would chop it all up 'staccato style' making full use of start/stop/pause button technology and loop it by dubbing and redubbing between machines(a walkman and double sided tape deck patched together to work like an amateurish multitracker)all the while adding more and more stuff into the mix. over time the original and consequent layers would be drowned out by endless overdubbing, but it thrilled me to think that they were still there somewhere, inaudably but subliminally affecting the way it sounded(i had this idea about the attractive nature of an initial magnetic imprinting being the sonic equivalent of a basement in a building). a piece wasn't something i finished and then became ready to be listened to, it was just something i was always doing(we call this "the process" now, i guess.)only having a few cassetes and no money helped me keep my artistic integrity as a kid. when i got my first c.d. player, i tried to find the limits of it's musical capabilities too(recording a song onto tape and then using two sets of speakers to 'dopple' the sound and cause chorused rounds(or by putting pressure on the tape wheel, messing with the pitch by slowing it all down). my favorite thing was using a dry erase pen to make tiny markings on 'spooky sounds' and intrument sample c.d.'s causing them to skip and then isolating the good bits and copying them. i'm still doing pretty much the same things as when i was like six. i keep making the same mistakes, i just don't have as many or as good of ideas as i did then. but, iv'e got fancier equipment.
From: [identity profile] dopplerivets.livejournal.com
what about wax cylinders? do you know where i can get any? for a song. or a steal? or just flat out steal them... i have a thing for, still extant,but outdated modes of socio-cultural rep.s in replication and the new uses they can be put to too(not as a means of traditional preservation or as a retro ruse, but because the past and ignored before are always new and exciting to me). the thing i have about records, among other things,is their plasticity. i mean, they can be read so many different ways and mean so many things. sending mixed messages; as digitally encoded information copied onto analogue technology is(in turn) handled-once(or twice)again- in digital fashion. maybe, tangibility is thought of simply and illusively as being a more understandable and manipulatable way of interfacing, which plays to certain human sensibilities. i have a soft spot for tactility (it's an itch i can't scratch, really) and it is so much fun to touch stuff. plus, it would be just like me to think that vinyl discs are big and awkward and toylike or small and fragile and ummnnn...toylike. perfect for funktioning symbolically as cyclical symbols(form is essential)in a piece of performance artificing called 'playing at being a d.j. (shamen/showman: there are cults built up around these things)'. i also like the idea of unloading the 'ritualistic' 'gear' out of an oversized lidded box and spread out onto the floor.

Profile

imomus: (Default)
imomus

February 2010

S M T W T F S
  1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10111213
14151617181920
21222324252627
28      

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags