18 sounds of Placard
Aug. 9th, 2004 11:57 am
(Photo: Jean Snow)
Yoyogi Park is cacophonous. Here's a list of some of the things that could be heard there while the Placard festival was happening this weekend:
Saturday
1. Rain. The Yoyogi Park part of the concert was cancelled and musicians were sent to a penthouse in Aoyama instead. We got there at 7pm hoping to hear Midori's set, but everybody was still setting up the gear. Later it turned out that Midori had been so tired by the time she'd walked from Yoyogi to Aoyama that she'd just gone home instead of playing. Luckily our trip wasn't wasted: next door was Comme Meets Colette, with an exhibition of the work of Genevieve Gauckler which matched Placard's playful spirit and its Paris connections.
Sunday
Sunday was sunny. The park was filled with the following sounds, in descending order of magnitude:
1. Pop basslines from an idol talent show in the nearby NHK Hall.
2. Semis whirring away as if their life depended on it.
3. A rock band in the Yoyogi bandstand.
4. The sound of the small Placard generator hidden behind the Placard tree, supplying electricity for computers and video monitors.
5. Crows cawing.
6. People practising musical instruments too loud to be played in their thin-walled apartments.
7. Some shockingly unambitious techno music which sounded like The Orb circa 1991.
8. Cheerful conversations in Japanese and English.
9. Not-so-distant fireworks.
10. The sound of Ludo and Valerie's baby Iannis (that's Iannis as in 'Iannis Xenakis') toddling and laughing.
11. Mosquitos flying towards human flesh.
12. Heaphone spill from Placard -- techno music which sounds like The Orb circa 1991. (Just kidding, guys!)
13. The high frequency cries of bats circling above the trees.
14. The sound of fire being juggled.
15. The sound of ants creeping through the grass and up my trouser leg.
16. The sound of my hard drive having trouble playing iTunes mp3s and Quicktime mp3s at the same time.
Oh, and mustn't forget:
17. The history-making sound of Jean Snow blogging. What does blogging sound like? Well, sort of ccccchhhhhrrrrrrryyyyyyyyyvvvvvvvvccccchhhhhhhkkkkk....
Sunday in Yoyogi
Date: 2004-08-08 11:02 pm (UTC)Re: Sunday in Yoyogi
Date: 2004-08-09 10:36 am (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2004-08-09 01:48 am (UTC)More photos of Placard Yoyogi
Date: 2004-08-09 10:29 am (UTC)Re: More photos of Placard Yoyogi
Date: 2004-08-09 10:49 am (UTC)Re: More photos of Placard Yoyogi
Date: 2004-08-09 03:20 pm (UTC)New noodlings from another correspondent in Japan: Ian Masters
Date: 2004-08-10 07:55 am (UTC)http://www.eat78rpm.co.uk/spoons/you-need-a-heart-to-b.mp3
Vice versa?
Date: 2004-08-09 01:29 pm (UTC)http://www.imomus.com/ongatekeepers.html
"Irony can only go so far. In the end, even recontextualised fascism is still fascism."
Re: Vice versa?
Date: 2004-08-09 03:56 pm (UTC)Re: Vice versa?
Date: 2004-08-09 04:07 pm (UTC)My Vice article on Laptop Girls (http://www.viceland.com/issues_au/v1n7/htdocs/leaf.php) looked at precisely this question and concluded that it would be silly to like the new feminine, organic electronica on labels like Leaf because it's close to nature (or, worse, because women are).
Re: Vice versa?
Date: 2004-08-09 10:30 pm (UTC)the artificial character of an iPod by listening to mp3s
while lying under a tree? What about when reading a book
under the same tree?
Perhaps it's a matter of form factors and that even
the notebook format recalls the "office gesture" of
laptop performance?
Would something like the Vaio U series (http://www.jp.sonystyle.com/Style-a/Product/U/index.html) be better suited for this
kind of environment?
Re: Vice versa?
Date: 2004-08-09 10:34 pm (UTC)Sir Issac may have something to say about this, I'd wager (What inspirations might come should a Powerbook land upon our craniums? Perhaps the electrons released might whisper the unified theory in our ears out of pity?)
Looked like a lovely event, in any case; it is gratifying to see technology used to such an enchanting end.
W
is personal being authentic?
Date: 2004-08-10 08:42 am (UTC)It would be fun to have you and PJ Harvey discuss these things. Who's keepin' it real? Perhaps she would have a different take on it given the proper context. It may just be that the Mississippi delta, or wherever she's getting her inspiration from, is her parallell world...?
fun night
Date: 2004-08-16 06:50 am (UTC)Are you going to sing at the event in Shimokitazawa? I would really love to see you perform live!
Please say "hi" to Hisae. She was so sweet to let me sit with her.