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john roach

William Basinski - The Sound of Decay - 1 views

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    "Brian Eno once said that "repetition is a form of change," but Basinski's tape loops physically revise that and bring the idea back as "repetition is change.""
john roach

Ragnar Kjartansson, on Repeat | The New Yorker - 0 views

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    "How Ragnar Kjartansson turns repetition into art. "
john roach

Sculpting the Film Soundtrack | Sounding Out! - 2 views

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    "When Shane Carruth's film Upstream Color was released in 2013, critics described it in various ways-as a body horror film, a sci-fi thriller, a love story, and an art-house head-scratcher-but they all agreed that it was a film "not quite like any other". And while the film's cryptic imagery and non-linear editing account for most of the "what the hell?" reactions (see here for example), I argue that the reason for its distinctively hypnotic effect is Carruth's musical approach to the film's form: he organizes the images and sounds according to principles of music, including the use of repetition, rhythmic structuring, and antiphony."
john roach

How Do They Make It?! Music (Mammoth Beat Organ) - YouTube - 0 views

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    "The Dunning Underwood Mammoth Beat Organ is a modular, mechanical music contraption by Sam Underwood and Graham Dunning. Designed as a two-player, semi-autonomous musical instrument, it plays unusual, sometimes erratic compositions drawing on drone music, minimalist repetition and fairground organ techniques. h"
john roach

Rolf Julius: Songbook (2021) on Vimeo - 0 views

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    The Song Books by the sound artist Rolf Julius (born in 1939) consist of several bound sheets of Japanese paper, of which each sheet is marked by a different kind of spot.[1] These red or black spots are prints of the processed photographs of color pigment clusters. Julius had already used these types of pigment clusters in earlier sound art installations, combining them with different sounds. There were similar sheets in his Piano Piece No. 1 (1998), whose title indicates that they can be performed musically.[2] It would hardly be possible to detect this solely on the basis of their visual form. According to Erhard Karkoschka, Julius's musical graphics can therefore be classified as pure musical graphics, that is, as musical graphics without a staff.[3] It must above all be stressed that musical graphics constitute individual solutions to problems with notation as perceived by an artist, and therefore stand out due to their different relationship to conventional notation. When interpreting musical graphics with so few parameters, which is the case for the Song Books, the performers have to develop a convincing translation for the ambiguous parameters. In the Song Books, the repetition of a similar form-in this case, the various spots-directs the performer's gaze toward minimal differences, such as the different sizes or fraying of the spots,[4] which are then translated into sound.
john roach

Repetition can make sounds into music -- ScienceDaily - 0 views

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    "Water dripping. A shovel scraping across rock. These sounds don't seem very musical. Yet new research at the University of Arkansas shows that repeating snippets of environmental sounds can make them sound like music."
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