Music

PC//MM tracks, Pico Picante and Sessions

Saturday, October 1st, 2011

Put up a few PC//MM tracks from the last couple months.

From Pico Picante Vol. 2, in the basement of Good Life.  They have incredible bass down there.

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And a second Joey and I recorded, Sessions.  Here are B and C. They are much more cerebral.

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music, biking back

Monday, August 29th, 2011

I wrote a song tonight. Drum and vocals, and added samples from some tracks Joey sent me.

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repetevive // sketches

Thursday, January 20th, 2011

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on soundcloud

repetevive // sketches by whichlight

Moment of Clarity

Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

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Listen here if the above player doesn’t work

This piece was created for the 2010 Linux Audio Conference composition competition. The theme is 150 years of recording sound, to mark the anniversary of the oldest reproduced sound fragment “Au Claire de la Lune” dated from 1860:

The original 150-year old “Au Claire de la Lune” sample, found at www.firstsounds.org/sounds/scott.php can be used as a starting point… For the composition process the use of Linux and/or open source applications is strongly encouraged and appreciated.

The composition must be accompanied by a (short) description of the work and the use of software technology.

In Moment of Clarity, I sample the 150 year old recording and create a composition based on the narrative of experimentation, exploration and discovery.

Initially hearing the sample I thought to remove the noise, at which point I realized that the noise is an essential aspect of the recording, giving it history and character.  In the piece I explore reframing the noise of the sample, i.e. as a percussive sound, or a texture.

The manipulations of the sample were written in Super Collider, and the mixing was done in Audacity.  Both pieces of software are available for free download and are open source. I thought about what compositional tools were available with the open source software that would be much more difficult to achieve, with as much freedom, in commercial software.  I found this an exciting opportunity to explore open source music apps, and push myself to learn something new.

I followed a similar stereo sound particle theme that I explored with virtual hardware in emergence_voice and live analog synths the guests/ a vision/ to this river .  In this case I was able to execute the randomness and repetition of the particles through code, rather than twisting knobs live through software or hardware.  This allowed me to slice up the sample and collage it on a larger scale, and immediately feel what differences slight parameter shifts made.

The 2010 Linux Audio Conference will be held in Utrecht from May 1st through 4th.

update: Moment of Clarity was awarded first prize in the Linux Audio Conference composition competition.  The following is an except from what the jury from FirstSounds.org (who provided the audio sample) had to say

“I’m impressed with the distinctively percussive use the composition by Kawandeep Virdee makes of the source material. It is quite effective, and very different from the strategies found in other creative works I’ve heard using phonautogram samples, so it rates highly in terms of originality. Despite the thorough transformation of the sample, it still retains enough of its original timbral character — the “noisiness” — for the source to be recognizable and meaningful.”

The guests did not…/a vision of…/to this river…

Saturday, April 17th, 2010

Full Title: the guests did not care anyway/ a vision of ultimate cunt and come/ to this river, to this song of a thousand voices


This three part electronic composition was created as a multi-speaker installation and interactive performance for Electronic and Computer Music in 2008.  The piece contains eight unique simultaneous tracks, and the following is a mix onto stereo left and right.

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Listen

With respect to content,  I wanted to make it a retrospective piece, as it was my final performance in university.  The title comes from quotes from three books that coincided with phases and experiences in my development while at school.  The first part is from The Fountainhead, the second is from Howl, and the third is from Siddharta.

The composition is made up of eight tracks to be played simultaneously from different sources.  Form wise, I wanted to make a piece of music that one could actively explore in a space.  I wanted people to wander through a room and hear something different wherever they are. This piece was created for eight speakers, which were placed around the Dorothy Betts theater in GWU, surrounding the audience.

Performance

It was the last performance of the evening and the audience was invited to get up and wander around.  From behind the stage metal was struck during the first part and a red light filled the auditorium.  In the second part, the lights turned blue and an acoustic guitar player sat among the audience seating.  Glowsticks were handed out in a previous performance during the night, and they glowed as audience members wanders the aisles, the stage, or the seats.  For the drum part a synthesizer was played live alongside the speakers. In the final part a group of audience members settled sitting facing each other in a circle in the center of the stage.

Thanks

I am very grateful to those who collaborated and provided support during the piece

Recorded Performers: Karinne’ Hovnanian, Kiran Sarabu, Roshini Mahtani, William Gibb

Live Acoustic Guitar: Jeff Lamoureux

Speakers, setup, and guidance: Steve Hilmy

This was performed on May 1st 2008 as the final piece in the 2008 Electronic and Computer Music Concert in the Dorothy Betts Marvin Theatre in Washington D.C.

Fairy Tales

Thursday, April 1st, 2010

meme : fairy tales

1. a fairy is born

2. the straw, the coal, and the bean

Based on the German fairy tale documented by the Brother’s Grimm

3. father frost

Based on the Russian fairy tale included in Andrew Lang’s Yellow Fairy Book

4. the enchanted canary

Based on the French fairy tale included in Andrew Lang’s Red Fairy Book

5. the water demon

Based on one of the Czech fairy tales about Vodnik.

6. the rose

Based on the German fairy tale documented by the Brother’s Grimm.

7. the snake prince

Based on the Punjabi folk tale included in Andrew Lang’s Olive Fairy Book

8. the gold spinners

Based on the Estonian fairy tale included in Andrew Lang’s Blue Fairy Book

9. the fairy grotto

Based on the Chinese fairy tale documented by Wolfram Eberhard in Folk Tales of China.

About:

I devoted much of the summer of 2008 on researching fairy tales, writing lyrics and music, and compiling this album.  The initial inspiration came from the thought that some part of every interaction and conversation is imagined.  Each one of my friends and acquaintances is represented in my mind in some way, and to an extent my imagination extends who they are whether or not I am aware of this.  It is most evident in passionate relationships where a lover could be aggrandized to evoke the sense of a god or  demon far beyond their actual capabilities or intentions.

What if you just increased the degree of imagination you instilled in your reality?  In the people and things and experiences around you? What does it mean to do this?

Reading Calvino’s Invisible Cities and Anias Nin’s Children of the Albatross I kept thinking about the many deep realities that were created, rich in metaphor and detail–> rich in imagination. Months earlier I had read Die Rose (track 6 is based on this) in the Brothers Grimm and was struck by how such a short fairy tale could be so powerful yet enigmatic.  There was something more to this fairy tale for sure, there was some way to make sense of it.  Fairy tales seemed like a good route to explore as they present characters as simply good an evil.  The complexities of beings in reality removed to create simpler symbolic characters.

Having access to an electronic studio I began creating sonic environments for these fairy tales, and wrote lyrics based on folk tales from around the world.  I focused on using simple sounds created through subtractive synthesis using a cs-15 and arp 2600, as well as the Subtractor in Reason.

The thought occurred, what if these stories were actually real in our minds?  As in they provided the metaphors and symbols to understand interactions and experiences in a deeper and more meaningful way.  I wrote the first track as an introduction to frame the listeners experience, in the form of an invocation to these characters which exist only in thought, but could be real.  Traveling around India and New Mexico, I found places around the world where folk stories are very real to the local communities, the magic and imagination in them is instilled in the environment.

By the end of the summer I was recommended Hero with a Thousand Faces by Joseph Campbell and many ideas began to come together.  He describes the invariant characteristics of folk tales and mythologies from all around the world, and considers how the stories could be so similar in form if the regions are disconnected geographically.  He was a student of Jung, and includes many elements of Jungian framework of the unconscious in analyzing folk tales, connecting them to human growth and development, as well as providing collective meaning for a society.  In some part I found what I was looking for: in all of the examples people were understanding reality and experiences by actively creating meaning with imagination through the use of symbols and narrative.

Milly Beau Remix

Friday, January 22nd, 2010
Milly Beau song Milly's Thrash remix by MEME

Milly Beau song Milly's Thrash remix by MEME

I recently completed a remix of the track Milly’s Thrash by New York band Milly Beau.  I first met the members a few years ago in DC, and its incredible to see what they are making now.  The album will be put out next week by Greenhouse Records.

I am working on the aesthetic of simple positive energetic dance music as I first explored with Max in Love Love Ecstatic- in this case with sample and computer based music, rather than live performance and hardware.  The vocals for Milly’s Thrash was a great place to test out some of these musical patterns.

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emergence_voice

Sunday, November 29th, 2009
Tom Cramer Scent thumbnail

Tom Cramer - Scent

I am excited to create music for the Tom Cramer opening downtown at Floyds for First Thursday.  When I first saw the pieces I thought of a lot of the multiscale phenomena that occurs within complex systems.

For example, an individual ant alone will not last very long.  Even 100 ants will not be able to sustain themselves for very long.  However you take 1000 ants, or even 10,000 and a collective intelligence emerges. I had previously discussed many of these ideas in terms of non-hierarchical performance with Gary Wiseman when we collaborated on HEXAGON last spring, and he is curating this opening.

In Cramer’s works there is a homogeneity from a distance, with small variations, but as one gets closer it becomes evident that the immense number of simple patterns are all unique, slightly different.  To respond to this idea I created many simple synthesizers each controlled by a separate random arpeggiator and varied the rates, as well as other qualities of the sound.  Each individual sound is simple, and though their placement in pitch-space and time is random, a smoothness emerges as the complexity of the music increases i.e. as the rate of each arpegiattor increases, or as the notes begin to sonically merge within one other.

I will perform this music live in order to respond to the environment, Cramer’s work, and those wandering into the coffee shop to look at the art.

A sample of what may play at the opening:

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Thanks Erik Carter and Mariah Maines for additional vocals.

The opening is on December 3rd from 6pm-9pm at Floyd’s in Old Town: 118 NW Couch St Portland, OR 97209


Documenation: emergence_voice parts I, II, and III


emergence_pic_far

The following three tracks are from the Tom Cramer opening at Floyd’s. When listening to the pieces it is important to note that the tracks were created for the environment of the opening- so they would be accompanied by conversations, voices, and in a space one could move through. These recordings are the sounds alone, so they do not include the more social-interactive aspect that was present during the show.

Part I was recorded live. Part II was recorded before the show and played during intermission. Part III was recorded live. All together it is about two hours and 45 minutes long.

part I:

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part II:

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part III:

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The music was created using a generative process. The following is a simple schematic of the way the sounds were set up.

A diagram of how the sounds were created

A diagram of how the sounds were created

Five synthesizers and three voices were mapped to a keyboard notes D, E, F#, G, A, B, C. The voices were recorded live, without any manipulation in the mapping. An arpeggiator selected a note randomly. During the live performance the rate and resolution of the arpeggiator were affected, as well as the reverb, filter, pitch and ASDR of the synth and voice tracks.

Complex systems have multiple levels (scales) of activity. With the ant metaphor mentioned in the earlier post, there is the scale of an individual ant, and then there is the scale of the collective of ants. The individual ant appears to be moving randomly, but the collective of ants seems to move with purpose. From the complex systems perspective, a designer of a complex system must be aware of these levels and choose carefully what will be controlled and what will be left alone. If each of the individual ants were controlled externally and coerced to a certain action, it is unlikely that the same degree of complex collective intelligence would develop.

For this piece I chose to represent these concepts by what would be controlled live, and what was left to chance. I chose to leave the exact note choices in time to chance by defining the pitch-set to be P = {D, E, F#, G, A, B, C}, and leaving to chance the way in which these pitches would be arranged in space. Since the notes were chosen randomly, it is unlikely that any two performances of the piece will be exactly the same.

I chose to directly control the aspects of timbre, amplification, and effects of the sound live. This changed the quality of the sound. I also chose to control the rate at which the random notes were chosen, so the arpeggiator could be sped up to produce notes at a faster rate, or slowed down, to produce notes more slowly.

emergence_pic_close

In retrospect the show as a whole felt very successful. It was exciting to be playing in the dynamic environment of a coffee shop during an opening, and especially to meet Tom Cramer at the end of the show. He enjoyed the music immensely, and so it definitely felt like a successful collaboration between artist, musician and curator.

Photos by Shawn Patrick Higgins