WEEK 10 – Ocean of Sound

Summary, notable parts and reflection upon Chapter 3 from the book Ocean of Sound by David Toop

The chapter (titled: Crystal World) is mainly about the American composer and sax player La Monte Young and glimpses into fragments about his career, influences, interests and life.

The Theatre of Eternal was La Monte’s band of performing groups including colour and light installations by his collaborator Marian Zazzela and included Jon Hassell on the trumpet, Garrett List on the trombone, Angus Maclise on percussion and John Cale playing a modified viola. The ensemble’s early work was available to be heard on a tape from 1964: ‘Sunday Morning Blues’. These are the people who lived around in New York bohemian circles and led creative lives including working with bands like The Velvet Underground, The Primitives and The Falling Spikes. 

La Monte was mostly recording trance explorations influenced by rain as a rhythmic pattern. After some recorded tapes were sold so little of it survived to this day. La Monte Young’s music was only available on some limited copies of 7’’ Flexi-discs. Now in recent years some of his significant work has been made available on CDs even though they never reached the masses. 

In 1962 La Monte opens ‘Dream House’ which was a space where his music would be played on a constant and experiences. The idea of a permanent location gave room for the pieces to grow, develop and evolve a life on their own and these were all before electronics were used in the music. 

The chapter goes on some anecdotes about La Monte’s earlier inspirations from his time living at his grandmother’s house in Los Angeles, listening to power plants to his time at UCLA in musicology field. He listened a lot of different and eclectic recordings such as gagaku music, pygmy music and Balinese music doing his ethnomusicology minor at UCLA. By absorbing all of these musical information and collection of sounds in his head he draw inspiration and developed a unique take on music from early on.

Toop then goes on to talk about why he wanted to centre La Monte. Understanding La Monte was understanding of listening to yourself because he highlighted this discipline through his work. Toop says its almost like projecting your own nervous system against the background of sound which was a starting point of minimalism and influential names like Philip Glass that is so big today. 

a swarm of butterflies encountered on the ocean:

Toop here lists a couple of year specific events he have been to and describes them a little bit including 1968’s Middle Earth —a psychedelic club in Covent Garden, London— 1994’s Disobey Club where he saw Aphex Twin and Richard James play and an evening in 1960’s with Yoko Ono accompanied by electronic music composer Richard Maxfield who had a view to collaborate with La Monte on different series of new music concerts. 

Maxfield’s 1961 work Steam IV was a tape including processed sounds of steam recorded from radiators in his NYC apartment then manipulated which was inevitably inspired by David Lynch’s Eraserhead.

night music: 

In this passage Toop looks a bit deeper into Maxfield’s work and his usage of oscilloscopes with a tape recorder. He thinks it was similar to sounds of insects and birds that you would hear on a summer night. It was also a bit about highlighting sounds that are not really audible. Like editing down the sound of a heavy traffic so it starts sound link like sea waves and surfing. 

————

The chapter then goes on to touch Terry Riley known as a pioneer of minimal composing. Riley is originally a piano player that was inspired by the music of Bach, Debussy and Bartok. He wanted to always keep his art open to improvisation and making music on the spot. He was inspired by La Monte and John Coltrane and took up to play soprano. He becomes the a master in trance improvisation with his Persian Surgery Dervishes album recorded in 1971 and 1972 in Paris. The album consisted of recordings of an electric organ and a tape delay system. Riley’s influence places itself in electronic music when acts like Baby Ford and 808 State heavily uses repetitive and minimal piano chords in the Acid House recordings. 

Overall this chapter talks about minimalist composers such as Terry Riley and La Monte Young,  and their experimentations through the sounds that surrounded them, how their ideas came to life, which influences they took inspiration from and how it all developed. I enjoyed reading the chapter even though minimalism is the movement or sound I am least interested in music and production in general. It is really interesting to read and understand how paying attention to little sounds we are always surrounded by can trigger our conscious into developing new ideas fro them and turn them into pieces of our art. Being raised in a generation that mostly makes laptop music through midi processing and sampling , sometimes forget to appreciate the little sounds that are around me like birds, the sound of the wind, my surroundings and background and get drawn more into the loudest sound in the room possible. This chapter is inspiring me to pay attention a bit more to my surroundings and maybe do some recordings around. The part where the chapter talked about Maxfield’s idea of turning recordings into sounds that wouldn’t be audible like recording of a heavy traffic and processing it in a way so that it almost resembles a noise and sound of sea waves is inspiring and interesting. I have tried recording my surroundings once but I never actually experimented with them. Doing this reading, summarising and reflecting exercise is inspiring and motivating me to do so.

Toop, D. (2001) Ocean of Sound: Aether Talk, Ambient Sound and Imaginary Worlds: Ambient sound and radical listening in the age of communication. 5-star edition. London: Serpent’s Tail. 

Pink Floyd Exercise

Pink Floyd creates an enormous world of floating sounds, experimental usage of gear and a narrative that was never heard executed so beautifully and seamlessly before. I have always been so interested in concept albums that tells a story from beginning to the end. But what especially really interests me is when an album is continuous in its mixing and production. Where tracks melt into each other and some might reference earlier or later tracks as the album goes by. I remember listening to The Dark Side of the Moon when I was a kid and being so surprised by how a vocal sample and the melodic theme of Breathe (In The Air) later appeared on the track The Great Gig in the Sky. Even though I’ve encountered this type of a concept later in life with other albums such as Madonna’s Confessions on a Dancefloor (2005) and King Gizzard and the Lizzard Wizard’s Nonagon Infinity (2016) I was so surprised by how good this was done back in 1973. Alan Parsons using Studer A80 tape machines that can handle 16-tracks was able to do this with no digital or computer technology available at the time. Gilmour says this was achieved by snipping bits of tape of each track and sticking the ends together. This just shows how mixing can change everything when working on an album. 

Second thing I wanted to reflect upon while listening to The Dark Side of the Moon is sampling and the mystique concrete influences the album had, especially on the track ‘Money’. The band and the producers on the album tried so many amazing tricks to achieve and mix these things into the rock songs on this album. Nick Mason the famous drummer of the band states in one of the interviews about the album ‘I had drilled holes in old pennies and then threaded them onto strings; they gave one sound on the loop of seven’. As a producer who samples quite a lot in my music I was so inspired to record more objects in inconvenient ways when I got more into how the producers sampled some of the stuff for the album.

Lastly the usage of EMS Synthi on the album. It is a modular analog synthesiser that later came with a built-in sequencer and the band uses this heavily on the album. Overall in the album they create warm, wavy and dark sounds that accompanies all the songs throughout the album. EMS can be heard most prominently on the track On the Run. From the 0:19 mark throughout the song there is an ongoing sequenced synth line that creates a futuristic and space-age like vibe and the resonance, modulation and the speed of the sequenced synth line changes and moves around throughout the song which was really shocking to listen to when I first heard the album. This apparently came with experimentation as Gilmour came up with the melody and Roger Waters overhearing this came to play with it and created the sequence himself. 

As an electronic music producer I’m so impressed always with the production of The Dark Side of the Moon and how electronic of a record it really is even though its considered to be a canonical rock album.

MusicTech. (2015) Landmark Productions: Pink Floyd – The Dark Side of the Moon. Available at: https://musictech.com/guides/essential-guide/landmark-productions-pink-floyd-the-dark-side-of-the-moon/ (Accessed: 3 December 2022)

LouderSound. (2022) The making of Pink Floyd’s The Dark Side Of The Moon: lyrically bleak, musically bonkers and, somehow, the 4th best-selling album of all time. Available at: https://www.loudersound.com/features/the-making-of-pink-floyds-dark-side-of-the-moon (Accessed: 3 December 2022)

Derrett, M. (2018) The Use and Interpretation of Narrative Production Elements In Pink Floyd’s The Dark Side Of The Moon. Available at: https://blog.yorksj.ac.uk/musicproduction/2018/01/22/the-use-and-interpretation-of-narrative-production-elements-in-pink-floyds-the-dark-side-of-the-moon/ (Accessed: 3 December 2022)

WEEK 8 – Burial

British producer Burial is mostly known for his mysterious and ambient creations processing them through sampling and layering techniques. He is considered to be one of the masters of ‘hauntology’. A word used to describe music that has a specific familiar feeling and ambient of nostalgia with vintage found-sound montages incorporated within the music. When you listen to Burial’s iconic album ‘Untrue’ it almost makes you feel like walking in the empty and cold streets of a town that existed in the past, almost a ghost town now. 

Throughout the whole album Burial cements vocal samples all over the tracks with pitching them up and down to create an eerie feeling. These samples are mostly from covers of already existing songs. The vocal samples are used in a way where they only resemble human voice now and it almost sounds like ghosts or past voices are talking to us through thick cold air or inside of our minds. This of course was a desired approach in Burial’s music which is all about eerie and sorrowful nostalgic future. 

The synthesis in these tracks are really deep and mostly in minor scales. There always is a heavy and wet baseline underneath the tracks that carries beautiful pads and a prominent vinyl crack sound. This vinyl crack sound is interesting to me because its placed so carefully within the tracks. Sometimes it can be heard really loud, sometimes it’s deep down within the sound. The title track untrue opens with some samples that resembles door and feet walking to me. Which then proceeds to a nice breakbeat and vocal samples. 

In an interview Kobe9 the owner and founder of Hyperdub record label which Burial releases with tells that the album samples a lot of TV shows, video game original soundtracks and loads of FX sounds. The track Ghost Hardware might be one of the examples of these. While most of these songs include singing vocal samples dominantly, this track in particular features a VoiceOver talking voice that splits the track to a little silence before the looping chords hit again.

When the album is listened over and over again from start to finish it definitely makes you feel like you have entered this world Burial created which does not exist in the real world. By using familiar sounds and samples Burial creates a creepy but hauntingly beautiful new world to us. It sounds familiar but it is actually not. 

MacGregorreid, M. (2019) Hauntology; experienced through Burial’s ‘Untrue’. Available at: https://marymacgregorreid.wordpress.com/2019/04/26/hauntology-experienced-through-burials-untrue/comment-page-1/ (Accessed: 1 December 2022)