Sunday, June 26, 2011

Tape Loop Bureaucrat (#68)

Source here. Originally recorded on August 7th, 1997.

Another short one and another skipped week. This summer is shaping up to not shape up at all. Still, I care about each one (both) of you and I'm putting in the time. The title implies an oppressive, "normalizing" regime holding court over an army of drones. This moves slowly, so titling was annoyingly hard.
  1. Monster Moment
  2. Don't go in the Master Control Room!
  3. The bugs in the background are chewing on me
  4. Slowly ground down
  5. Spin Cycle
  6. Gravel Driveway
  7. Code Talker
  8. Falling Apart
  9. Scratching the Surface
  10. Turning the Crank
  11. The Yo-Yo Makes It Work
  12. Elliptical Sander
  13. Background Murmur Metal Recap
Added by IanF-R: Purely provenance side-note: this show is the next-generation descendent of the previously posted show "Tape Loop Marxist". Is it more distributed, less political, than its parent? Is it half-speed for half as long? I can hardly say. One listener's boredom is another's catharsis.

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Drones (#66)

Source here. Originally recorded on July 24th, 1997.

I could say I've been on "Summer Hiatus" and to a certain extent (except for the summer part) that's true. The Big Lazies have gotten to me the past two weekends (in a ROW), and we've all suffered as a result.

Drone music does nothing to shake off the lazy feeling, even enhancing it if you play your cards right. Given that, it's amazing that this is such a short bit. With the abrupt start, it's probably one we started recording somewhere in the middle, or accidentally forgot to flip the tape, or something like that as the music overtook us. This is all muddy (in the good way) resonant ringing drone, and pretty fantastic at that.
  1. Gurgle gurgle gurgle puke
  2. The spins with a catchy beat
  3. Interstellar Autobahn
  4. Wrung out all wrong
  5. Stop with the shouting!
  6. It's thunderous, but it's not applause
  7. The drill bottoms out
  8. Jimmy Carter Noir
  9. Flying away on a robot intermodulator
  10. Reference tone manipulation
  11. Quiet water-powered xylophone
  12. Chewy reverb harmonium sound
  13. Phone tone lone drone

Sunday, May 15, 2011

Radio Radio (#64)

Source here. Originally recoded on July 10th, 1997.

This is all about making radio while making radio. There is all sorts of radio theater gaggery going on here, with lots of audio sound effects and wonky juxtaposition. It strikes me now that we may be in the last days of live radio, or that live radio is really the only kind of radio left worth listening to.

With MP3 players / Last FM / Pandora on your phone / Satellite radio providing all sorts of different ways to listen to what you want to hear while getting introduced to new stuff you might want to hear; live radio, and possibly talk radio, are the only reasons one might spin the tuner dial and check out what's coming over the airwaves.

I've flirted with the idea of doing this sort of show again, except over the Internet, but the problem is the temporally shared experience lends its own energy (and I'm using this in the non-scientific way) to a performance such as this. I'm not saying we could tell if people were listening or not. It was more subtle than that, and losing that ineffableness is one of the things that keeps me awake at night. You can't measure it, but you know when it's gone.
  1. Steve Allen's large salami
  2. Come in, North Pole
  3. Let's go back to the year 1942
  4. Mexican Radio
  5. Echo Sonata
  6. Never Enough Loop
  7. Never Enough Loop (reprise)
  8. 1000 Vices
  9. Minor Mellow Moment
  10. I'm only getting noise
  11. ORIGINAL CREAM
  12. The Eagle Has Landed, Man
  13. End Transmission

Saturday, May 7, 2011

ROBOT RADIO (#59)

Source here. Originally recorded on June 5th, 1997.

First off I must profusely apologize for the missed weekend. I spent the whole weekend (and I mean the whole weekend and almost every bit of it. I just finished languishing laundry. That is how busy it is) at a computer security / hacker conference. The weather was wonderful and I saw not a bit of it (except when it was dark out).

THIS IS OUR ROBOT SHOW. Meaning we stick with music and sounds that either directly or indirectly reference robots. Lots of computer noise, mechanical noise, synthesizers of voice and music. A few robot/robot inspired bands. NO ACTUAL ROBOTS WERE IN THE STUDIO. We did get out the aluminum foil and make little hats, though.

The first 26 minutes are filled with a ping-pong noise that gets annoying even to me, which might have been the initial point. There is stuff that goes on around it, but after a while THAT IS ALL YOU HEAR. Then there is real ping-pong for 20 minutes or so later on.
  1. Every Robot Show Must Start With Kraftwerk
  2. Ping Pong or Radar?
  3. A Murmur of Droids
  4. Desperately trying to drown out the pinging with early synthesizer music
  5. Starting to count in German now
  6. Real actual ping pong now.
  7. Do not tell me this real ping pong lasts the rest of the show
  8. INCOMING ROBOT DATA TRANSMISSION
  9. The grandfather clock is reporting in
  10. Wait, Circus?
  11. Mellow Lounge Robot Time Interrupted
  12. The Big Arpeggiated Reveal
  13. Ending with Disque 9

Sunday, April 17, 2011

What Will They Try Next? (#47)

Source here. Originally recorded on March 20, 1997.

The first 15 minutes or so end up featuring some really aggravating squeaky distorted murmuring. I'm not sure if this was us or some found recording, but please do speed past that part into much more interesting stuff. Not so many vocals in this one, but a good mix of hi and lo fi awaits the intrepid listener.
  1. Hipster or Eastern European?
  2. Transmission from the planet dorkwad
  3. Bells and Peals
  4. We're in my house goofing on the four track come on over
  5. A Confusing Wall
  6. A very very white dub
  7. Overwrought Synthesizer Theme
  8. The numbing isn't working
  9. The cartoon orchestra performs the hits
  10. Burroughs and Clavinova
  11. Shoot the piano player, please
  12. Today is going to be the day for saxophones
  13. Hands on the home row