Wednesday, December 28, 2011

TKDF Reports Live News (#77)

Source here. Originally broadcast on October 9, 1997.

80% of any blog is apologizing for infrequent posting, so I'll forgo that there and hope you have us in your automatic reader and this just pops up as a pleasant surprise. I'll try and knock out a few of these over the break, and send them out in measured fashion.

This is sample-heavy, and somewhat localized to the at-the-time North Carolina home of the show. These are not intrinsically bad things. Some of the less-local news is very newsworthy, and in particular snippits of Negativland's legal troubles feature occasionally. Percussive Morse Code compliments robotic telex.
  1. To Protect and to Serve a Voice Synthesizer
  2. A lack of crowd control
  3. Absinthe of Malice (Nectar of the Goths)
  4. News, Reported
  5. This is Yhaoo News.
  6. Everybody Quiet!
  7. Dean Smith is Stepping Down
  8. Unabombermultiplex.
  9. The History of Howland Island
  10. The Tape Fell Into the Wrong Hands
  11. Students and Alumni
  12. Junior Rodeo Storm Warning
  13. We now return to our reporter in North Carolina.

Saturday, November 26, 2011

Another Hiatus Heard From

Just to say I'll be posting a new show this weekend. Been busy job hunting, but look for another show post tomorrow. Sorry about the wait.

Sunday, October 16, 2011

Surprise Visitor (Part 1) (#48)

Apologies for that long gap there in posting. This show was originally broadcast on March 27th, 1997. Show source found here.

Though it's called "Part One", this recording has two semi-distinct halves. It starts like a solo session, as taking a long time to get to spastic, hyperactive, or call-and-response-y stages. Shows took place pretty late at night, and you had to really be raring to go to pull off a full two-three hour shift of solid collage and manipulation that felt engaging and interested. My own tendencies, when left to myself, were towards droning, hypnotic fields and slabs of sound. As soon as a second person was involved and playing things alongside me, an interaction began to happen, and this often sounds either more disjointed, or, when it worked really well, like a conversation or give-and-take. This show's first half doesn't get very far past looped guitar buzzes, de-contextualized sound effects--motorboats, welding, trashcans--and way too much Clown Party.

Once the second side of the Part 1 tape begins around the 45 minute mark, things brighten up a little bit, with more vocal fragments, stop-and-start pacing, and twitchy turntable work. It jumps in and out of active and passive modes, ending quite ephemerally. "Surprise Visitor", in this case, could have meant someone who distracted me/us from starting the show off brightly, but I expect it refers to my starting the show alone, and then some collaborator appears to help out for a bit.
  1. By "industrial" we mean heavy industry
  2. Dry/unemotional funk breakdown
  3. Hypnosis using effect pedals
  4. I can't get my drum circle started
  5. Clown Party with a knife fight, maybe
  6. Where is the "bludgeoning" sample when we need it?
  7. German murmurs, vocal deconstruction
  8. Jud jud jud jud
  9. Everyone leaves the room
  10. Sinister roar and approaching guitar
  11. It's Monk time
  12. Confused computer jazz
  13. Feathered shivering

Sunday, July 17, 2011

Music and Noise, Pt. 2 (#20)

Originally broadcast on October 5, 1996, and show source found here.

I feel my role for these programs now is part historian and interpreter, and sometimes apologist. I recount the facts and details about the original show and how it was made, I provide context from the intents and environments at that time, and I also admit when the shows fail to live up to their potential. This one feels at times like it needs apologizing for, with dead-air minutes and interminable stretches of unpleasant scrapings.

This is, however, what this show is also fundamentally about: pointing out the subjectivity of sound appreciation and attempting to sow seeds in the extreme outer corners of the possible aural field. Music is sometimes differentiated from noise as being organized or desired sound. But putting Music and Noise on a linear axis varying in degrees of Organization or Desirability does not address the subjective nature of those factors. Repetitive factory sounds, clumsy guitar dismemberment, slap funk bass, scrambled tape feedback, reverberating vocal grumbles as found within this show are all equally organized/disorganized, or desirable/undesirable based wholly upon the listener's sensibilities.

As the second of a two-show theme, this recording captured myself, possibly alone at the controls, challenging my future self's definitions and acceptance of music versus noise, contrived versus accidental, and beautiful versus unlistenable in the context of radio programming. I won't bore you how I like it now, but I find it still makes me think, which I count as a kind of success.
  1. Dot matrix guitar
  2. Guitarpentry
  3. 1959 guitar lessons with 3-minute break
  4. Hi and lo white noise
  5. Cave flautism
  6. Caveman at open mic night
  7. Actual beats and basslines
  8. Jajouka versus breakaway tape machine
  9. Fire engines in freefall
  10. Weird noise club next door
  11. Behemoth speaking slowly
  12. More cave guitars with Anton LaVey
  13. Relentless house paranoia

Thursday, July 7, 2011

Beatleshow 2 (#73)

Show source here. Originally broadcast on September 11, 1997. This was the second of two successful-seeming shows dedicated to the Beatles and their celebrity.

Hopefully, this show can't be mistaken for a fully-earnest Beatlish tribute, due to the constant (mis)handling and sabotage of playing anything just as it is. This program presents a uniformly blended mishmash of confused and entertaining shreds from the Fab Four's commercial discography, press interviews, post-Beatle careers, and subsequent oddball or eccentric Beatles covers. As soon as a song appears recognizable, an unseen hand wrenches it into parody or dissonance.

I am reviewing this show without the benefit of the tape case or any notes, but I know that several tapes existed in the aftermath of the Beatle-shows, some of which were post-produced edits, and so this one may have been trimmed from raw broadcast for the most interesting bits. In this state, it feels pretty organically evolved.

Also, I note another brief appearance partway through of a call-in contribution, a friend playing tapes of more scrambled interviews over the phone lines. These calls happened more often without success than with it, so it feels like a small triumph to hear it working here.
  1. Strawberry cellos forever
  2. Long & winding bad trip
  3. Sobbing, tearing hair
  4. I'm pretty sure you didn't bury Paul
  5. My funny birthday drums
  6. Helter Skelter = Merzbow ÷ Melvins
  7. Help, help, help
  8. Persistent and annoying organ pulse
  9. Ringo the dog presents the Rutles
  10. How big are they?
  11. All about the money
  12. Emperor Lennon is insulted
  13. Sha la la la la. La?
This show's playlist.