Monthly Archives: October 2020

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Ernste music

Here is some further listening from today’s class.

My band from college was called “Milk of Amnesia”. We performed primarily in the MidWest (Chicago, Minneapolis, Madison, Milwaukee) where all three of the band members went to college together (UW-Madison). The song excerpt I shared in class today from “Kamikaze Airplane” can be heard again here: Kamikaze Airplane.

My piece for solo guitar and electronics, Roses Don’t Need Perfume, uses sounds of the guitar as an electronic backdrop for a live solo guitar part. All electronic sounds are “acoustic”, i.e. they are derived from guitar. You can hear the recording from the commercial CD, Draw the Strings Tight–which I engineered myself here in Barnes Hall–on my website. A score is there also, or linked here.

The piece is long (15 minutes), so I encourage you to listen to the first 3 minutes (Movement #1, first page of the score) only.

Here, too, since I mentioned this method in class previously, is an image from that recording showing the microphone placement…two near mics (12th fret, behind the sound hole) and a third large diaphragm condenser mic further away).

The second piece I played, called The Awful Grace, is based on a commemorative sculpture in Indianapolis, IN, where on the night of MLK’s assassination, Robert Kennedy announced the terrible news to a large crow, speaking from the back of a pickup truck. 

With that speech, Kennedy calmed his audience from rioting, channeling his own experience losing his brother, JFK, who was assassinated 5 years earlier in 1963. Partway through, he quotes Aeschylus … lines that would late appear on his own gravestone after his own sad assassination just months later.

“Even in our sleep, pain which cannot forget falls drop by drop upon the heart, until, in our own despair, against our will, comes wisdom through the awful grace of God.” – Aeschylus

My central ideal with this piece was to channel that mutual empathy, which seemed to me important to our current moment.

My piece is for viola, percussion, and unmanned piano. The piano is used as a resonator (speakers placed inside and under) as well as being played *inside* by the percussions (fingers, sticks, mallets, his ringed finger, eBows).

In the excerpt you will hear, the first part is made up of these “inside the piano” sounds. Then you’ll hear Robert Kennedy’s voice, from his April 4th 1968 recitation of the Aeschylus, resonated into the piano. The voice is circulated back to the piano repeatedly (feedback) to enhance the frequencies of the voice (those “partials” we’ve been talking about) as they make the piano strings ring sympathetically. To hear this effect yourself, find a piano, put down the pedal, and shout into it! Finally, in the last section, the percussionist uses the eBows to play the strings directly, creating a singing melody. The drone sound in the background is derived from MLK’s voice, from his last speech (“I’ve Been to the Mountaintop”), given the day before his death. It’s specifically derived from the word, “see” in the line:

“…only when it is dark enough, can you see the stars”.

My Project 1

Hey Everyone,

This is what I did for my project 1, looking forward to listening to whoever also posts there’s. If anyone has any comments/questions about my project, feel free to reach out to me. Always happy to chat with others and bounce ideas off each other.Beware of Dog.wav

P.S. As with most people’s tracks, mine sounds way better over headphones/earbuds rather than the regular cpu’s speakers, so keep that in mind.

Free Ableton Live Lite

Hi all,

It looks like Ableton Live Lite is free if you make a (free) account on Splice.

https://splice.com/daws/38929163-live-10-lite-vst-by-ableton

 

Assignment 3: Melissa Gao

I listened to and analyzed one of my favorite songs, Paris in the Rain. It’s about the euphoric feelings of being young, in love and spontaneous in a foreign city. It’s a chill, vibey pop song off Lauv’s debut album, which is about the progression of someone falling into, being in and falling out of a relationship. The song is the epitome of his slower, stripped-down, electro-pop style. Lauv is an up-and-coming indie artist and songwriter who you might recognize as the guy who sang “I Like Me Better”. I like his music because it’s somehow relaxed, hype and emotional at the same time. I would recommend his collab with blackbear, “if i were u”, “Make It Right” with BTS, and “Feelings” for further listening.

Lauv also released a short video explaining how he made Paris in the Rain. I think it’s interesting to hear an artist talk about their creative process and how the song came together.

lgw33 assignment 3

I figured I’d share my assignment 3 since I wanted to finish it early and I really like this song. The album is about the frontman’s past problems with addiction and subsequent disillusionment with drug use. This song, Partners in Crime, is about the emptiness of relationships that stem primarily from a common interest in drugs.

Assignment 3

 

 

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