Out now on pro-duped CDr, this newest Noise Improvisation by Dry Eyes “is intended to be mindblowing”.
Month: July 2017
A CONVERSATION WITH by Wirephobia released!
Today we have released A CONVERSATION WITH, the newest noise by Wirephobia! Featuring distorted conversations and noise, this one is a head-scratcher, but ultimately quite a rewarding listen!
A CONVERSATION WITH Wirephobia
This post is not to display an actual conversation with Wirephobia, but to announce the impending release of an album on CDr called “A CONVERSATION WITH Wirephobia”, which is by Kurdistani noise artist Wirephobia and should be an interesting listen for everyone involved. Barring calamities, it should be released within the week!
Dry Eyes’ Noise Improvisations 0022 and 0023 released on pro-duped CDr
Packaged in a shrink wrapped jewel case with inserts, Dry Eyes’ Noise Improvisation 0022- “Kitchen Clatter” and Noise Improvisation 0023- “Object Distortion” have been released. I consider these to be the best Improvisations yet! Get both on Siccum Records’ Bandcamp.
Welcome to the new Siccum Records blog
Dry Eyes speaking here. This is the second Siccum Records blog (the previous one was on Blogger.) This one has its own hosting, domain, and uses WordPress, and thus is potentially much more robust. The previous posts from the Blogger blog have been copied and pasted over to this one (with some modifications), so that they are not disconnected from this blog.
This blog looks sort of similar to the previous blog, and that’s intentional. I guess you could say that its a combination of brutalist and minimalist design that puts function far over form. I’m going to explore what’s available with WordPress plugins to see how the site can be enhanced, but expect similar aesthetics.
If it turns out to be viable, Siccum Records may sell releases on this site. For now go to the Siccum Records Bandcamp page at http://siccumrecords.bandcamp.com/
Interview with diigitae
Dry Eyes’ musique concrète and photography
Pierre Schaeffer recorded sounds such as trains and used tape manipulations and various other techniques to make new sounds. This kind of treatment of real life noises to make music is the essence of musique concrète.
While the technology of the 1940s was limited in what could be done in terms of sound manipulation, there has been a continuous stream of advances in sound manipulation techniques. In our current time, all or most of these effects are available as software which we can use in robust music-making programs called DAWs or “Digital Audio Workstations”.
Noise musicians from the late 1970s and the early 1980s developed a technique of using a feedback loop which was fed through many effects in sequence which were being constantly manipulated to create different sounds. This “playing the effects as instruments” turns the studio itself into an instrument, with various knobs, sliders, and switches creating Noise Music. Many people, who could not afford a full-fledged studio, found other means of creating this kind of music using, for instance, guitar effect pedals and recorded it to audio-cassette. Through the tape trading scene of the 1980s, an underground form of noise music was born.
Instead of creating a feedback loop, I feed actual, recorded sounds into a stream of effects and use a MIDI controller attached to a computer running a DAW to manipulate the sounds in real time. This is not a new technique, but it is the one which I have chosen for Dry Eyes’ Noise Improvisations, as I think it provides one with the ability to playback recorded sounds on the one hand, and if one creates a wall of sound by playing many sounds at once, this undulating, multi-rhythmic layer of noise can be fed into a chain of effects which offers many possibilities for interesting sounds.
My noise music uses sounds that are easily produced in the universe. It is a music of real life, and to me the effects are like different perspectives on life. This brings me to the other aspect of Dry Eyes, which is photography.
Photography has some similarities to musique concrète. All of my photos are black and white, so if the photo is the “sample” of real life, black and white is the “tape manipulation” or “effect” that has been applied to it. While I do not usually create the things that I photograph, the way that I capture them is my own.
My photography is black and white because this to me strips objects down to a more primitive, less vibrant essence. It shows the object as it is, but in a different way. I think that black and white can be used to show power relations and contrasts between different dualities in life if one is clever in what they show in a photograph.
Photography more directly shows the real world than musique concrète, but as artforms they both use the raw material of the universe more directly than say, traditional music or painting. My music and photography as Dry Eyes, aims to show the beauty in the mundane, and to work with it to create interesting things.
Dry Eyes’ music and photography at: https://dryeyes.bandcamp.com/
Also, many more photographs on Twitter at http://twitter.com/DryEyes4096/
The Noise Improvisations of Dry Eyes
I’d like to talk about the Noise Improvisations that are released frequently by me. Currently, there are 21 of these noise improvisations. Except for the white noise improvisation, these are all made by recording short sounds (around 10 seconds usually), then looping and crossfading them. This creates for each sample a continuous stream of sound, which is played back with other sounds which are given the same treatment. Then, in real time, the volumes of the samples are manipulated, creating different combinations of noises.
VST effects are applied to the stream of sound created, making for different soundscapes which evoke different mental states when listened to. Sometimes the sound is a calming drone, at other times, it can be quite harsh. Many rhythms play independently of each other, just like the rhythms of every day Real Life.
Often I find that when a copious amount of reverb is applied to the mess of sound, it creates what sounds like a train rushing through a tunnel. To me, this sound is hypnotizing, and I use this effect quite a bit.
This kind of musique concrète is for me a celebration of mundane things. The sounds are for the most part created using mundane objects, and I try to make each object shine in a beautiful way through sound manipulation. Making this music is very enjoyable because it turns anything that makes sound in the environment around me into a potential musical instrument that can be recorded.
Noise music to me is a way to make any sound beautiful; it is to me music, not “just” noise, or not “noise not music”. Echoing the predictions of the Italian Futurists, modern technology has enabled us to turn any sound into music, and to me, noise is the future of music in this respect. I prefer to use mundane sounds, but noise is so great because literally anything can be used, and this freedom is a great thing for music.
If you listen closely, the universe is playing a noise performance to you; appreciating this and other noises leads to the appreciation of beauty in what actually exists in real life. In this respect, a noise album is like an extension of what the universe already does, and this is a great thing, in my view.
Anyways, if you want to hear my Noise Improvisations, check them out at http://dryeyes.bandcamp.com/
Also, check out the black and white photograph prints I have for sale too!
Why diigitae’s Extreme WEN§Digo VOL.1 is an album you should listen to
diigitae – Extreme WEN§Digo VOL.1 released on Siccum Records
I’m excited to announce that Siccum Records has released Extreme WEN§Digo VOL.1, a full-length, harsh noise album by diigitae, a noisemaker from France. Available on CD and as a digital download on Bandcamp, Extreme WEN§Digo VOL.1 is 13 tracks of well-sculpted, harsh noise. Get your copy today!
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