Category Archives: music

Free concerts every day

I’ve been doing yoga with a large group down on the ocean-front bluffs near the Long Beach Museum of Art. There is a lot more noise than one hears in a yoga studio. The teachers will often tell us to soften our muscles, to breathe into a cramped or stretched part of the body. They will also often invite us to take in the sounds going on, without judgment. Depending on the day of the week and the weather, the combination of sounds can vary a lot. Just as certain thoughts and certain yoga positions can induce a reaction, an unpleasantness perhaps, so can the sounds. When the Harley Davidson engines of weekend cruisers roar by and drown out everything else, it can elicit rage. When the foghorn and engine sounds on Ocean Blvd. merge to create a stable fundamental drone, it can soothe. By following the suggestion of the teachers, I’m finding a way into letting each sound be itself, without my aesthetic opinion.

It’s been a long time since I read John Cage’s Silence. The effect that the book had on my as a youngster was tied closely to a nascent interest in a sort of improvised Buddhist meditation. As Cage suggested a sound world all over that could be taken in with the interest of a devoted concertgoer, I would open my ears to this world as I was then opening them to the avant-garde music I was being exposed to (mostly via Pacifica Radio). The ‘opening’, then, was a connected experience, and the usual discomfort associated with hearing something that vexed would be replaced by a certain calm detachment and perhaps a curiosity. Hearing agreeable sounds that would normally be ignored or taken for granted could now be a source of calm delight.

Somewhere along the line, I lost this ability. I suspect that it’s about ego, the usual culprit in stealing serenity from any moment. For years I have been trying to hear that ‘music inside my head’ and get it in notation or digital audio. This inward-looking process has yielded some good surprises and a unyielding predilection for sublimity, but always with that judgement attached. Is this good? Does it sound like someone else? Am I becoming too antiquated?

Yoga’s got me back in a good place – listening to the variegated strands of noise and pitch and make up Long Beach’s waterfront. Listening with more interest than I have felt in the concert hall in years.

 

Supersaturation

Although advocates, usually salaried employees of art organizations, will beg to differ, I declare here and now for all time that there is simply too much music in the world. At least, there is too much if the goal of the person laboring to make this music is to have a name, a personhood, an individuality created out their efforts. Stockhausen, in a talk to a Dutch arts organization about religion in music, maintained that this is natural impulse of a Western musician and that the Buddhist inclination to get rid of ego in not in keeping with the European mindset.

What may have been true to Stockhausen has been rendered incomprehensible by the fact of the internet, and the transient character of new musical careerism in our age. Try as one might to distinguish oneself as a unique voice, the sound will be subsumed into a crowded community of other experimenters, dabblers, free agents and DMAs looking for a day job. While my wish for those to find a way to make a bit of cash doing something they claim to love is sincere, I’ve come to believe that, for the majority, it’s truly Catch and Release. It’s the chase that one loves, the desire for expressing individuality, but musical End Times are here, and all that’s really left is overtonality, the resonant structure of the planet we live on the love we offer.

Radio Dynamics

 

I asked the Oskar Fischinger Trust to explain why his animated film, Radio Dynamics, was exempt from licensing for musical use. Here is the response I received:

‘Please watch the film again, and look at Fischinger’s titles:  “Please! No Music!”
Your request seems to indicate a basic misunderstanding of this film and his intent; we will not grant an exception.  No music is allowed with this film.  Please also review again William Moritz’s text about the film, in Optical Poetry.
Please respect the filmmaker’s work and intent.  Some films are intentionally silent and must be viewed ONLY that way. ‘

The Trust makes a good point. Respect the intent of the filmmaker’s intent. I wonder, however, if his intent was based on the limitations of music technology in 1942. This was 2 years after the release of Fantasia and I don’t doubt that experience (Fischinger contributed the animated abstractions to the Bach ‘Toccata and Fugue in D Minor’ section of the Disney film) might have given him pause about allowing his visual imagination to be constrained by commercial standards of film scoring. If he had been able to see the degree of sonic experimentation and post-production synchronization, he may not have been so inclined to forbid music.

I am posting the music with the title ‘Radio Dynamics’, which I do not believe is covered by the same licensing restrictions. With thanks to Herr Fischinger for giving my musical imagination something to connect to.

An example of the animation below the music:

 

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being found

From the very beginning of UseNet and early internet resources, I always thought the attraction was the hunt and search for esoterica that connects me to world and it’s many hidden nuggets of interest. Why bother putting up yet another personal identity site that promotes but does not feature anything that compels.

This site is an experiment for me, does being ‘found’ (i.e. searchable, linkable, SEO-friendly content) mean anything at all? does the ability to be located by a search engine really rate in comparison to making a good find of your own? Is being the target of some online marketer rate next to having the Great Adventure of looking for the next satiation of accidental curiosity?

Today’s find: Dennis Parker. Porn Star in gay and straight 1970’s films, Disco singer ‘Like an Eagle’ and later role in ‘The Edge of Night’ soap opera.

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