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Monday, October 17, 2022

Audio in Video

 Hello Folks!

Attrib: Daffy Duck in Hollywood

 

Audience reaction:

Attrib: The Ghost and Mr Chicken


Friday, April 1, 2022

Pictures this week

Unlike computers, analog forms of entertainment continue to function when defective.  And as you can see from our banner up there, Technical Difficulties on broadcasts I saw in childhood is one of the psychic drivers of this art.  Even then, I think I appreciated Burrough's idea about how easily control can be broken in the distribution.  One bad servo, and the President has egg on his face.  

Today's post comes from the world of early television.  It was a glitchy mess, with all those dusty little analog switches and sliders, and the Gremlins were a busy bunch.  All of these screens were capped during a transition of some sort, and may only now be appreciated thanks to digital reproductions.  Portions of today's post have been broadcast in other time streams.





Ok, actually, the third one is a cross-fade, not a dusty switch.  But those could be weird too.  Here's a Robert Williams wet dream, courtesy of Mr Ed:



I guess I should start a page for these things.

In the audio realm, "A deep silence prevails on Mars".  Find out about Recordings of a Robot Miner...this week, In The News!

Friday, March 25, 2022

Science Fiction Trailers

 

A deconstruction of contemporary trailers.

Play

Friday, March 11, 2022

Air Pirates of the 21st Century (single)

 

This is the first 7 minutes of a longer piece found in the podcasts section of this website.  It was created from underground radio broadcasts on the Internet Archive.  

Air Pirates

Friday, March 4, 2022

Hot Minute: Brainiac Kicked Our Butts!

Introducing "Hot Minutes", 60 seconds of crazed audio when you're on the go!

Brainiac Kicked Our Butts!

I once made a series of one-minute bits, using the surprisingly percussive soundtracks of mid-1990's kids cartoon shows.  (Which were at the top of the form, back then, in terms of orchestrated mayhem.  Especially the commercials.)  The contents of today's mix were found on one of the backup tapes I didn't get to.  

It seems to be worthwhile to make one-minute bits a special class--  so when you see "Hot Minute" in the posts, you know it'll be quick n' tasty!

Friday, February 11, 2022

lab fragment_Booking Talks

 

This one is a brief clip of what I was working on when the deadline rolled around today.  It's an example of found sound, reworked from a old Talking Books cassette. It's so short because there wasn't enough time to flesh out this week's submission. 

Talking Books seems like a promising source, and there will probably be more extensive play with it in the near future.

lab work_Booking Talks 

Friday, February 4, 2022

Friday, January 28, 2022

William S Burroughs birthday: Sun Tea, part 1

The basic tracks for this week's piece are from Real English Tea Made Here at ubu.web.  

WSB's birthday is commemorated on this site because of his singularly Promethean act: breaking the hold of the Word virus on the Human mind, by cutting up the input that sustains it.  A concept derived from Marcel Duchamp's cutup work, innocently applied to the serial stream of social control built into language, with unexpected results.  

The tapes in Real English Tea were compiled in the mid-sixties and published by Ubuweb when the CD was issued in 2007.  They include pieces that stand by themselves, and some in which the content is more scattered and perhaps even meant as a do-it-yourself challenge for anyone coming across them later. 

I accept the challenge.  My goal in these birthday things is to present, in effect, a cut-up lecture from the old Doctor, summarizing and demonstrating the remarkable mind-altering principles of cutup as he practiced it, for those of us who wish to do the same.

His birthday is Feb 5 (1914).  Here is part 1 of this year's mix, entitled Sun Tea, part 1.

If you're interested in more Burroughs birthday bits on this site, there's a search box over there on the right.


Tuesday, January 25, 2022

A necessary behind-the-scenes note

 

I recently committed to giving you folks a new audio bit every week.  Something about making a commitment like that has brought Entropy roaring out of its hole, and my life is being wrenched around quite a bit.  

I'm mentioning it here because of the kind of spotty nature of posts up to last month-- if you're coming around b/c I'm doing stuff again, great!  Thx for your interest.  Something by me will be posted every Friday. It might be a while before I have enough control of my time, for it to be very complex.  I hope it's new.  We'll just have to see.  Bear with us.

Friday, January 21, 2022

America's Musical Frontier Heritage, part 1

 

Let's see, that's 3 new posts in the last 3 weeks, so maybe I can get away with a rerun this week, if I promise something special next week.

This week's post (a rerun, yes) is from a piece of 1960's vinyl, featuring the voice of Ken Nordine. 

It was originally meant to narrate a filmstrip about pioneer music, and included a sound cue ding for an operator to advance the frames.  I have, of course, thoroughly processed it for your enjoyment.  

Play

The promise is-- I found another Ken Nordine filmstrip record.  Will it end up like this one?  Come back next Friday and see.

Update, 1/28-- see the next post.  There wasn't enough time and TLC available this week.  The Radio God graciously allowed a substitute inspiration to occur, with enough time to complete the post.  

It's hard to believe something won't be done with our old buddy Ken's record, sooner or later.  I have faith. 

Friday, January 7, 2022

Breakin' In a Brand New Dub

6 years ago, I posted a workfile...and I want to know where you kids put it!  Seriously though-- it was eventually finished, and included in the podcast archived on this site a little over a year ago.  Then it was lost in the general foo-frah.  I recently realized the fershligginer thing was actually done, and, unless you tuned in the podcast, it wasn't anywhere else, on this site or Bandcamp.

It's interesting, at least as an experiment-- the premise being, how would an extremely overdubbed song sound, even more overdubbed?  Connie Francis's 1961 hit, Breakin' In A Brand New Broken Heart, is something like a sound-river.  

Play