an Art Museum in New Zealand and the KAOS Radio Building

One of the staff members at KAOS was tuned in at the beginning of the show and called to make sure the tower wasn't cutting out. "Is it supposed to sound like that?" You bet it is! But in all seriousness, thanks for listening and for having my back. This show concludes my sister's New Zealand travelogue adventure with a field recording of an art museum towards the end. There is also a field recording of the KAOS radio building which I took right before the show. I also experimented in this show with hideous approximations of Olivier Messiaen's overlapped descending lines from Vingt Regards sur l'Enfant-Jésus (the 6th movement Par Lui tout a été fait about 3/4 the way through).

Cooper Schlegel
New Zealand Birds, Crickets (and cicadas I think)

My sister returned from New Zealand this week but not before sending back field recordings! The birds in this recording include but are not limited to chattering lory, plum-headed parakeet, bourkes parrot, king parrot, mulga parrot, cuban finch, south island kaka, long-billed corella, opaline red-rumped parrots, blue red-rumped parrots, eclectus parrot, red-tailed black cockatoo, blue and yellow macaw, scarlet macaw, blue and gold macaw, gouldian finch, diamond dove, jacarmi finch, siskin finch, namanqua dove,and red-faced parrot finch. Dang that's a lot of birds!

Also in this recording is a couple bits of classical music I really like, one of which is being played in the symphony orchestra I am in (Olympia Symphony Orchestra)..

Magic Conch, Grandkids, New Zealand Ambience

My buddy mark sent me his band's album in the mail which I sampled for this episode, the tracks unsettled and the sky is the limit. If you were to write out the order in which the first samples appear they would be BBAAAAACAACCAACAACBBCBBBAACACB which is magicconch in a triliteral (base 3) cipher. AAA = a AAB = b AAC = c ABA = d ABB = e ABC = f ACA = g etc. We continue our (my sister's) sound voyage of New Zealand and go to a rugby game, a bird park, a rainy portch and sit down to hear a grandkid's wishlist. Extra special thanks to Magic Conch, Mark, Rosa, Alexie, and Isabelle.

!Cooper Schlegel
Various Ways of Getting to Dunedin

Last episode, we heard some field recordings from my sister Isabelle in Seatac Airport, and we continue this episode with many more field recordings sent from halfway around the world! I will say that this episode, due to some recordings featuring people talking among other things, is a little less sleepy than some of my other episodes, but hey I'm trying something different. Save for one obvious exception, I have left the field recordings pretty much as they've been sent; I spliced them together, I censored any swearing, and I adjusted volumes, other than that they are completely untouched (also they're only untouched if you don't consider me playing over them tampering). The exception is an extended plane noise section where I take 5 different recordings of the puddle jumper Isabelle took from Auckland to Dunedin at different stages; taxiing, taking off, climbing, cruising, and descending, along with making a synth-y patch of the in flight "bing."

Thank you to Isabelle, Rosa, Imogen and Georgia.

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!Cooper SchlegelDunedin
Seatac Airport

My compatriot Jacob Bicknase was in town this week and we played a lot together during that time. Me and Jake were both part of Left Field Quartet in Madison WI a little while back (https://leftfieldquartet.bandcamp.com/releases). My sister sent me the first of a series of field recordings she is taking of her trip to New Zealand, the first being Seatac Airport of [con]course.

!Cooper Schlegel
Tacoma Narrows Bridge

When I took the field recording at the narrows bridge it wasn’t exactly sleep inducing. The coal trains were running underneath, the sound of the cars going over the bridge end was loud and obnoxious, and some dude rode what looked like a razor scooter with a lawnmower engine attached by. I had the idea to change this raucous soundscape into something more mellow so I transcribed those three elements, the cars taking the longest. Had I had more time I would have also transcribed the big trucks passing too, (maybe I’ll return to it later). I slowly add in all the elements until it’s completely electronic, and randomized. The second half I played a couple things that continuously slowed down while I added notes halfway in between the slowed notes.

painted by my mom

painted by my mom

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!Cooper Schlegel
Crazy Birds by my Apartment

First Patch

The thing that took me the most time on this patch was the random number generator.  Pure Data has a random number generator which you can choose the range of, but I didn’t want it to repeat itself until it found all five numbers.  So instead of 1 2 3 1 4 5 1 2 3 1 2 it would be in sets of five 1 2 3 4 5 or 5 4 3 2 1 or 3 1 2 4 5 etc. I wanted each voice to come in before they started dropping out again.

There’s probably a better way to do this because I think it might skew the probability the way I set it up.  When a voice trips it then connects itself to the next highest number, or in the case of 5, back to 1, and when all voices are connected, it resets.  So after 1 is tripped, it becomes 2, and after 2 is both it and 1 would become 3. Another problem with this method is that it isn’t super easy to expand the range.

1 2 3 4 4 becomes 1 2 3 4 5

5 3 3 4 1 becomes 5 3 4 1 2

Each number is connected to an on/off switch for the voices, which are made from a choir sample played at different speeds simultaneously, original speed, ¾ speed, 3/2 speed, 4/3 speed and ⅔ speed, so the 3/2 and ¾ speeds are the same notes just shifted up and octave, as are the ⅔ and 4/3.  It reminded me to the opening of the 3rd movement of Bartok’s 4rth string quartet so I through in some quotes of the cello line. Also dang I was struggling with the drumming/bassing at the same time but it was fun!

After the first patch, I tried an additive meditation where it accrews variation slowly.  Can you tell where I accidentally break the pattern? I’m making it up as I go. Gotta remember to concentrate!  But I’m getting better at these sorts of mind games.

Second Patch

Whoo what a mess!  So the animal sounds are recorded obviously, but each of the little blips I programmed.  All of the osc~ mean oscillators and they are tuned in a 5 limit tuning (like the recorded samples before https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Five-limit_tuning)  Does it make it sound better? The reasoning for the sustained samples in the first patch was so there’s less wubba wubba stuff, for the ping pong stuff in the second patch idk maybe, I tried it both ways and the jury’s still out.  

So for this patch the main attraction is the big ol select bar.  I’ve programmed it so it plays the blips like this: 1, 1 2, 1 2 3, 1 2 3 4, 1 2 3 4 5 etc until it gets to 25 where it will reset. I stole the idea from this: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oR7KOncoYOc.  I’ve used it in my playing, but haven’t programmed a patch for it yet.  Every time the 11th blip is played, it starts playing a note every five eighth notes, after which it will slow or speed up the overall tempo at a gradual pace.  The big ol circle on the right flashes a metronome so I tried to play the same tempo throughout, while it shifted above me, so when you hear me out of tempo, I’m actually playing the same tempo throughout.  Pretty tough if I do say so myself. Does it pay off? It sure sounds weird sometimes. I think I’ll have to try something like this again to really know if it works or not. I have to sound like a metronome, and the electronics have to sound like they’re changing.  I don’t think I quite pulled it off. I end with an American style sort of thing.

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