Showing posts with label music. Show all posts
Showing posts with label music. Show all posts

Wednesday, 21 September 2011

1bit audio / video

I was just sharing Tristan Perich with a friend and found mention of some other 1bit artists, Ryoji Ikeda and Alva Noto.

I have only had a quick look at Ryoji Ikeda's work, but it looks amazing - creating sound and visual from data / noise.

Spent a little longer with Alva Noto.
Check his videos - headphones on and prepare to be assailed.
Love his ringtones, and funkbugfx down at the bottom of the page is great!

A snippet of performance:


let me know your favorites...

Thursday, 23 June 2011

New Amon Tobin album

Amon Tobin release his latest album ISAM a short while ago, and some remixes are now coming through...

Check this version of Surge. It's gorgeous:


...and the more Amonesque 16Bit remix:


And, of course, the original if you haven't heard it yet:

Friday, 1 April 2011

Digital Symphony

Thanks to Mark Sng for turning me on to Tristan Perich and his 1-Bit Symphony.


Perich has composed a symphony, and I have a copy of it.
Number 2769.
It is in a cd case, but it isn't a recording.
Rather, this is a rather beautiful (in a tech-geek way) physical object, comprising wires, switches, a battery and a chip, that plays the music live for you when you turn it on.


One of the consequences of this which I rather like is that unlike a normal cd, you cannot make a digital rip. If you were to want a copy of the sound, you would need to record it in real-time, in an analogue fashion if you like, even if you use digital equipment.

Of course to make a copy of the sound would be to miss the point. This is a unique hand soldered artifact, and joy is to be had handling it, appreciating the near liquid quality of solder, reading the code supplied in the packaging, plugging into the headphone jack, and letting the sound unfold.


The sound is hard.
1-Bit doesn't have much space for tonal depth. It won't be to everyone's (many people's...) taste, and I might not listen to it that often, but the object-ness of the whole work will ensure it doesn't get tucked in storage as a physical back-up to mp3s, like so much of my music now.



Listen to a clip, then order your own copy from here.