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Showing posts sorted by date for query chaircrusher. Sort by relevance Show all posts

Saturday, June 20, 2020

DAY DAY by chaircrusher




chaircrusher aka kent williams sent in his latest release along with a promo code. First person to click here and enter tz42-6hcb gets it.

A handfull of chaircrusher's pics were featured here on the site, one all the way back in 2005, the 1st year of the site!

Details on the release:

"Electronic music is absolute and abstract, so if you don’t have a particular narrative idea in mind - which I usually don’t - the choice of title is arbitrary. So for the past year or so, when I finish a track, I google “what national day is today?” and choose the “national day” I like best. The tracks are presented in chronological order, beginning with “St Nicholas” which I finished on St Nicholas Day: December 6th 2019. The album title, “Day Day” imagines a national Day Day, where the idea of national days celebrates itself.

All of these tracks are exploration of compositional experiments done with the software modular synthesizer VCVRack (www.vcvrack.com). The core idea is to generate extended permutations of a small set of melodic tones.

Traditionally, composers wrote their music one note at a time, and the written representation mapped directly on the performance. Jazz musicians freed themselves from the score, using the bare bones of a song as a launchpad for improvisation. In electronic music, especially when working with modular synthesizers, you construct a custom machine to generate the music you want to hear. The goal - or my goal at least - is to make a modular ‘patch’ capable of interesting complexity and surprise.

A sufficiently convoluted patch is barely under the composer’s control. There are controls to pilot the patch into musically meaningful territory, but the patch runs whether you steer it or not, potentially forever. Most of these pieces are live realizations, where I tweak knobs and settings as I record. As I’ve refined and practiced, the amount of editing and augmenting of the original live recording has diminished. Some tracks, like the album closer “Rotisserie” is exactly the live ‘performance’ of the patch with no edits or overdubs.

The album art is the work of Alex Mugford, who is 10 years old and lives in the UK. His father, music critic Joe Mugford, has been posting his drawings on Twitter & Facebook for a couple of years, and I’ve admired the riotous invention of his work. His drawings look as though Keith Haring and Joan Miro spent a long afternoon drinking Beaujolais & doodling on each other's placemats.

Thanks to:

My wife Melissa for the best music review in human history (“Is there something wrong with the stereo?”).


My mother, composer Linda Worsley, whose feedback was invaluable. (“There’s a sound that’s like when I chop onions that I don’t like. I resent when it comes in and I’m relieved when it stops.”).

Andrew Belt for creating VCV Rack, Rack. developer.

Musician Jeremy Wentworth, who implemented an idea I had for combining sequencer clocks with boolean logic.

COVID19 for isolating me in musical pocket universe for the past few months.

… and anyone who has given me feedback and encouragement over the years."

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Flohmarkt Synthesizer Heap [Synths at a Fleamarket]


flickr By chaircrusher
(click for more)

What a sight that would be.

via kent back in 2007: "There was a guy selling a pile of synths and odd drum machine stuff at the MauernPark Flohmarkt (Wall Park Flea Market) in Berlin this last Sunday."

If you're wondering why it took five years to put this up, I changed my email address from the matrixsynth.com domain to gmail years ago.  Some stuff apparently  came in on that old address that I missed.  The previous posts from J chot (1, 2, 3) and makingsound where some of them.  This one should be the last though.  If you have my old matrixsynth.com address still saved, you might want to update it at this point. :)

Wednesday, June 21, 2006

Moogerfoogers - New Flickr Shots


flickr by chaircrusher. Click here for more.

Upate via chaircrusher in the comments:
"The band in question is called Blizzards of Wizzards, and they're kind of post-rock-esque.
Anyone with a free flickr account can log in and look at larger sizes...
For the record, the guitar setup comprised:
EH Linear Power Booster
EH Microsynth
Roland CV Pedal
Moogerfooger Lowpass
Moogerfooger 12 Stage Phaser
Moogerfooger Ring Mod
Moogerfooger Analog Delay
2nd Roland CV Pedal
Ibanez Analog Delay
Moogerfooger Control Processor
He had a pretty expensive amp as well -- a Mesa Boogie IIRC.
There are a couple of pics of the keyboardist in the set, I didn't take any gear geek pics though. He had a JX3P (with the knob box) a Wurlitzer Electric Piano, and one of the Yamaha CS series keyboards."

Thursday, September 29, 2005

EMS Putney Sample


Right click here and save. This came in via chaircrusher aka Kent Williams on AH. I asked him if I could post it and he gave the ok. Thank you Kent! This is an amazing showcase of the EMS Putney.

"I just got an Electribe ES-1 sampling drum machine on Ebay, and this is my first 'test' track with it. I ran the EMS Putney mono into the ES-1, and messed around a bit generating noises and sampling them.

I then recorded a couple of takes of the ES-1 with Putney sounds sequenced, messing a bit with effects, I also recorded the Putney live, and some more conventional drum sounds. Then I did some editing and processing in Acid.

The loop at the beginning is the ER-1 in 'beatslice' mode on a Putney sound.

I need to figure out how to maybe get things a little more varied, and less 'in your face' all the time, but it was a fun exercise, and should give you a really good idea of what a Putney can sound like."
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