Archive for the ‘Bytes’ Category

Exclusive Track Preview: Isomer Transition - San Pellegrino

Saturday, May 30th, 2009

crw_2002

It’s been a while since I’ve posted some new Isomer Transition material, so I wanted to put something up here for y’all to get your ears on. This track is in a new style for me. I have been DJing at my monthly, and I have a been making material to be used in this context, rather than in the context of an artist release. Rest assured, I am not going to stop making the hyper-composed mental energy filled Isomer tracks, I am just taking a detour for a little while. I am thinking of using a different alias for this project. Perhaps ‘Ray Trace’? I really like the ’80’s video game, under the 3d engine hood references in this name.

Here is the track. I hope you enjoy the new direction as it was very fun and fulfilling to explore. Comments, as always, are appreciated. Either in the comments section or on SoundCloud.

Track no longer available for preview.

Terry Riley — composer, spiritual guide, or other worldly visitor?

Tuesday, April 28th, 2009

A few weeks ago I had the most amazing experience. I was on the J/M/Z train headed towards Brooklyn, just leaving Canal Street train station, about to cross the Williamsburg Bridge and I selected Terry Riley’s Dorian Reeds to play on my 3rd gen iPod. The first few notes struck as the train exited the tunnel and I was entranced. As the train began it’s journey over the Williamsburg bridge the composition’s timing and complexity picked up - the playing got faster, and the space between the notes got a bit longer so you could really hear the tape delay in the composition.

I looked out the window at the concrete and steel landscape, ravaged by the elements and time and thought to myself, “What a perfect soundtrack to this ride.” The repeating patterns made by the steel girders as they passed the window I was looking out were in sync with the music I was listening to. The color and texture of cement, and eventually water, matched the sounds of decay on the tape used to repeat the short musical phrases on the recording. It was as if this recording was made specifically for this exact event that was transpiring. What happened next was something that I have been working on for a while but have been less than succesful, and of course it happened when I wasn’t trying.  All at once I stopped thinking and simply was. My mind stopped running in overdrive and I was able to simply be. I was able to stay in this space for the rest of the journey over the bridge. It was one of the most inspired listening experiences that has happened to me in the past 5 years.

This is the magic that Terry Riley makes happen.

It isn’t just him that does this for me — there are other composers that are able to create this space where the no-mind is able to arise. Cage, Reich, Glen Velez… They are all amazing composers that inhabit a space where spirituality and sonorous world collide. It isn’t just about creating this no-mind space though, it is about dedicating you life to bringing this natural state of being to the world through your work with sound, and sound alone. There is no need to add anything else to the equation. You can simply be there with out any aid.

Riley, in the 70’s (I believe), traveled to India to learn traditional Indian Raga vocal techniques. That wasn’t a journey just about singing, it was a pilgrimage to the center of the spiritual universe, one where he was able to get past all his western ideas and become something more. I really feel that Riley and these other composers who bring these universes to us are the modern equivalents of profits and wise men, they just use tools other than scripture to get their work done. In this day and age preaching the ‘good word’ will get you (mostly) ignored by people. If you simply ‘take someone there’ how can they deny their own true nature? I don’t think they can, at least I can’t.

I recently had the honor attending a performance by Terry Riley, and it was one of the most amazing and spiritual experiences I have ever had. I felt so much love emanating from him at his show, and there was so much positive energy in the room. It was palpable and it really had an impact on me emotionally. Safe to say that I had a reaction. This was my experience with my Dali Lama. I can’t stress how much him and his work has had a positive effect on me, and it has really changed the way I view the world. I hope you can get a little something out of his works.

I found a clip of and about Terry Riley for your viewing pleasure. I think this one is in French, but you’ll get the idea. Be sure to follow the links to Wikipeda and read a bit more about this shaper of the modern musical universe.

Here is his Wikipedia entry.It is truly amazing.

Terry Riley official (very old and outdated) website.

Here are some program notes from one of his performances:

Program Notes Steinway Hall April 25 and 26, 1967.

The music heard on these two evenings will consist of sections from the following two compositions.

SOLO TIME LAG MUSIC FOR SOPRANO SAXOPHONE (1963-present)

This composition utilizes the time lag accumulation technique I first explored in the music for “The Gift” in 1963. All the material that I am playing subsequently recycles and combines in an accumulative manner. In this way many generations of the material can be quickly built up without having to add each track one at a time, therefore adapting itself naturally to use in live performance. This is the freest of all my recent work as the automatic ordering of the material in the timelag accumulation process allows me to play quite complicated material which then is arranged into loops and recycled. I have found this such an effective way of producing music that it has occupied the larger part of my time since 1963. I have written no scores for this music as so far it has all been governed by an intuitive relationship developed between me and the machines. I do have a catalog of material which I use as a basis for these improvisations and am constantly adding new patterns. However, I want to keep the music in the tradition of unwritten improvised music.

– T.R.

KEYBOARD STUDIES (1965-present)

The keyboard studies are a part of a work begun in 1964 and are also improvisatory in nature. The two hands combine repeated patterns of varying lengths. Cycles that combine 2-9 beats and any combinations thereof are matched in spontaneous selection, either hand capable of shifting independently to another cycle. The product is polymetric cycling and combined patterns can range to any length — a result of being the common denominator of the 2 component patterns. All patterns are built on a preselected mode or scale. Occasionally melodic passages may be introduced which are composed of a number of patterns linked together.

– T.R.

The Future of Music: Credo by John Cage (1937)

Monday, April 27th, 2009

john-cage-1956

There are a lot of us that feel that something doesn’t need to be ‘musical’ to be considered music. I know, I am preaching to the converted. And, for the most part, those of us that think this way feel that we are on to something, or perhaps even innovative for believing in this idea. It may still be on the ‘outside’  of what is considered ‘music’ but it is by no means new. Truth be told, all of this is really old, old hat. The late great John Cage wrote the following text in 1937.

If you didn’t know about this piece, and came to a similar conclusion on your own, and think you are quite smart because you did, think again. John Cage is the reason you think any of these things, even if you never knew it — that is just how the universe works. Once it is out in the ether people can key into it and the thoughts spread like the wind. Not even kidding.

THE FUTURE OF MUSIC: CREDO

I BELIEVE THAT THE USE OF NOISE

Wherever we are, what we hear is mostly noise. When we ignore it, it disturbs us. When we listen to it, we find it fascinating. The sound of a truck at 50 m.p.h. Static between the stations. Rain. We want to capture and control these sounds, to use them, not as sound effects, but as musical instruments. Every film studio has a library of “sound effects” recorded on film. With a film phonograph it is now possible to control the amplitude and frequency of any one of these sounds and to give to it rhythms within or beyond the reach of anyone’s imagination. Given four film phonographs, we can compose and perform a quartet for explosive motor, wind, heartbeat, and landslide.

TO MAKE MUSIC

If this word, music, is sacred and reserved for eighteenth- and nineteenth-century instruments, we can substitute a more meaningful term: organization of sound.

WILL CONTINUE AND INCREASE UNTIL WE REACH A MUSIC PRODUCED THROUGH THE AID OF ELECTRICAL INSTRUMENTS

Most inventors of electrical musical instruments have attempted to imitate eighteenth- and nineteenth-century instruments, just as early automobile designers copied the carriage. The Novachord and the Solovox are examples of this desire to imitate the past rather than construct the future. When Theremin provided an instrument with genuinely new possibilities, Thereministes did their utmost to make the instrument sound like some old instrument, giving it a sickeningly sweet vibrato, and performing upon it, with difficulty, masterpieces from the past. Although the instrument is capable of a wide variety of sound qualities, obtained by the mere turning of a dial, Thereministes act as censors, giving the public those sounds they think the public will like. We are shielded from new sound experiences.

The special property of electrical instruments will be to provide complete control of the overtone structure of tones (as opposed to noises) and to make these tones available in any frequency, amplitude, and duration.

WHICH WILL MAKE AVAILABLE FOR MUSICAL PURPOSES ANY AND ALL SOUNDS THAT CAN BE HEARD. PHOTOELECTRIC, FILM, AND MECHANICAL MEDIUMS FOR THE SYNTHETIC PRODUCTION OF MUSIC

It is now possible for composers to make music directly, without the assistance of intermediary performers. Any design repeated often enough on a sound track is audible. 280 circles per second on a sound track will produce one sound, whereas a portrait of Beethoven repeated 50 times per second on a sound track will have not only a different pitch but a different sound quality.

WILL BE EXPLORED. WHEREAS, IN THE PAST, THE POINT OF DISAGREEMENT HAS BEEN BETWEEN DISSONANCE AND CONSONANCE, IT WILL BE, IN THE IMMEDIATE FUTURE, BETWEEN NOISE AND SO-CALLED MUSICAL SOUNDS.

THE PRESENT METHODS OF WRITING MUSIC, PRINCIPALLY THOSE WHICH EMPLOY HARMONY AND ITS REFERENCE TO PARTICULAR STEPS IN THE FIELD OF SOUND, WILL BE INADEQUATE FOR THE COMPOSER WHO WILL BE FACED WITH THE ENTIRE FIELD OF SOUND.

The composer (organizer of sound) will not only be faced with the entire field of sound but also with the entire field of time. The “frame” or fraction of a second, following established film technique, will probably be the basic unit in the measurement of time. No rhythm will be beyond the composer’s reach.

NEW METHODS WILL BE DISCOVERED, BEARING A DEFINITE RELATION TO SCHOENBERG’S TWELVE-TONE SYSTEM

Schoenberg’s method assigns to each material, in a group of equal materials, its function with respect to the group. (Harmony assigned to each material, in a group of unequal materials, its function with respect to the fundamental or most important material in the group.) Schoenberg’s method is analagous to modern society, in which the emphasis is on the group and the integration of the individual in the group.

AND PRESENT METHODS OF WRITING PERCUSSION MUSIC

Percussion music is a contemporary transition from keyboardinfluenced music to the all-sound music of the future. Any sound is acceptable to the composer of percussion music; he explores the academically forbidden “nonmusical” field of sound insofar as is manually possible.

Methods of writing percussion music have as their goal the rhythmic structure of a composition. As soon as these methods are crystallized into one or several widely accepted methods, the means will exist for group improvisations of unwritten but culturally important music. This has already taken place in Oriental cultures and in hot jazz.

AND ANY OTHER METHODS WHICH ARE FREE FROM THE CONCEPT OF A FUNDAMENTAL TONE.

THE PRINCIPLE OF FORM WILL BE OUR ONLY CONSTANT CONNECTION WITH THE PAST. ALTHOUGH THE GREAT FORM OF THE FUTURE WILL NOT BE AS IT WAS IN THE PAST, AT ONE TIME THE FUGUE AND AT ANOTHER THE SONATA, IT WILL BE RELATED TO THESE AS THEY ARE TO EACH OTHER

Before this happens, centers of experimental music must be established. In these centers, the new materials, oscillators, generators, means for amplifying small sounds, film phonographs, etc., available for use. Composers at work using twentieth-century means for making music. Performances of results. Organization of sound for musical and extramusical purposes (theater, dance, film).

THROUGH THE PRINCIPLE OF ORGANIZATION OR MAN’S COMMON ABILITY TO THINK.

Semi-Regular Transelectronic Newsletter

Thursday, March 19th, 2009

Isomer Transition News

Isomer Transition has been featured on RCRDLBL.COM, has an inclusion on Claude VonStroke’s upcoming Fabric 46 mix CD, and 3 releases are scheduled for this year on several labels, including Archipel, and Race Car Productions.


Digital Shop Now Online

Recently launched is a ‘direct from artist’ shop over on BANDCAMP. You can now purchase 320 kbps or FLAC files of all of the Isomer Transition releases DIRECT, some with bonus tracks. Releases are $3, $5, and $6. ‘Shadowlands’ is recently remastered and it is now available digitally for the first time.

Click on the image to preview and purchase. No time like the present to support the arts.

Orbits Decaying 1971 Mission To Mars Shadowlands
Orbits Decaying
(Special Edition)
1971
(Special Edition)
Mission To Mars Shadowlands
(Remastered)

Richard J Valeo News

Two new releases by Richard J Valeo are now available digitially on Boomkat. The reviews are in and they are… Click the album art to read the reviews and purchase these essential releases.

The Hardware Excursions Devolutions Volume One
The Hardware Excursions
Volume One
Devolutions
Volume One

Upcoming Release Details

Late last year The Wire Tapper featured ‘Monday Night’, a track taken from Richard J Valeo’s Modyfier Process contribution. This 4 track EP for Modyfier has recently turned into a full length release entitled ‘Days’ and is scheduled to be released on Io Records late spring of this year. 8 tracks of stripped down electronic glitchy goodness.

Also upcoming are ‘The Basement Tapes’ — select compositions harvested from the DATs that make up the ‘Transelectronic Archive’. Spanning the years 1992 - 2000, ‘The Basement Tapes’ are a behind-the-scenes earful of diverse musical landscapes created by RJ Valeo.


Io Records News

Io Records has been re-born as a digital label, with distribution primarily on Boomkat. With each release Io Records explores the diverse musical universe of RJ Valeo — both his own compositions and those by fellow musicians he feels fits the distinct vision of Io Records.

Upcoming Io Releases:
March
Richard J Valeo - Programmatic Responses

April
Richard J Valeo - Devolutions Volume Two
RJ Valeo - Sunrise (Boomkat Edition)

Spring / Summer 2009
Richard J Valeo - Days (as featured in The Wire Tapper)
Richard J Valeo - The Basement Tapes
Baye - The Spandrel
Connor Long (aka Khonnor) - The Untitled Release


The Future Is Beautiful
Monthly Electronic Music Event in Brooklyn

Recentally launched is a monthly event called ‘The Future Is Beautiful‘ over in Greenpoint Brooklyn at a place called Coco66. It is an intimate evening of beautiful electronic music, spanning drone/laptronic to techno and electro. There really is nothing else like it in the city. Mix in some amazing visualists at every performance and you get the idea of how ‘The Future Is Beautiful’.

Morgan Packard Ezekiel Honig &
Josh Ott
Calmer Patrick Gallagher

All photos by Zach Dilgard


The Isomer Transition Story

All of the Isomer Transition releases revolve around, and build upon a single story. The releases and song titles represent different chapters and scenes in this story.

The story chronicles the adventures of Captain Rethan Doepfer and his team of renegade scientists aboard ‘The Mistress’, who are racing to locate and decode a mysterious transmission before it disappears.

With each successive Isomer Transition release, and select Richard J Valeo releases, the story evolves, more information is revealed, and the saga continues.

Shadowlands

Captain Rethan Doepfer is called to begin his journey by a mysterious transmission. The discovery of the transmission takes place on the ISLOO (Independent Scientific Lunar Orbiting Observatory). The transmission is received from a point in space that should not be transmitting anything as nothing shows up at that spot on any scans of the region.
When decoded the transmissions tells of…

  • A Dark Star where none was previously.
  • Where Heavy Water can be found on Io.
  • A Red Giant located in a neighboring galaxy where none should be or could exist based on the current understanding of Physics.

Read more of the story here.


And so that wraps up this edition of

the semi-regular transelectronic newsletter. Be sure to stop by our home to stay up-to-date with the latest happenings and goings on in the wonderful and strange world of transelectronic.net.

Io Records Launch & Boomkat Review

Thursday, March 12th, 2009

picture-42

After much work and toiling the Io Records launch is finally here. Hibernating quietly for over 8 years Io is back with a vengeance, with 4 releases in the first two months. We opted for a lowkey minimal website to begin with and will fill it out as time goes by. There is no secret who releases on this label, and there is no secret as to how to get in touch with the label owner.

First up on Io is Richard J Valeo with ‘The Hardware Excursions Volume One”. Boomkat says…

“Returning under his own name after recent activity as Isomer Transition, Type’s very excellent RJ Valeo resumes more experimental duties, momentarily setting aside his preoccupations with techno formats. Hardware Excursions Vol. 1 finds the New York producer exploring deep and extended freeform synthesizer explorations, at time bordering on drone or even outright noise. You can hear a bit of a sci-fi influence creeping into the music, with combining elements of low frequency, motor-like oscillations and higher pitched, modulated bird-like timbres making up the largest part of Valeo’s minimalist sound palette. Structurally these pieces are very liberated, unburdening themselves from anything that might be termed ‘form’ right up until the distorted industrial rhythm that fires up towards the end of ‘Excursion Two’. The result is 16 minutes of dense, surprising and immersive electronic music of the highest order. Very highly recommended.”

Fucking awesome. :)

The Future Is Beautiful: Saturday March 14th

Thursday, March 12th, 2009

picture-5

For this month’s edition we will skip the snappy description and get right to the meat of things. Door open at 7:30, music begins promptly at 8pm.

Come early and celebrate Jessi’s 30th birthday with wonderful oysters during performances by NY favorites Morgan Packard, Ezekiel Honig and Calmer. Josh Ott is going to be performing with Zeke and Morgan using his custom built ‘Superdraw’ platform. If you haven’t seen ‘Superdraw’ you really need to get out more. It really is ‘future-beautiful’.

Following the relaxing and atmospheric stylings of the early evening’s sonic explorations we have Isomer Transition playing selections from unreleased and upcoming projects from the transelectronic vaults. Following Isomer we have plenty of electronic future music to go around. Jen Lusker, a NYC fixture will be gracing the decks, followed by the infamous Patrick Gallagher truly mashing it up, and finishing the night off, in honor of his friend Jessi’s 30th is the legendary Derek Plaslaiko.

For your visual stimulation Chika will be bringing her unique brand of VJing to the big screen, and Zach will be taking pictures, so there is no way you can say you were there if you weren’t.

All that and enough bass to shake light fixtures from the ceiling. Not even close to kidding, it happened last month.
Bass, that’s right.

Here are the set times.
8:00 Morgan Packard w/Josh Ott
9:00 Ezekiel Honig w/Josh Ott
10:00 Calmer
10:40 Isomer Transition
12:00 Jen Lusker
1:00 Patrick Gallagher
2:00 Derek Plaslaiko

$5 admission all night - to help cover the cost for the sound and the performers. More would be amazing.

Come early and stay late. No need to eat humans, there is plenty of food at Coco66.

Time Machine - Vintage Mix Tape Found - Meat Beat Manifesto, Front 242, Eon, KMFDM, Nitzer Ebb…

Sunday, March 1st, 2009

playback

Back in the early ’90’s I used to be really into industrial and the darker side of electronic music. I used to get stoned and make mix tapes to play in my 1986 Bronco II, the one with the huge 18″ subwoofer in the back. It was like getting a full body massage in the car. We used to listen to these tapes while we drank, sitting in a parking lot before we went into a club. Clubs like Voodoo, The Building, the Limelight, and other assorted legendary NY establishments. Really - I used to get all crazy and party and go clubbing. How things have changed.

Anyways I found one of these tapes that I am quite happy with and I ripped it and encoded it for your listening pleasure! Below is the artist list. I don’t have a play list because I don’t remember the names of all the songs, but I totally remember who each artist is. Some songs the titles are quite obvious while others aren’t. It was the ’90’s. Give me a break.

A few more interesting things and then you can get to the download. I did the mix with 1 CD player and 1 record player and a realistic dj mixer. I still have the mixer! I didn’t (and still don’t) do beat matching when playing this kind of music. Also, the recording gets all garbled in the beginning of the tape. That was beer that got spilled on the tape, in the car. Probably while driving. Not kidding. We used to drink beer, get high, and listen to tunes in my truck. How suburban of us! My truck was named ‘Bruiser’. I am definitely not a role model.

Here is the Artist List:
Doubting Thomas
Meat Beat Manifesto
Nine Inch Nails
Ministry
Front 242
Nitzer Ebb
Renegade Soundwave
KMFDM
Eon
Meat Beat Manifesto x2 (what? I really *REALLY* liked them. Shut.Up.)

Here is the mixtape.

Isomer Transition on RCRDLBL.COM

Friday, February 27th, 2009

rcrdlbl_spot

Every once and a while something nice happens, and today it took the form of a spot on the RCRDLBL.COM home page. Please click here and both download the tracks and leave a comment about ‘Isomer’. The more downloads and more comments that happen/appear the more likely they (the website people) are to do a full-fledged feature on ‘Isomer’. That seems like it would be a good thing, right? Right.

Here is how all this came about. A few months ago I emailed them letting them ( RCRDLBL.COM ) know about ‘Isomer’ and what he was doing and asked if they would be interested in hosting some of his tracks on their site to give away, helping to promote his current releases. A few days came and went, and as things go, I completely forgot all about it.

Then, about a month later I heard back from them saying they would be interested and instructed me to upload some material to a special place and let them know when it was uploaded. At the time I was very busy preparing for an upcoming gig and wasn’t in ‘Isomer promotion’ mode so I put the email aside, and *ahem*, completely forgot about it.

A few days ago I was going through my inbox and came across the email. Shit! I wondered if it was too late. last night I fixed up my bio/press kit (so hard to say good things about one’s self, but in this game that is how it is played) and I uploaded it to them and shot them over an email. The very next morning (that would be today) I got a response letting me know it was up. Nice.

Today I put together a brief promotional email and sent it out to my list to help promote the feature on their site. We’ll see what happens.

The moral of this story is, if you keep at it, eventually you can cut through the noise, if only for a minute. :)


Blog Directory - Blogged