Category Archives: Media

wecollectskies – Of Clouds (essay)

This essay on the motivation, process and conclusion on the Of Clouds EP by wecollectskies comes with the download of the album and offers a unique insight on how the sound of the album was architected.

Final Project Description

I asked a number of people what devices they use most frequently in order to listen to music with – most people said either a mobile phone, mp3 player or a computer. This gave me the idea to create the music for playback so that it could be listened to using said devices. A number of people do not even own a Hi-Fi let alone studio quality speakers or headphones. Listeners are content to play their favourite tracks using only the inbuilt speaker – in many cases at max volume – thus distorting the actual quality/dynamics. This is that I first decided to explore further, with an intention to obtain clarity within the overall sound, regardless of the speaker quality or amplitude. From testing commercially recorded tracks, there seemed to be an overall harshness to the sound in general. The cymbals and guitars in most metal music would spill over the sound as a whole, essentially creating a wall of distorted fuzz. The same applies to headphones with listeners having a habit of playing the music at max volume whilst walking down the street or on a bus. When asking a couple people if I could listen through their headphones to check the “quality”, I found that the sound was similar to that of the phone speaker – the dynamics where completely lost and it appeared that the general consensus was the “louder the better” even though the sound is destroyed. I then went on to test laptop speakers and PC speakers, from which I obtained very much the same result. The main aim for the EP was to make it fully audible at max volume on various headphones, phones, and inbuilt speakers alike. To emulate the playback on various devices/output I choose to mix, record and master with that which people have at home. This accumulates to roughly eight pairs of cheap headphones under £20 (also gaming headsets), two pairs of PC speakers (£10) and a number of phones and laptops. There was no use of professional monitoring systems for the playback, testing and finalizing.

As the concept developed I decided to work entirely within the digital domain rather than analogue, meaning that I would not be able to use microphones, real amplification or real drums. Ultimately, the only real part of the EP is the two instruments being played; guitar and the bass. the amplification is simulated and recorded directly from a digital guitar peddle – there is no guitar amp and mic usage within the EP. One of the key instruments is the drums of which were programmed fully in midi. The samples were re-tweaked and edited from the original “kit” sounds used in the Reason Re-Drum.

In summary, my idea was to see if a digitally created/recorded EP can hold up to a commercially released record. More importantly, would it be able to stand alongside other tracks in terms of overall sound, hold the same characteristics and dynamics without being created in a studio environment? The EP was also only created by one person, there is no band but it was made to sound like there was one.

Contextual Reflection.

During the creation process it was important to have a number of comparisons in terms of what production techniques are currently being used, overall levels of the instruments, how the mix “sits” and general audio level/dynamics. It is important to note however, stylistically the EP was crafted via personal musicianship and technique. as every guitarist will quote that they have their own tone and playing style, this EP is composed of fully original material.

The first reference was to the overall sound level, from artist to artist, and the current trends within similar sub-genres that the EP could be linked to. the ‘loudness’ factor is important. Metal bands aim to be as loud as possible, be it due to taste or to enhance the feeling/message of the record. Whilst the “Of Clouds” EP is not related to metal in terms of structure and composition, it shares similar traits so the level had to be consistent. This was also highlighted by the fact many listeners could be playing the EP in shuffle mode (if within a similar genre) on their computer, phone or mp3 player, making it important to keep up the “loudness” factor, yet at the same time aiming to not ruin the dynamics of the piece.

A record I used as a comparison was “There Is a Hell, Believe Me I’ve Seen It” (2010) by Bring Me The Horizon. http://www.bringmethehorizon.co.uk/. the mastering is focused on maximising the sound of each of the instruments and levels setting it apart from records of another genre. This album was used as a reference solely because of this point – looking at the audio file it was pretty clear to see how “at the peak” the record is. the EP holds well level wise, yet I appreciate that BMTH’s recording/mastering process is much more refined and professional compared to an EP recorded without a microphone with less than substantial monitoring.

Other records I listened to include:

“The Long Procession” (2010) by Amia Venera Landscape
http://www.myspace.com/amiaveneralandscape

“Through Closed Eyes” by April Dead (2006)
(Of which I was previously a member)
http://myspace.com/aprildead

“Messengers” (2007) by August Burns Red
http://www.myspace.com/augustburnsred

All of a sudden I miss everyone (2007) by Explosions in the Sky
http://www.explosionsinthesky.com/

The above are just a few of the records that I listened to. I found that the overall mix I was crafting was able to sit well next to another artists within the “Of Clouds” genre. In terms of instrumentals the guitar level fits well as does that of the drums.

In relation to mastering, due to the lack of frequency response (if any) from the PC speakers it was hard to get the more refined shimmer to the sound. However, by using a number of spectrum analysers such as the Voxengo Span, I was able to recognise elements that my mixing/mastering was lacking, or that the speakers were not responding to.

Project Summary

As for the general production, I believe that this EP is comparable to that of a commercially mixed releases such as those that were used in reference, in both regards to the sound of the instrumentals and the mix levels. The EP has its own characteristics and, considering it was produced without the use of high end production tools, it is still able to hold its own. Compared to my previous material that was recorded using a similar set up, it is clear that the production contains a great deal of clarity. I would like to have been able to record a version of a track(s) using high end equipment to see how it compares as an end result.

The guitars are convincing, the stereo spread is wide and captures a lot of the energy contained within the composition. As great as the amp simulation sounds, on a personal level I feel it is lacking harmonic content from a real guitar cab, amp and microphone. Sometimes I feel that High-Gain guitar tones are not suited to that of a digital effects unit, however a clean guitar setting can be impressive. I also found that adding delay on the unit did at times make the signal too hot on the mono output.

Even though the bass appears fitting for the most part, when the kick drum is at its most hectic the bass tends to get lost within the mix – I think, however, this is due to the programmed timings of the pattern and the eel on the kick. I would also like to note that the bass is not an instrument I have personally recorded before so I would have liked to have learned a better playing technique so as to improve the sound.

I have to say I am pleased with the drum sound. The patterns at times become a little mechanical but for the most part the “kit” sounds clear and at a good level. I was able to create a slight humanisation to the drum beats and form a number of variations on the same piece of kit. It would have been interesting to have made use of other musicians and play-styles in the composition, such as a real drummer, for example.

In terms of playback, I find that the EP has clarity on a wide range of speakers and headphones. At full volume the sound stays more consistent to that of other artists I tested, but then there is also the issue of MP3 compression. There are a few mixing flaws and errors but generally I believe I was able to capture my intentions solidly. I am now looking to create more music with set limitations as the results are more original and contain an element of individuality.

Con Fuoco d’Occhi un Nostalgico Lupo (review by Fluid-Radio)

Fluid-Radio‘s  Adam Williams reviews  Con Fuoco d’Occhi un Nostalgico Lupo.

This compilation comes via The Silent Ballet and Lost Children Netlabel and comprises contemporary Italian experimental music which was created in part to highlight the abundance of excellent and often unheralded artists originating from Italy. Many of the tracks included have been written especially for this volume or else were previously unavailable.

For some years The Silent Ballet has been dedicated to audial excellence and so it comes as no surprise that a work which is compiled by members of TSB’s staff is packed full of quality music. At twenty one tracks spread over two parts, there is a large amount of music for the listener to pour over. Due to the fractured nature of Italian independent music and the relatively less state support which artists receive when compared with many other Western European cities, it is a worthy endeavour indeed to shine the spotlight on this fertile music scene.

There is a real diversity to the track-list and to discuss each musician would be worthy of an article in itself, so to pick merely a few names involved for the sake of brevity, artists such as Matteo Uggeri, Giuseppe Ielasi, Neil on Impression are given a space on the compilation, as is Italian noise guru Maurizio Bianchi, who has offered a track from what he reports to be his last album, having announced his retirement from music once again. Though there are elements to the compilation which will cater to most experimental music fan’s taste, there is a shared aesthetic between the works and this helps to make con fuoco d’occhi un nostalgico lupo a remarkably cohesive body of work which incorporates ambient, minimalism, field recordings and more.

In con fuoco d’occhi un nostalgico lupo, the many people involved in its creation have between them compiled a wonderful and sincere document of Italian contemporary experimental music which can serve as an introduction to the music scene within Italy for the uninformed or as simply a great body of work in its own right.

Con fuoco d’occhi un nostalgico lupo is available now from Lost Children Netlabel for free download or optional payment of any desired amount.

- Review by Adam Williams for Fluid Radio

source: http://www.fluid-radio.co.uk/2010/11/con-fuoco-d%E2%80%99occhi-un-nostalgico-lupo/

Machtdose.de podcast August 2010

An interesting podcast with netlabel tunes from all over the world, it features a track of The Silent Ballet Compilation Volume 16, The Best PessimistThe Sea, The Night, The Stars, The Light, and is well worth a listen if you want to get to know some other netlabels and their music.

Machtdose Podcast August 2010 by machtdose

machtdose.de

Con Fuoco d’Occhi un Nostalgico Lupo (Essay)

Longtime readers, or those who crawl through the archives, of The Silent Ballet may remember a feature called Tracking the Trends. In fact, the feature, written by founder Jordan Volz, predates TSB itself, going back to the time of Decoy Music. Each installment took a close look at promising new artists, organized by region. Italy stood out as an important center for creative music, though grouping artists based solely on region always seemed a bit arbitrary to me. Over the years I’ve gotten to know more and more of these musicians, and found that their opinion of their homeland was more complicated than artists from other regions. Italian artists receive less state support for their work, and the Italian scene suffers from fragmentation and a lack of performance venues. Several prominent members of the musical community live and work in Paris, Berlin, Tokyo, or other cosmopolitan centers of artistic production. As a result of this, I found that many of the artists I’ve worked with were unaware of work that was going on within their own country. Certainly region alone isn’t enough of an organizing principle, but nor is it one that that can be completely dismissed outright. These musicians do indeed share a linguistic and cultural tradition, and though that heritage isn’t always expressed in stylistic similarities, certain attitudes and conventions do emerge, or are at least being reacted to.

The original conception for this project was to put together a single release dedicated to artists who work with field-recordings, a project that will finally see the light of day next year. In the early stages of putting this together I realized that many of the artists were Italian, so the orientation of the project shifted, and con fuoco d’occhi un nostalgico lupo was born. I was struck by the creative diversity of these artists, and so abandoned genre for nationality. I was also working on the inaugural issue of In Circulation at this same time, thinking about the idea of nationalism, trans-nationalism, competing globalisms, and both the inadequacies and persistence of the nation-state. I realized that I was putting together a compilation based precisely on national origin, thereby supporting, at least in the case of aesthetic output, the belief that national heritage can be an important factor.

Opera fans in Italy are known for being quite harsh and unforgiving. The widespread attention that classical music has commanded in Italy created an audience with sophisticated taste, and one that was unafraid to voice their discontent, in effect an affirmation that they have cultivated taste and that they are not averse to passing judgement. By the time rock music became popular in Italy, the psychedelic movement had already taken off in the UK, and so Italy’s exposure to rock was one with expanded sonic potential. These shared conditions, linguistic and cultural heritage, create a shared aesthetic orientation, even if this orientation becomes expressed in such diverse forms. My hope is that in some way this work justifies its existence, bringing together a strong collection of artists and representing some of the most interesting music being created today.

The twenty-one tracks that are featured on con fuoco are not quite meant to be a “who’s who” of the Italian scene but the volume does strive to be something on an anthology, showcasing this particular moment in time, bringing together established artists with emerging figures, showcasing the tremendous vibrancy and diversity of music being made by Italian artists today. Many of the tracks were composed exclusively for this volume, or else are previously unavailable. Giuseppe Ielasi, a figure of central importance, contributed a track of a recent LP as well as having contributed to the production of other tracks. Neil on Impression were featured in the original Tracking the Trends, as were Giardini di Mirò, whose keyboarding has contributed a track under the name Pillow.

Though many of the artists come from Milan, in the end there are artists present from all over Italy. As an Italian-American and one who has spent a good deal of time in Italy, and written much about its music, I believe that Italy has a rich
tradition of interesting and unique artists. But I have found that many of my friends in Italy who make music are often unaware of many of their peers in Italy. With a little context, the various artists presented here make more sense as a group, hopefully to the artists themselves as much as to new listeners. Important historical precedents exist that, coupled with Italy’s classical and avant-garde past, help situate contemporary artists in a national tradition, granted one that has also incorporated many influences from abroad as well: figures such as the Futurist painter, composer, and theorist of noise Luigi Russolo, psychedelic rock group Le Stelle di Mario Schifano, contemporary classical composer Luciano Cilio, and Maurizio Bianchi (MB), whose industrial and post-ambient noise is incomparable. It is my great pleasure to say that MB is included in this volume, a track taken from what may very well be his last album, as he has announced his retirement from music yet again. Taken together these figures represent a genealogy of sorts that all the artists included on this volume share on some level. Even if their particular work may be unknown to some, they represent, in my view, nodes in which various tendencies in Italian avant-garde music have been clearly articulated and expressed in the last century. The transnational influence of rock and punk and John Cage and Brian Eno and so on are surely audible as well, but this is not news but a lineage that musicians all over the world now share. The link between Russolo and Bianchi is quite a necessary one, both representing the camp that is deeply resisting the past, embracing noise in all its modern, ugly, and beautiful forms.

Philippe Blanche’s essay “The art of duration and resonance” (2009) treated many of these connections, focusing attention on MB and the younger artists working in his wake, outlining the aesthetic parameters they’ve begun to carve out, succinctly summed up in his title. Many of these younger artists of the past two decades have contributed to furthering the post-ambient work he’d returned to after a lengthy hiatus from his earlier, more industrial work, even collaborating with MB directly, as in the Between the Elements series conceived of by MB and Matteo Uggeri. This generation of musicians is represented in this volume, however they often seem to have more of a playfulness than one would expect from MB himself. Uggeri and others who have integrated field-recordings into the core of their work often feature the voices of children, a powerful transformation of MB’s original stance towards industrial noise and technology. Perhaps the clearest example of this is in Italian Plays, a broadcast Uggeri curated for Framework, in which all the contributions features recordings of children playing games. Using an industrial process, framing a moment with simple recording technology, the resulting work is deeply hopeful. Many of the tracks on con fuoco express a similar sentiment, and perhaps this is at the heart of what unites these artists: a realism that lacks both irony and cynicism.

What could be more refreshing?

J. Sannicandro
Montréal
October 2010

Photography by Adriano Zanniaz64.org