Music Banter

Music Banter (https://www.musicbanter.com/)
-   General Music (https://www.musicbanter.com/general-music/)
-   -   The Monthly Music Trading Post (https://www.musicbanter.com/general-music/38066-monthly-music-trading-post.html)

Schizotypic 01-06-2010 06:09 PM

Good review there, glad you enjoyed the album as much as I do. Anyway, I'll probably be getting my review up within the next few days, can't wait to unzip that sucker as you seem to know your music. Cheers! :beer:

Dieselboy 01-06-2010 11:30 PM

From abdullah424:

William Basinski - The Disintegration Loops Vol. 1
http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/...500_AA280_.jpg
I'd never heard of this before. In case anyone else hasn't either, here's part of the description he sent me as well:

"It's impossible: no one could create a script this contrived. Yet, apparently, it happened. William Basinski's four-disk epic, The Disintegration Loops, was created out of tape loops Basinski made back in the early 1980s. These loops held some personal significance to Basinski, a significance he only touches on in the liner notes and we can only guess at. Originally, he just wanted to transfer the loops from analog reel-to-reel tape to digital hard disk. However, once he started the transfer, he discovered something: the tapes were old and were disintegrating as they played and he recorded them. As he notes in the liner notes, "The music was dying." But he kept recording, documenting the death of these loops."




So yeah, that's what this is. I only received the first session from abdullah, which is nothing more than a one-hour recording of the same 5-second classical sounding sample repeated over and over until the end. The looped sample "dies" as you listen to it over the course of sixty odd minutes and in the end, is little more than warbly static.
It's hard to sum up how the sound makes you feel after listening to it for so long. At points I felt like maybe a baby in a mothers womb might fit accurately. Another time during the listen I thought of floating away from the earth very slowly into outer space. I even thought it could be the soundtrack to a very slow death, or even just slowly dying over your lifetime if the tape were stretched out that long.
Interesting thought's, but at the same time listening to the full hour felt more like work to me than enjoyment. I'm proud to say I finished it, without skipping ahead once, though the temptation was very great.

Another element to this whole thing is introduced with a very strange story. Apparently Basinski and his friends listened to these on the roof of his NY apartment on 9/11...as they watched the towers burn and then finally crumble. They watched, "an old skyline fall and a new one begin." As they listened to the tapes die and be reborn.
Interesting...very interesting. That adds a whole nother element to the music. I can picture watching that happening live with this playing...would be beyond...well I can't even describe how that would feel really.
As I listened, I read around some reviews here and there. There were some negative accusations going on about how he simply linked his music to 9/11 in order to over-emotionalize the significance of what he had. After thinking that through...with the loop still playing...I think what he tried to present might be a little too perfect, and I decided he might have just linked them for those obvious reasons. I got a little angry about this, cause that would be f*cking lame, but I calmed down again. I mean...who really know if its true right? I don't. /shrug

In conclusion...I'm just really not sure what to think of all this. It's quite the journey abdullah, despite what it is...just a simple loop. This is not my kind of music at all. I think I'm glad I listened to it. I'm pretty sure I'll never listen to it again though. I think once was enough, but again, who knows.
If an acquaintance ever asked me if I'd heard this, I don't think I'd be able to say, "Yeah that's cool." or, "Yeah that sucks." I'd simply just say, "Yeah I'm aware of it."
I probably sound like an idiot with all this talk about not being able to make up my mind. It might sound like I don't enjoy challenging concepts, but that's not true. This is just...strange. :|


Anyway, thx for sending this, it was educational. I doubt I woulda had the guts to send this to someone else in a trade if I knew of it, so props. :thumb:

Rickenbacker 01-07-2010 07:26 AM

Inspiring and interesting review, Dieselboy. That is, until you used "a whole nother"

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dieselboy (Post 807047)
a whole nother


Dieselboy 01-07-2010 02:17 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Rickenbacker (Post 807130)
Inspiring and interesting review, Dieselboy. That is, until you used "a whole nother"

Lol, the spell checker caught that of course. I just decided it didn't sound too weird or anything and left it. Is it really that big a deal?

duga 01-07-2010 06:10 PM

i like adding bits of informality even in my formal writings...adds a bit of personality imo

NumberNineDream 01-07-2010 06:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dieselboy (Post 807047)

So yeah, that's what this is. I only received the first session from abdullah, which is nothing more than a one-hour recording of the same 5-second classical sounding sample repeated over and over until the end. The looped sample "dies" as you listen to it over the course of sixty odd minutes and in the end, is little more than warbly static.
It's hard to sum up how the sound makes you feel after listening to it for so long. At points I felt like maybe a baby in a mothers womb might fit accurately. Another time during the listen I thought of floating away from the earth very slowly into outer space. I even thought it could be the soundtrack to a very slow death, or even just slowly dying over your lifetime if the tape were stretched out that long.
Interesting thought's, but at the same time listening to the full hour felt more like work to me than enjoyment. I'm proud to say I finished it, without skipping ahead once, though the temptation was very great.

That really made me want to listen to it. Link please?

Dieselboy 01-07-2010 07:10 PM

I'm sure abdullah will see this, so I'll leave the linking to him I suppose, since it's "his."



I do think the part you bolded is the most fitting of the three I listed, but others might hear different things. That description fits, but maybe not as cool or interesting as it might sound.

As I said, that really was almost a chore listening to that same loop uninterrupted for so long. At least to me. Again though, everyone's different...so see what you think. 0_0

abdullah424 01-07-2010 07:27 PM

Glad you found it interesting Dieselboy....

To return the favor Dieselboy sent me The Dead Bodies - Mr. Spookhouse's Pink House

http://ecx.images-amazon.com/images/...500_AA240_.jpg

True to its name I can definitely imagine hearing this album play in a hunted house, but with that being said I really enjoyed it. I only gave the album one listen so far but it seems to be telling Mr. Spookhouse's story, who I just realized is a vampire.

The music mixes quite a few genres from electronic, to indie, even to classical but it all melds together perfectly and really pulls you in. Even though the tags on the song say indie i don't think you can classify it that easily.

Overall, I loved the album and highly recommend it to any interested parties. And as soon as I'm done typing this I'm going to find some other music by The Dead Bodies.

Astronomer 01-07-2010 07:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Dieselboy (Post 807268)
Is it really that big a deal?

No, it isn't really a big deal, and it bothers me when people go to the effort to pick out something like that and correct it when the piece of writing is perfectly understandable. It doesn't matter.

NumberNineDream 01-07-2010 08:59 PM

From Rickenbacker

Caravan of Thieves - Bouquet (2008)

http://www.glidemagazine.com/hiddent...eves_large.jpg

One of the most cheerful albums I've ever heard. Though, to me "cheerful" isn't much a of a positive point, that album isn't just happy, it genuinely puts you in a great mood. The first impression I got, hearing the first track, I just remembered the Dark Cabaret compilation LoathsomePete uploaded, this kind of music you'll hear in circuses and parades.
A great album and a great band, loved it from my first listen, from the first song even. Maybe it was the gypsy swing music, eastern European kind of melodies, the strong rhythmic guitars, the sound of the violin or the shy double-bass, all I know, it was all there, and I loved this whole fusion. It was kind of a mix between Django Reinhardt and Goran Bregovic, no matter how strange this sounds, it really worked. I don't think I have a "favourite" track, as I feel it's one of those albums you just hear from the beginning to the end. Some of them did stand out, maybe The Butcher's wife, Bouquet or Burial at sea. What was even more interesting though, were these few instrumental parts inserted in the songs, that seemed like improvised pieces on stage.
I didn't talk much about the vocals in the album, maybe because they weren't that special, though they were pretty smooth and worked very well with the great arrangements. I think I would've got annoyed by them if they were a bit more noticeable, cause they would have seemed a bit over done. So I think they were perfect for the music.

All in all, it was a great album, that might be my second favourite of 2009. Thank you Rickenbacker.


All times are GMT -6. The time now is 12:34 PM.


© 2003-2024 Advameg, Inc.