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5/11/13

Sound picture composite





It is a spring day in a small park surrounded by houses. The weather is warm so people are out and busy with roof repairs. Walking up the slope into the park and then around its area, stopping every now and then to capture the sounds heard in the moment. Sometimes the wind would rise unexpectedly because of the shape and topography of the park. It shook the leaves, sometimes the microphone was close by, sometimes at a 30 foot distance. The last sound is that of a man shouting out the cost of something in thousands. There is the wild wind and an untamed bunny, but the economy is never not nearby. 

All were laid out on a single track with short fade in/fade outs linking them and a few trims applied to shorten the duration of some of the takes.

A few days after making this I dipped into Murray Shafer's The Tuning of the World (1977) over an afternoon sandwich and found this quote by Thomas Hardy whose prose description of a 19c English pastoral landscape strongly resonated with my local urbanite listening experience in the park. I marvel at his prose, at how its forthright rhythmic exposition emulate the declarative call of the shepherd from the hill and magically connects the ears to the imagination through mere words on a page. 
  
" The shepherd on the east hill could shout out lambing intelligence to the shepherd on the west hill, over the intervening town chimneys, without great inconvenience to his voice, so nearly did the steep pastures encroach upon the burghers' backyards. And at night it was possible to stand in the very midst of the town and hear from their native paddocks on the lower levels of greensward the mild lowing of the farmers heifer, and the profound, warm blowings of breath in which those creatures indulge."
                                        Thomas Hardy  "Fellow Townsmen", Wessex Tales 1920

5/8/13

Lima beans

Giant lima beans, overnightly soaked and popped out of their skins (that part is uber satisfying). They cook pretty fast, are a cross between bean and potato in taste/texture and go well with Balsamic vinegar...


5/7/13

a sun room


....a sun room
......moon room, too, is the idea....


One side a set of doors leading from the main house into the sun room. These are planks normally used for scaffolding rigs which Peter has flayed with a wire brush attached to a drill, and then joined together with sticks of dowel and glue. It weighs a lot and with 8 more pounds of hardware attached should prove an interesting challenge to hang. 


A FILM IN STILL PARTS








Album covers from books of bakelite records circa 1940's (thanks, Nancy Haddix!). Big mould invasion. More rain makes new compositions. Mould has invaded the grooves of the records themselves, also. Later I will play a few under the needle and see if there is any correlation between the visual patterns and sounds produced by the needle bumping over the mould spores convolved with the music itself.

"What was that noise?" "It's getting spooky, let's go home"

Gasping in awe at the strange scene in front of him, the gentleman steadied himself against a tree.

Mouldy symphony

Compositions in mould...

Lyre. A conductor stands where the strings would be. All mouldy.





Bee Pollen

This is bee food. It's pollen mixed with bee spit that is made and stored by the bee. It smells strange but tastes lovely; slightly fruity and slightly honey but not sweet. A tablespoon in cereal imparts a surprisingly deep creamy sensation. It's a good substitute for milk.
I hope the bees don't mind. I mean, is this pillage? 

Each piece is about the size of a pin-oat. Being pollen, cautions abound about allergies. Since it is ingested rather than airborne, I wonder does that reduce chances of reaction.