Title: Forget All The Memories (Extrapolation mix) Artist: And the Bass Kicks the Drum Album: And the Bass Kicks the Remix Date: 2011
This is the most jammy remix of the bunch. Stays pretty true to the original, barring some manual tape speed changes. This one sees the drums kicking back on the bass.
Once again, recorded to 1/4″ tape from MPC1k through an LXP-1 reverb. Download: atbktd-remix2(extrapolation (right click and choose ‘save as’)
More hybrid Sunnybrook garage/Redhouse attic jam. This one completes this suite of mixes.
Ran with the melody a bit more in this one, and this one comes out as one of the most focused efforts from these samples / sequences.
MPC + LXP1 straight to 1/4″ reels. Download: noggin-nonchalant(pianoversion) (right click and choose ‘save as’)
Title: Hswowsh jam spring 2011 Artist: Noggin Album: Spring Tape Date: 2011
Hump day humpin for ya, acid style.
I will willingly attribute any awesomeness found in these digital frequency representations to be wholly due to the company of my homey Hswowsh, who was chilling in the Furnace with me as I reached over and hit ‘record’ on the tape deck while preparing for my show later that night.
This is therefore short, unrehearsed, distorted acidy excursions for your mind and your rear end.
Homebuilt 303 (x0x) -> amp sim + mpc all being digitally mixed through a newly refurbished Yamaha DMP-7. Whodathunk that analog -> digital -> analog conversion ala 1986 would sound so sweet? Download: hswowsh20110612 (right click and choose ‘save as’)
From the depths of the Sunnybrook garage…..more remix/reshuffling of tracks originally conceived in Anacortes in 2009.
These tracks all share such weird parts, and stray so differently from them, that I find it damn near impossible to split them up in my head. So this one gets called the restrained version cause it kind of dances around you while you’re tied to a chair.
MPC + LXP1 straight to 1/4″ reels. Download: tape1105f (right click and choose ‘save as’)
Title: Demanding Artist: Jon + Noggin Album: As Yet Unknown Date: 2011
One night Jon came over and we had a hell of a recording session, just hitting the reels real freeform style, just putting hot pokers to the tape heads. Then we realised we has only hit ‘play’ and not record. First time I tried out the demagnetiser to really see how it cleaned up tapes, so the tape that was playing was blank, and we never noticed.
Luckily, we just sat down and got to work and hammered out a bunch of the tracks right away.
This is a pretty collaborative drum n bass effort here coming straight off Jon’s mpc. Download: demanding20110605 (right click and choose ‘save as’)
Title: That Old Orange Guitar Artist: Noggin Album: Sober October (demo) Date: 2010
This a track I produced using nothing but a recently (and very diy) rigged-up-with-a-pickup parlor guitar (thanks Chuck). This is actually the first guitar I ever had, and I have since come to like it’s particular sound, so I decided to put to use a piezo I had lying around. Thanks Tom for helping out in the shed as we rigged this thing up. There might be some grounding issues and I might have to sometimes run a bare wire from the sleeve of the plug to the metal part of the guitar, but it works.
Anyway, here’s one to think on on this reflective day. Download: orange (right click and choose ‘save as’)
Here’s one I played a lot with my homey Karl. We would generally open with this one, the lyrics being nothing but a well timed, big smile from both of us. Worked as a pretty good dirty jam to just get the crowd funked up enough to know where things were heading. This is an early demo I made of this running through a bit of rack fx courtesy the studio quad. This one is labeled Pictures of Clouds cause that’s the tape it came from.
I walked outside yesterday and Mr. Blau was right there. Good times! Download: Pictures Of Clouds – 23 – B23 (right click and choose ‘save as’)
Title: Untitled b17 Artist: Noggin Album: Side B Date: 2010
Here’s some house jam I recorded to cassette tape one night in Anacortes with the MS-2000 hooked up. That is pretty neat little synth. The one I got for dirt cheap from the pawn shop has been mounted into what looks like was once a amp head. So it’s a self contained unit with a carrying handle now, instead of a rackless-rack synth. Fits the amp head perfectly, props to the person who did the modification.
Bonus mildly related lulz: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AXLnnDKqvMg Download: noggin-b17 (right click and choose ‘save as’)
Title: Cepstrum (mix 3) Artist: Noggin ft. Mr. Sprott Album: Old Town Acid (demos) Date: 2011
ALMOST instant jam (and request, too). Recorded this last weekend with Kyle in an effort to wrench some tweaky acidity out of his nord micro modular. That there is a hell of a synth packed into tiny little red box. It is also kind of a testament to where music technology itself really stands. Bear with me for the ensuing rant…
When the Nord red boxes started coming out, they were insanely popular. I remember being 15/16 and just lusting after this seemingly super synth, the Nord lead 2. Seemed like all my favorite producers were using them. They had power and they worked just like an analog synth. This is important to note, because, more recently, synth manufacturers have been including ‘analog’ parameters onto their synths, in an effort to quantify ‘analog-ness’ (but let’s be frank here, it’s a binary friggin option). Usually these knobs do nothing more than introduce some jitter and/or detune into the main oscillator’s frequency. The Nords didn’t have this. But people still went crazy for the sound.
First point: Isn’t it funny how nowadays you’ve got to have that ‘analog feel’ knob, in order to ‘fake out’ the listener that his digital synth sounds ‘more analog’…therefore…better. When VA synths WEREN’T a dime a dozen, the Nords didn’t need this knob because, damn, they already sounded good….like a theoretical analog synth (not an ACTUAL analog synth). I find it funny that one of the most popular VA’s out does very little to fake the analog side of things…it’s some pure oscillators with some controls set up in the same fashion as an analog synth.
Moving on, with the Nord modular synths, they literally give you access (via a computer) to a blank canvas where you can patch various synth building blocks together to create your own synth. The possibilities are limited only by how much processing power is required to compute each building block….it’s plenty of power for most things. MOST NOTABLY, a direct reincarnation of a Nord Lead! Yea, you can actually patch the modular in such a way that the tones it outputs are the exact same as from a Nord Lead. What is further enlightening into the matter, is that you can download the Nord Lead banks of sounds to the Modulars, and then you get a behind-the-scenes look at how the nord leads actually produce sound.
GUESS WHAT? It’s pretty damn simple. It’s your basic subtractive synth…oscillators, some envelopes, and a filter. It’s also interesting to note that every one of the Nord Lead patches I brought up used the exact same modular patch, only with the settings/knobs tweaked in different ways.
Second point: By allowing us this behind-the-scenes look inside such a popular synth as the nord lead, one can see how so much of synths is in the marketing, vs the technology. Here you have this modular synth, which can do a perfect emulation of a very popular synth (it actually looks like said popular synth was built directly out of this modular patching environment), plus a whole hell of a lot more, and still wait silently in the shadow of the infamous red boards.
I don’t think it’s a problem, but I applaud Nord for allowing me the chance to explore around, what looks to me like, the basic skeleton they have used to build their own synths.
Think about it this way…imagine if you could create a totally bitching patch in the modular environment, lock it in so it can’t be messed up, then put that patch in another box and call it another synth….Nord can.
Disagree? Agree? Let my ranting encourage your own.
Ok so about this track, yea, it’s MPC and nord micro from Kyle’s living room in Austin. It’s noisy. It’s acid. It’s got fm. Kyle claims to have made these patches that we pulled from 6 – 7 years ago on Walter st. in San Francisco.
Enjoy. Download: cepstrum20110505 (right click and choose ‘save as’)
Title: Nonchalant Love (guitar version) Artist: Plug / Noggin Album: Sober October Demos Date: 2009
Not really sure if you’d call this a remix or an original…the original idea was definitely to remix/remake/cover some random ass track from Mark’s friends in England. All we had was a 7″ record with 4 tracks on it to go from. Max and I got commissioned to do this track. I originally laid down all the basics, melody, beats, etc, hoping that he would just be able to drone/jam out over it if I left it open enough (a pretty winning formula for us, really). Well Max kind of went MIA for a time and so this pretty much stayed in the studio. Until the one time we were supposed to actually perform it, at which point we proceeded to annihilate (read, literally blow the tweeters out of) the speaker system with the absolute first noise we made…we were into feedback and high frequency stuff at the time. I’ve never heard of a blown tweeter before, but kids, it can be done with enough feedback and amplifiers.
The point it, this track never really manifested itself as a Plug ‘remix’ or ‘cover’, and instead gestated in the sampler up until my autumn excursions into garage-tapedom. It has since spawned 2 other mildly related tracks, mainly sharing elements of the drums. Download: nonchalant-guit (right click and choose ‘save as’)