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john

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Everything posted by john

  1. Hi Guys I thought you might find this interesting... especially the monthly plays needed to get US minimum wage!
  2. Awesome job by your artist. What is their name?
  3. Awesome artwork. Great job by the artist.
  4. No worries Tony. I really sould post up more
  5. Hey Here's some freebies from some London based developers. They intend expanding the range of free plug ins. https://www.spitfireaudio.com/labs/ Go get yours. Cheers John
  6. Yeah, it’s white noise with a filter sweep on it Sometimes such sweeps are combined with a volume envelope, and or pan sweep.
  7. Hi and welcome to the Songstuff family Tanya! I am sure you know this, but you have awesome taste in music! Lol What do you hope to get from Songstuff? Dive in. The more active you are, the more you are likely to get out of membership. Whatever happens, have fun! Any questions, please just we’ll try our bes5 to help you.
  8. good idea. Definitely better than a plain vanilla addy
  9. john

    Müesk

    Electronic music, somewhere between ambient and avant garde.... Müesk is an inspirational American electronic music artist. He is also a respected poet, publishing under his real name, Steve Mueske. Originally a guitarist in the progressive metal scene, Steve reinvented himself musically after grad school in 2002. Steve’s compositions are clear, detailed pieces of electronic music mastery. He creates his works in the “Thought Farm”, aka his home studio. He has just released an album, “So Far”, through Pink Dolphin Records, 29 pieces, spanning 15 years. You can get your copy of “So Far” here... A limited edition cassette version of “So Far” is available from Pink Dolphin website: http://pinkdolphinmusic.com/album/so-far Steve is already working on a new series of pieces, focusing on both rhythm and transmutation, an evolution of his largely organic style. Discography Hello Cruel World (limited edition EP, 2008) Hello Cruel World (2009) Eventual (2016, Split-Notes) So Far (2018, Pink Dolphin) Also Appears on Next Xen (2016, microtonal compilation from Split-Notes) Code Red (2016, Verses Records compilation to raise money for the ACLU)) Dancing Down the Rabbit Hole, appeared on Friends for Equality 2, a compilation by Spartan Jetplex to raise money for Planned Parenthood (2017); Epiphany's Moment, a collaboration with Manny Marx, appeared on Gone in Sixty Seconds, Vol. 4 ,(2017, the song is not included in So Far) Doomsday Clock is forthcoming on Possible Worlds 4, a compilation by Spectropol Records. Poetry Books Whatever the Story Requires (2004, Pudding House, chapbook) A Mnemonic for Desire (2006, Ghost Road) Slower than Stars (2014, Ravenna Press)
  10. john

    Müesk

    Yep, it’s our awesome interview with Müesk, aka Steve Mueske, inspirational Electronica dude and microtonal composer, poet, and all round nice guy.... Interview Q & A You describe your music as “Electronic Music, somewhere between ambient and avant garde” and that you see yourself as a refugee from the progressive music scene. You have also described the process of change as that of a “reinvention”. Was it a deliberate, directed redefinition of your art or was it more of a gradual evolution? I grew up listening to metal. In my teens and early twenties I wrote progressive heavy metal and played gigs with metal bands in the upper American Midwest. It was fun, but not sustainable, partly because it is a niche market and partly because we played all original music and were not signed. I got married, went to college and then grad school, but found that I really missed making music. In the early 2000’s, technology was making the computer-based home studio a reality. I wanted to do something completely different than I had before (I didn’t want to rehearse 4 - 5 hours per day and drive 300 miles for gigs), so I jumped into making electronic music. Of course, my focus has evolved, and I’ve learned a lot along the way. The past few years, I’ve become interested in a lot of the pioneering work of artists like Ussachevsky, Dockstader, Xenakis, and Chowning. The early practitioners actually had to invent the methods and principles we take for granted for every day. we live in a very exciting time, musically. You have a collection of your works available through Pink Dolphin Music. Can you tell us a bit about the release? It’s a retrospective collection of 29 songs created between 2002 and 2017 that covers material from my first two albums plus seven uncollected tracks. It is available on limited edition double cassette, digital downloads from Bandcamp, iTunes, and streaming sites such as Spotify, Deezer, and Apple Music. With the exception of a handful of songs, it’s pretty much everything I’ve done in the past 15 years. This is your first release through Pink Dolphin. Can you tell us how that came about? I’d had a bit of bourbon one night and decided to send Rich (the label owner) a demo of a recently completed song through Pink Dolphin’s account on We Transfer, just to see what his reaction would be. In the comments I mentioned that I was an independent artist with a few albums and seven new tracks and tossed some ideas out, one of which was doing a retrospective. I’ve been in a kind of gathering phase and the idea of releasing the bulk of my work in a unified collection really appealed to me. To my delight and surprise, he liked the idea and has been very supportive. Of those works, do you have a favourite? If so, can you pin down why it is your favourite? I suppose my answer will change based on mood, but there are a few pieces that were very challenging to create. “Entropy’s Song” comes to mind because it is written in 26 ed3 (an octave and a half divided into 26 steps), is in an odd time signature, and was very labor intensive to create. There was one part, for example, I generated about three dozen chords, cut them up in an audio editor, loaded them into a sampler, then routed them to different tracks, where I could process them with different effects, panning, levels, and so on. Another part uses drum track sequences of different lengths to create a kind of simple polyrhythm. Because the guiding aesthetic was decay, I got a chance to play around with saturation, distortion, bit reduction, and such. Hopefully, a lot of that is transparent to a listener. Half the fun of doing this kind of music is trying to see what is possible. The struggle, of course, is that no two songs have the same architecture. I have to discover how to create the song as the song is being created. From a sound design standpoint, “She Dreamed the Swans” was a huge undertaking. In that piece I wanted to create a disturbing sense of otherworldliness; part of the design aesthetic, inspired by tape music, was to mimic the sound of loops without actually using loops. She Dreamed The Swans Do you have plans for any future releases? I don’t have anything definitive, but I am working on a series of pieces I’m calling my RTM series. I would like to release them at some point as an EP. At some point, too, I would like to return to my roots and mix a heavy aesthetic with something more contemporary -- maybe a post-industrial metal ambient kind of thing, I don’t know. When you create music, what is your personal purpose or goal? The most important thing for me is that it has to have artistic merit. It has to feel authentic, grow organically, and explore territory I haven’t been to before. My hope is that for listeners it encourages a kind of lucid dreaming. I often get comments like “that would be great for a movie soundtrack or video game,” which I find interesting. Ideally, I would hope my music could be the soundtrack for your own private daydream or adventure. Each piece is short and focused thematically enough to invite a short adventure or reverie. I want each piece to be progressively more challenging, but not so esoteric that it exists in isolation and alienate listeners. What draws you to your genre? I’m not really sure what genre I work in. What keeps me interested in electronic music is the limitless world of sound to learn and explore. I’m not bound by a typical song structure other than my desire to keep pieces relatively short. I like texture, I like learning. I like juxtaposition, playing with sound. In fact, probably two hours of every session is dedicated to “play time.” This is valuable because it fills my mind with ideas. Even if I don’t use something right away, the seed is planted and will grow at some future point. The realm of possibilities is limitless; sometimes I’m just in awe of the tools we have available. You have created a number of microtonal or xenharmonic pieces, ie pieces using a tuning and scale other than the standard Western 12-tone temperament of pitches. What first attracted you to alternative tunings? What is it about microtonal that makes it such a fertile ground for you? I’m not sure what first attracted me to alternative tunings, but I started gravitating to the music of Carlo Serafini, Sevish, Skiks (Bruce Hamilton), City of the Asleep, J.L. Smith, and others, and found a group on Facebook called the Xenharmonic Alliance where alternative tunings are regularly discussed. A lot of the mathematics and such goes over my head, but these tunings – and there are thousands and thousands of them to start with – provide new emotional colors, an enhanced and extended chord palette, different constraints for chord progressions and inversions. I guess what I like the most is the sense of being lost, the bewilderment of being on a frontier that is so alien to everything I understand about music. If we were to peek over your shoulder, what does your studio look like? What gear do you typically use? My studio setup is pretty minimal. It’s just a spare room in my house – a PC, two 77-key Roland A-37 and 25-key M-Audio Oxygen MIDI controllers, Adam A7 monitors, Sennheiser headphones. I do everything in the box, with a variety of DAWs, standalone processors, samplers, and plugins. The music is programmed and manually automated in Reaper, Renoise, and Sonar. I used to use Reason a lot in the early days, and just recently upgraded to the new version. A lot has changed since the version I last used. Each of these programs I use for different tasks / reasons, and the approach and architecture varies widely from project to project. I have a little toy Frankenstein, affectionately dubbed, The Reverend Frank N. Stein, who presides over everything. I used to have a small wizard, but he’s been lost for many years. What sets your music apart? What is unique, or at least uncommon? That’s a difficult question. I guess what I do doesn’t really fall into a neat genre / subgenre category. It doesn’t follow conventional song structures, per se, but it is also not so “out there” that it is inaccessible. I try to create music that is interesting and listenable and encourages the mind to wander and explore. Hopefully, what makes it unique is my mind and personality. What is your biggest musical challenge? I have a few challenges. Each piece always presents a new set of circumstances, a new set of problems to solve and ideas to explore. As someone who suffers from depression, it is very easy to get discouraged or become overwhelmed. Trying to cultivate a sense of curiosity and interest is one of the things I keep investing time and energy in. You are also a published poet. What is your favorite published poem? Some of my favorites are as much for the journey of creating them as for the pieces themselves. One that I particularly enjoy is a piece called “Two Reliquaries” which was published in Water~Stone Review in 2010 and then reprinted in an online anthology about dreams. It’s basically a diptych culled from dreams. The first section is from a series of dreams I had about a place called Nowhere, the second from a dream about survival and love in a post-apocalyptic world. Is there a symbiosis or synchronicity in your musical and poetic expression? Yes and no. They are completely different things with different approaches and mindsets, but I guess the guiding aesthetic is similar. There is a need to cultivate and balance a sense of active creation along with surrender or listening. The poems take a much longer time to finish – some have taken as much as ten years or more. As of yet, there has been no interplay between the two, though people have often asked me if it is something I have interest in or will one day do. I have thought about it, but I’m not sure what the approach would be. I’m not interested in writing lyrics for these pieces or simply plopping a poem to a soundtrack. It would have to be something completely different, something hybrid. Maybe I’m overthinking this, I don’t know. I guess, at some point I will probably try something that unifies the two. Your current music project is a series of pieces that focus on rhythm and transmutation. Can you tell us something about that? This is the RTM series that I briefly mentioned earlier. I have one piece completed and am significantly into a second. It is focused primarily on rhythm, rhythmic elements, rhythm transformed into melody, melodies transformed through sound design into texture. Again, I hope that the end result is transparent to the listener, but I find that a guiding principle or aesthetic often serves as a useful guide. The pieces use alternative time signatures and the idea is to work with minimal elements and through layering and repetition create a sense of unification and movement, for example, reusing a short rhythmic phrase with different reverbs and panned in different places. Your work has been predominantly personal exploration. Would you like to collaborate with anyone? If so who, and why? I have collaborated with a few people, most notably J.L. Smith, who co-wrote “Entre Nous” with me, and Manny Marx, who cowrote a track called “Epiphany’s Moment,” which was released on a compilation of one minute tracks called Gone in 60 Seconds, Vol. 4, but is not included on the retrospective. Most of the collaborations I’ve tried, however, have failed for one reason or another. There are problems such as different OSs, DAWs, aesthetic concerns, time and availability, division of tasks, and so on. I’m always open to the idea, though. I think it would be great to do a short, focused EP with someone who has similar interests. Have you considered exploring visual art, especially that of videos for your music? I am, but I’m not sure that I’d be good at it. I don’t really have the drive or curiosity to push that pursuit in meaningful ways. It’s always in the back of my mind, though. Probably because I love interesting visual images. Given your lower visual art drive, and other demands on your time, would you perhaps consider working with a video artist on a collaborative venture? If so, what kind of video works do you find yourself attracted to? Don't get me wrong, I love art. My Twitter feed is filled with paintings and photographs. Collaborating with a visual artist would be very interesting. There is an organization called Motionpoems that pairs poets with filmmakers to make short pieces, and there is usually a soundtrack for those created by a group called Egg Music. I go to the premiers at The Walker Art Center and they are always amazing. So, yeah, something artistic and different. Can you offer any advice to our readers? Believe in yourself, even if it seems no one else does. Honor your art. Honor your craft. Open yourself to the Universe and its endless possibilities. Flaws are good. Imperfections are good. The important thing is to be true. You can get your copy of “So Far” here... Or for cassette/digital: http://pinkdolphinmusic.com/album/so-far Other Useful Links Twitter: @SteveMueske Instagram: @stevemueske Steve Mueske on Patreon
  11. Ah ha! An extrawithextraextraterrestrial? Welcome to our family! If you have any questions or need any help please don’t hesitate to ask and we will see what we can do
  12. Hey Anthony, welcome to our family! Any questions, please don't hesitate to ask. What are you looking to get from Songstuff?
  13. Hey Abacus Welcome to Songstuff! Good to have you with us
  14. Heya Phil, great to have you with us. Welcome to our family!
  15. Earache my eye - Cheech and Chong lol
  16. Good job James. Only nit pick is on the vocal reverb. Solid performance.
  17. First time Rudi. That said, often when you see a band playing unknown material it just leaves you impatient to hear the stuff you know. I guess each way has it’s pros and cons
  18. Hi gang If you could pick one gig from history, that you could time travel and go to today / tonight... what would it be? It could be a gig you actually were at, or not... as long as it was an actual gig. I would love to have been going to see Pink Floyd playing “Dark Side of the Moon: A Piece for Assorted Lunatics” (as it was provisionally known at the time) at the Rainbow Theatre February, 1972. It was played as an incomplete sequence, due to a technical error at the Dome a month before. This was a full 14 months before the album release. There are sooooo many other gigs I would like to have been at or revisited... but this album has been a long time favourite and influence, so I had to choose this. If I could I would love to have experienced it fresh, like any other audience member, to have my mind blown all over again. Still, just to be there would have been enough.
  19. Oldies and goldies. what was the guitarist one again?
  20. good vids that explains some good fundamentals. Worth adding to the YouTube Channel club. It’s prettty new with virtually no info added yet. Hopefully over the next few days.
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