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Saturday, January 22, 2011

The Serra-Spective - Music Visualization and Imagination - II

This is a reply from one of my good friends and Mentor, Jean Serra, to the music and visualization post. The original post is here: http://principia-musicmanica.blogspot.com/2010/09/music-visualization-and-imagination-i.html

It was sent sometime back in December, thanks to my laziness, it comes out only now :)

This was sent sometime back and has made me think of music differently.

=-= START =-=

1rst December 2010

To Ravi,

Let me try and tell you, with my poor own words, how I feel music. I guess that music is a trick that we, humans, invented to access and to enjoy another music, more spiritual, that we have in soul and which is purely silent. But this second music is not written, nor even fixed, and we can just touch it, shortly, and never in a durable manner.

For reaching the goal, we have two or three means. One is to reveal the silence as emerging from the sounds. Indeed, the only way to actually feel silence is to discover it as a palpable background of the sounds. Vivaldi, in your example of the four seasons, uses superbly the technique. Background and foreground are almost symmetrical in durations and locations. The second method consists of echoes, souvenirs, repetitions for remaining you some little melody who previously entered your mind. And the third method is the consequence of that. For managing all effects of nice repetitions, music needs to be constructed. For being “adult”, I mean for being a real art, it has to develop letters, words, and sentences in the flow of the time. It is this whole construction that you progressively enter, often not at the first audition, and that suggests you, urges you to penetrate the second music, that of the soul. A a first glance, this construction may seem abstract, of course, but it is always a story, with a beginning and an end, with suspense, with diversions, where some moments must be boring for provoking others, etc..

And curiously, music generates also exactly the opposite. It may prevent you against the spiritual mode. It may make you addict as if it was a drug, by the amount of decibels (dancings), by the rhythm, by the obsession of some theme that you cannot reject. For doing so, it refuses the construction, and bases its power on the incantation. And we want also this effect, we like it.

Another point. How to be active, rather than passive, in listening music? One could think that an interpreter participates in the musical creation more actively than an auditor, but it is not always true. He can perfectly play on his keyboard and sleep at the same time. Dancing is better, the dancer is passive in that he hears, and active in that he moves his body with the sounds. In terms of your approach, he creates a visualisation, but he does not see it from the outside. Same comment when a few musicians play together.

According to you, is the track “tracid”, visually splendid, an “adult” music, or incantatory? And “any colour you like” (which is visually poorer)? But beyond that, there appears another question. According to you, does the first mode of music, the constructive one, lend itself to images? I have the impression that it is because the specimens you show in the blog are precisely without musical structure that images can fit with them. Am I right? Indeed, some of your specimens are constructed music, as for example Vivaldi’s winter, and “nothing else” with its duo of flutes. But their animations are not external images. They are a mixture of the partition and of the time.frequency diagram. Is it really a time.frequency diagram that an imaginative child wanted to see through music when he was a boy, 15 years ago?

=-= END =-=


That was one of the best interpretations of music i have heard( and obviously great words from a great man :) )! He goes on with a few more comments. There are a lot of interesting points in there and would surely be answering a few in the next upcoming post. I really appreciate and thank Jean in taking the time and effort to go through my attempts at this topic.

Best

Ravi

Monday, January 17, 2011

Playlist #04

After a week of doing nothing but listening to songs, just a collection here i thought would appease my maniacal sensibility to discuss music :)

There are a couple of songs thanks to a sweet little Romantic German movie "Keinohrhasen" meaning "Rabbit Without Ears"

Music is well suited to the movie and at points caught more than the storyline. Here s one:

A Rainy Day In Vancouver:



The ending of the movie comes up with a great mix of the Killer's Mr.Brightside



Which brought me across this German composer Dirk Reichardt. And the youtubing happened a bit more and found a few very interesting ones by the man :)

What you see:



Now (song from Zweiohrküken - part two of Keinohrhasen)



Thats all for this playlist :)

Please do post songs you think are interesting.

Ravi

Saturday, January 8, 2011

Mashups and Mixes #1

Music in general can be conceived to be innovative (tracing back from what and how its made is very well buried and the tracing by itself becomes an art) and the other can be seen as something of Derivative Drive ( Where the essence of the original song still remains and the modification is not the prime attraction).

Here i come up with some good mashups that sample both these worlds of creating songs. The mix sometimes creates a whole new feel to the song where the mixture is contrasted with what u know of the songs originally and the actual new sound that is created by the overlapping or mixed songs.

This first one caught my eye in one of my late night searches - Seems like the guy(DJ Morgoth) is pretty big too.

The Chemical Brothers vs. Rammstein - Du Hast Mich Again


Here is something that gives you a feeling completely contrary to the original iron maiden song mixed in.

The Trooper Believer



Heres one that combines a classic with Radiohead. I personally think that the classical part can be accentuated in the song. But nevertheless this is something of a mashup. This is one of my favorite coverup artists (and otherwise too) on youtube !

Jack Conte (from Pamplamoose minus the cute one :) )



There are a few songs where the voices and the chords merge and these two songs i guess had something of a resemblance. Apart from the funny names the mashup comes up with, its got good resonant voice mixture. May be they could try this out with Karen Carpenter and Fleetwood Mac's Stevie Nicks.

Shut Up The Maneater - Rihanna VS Nelly Furtado



The next song up is not really a mashup - but a composition By A R Rahman with Vanessa Mae for a movie. Its close to a mashup in terms of trying to introduce two contrasting styles within\, Fusion is not really the word here since its not a elements within another that is shown, its a contrast we observe (hopefully this doesnt sound like i am high on coke :P )

Raaga:


This discussion shall as always be revisited again :)

Hope you enjoyed these mixes, Please do send in mixes or mashups you find interesting !

Ravi