Agharta wrote:Music by 300 strangers:
https://youtu.be/enFB33SOo6k
There are other videos where they look at how the piece was put together.
That is quite extraordinary, and surprisingly moving.
Agharta wrote:Music by 300 strangers:
https://youtu.be/enFB33SOo6k
There are other videos where they look at how the piece was put together.
Martin Walker wrote:I'm loving this BigRedX!
Must dig out my copies of Coagula and Photosounder and get stuck in again.
Martin
ManFromGlass wrote:Photosounder looked wonderfully deep and I’ve kept it around for when I have time to learn it properly. There used to be a Mac program that converted pictures to music and I think one could also go in and alter the frequencies by drawing.
I’ve always been fascinated by the concept of converting images to sounds. The visual and aural seem somehow strongly connected to me.
If this community composition gets off the ground I am in too!
FrankF wrote:Arpangel wrote:FrankF wrote:What I want to know is: where can I buy a Marconi Microphone?
No-one seems to stock them!
Are you joking? I sold two about 3 years ago.
Ha! Well, I can wait. As they say, "what goes around comes around".
Actually, I contacted one music shop called The Kipple Factory, they've got outlets everywhere, but I think their biggest branch is down by the Tannhauser Gate.
Shell Beach is the nearest tube station, I believe.
Anyway, I asked them if they had the item in stock, and the chap on the vidphone (Isidore, I think his name was), he said, "hmm, well, we did have a few last month, but they got puddinged in a timeslip, so I reckon we're looking at a very long delay."
"Yes, yes!", I exclaimed, "that's exactly what I'm after, a VERY LONG DELAY!"
"Have you tried Digitech?", he replied.
I hung up in disgust.
I dunno, maybe I should just get some more neural plugins for my Interocitor...
FrankF wrote:Oh, right, you weren't joking! Kudos to you, hombre: I hope you got a good price for a good cause.
I was referring to this rather mystical and fascinating anecdote:
"The story goes that, late in his life, Guglielmo Marconi had an epiphany. The godfather of radio technology decided that no sound ever dies. It just decays beyond the point that we can detect it with our ears. Any sound was forever recoverable, he believed, with the right device. His dream was to build one powerful enough to pick up Christ’s Sermon on the Mount."
FrankF wrote:It is indeed a beautiful idea, as you say. Definitely a song title to be had from that!
It makes you wonder, though: can Google Translate handle Aramaic?
And would there be any mention of dairy products, or is that just apocryphal?
FrankF wrote:The word "microphone" was mentioned when I first read it, but I can't find that article anymore. I imagine an autobiography might reveal what he actually said/thought.
FrankF wrote:Oh yes, there are more things in Heaven and Las Vegas, Horatio!
Ooh look, I found this on YT: The Stone Tape, written by Nigel Kneale, no less.
Some great sound FX in the opening minutes, and the lovely Jane Asher pretending to look frightened.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vtvJWKaDI9s
"The story goes that, late in his life, Guglielmo Marconi had an epiphany. The godfather of radio technology decided that no sound ever dies. It just decays beyond the point that we can detect it with our ears. Any sound was forever recoverable, he believed, with the right device. His dream was to build one powerful enough to pick up Christ’s Sermon on the Mount."[/i]
shiihs wrote:To come back to the original question.... I see some options:
- participants could write their own variation on a given theme or chord progression or add extra lines/voices to variations in progress, whatever they prefer
- or one could set up a chain of participants, where the next participant continues where the previous one stopped (but here some measures need to be taken to avoid that the whole process stops if one of the participants suddenly loses interest/cannot participate for some reason).