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#if youre going to do an abstract interprative piece
jacksprostate · 5 months
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how did you like The Shining?
It was enjoyable, I liked the set design and I do like when a movie has a pretty fluid original soundtrack rather than prescripted beats. Hard not to remember that Kubrick abused the shit out of Duvall. I can see how people get very obsessive over interpreting this movie. I don't think it sparked that in me but it was like, worth the watch. Tbh I think if I didn't know about the immense hype around it I would be even more meh on it. I was sort of always a bit out of place watching it because, purposefully as far as I could tell, it felt as if everyone was acting around each other, without being an interacting whole, which was an effect that just didn't really play out well for me. If I even rewatch it maybe I'll like it more then but for now I'll put it in "It's always fun to watch a movie with my friends but this was solidly mid to me."
#asks#it files into the type of media where an overall simple story is made purposefully vague and more ambiguous and then lots of#specific details are peppered around#as to inspire people to think way harder about it even though#it kind of obviously seems purposefully lacking#which like. i guess some people enjoy that#but I personally prefer movies and books that just unilaterally commit to what they're doing#like it's not complexity that i shy away from at all#but nothing feels more limpdick to me than something that kneecaps its own message to provide a larger avenue for artiste interpretation#all the supposed interpretations of the shining are limited imo by the fact that none of them seem to be baked in as the dedicated thought#i'm all for niche interpretations#and i dont think author intent is The One True Interpretation#but I think a story should be consistent enough that interpretations can be very strong even if they werent the authors intent#or the inconsistencies should be part of the interpretation#which does seem to happen with the shining dgmw#idk#it feels like a very 'why are the curtains blue' movie. and i actually really love symbol interpretation and whatnot like that!!#i just like. when it is more cohesive. i hate when it feels like its being purposefully waylaid#im sure some shining fans may find this take highly degenerate but thats their problem#if youre going to do an abstract interprative piece#the main meat should still stand strongly on its own#and it just didnt feel like the shining's did for me
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Eric Frye
Jeff Witscher runs the label Salon Records, on which Eric Frye released the sparkling Some Consequences of Four Incapacities. The liner notes are saying that the record investigates new modes of perception and spatial cognition. Interesting words for mathematical beauty a.k.a. far out abstract techno, or the best post-millennial melancholia is currently offering.
— Niels Latomme
NL: Let’s start with your most recent release. It has the very intriguing title Some Consequences of Four Incapacities. What does it mean?
EF The title comes from a text of the same name by Charles Sanders Peirce.
NL It reminds of a book I’m currently reading which is called Boring Formless Nonsense. The writer establishes an Aesthetics of failure, and points out the impor­tance of Failure in experimental music and art. Is this concept important to you? It makes sense in a way, because although it has this very serious framing (cfr. The text & the fact you recorded it at the university), it has something very playful, and random.
EF Methodological and intuitive approaches are integral elements in my compositional practice. The seemingly random aspects that you reference are constructed intention­ally to be perceived precisely in that way, and, in essence, to challenge the common / ingrained modes percep­tion. This might also be viewed, in certain cases, as a form of antinarra­tive compositional strategy.
Regarding ‘Failure’ I’m not sure I follow you. Perhaps some specific examples would help clarify exactly what you’re referencing. Although this concept is not disinteresting to me, it isn’t necessarily something that I would readily apply to my own work. Intentional and focused uti­lization of ‘Failure’ in music seems to be linked stylistically to improv­isation, glitch, and noise, none of which I would self ascribe. ‘Playful’ is a bit easier to sympathize with when connected to my work, how­ever, it’s certainly a slippery slope. In my experience, many visual and auditory links to the brain are per­ceived as ‘playful’ when experienced by the perceiver.
Defining a sound or visual art practice as playful seems to connote a disregard for logic and the ab­sence of a concentrated, considered endeavor. I wonder if this term is applied with equal abandon in other industries. Thaemlitz makes a good case against the ideology of a music practice being shackled to terms like “fun” “playful” “carefree” and “inspi­rational”. This can have a detrimen­tal effect on composers and artists. Language of this type that commonly surrounds these practices is very generalizing and assumptive which can be corrosive and debilitating because it creates boundaries which not only limit the scope and impact of sound, but also makes approach­ing sound making or art making in terms of a recognized labor practice nearly impossible.
NL The promotext about Some Consequences states that you are researching new modes of perception and spatial cognition? How so?
EF As I briefly mentioned above, using antinarrative techniques is a very direct way of recalibrating common patterns of perception. When experienced in conjunction with spatial audio, the cognitive streams are interrupted further.
NL It also states that your music is a manifestation of new bodies of new mathematical concepts. First of all, I’m curious if I understood this well, by asking what does it actually mean? Second, the reason why you do this, seems to create new ways of looking or hearing. Can you explain how it actually does? I also wondered if you are consciously ignoring the concept of emotion in music? It seems now that you are in search of Absolute Music, which exists on itself, without relation to the ‘real’ world, without trigger­ing human emotions (which isn’t a bad nor good thing).
EF Fernando Zalamea wrote a text for my new LP. This text focuses specifically on the links between my compositional output and abstract and radical mathemat­ical concepts such as sheafifi­cation. There are conceptual links to Grothendiek’s sheafs as a topological representation of electroacoustic diffusions.
It seems that sound cannot help but be linked to emotion is some way. Oftentimes experi­ences of perplexity, anticipation, irritation, surprise, attraction, detraction, dissociation, physical and immaterial interaction, are all connected to my work. No, I am not seeking to consciously ignore emotion, In my experi­ence, the sounds are emotion­ally affecting. These sounds also evoke mental, and physical reactions, absolutely.
As the titles, accompanying texts, compositional palette, and structure would suggest, these pieces are not merely showcases of technical construction but conceptually considered works enabling a multitude of interpre­tive gazes and evocative personal connections that vary from experi­ence to experience. Whatever links are drawn, be it linguistic, mathe­matical, philosophical, emotional, the work is evocative and complex in its reflection of its surround­ings. Absolute Music seems to be an archaic concept without much contemporary bearing.
NL Are you an heir of the historical avantgarde music, and especially of their ideas to create new sounds, new music by means of new technology? Do you see this as still relevant in a postmillen­nial decade, in which everything seems to be thought, done and created? Do you feel that there is some sort of weariness in Western culture, as if has reached it’s limits in renewing things?
EF When composing with any system over a period of time, new and unexpected events will appear intermittently. Also, the collabora­tive effort in working with software designers is always creating new angles, strange specificities, and unexpected diversions. One look into software and hardware design, not to mention contemporary com­position, will reveal the unmistakable and continued transitions that are taking place. Curtis Roads men­tioned to me that he is developing an extremely sophisticated spherical audio system. One major obstacle in this ongoing project is funding. ‘Avantgarde’ is another archaic term that is historically relevant but not contemporarily viable. As a society, we are still approaching sound and music as a simple stereo reality in day to day life. This is directly linked to the market and what is currently deemed feasible to produce and consume. We have a long way to go to mature from our infancy (let’s not get started on the current state of radicalized sexism and racism in the world). Mutations will always persist and will simultaneously befuddle and obfuscate misplaced attempts at concrete definition.
NL Since when are you making music? And how does music relate to your visual art?
EF I was intently listening to the sound of air conditioning units when I was 5 years old. I was playing ab­stract improvisational pieces on my greatgrandparents’ baby grand piano when I was around 10 years old.
They are inseparable, one and the same.
NL How was it to work in an anechoic chamber? I heard stories that you cannot stay there for a couple of minutes, otherwise you start to hallucinate due to the lack of visual and auditory input. Does this has something to do with the abstract and absolute nature of your music?
EF The anechoic chamber is a very useful compositional tool. I have heard many stories of people sleep­ing contently in them for several hours. My experience with anechoic chambers is not alienating or antag­onistic. I have successfully utilized the chamber’s ability to isolate and refine certain characteristics of sounds. Anechoic chambers are extremely viable and should not be confined to academic or industry only practices. At Orfield Labs in Minneapolis, where I have spent much time composing and record­ing in the anechoic chamber as well as the multichannel studio, there is a specially built echo chamber (the polar opposite of the anechoic chamber) that I plan to work in during the coming months.
NL I like the way you treated voices in the salon cdr. Are they concrete voices, or synthesized? In relation to the mathematical and abso­lute concepts why did you use the most human of all sounds, the voice, in some tracks?
EF The voices are synthesized. What isn’t human?
NL And last but not least, for the reader, who sometimes likes to connect to the person behind the music. Can you describe your room, and the neighborhood where you live in?
EF I live in North Minneapolis not far from the fourth precinct that was occupied by protesters for several weeks following the brutal murder of Jamar Clark who was handcuffed by two police officers and then shot in the head.
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