Archive for January, 2010

Moon Phase

January 30, 2010

Today we went exploring the Griffith Park Observatory. I wanted to find inspiration for a new collection of musical works geared towards Meditative States. The idea of deep space intrigues me to no end and the color/shape of what it could become finds a home in the way I approach atmospheres in music. I enjoy the idea of sound traveling to us from orbit and the potential for decoding that mystery in the implied tones embedded within music. The visit to the Observatory was both exhilarating and calming. The potentiality of transcendence and the science that accompanies it offers a unique perspective on layering soundscapes. Images below: Temple, Pendulum & Telescope:

photos:orbiter_signal

photos:orbiter_signal

I asked my friend Chris, an Astronomy enthusiast, if he could relay some information about the nature of the intense brightness of the moon we have witnessed recently:

“The Moon’s orbit around the Earth is elliptical, not circular. The same describes the Earth’s orbit around the Sun. Due to this oblong shaped orbit, at certain points, the Earth is closer to the Sun, and the Moon is closer to the Earth. Rarely do both events happen at the same time. Well, this full Moon phase, January 28th-February 1st, happens to fall on a time when the Earth is closer to the Sun (%30 closer than our furthest point) and the Moon is closer to the Earth. (%14 closer than it’s farthest point) By the way, when the Moon enters this closer phase, people call it the Perigee Phase. So this rare event we find our selves in is known as a Bright Perigee Moon Phase.”

After our visit to the Observatory, I met up with Jimmy of Baby Tiger back at the Orbiter Signal recording studio to work on a few instrumental ideas for a film soundtrack project we are working on. The unconscious associations from the field research hopefully offer substantial insight into the color/shape of the mix below:

instrumental-minimalist Mp3

formulaic distension

January 29, 2010

amidst the quiet subterfuge of the pre-dawn
formulaic distension radiates the hollow point
below the thumbnail on the red right hand of god

orbiter_signal:moonlight@5am

orbiter_signal:moonlight@5am

Krzysztof Kieslowski

January 28, 2010

My friend Krzysztof (pronounced “Christophe”) sent over a photo of a record he recently acquired that he was very enthusiastic about. It got me thinking of having him as a guest reviewer of sorts, hypothetically covering any topic from music to restaurants. I called Krzysztof on the phone to discuss this possibility and ask him more about the recent LP purchase.

“Hold on,” Krzysztof said, putting the phone down momentarily, “listen to this.”

Between intermittent static on the phone I could barely make out what sounded like a blues musician howling away in the background.

“Can you hear it?!?” Krzysztof shouted. I informed him that I could hear the record a little bit. He asked if I had heard it before. I said that I had not. He then asked if I had heard the previous album by the artist in question. I said that I had not heard that either. He then wanted to know why I was belittling him. I assured him that I was not trying to. Krzysztof insisted that this album was both emotional as well as epic.

I am wondering now about what type of qualities Christopher Columbus had. I would wager he must have been both emotional and epic. Perhaps he too would have appreciated this particular album.
christophe

drawing black lines

January 27, 2010

down the black cloud sky / pestilence of clout / plague for your favorite disease control center customer service representative / miniature poison from the genealogy of the underprivileged by way of ineptitude / the slow decay of a pixelated lack of imagination / unclear as to which suffering deity we ought to thank for that one
blacklines

factura

January 26, 2010

of the materials themselves: gravel, petrol, rainwater, direct sunlight

starlight

re-purposed post-industrial run-off

prisonhouse of nations

January 25, 2010

encoded in the strata of our predetermined social construct, within our lineage, are cultural obligations

theoretically today is, by mathematical speculation, the most depressing day of the entire year

perhaps it is not the day in itself, but the unconscious bit before sunrise, when you cannot tell the difference from having your eyes open or closed

prisonhouse

Basinski

January 23, 2010

Today I have been listening to Vivian & Ondine by William Basinski on repeat for several hours.

My breathing will slow to a nearly suspended state and I could dissolve into the aether.

Here is a look at one of Basinski’s earlier works, “Melancholia”

petrol skyline

January 22, 2010
composite:orbiter_signal

composite:orbiter_signal

different trains

January 21, 2010
orbiter_signal

orbiter_signal

Steve Reich – Different Trains part 1-America before the war from Lost Highway on Vimeo.

ancient linguistics

January 20, 2010

ancient-Kharg-inscription

arson4