I liked the overview of the presentation and the track that Ryan Kohler sampled. I wonder where Richard D. James got the idea to use a marble. The manipulation of the sound is amazing, for over a minute he makes music with just a marble. Then the ambient music comes in and the tone of the piece changes. I could see why he could be classified as industrial. There is a minimal, rough quality to the beginning and end of the pice . There is also a frantic and frenzied feeling in "Bucephalus Bouncing Ball" that drops out when the melodic-electronic tones come in at the midpoint of the song.
VNV Nation: I would classify this as Eurotrash techno. This is not a kind name I know and it quite judgmental and bad of me, I know we should try to stay away from utterly dismissing music, but I hate VNV. Believe me I have spent hours listening to this. One of my closest friends in Russia, Luda loved dancing and VNV. The first track from
Standing, I have definitely heard at every disco I went to wth her, and the ballad song played when I went skating at the municipal skating rink. Heres the deal, dancing is not an activity I generally indulge in, but in Russia the average student’s social life revolves around the disco. I also went to a few Dachas (like country cottages for weekends use, the Maine equivalent is the Northern Maine hunting camp,: water from an outside well, no indoor plumbing and the kids use it to drink with their friends). These Dacha gatherings turned invariably turned into impromptu disco with entire VNV albums played as people drank, danced and banyaed. It wasn’t that these were horrible times, they weren’t but I sometimes get bored of the repetition and the unchanging vocals. I know that repetition is omnipresent in popular music, but in most rock songs the music doesn’t last for 18 minutes. Also the thumping bass over such long periods give me a headache.
Electronic music did one aspect of my life in Russia better. Driving in Russia is terrifying. The ladas are clunk hunks of steel in all manner of disrepair, it is constantly snowing so they give up on plowing some of the roads in November hoping the small canyons in the road will fill in. Tailgating is de rigeur, I’ve never seen a posted speed limit, you’re not limited to a certain side of the road and you NEVER NEVER stop for pedestrians. Oh right, two more important things, Beer isn’t alcohol and there aren’t seatbelts (I decided this was for the best as it would spare me the horror that is Russian medical care. So anyway, there we were heading to Ajva from Syktyvkar and a friend of a friend is driving. It was a full on blizzard and we were careening down a half paved road at 110 km/h/ Luckily there was some Psy Trance playing, now of course after sitting through this presentation, I have to womder if there was more than just beer in this man's system). Anyway this Psy Tance helped me not to have a panic attack as the electronic music helped make the entire scene like a videogame. I was able to displace myself from the situation and try to calm down. That 20 minute ride would have been far worse without techno, which is why I am unable to hate it in all situations. I believe there is a time and a place for it, but I would just prefer not to hear it three times a week.
Shea creating music in front of the class: I thought this was inventive and I really had fun seeing how a composition came together. I also enjoyed when Steve Pane took over. With no familiarity to the machine, he was able to create loud, loud music in front of us.