https://soundcloud.com/richardfair/the-fog-disquiet0258
This past week we’ve had some pretty intense fog in Norfolk, UK. One day in particular I don’t think it cleared at all during the day. Walking in the damp air, smells and sounds were very different. Distant objects were unseen and unheard. I only existed in a small grey space. It should have been claustrophobic, yet the emptiness seemed vast.
Occasionally muffled sounds would emerge along with dark grey shapes.
By the next day, my world had been returned to me. It seemed loud and bright and frightening.

6 Likes

https://soundcloud.com/suss-musik/weltschmerz-disquiet0258

It’s winter at Suss Müsik headquarters; today is the first truly cold day of the season. The first evidence of winter is usually the hollow sound of the wind blowing through our chimney and rattling through the studio ductwork. The greenery outside has begun its period of dormancy, the colorful vibrancy of fall replaced with a neutral thicket of browns and greys. We may get snow tonight.

WInter coincides with the holiday season. Bells can be heard ringing through the streets and there’s a sentimental magic to the air. After the holidays, an abyss takes over where sunlight is scarce. Those who embrace the festivities of December will isolate themselves come January, especially when winter storms are fierce and roads are impassable.

An aside: Suss Müsik recalls spending time in the farthest reaches of the north, where the construction and logging industries come to a halt between November and April. Unemployment in those parts is rampant during the cruel winter months. People exist in quiet desperation, waiting in solitude for the spring thaw with only cabin fever and a bottle of Thunderbird for company.

For this short piece, Suss Müsik attempts to channel three elements of the winter season: the first breaths of an early snowfall, the Yuletide celebration, and that moment of terror when the walls close in. A simple piano motif builds upon a bed of mallet percussion and ceramic flute, followed by an insistent beat topped with fuzzy bass and snarky guitar feedback.

We didn’t intend to make such a dark piece, but the muse goes where it goes. The piece is titled Weltschmerz, a German word that describes the melancholy feeling of being disconnected from the physical world.

Featured are the beautifully spatial tones of ceramic artist John Kulias playing a homemade Native American flute. Check out his work at http://meadowlarkflutes.com/ and he has a YouTube channel where you can see his wonderful playing.

5 Likes

The weather here today is usual for December in the UK- white-grey skies, gentle rain with occasional heavier showers, cold and damp. Many would find this weather depressing - but there is an inherent beauty to it, that I have a soft spot for. And it makes you appreciate the warm lights of home all the more. So, back to basics this week for me, with a piano improvisation. To make it sound more wintry, I rolled off a lot of the high end and boosted the bass of the piano, added a touch of very long (20 second) reverb which had most of the bass rolled off, and played large sections with the una-cordo pedal down to dampen the sound further. My first take got me pretty damned close to where I wanted to be, but I recorded it too hot and it distorted in an ugly digital way. The second take, as is often the case, was lacklustre but I found a few more thematic ideas in it, and this was my third take which I feel captures the mood.

https://soundcloud.com/ikjoyce/a-white-grey-sky-disquiet0258

6 Likes

16 tracks/acts so far in the playlist:

https://soundcloud.com/disquiet/sets/disquiet-junto-project-0258

3 Likes

https://soundcloud.com/lionel-benancie/dd992-disquiet-junto-project-0258-sonic-climate

Rain Rain and Horse
With a Bassline By Wüst :wink:

4 Likes

This week’s effort is a collage of the same field recording mangled in different ways, a base drone, and the whole thing fed through a feedback network:

4 Likes

https://soundcloud.com/ohm-research/glacial-drift-disquiet-0258

Winter is finally arriving in Maryland. This piece reflects the chill I feel is settling in. Primarily derived from scanning and modulating the wavetables in a Waldorf NW1, then some granular processing via an Audio Damage Grainshift. I apologize for the extra lengthy piece. This is the original form, and it didn’t work(to my ears) when I tried to edit it in length.

2 Likes

https://soundcloud.com/ethanhein/kool-warming-disquiet0258

My local weather is cold at the moment, but the climate in general is disturbingly warm and getting warmer all the time. Beats, guitar and horn stabs come from “Kool Is Back” by Funk Inc. Vocals are Ella Fitzgerald singing a Cole Porter song. And I included a slowed-down BRAAAM from the Inception trailer, so I can incept you with my anxiety about climate change and maybe some activist fervor too.

3 Likes

While the term “climate” prompted me think of the weather, I was reluctant to take that direction.

“Climate” reminded me of Junto 106, where the rise and fall of the temperature over 24 hours became a graphic score. Aside from thinking the cool change that arrived around the time of Marc’s email could be signified with a drop in rhythm or pitch, I didn’t have too many ideas.

In the end I used both a drop in rhythm and pitch in my track but, while googling a definition of “climate” I’d been struck by the term “mileu” and it’d resonated with my reflection on the year that has passed.

The Christmas party at work on Thursday prompted me to think about my first year working in a museum and also I’d been playing on an old organ that I wanted to incorporate. So I started looking at the videos I’ve shot on the iPhone that came with my job and thinking how to make a song from a variety of animal and industrial noises.

Like @saintcloud observed, cicadas are a feature of the Australian soundscape. Their pitch rises and falls with the temperature. This week I read they can be as loud as 120 decibels. And I heard them for the first time this week too, although it was a lower pitch than the recording I have on my phone.

The video shows where many of the sounds originate. The emu makes a very deep gulping sound that might not be easy to identify and I don’t know the species of the other bird. The sound of a steam whistle is heard during the shot of the horses, while the cicadas were among the white cypress pines. You also see and hear the steam machinery shed.

While remixing landscapes has been a part of my music for a while, it was good to have musical instruments to work with in this track. You can hear horns, high hat and kick drum from a recording of Griffith’s town band, and I guess the cowbells can be considered here too. There’s also a bell from an old sulky, as well as my son operating a water pump.

The cicadas are gated in places to sound like a high hat and one of the blacksmithing loops is repitched for a similar effect. Most of the loops have been EQ’d to remove lower frequencies, except the kick drum is only low frequencies. The loops have also been gated.

This is the first time I’ve remixed recordings made on an iPhone and the higher frequencies started to become a problem when I added compression. My ears are still ringing but a bit of de-essing took care of them in the end.

You can see more of the Museum on Instagram and I’ve written a bit more on my blog here.

4 Likes

Hello all,

Here in Batam, the weather is very unpredictable… it can go from sunny/hot to rain/flooding in 10 minutes, we don’t have any seasons, it’s like this the whole year.
So for this assignment I wanted to make a not-danceable-dance song. Like the weather unpredictable but predictable.
I used sounds from Air Hybrid & Wobble and put them together with Audacity

That’s it for this week

https://soundcloud.com/user-242143924/4pmdisquiet0258

3 Likes

One rain recorded on different places…
Recorded with IPad and rode i-xy and cubasis

5 Likes

https://soundcloud.com/simple-not-simpler/disquiet-junto-0258-sonic-climate-sw-ohio-usa

Southwest, Ohio, USA. Wet, cold, ready for snow.

Eurorack, one-take recording. Patch uses Rings, Harmonic Oscillator, Rainmaker, Batumi and Quad Function & Trigger Source. Added mild mix effects post.

4 Likes

On Thursday, when I got the assignment, it was cold and damp. Also, my keyboard controller stopped working, so I programmed in two notes that seemed chilly and unrelenting over a beat. I then layered it with other synths using some randomizing, as well as adding the guitars.
https://soundcloud.com/lawrence-frazier-1/dank-disquiet0258

3 Likes

The winters in Kansas are very cold, but the weather here is also very unpredictable (it’s not unheard of for the temperature to be below zero and above sixty in the same week in December).

This piece uses randomization to alter the notes and timbres of a set of chords. All of the effects were created in Puredata.

3 Likes

Scottsdale Chill Factor

https://soundcloud.com/neurogami/scottsdale-chill-factor-disquiet0258

I wouldn’t swear that this in fact captures the current climate in sunny, and now relatively chilly, Scottsdale AZ. But that’s what the map said when I started out.

I’ve recently been interested in sticking to a more limited instrument set. A current goal is to create a number of pieces that use only my Yamaha 3/4-sized acoustic guitar. The first effort is presented here.

I recorded a number of tracks, more or less in pairs: Record track X, then improvise some accompaniment on track Y.

I then went through what I had, sliced out a number of samples, and brought them into Renoise. Then commenced additional slicing, pitching shifting, modulating, looping, delays, and so on.

I had in mind the idea of brisk air and clear skies, a reprieve from the summer heat. Here in winter there are days when the sky gets overcast, and sometimes it even rains. I thought of a crisp shimmer, with a hint of foreboding.

And then I just set to work making something I liked.

4 Likes

a live performance in one take. an ambient drone improvisation for modular synthesizer, monome, cassette tape, effects, and field recording. gentle music for winter weather.

soundcloud:

it’s been mostly cold and gray where i live; intermittent rain showers and chill winds. yet every now and then, the clouds vanish entirely, and the deepest, palest winter blue fills the heavens.

for this week’s song, which includes disquiet junto project #0258 and weekly beats 2016 #49, i wanted to place all that loveliness into a song using a new workflow. i recorded four long improvisations on rhodes and juno 106 to cassette tape, each one mono track. the tape deck, a yamaha mt4x, got one channel of the mixer, and two more for the modular, one for melodic swells and one for the field recording of the rainstorm at home.

i played melodies on the monome grid, via earthsea (oscillator: mannequins mangrove into three sisters filter, then mutable instruments clouds), while also bringing the tape drone sequences in and out by sliding the faders in real time, playing it like an instrument. constantly shifting between the mt4x, modular, mixer, and effects pedals. yet there were some moments so surprisingly pretty that i had to keep still and let the waves wash over me, as i had not heard everything together before starting the live session.

the video isn’t identical to the soundcloud recording, as i didn’t have time to film that session before the weekly beats deadline. but the video does show the same process and environment of the original recording.

9 Likes

This is my first Junto! Actually, not exactly true - I attempted to complete twice before but ran out of time.

https://soundcloud.com/modulogeek/autumns-end-disquiet0258

I recorded 3 takes, live, and picked the best one. Mixed and “mastered” a little bit (quite hard as my monitors are busted and so I’m just mixing with headphones).

This is also my first release with my recently-acquired modular. I’ve only been fiddling for a month or so. Having been dormant musically for more than 2 years, the modular synth has opened me to a whole new world, just as much as how the monome grid has inspired me in 2012.

About the track: I mostly just let my patching experiments dictate the outcome. I kept working until I achieved a sound that more or less describes how I feel about the current weather here in Houston. The low drone feels like a warm blanket while the higher notes serve to remind me of the start of winter.

5 Likes

https://soundcloud.com/rmn-at-spl/disquiet0258

Well, although i subscribed to the Disquiet mailing list for a year or so, that’s my first participation.

It’s not winter really yet, here (northern france), but it’s not a period of transition anymore.
Everything is settling down and becoming more stable (even the weather, as winters are mostly dry around my place).
I thought mostly of my inner climate for this piece.
I went in my garden with a microphone, to gather whatever was there. There was no wind, and few animals (one crow made it into the piece), so i had to generate my own motifs with the leaves, some dead wood, the watertank… i also found a very dry branch that had tiny (2-4cm) sub-branches on it, which i could play like a kalimba with almost no resonance.
I recorded 7 notes of that branch, which happened to be correctly tuned on an E minor scale, so that was my starting point. I recorded 3 minutes of that scale on a bass guitar and then mangled that into some granular software patch.
I also included other garden sounds recorded earlier this fall.

Hope it conveys the feeling of the softer sunlight in december.

3 Likes

Afternoon Rain: The City [disquiet0258]

Disquiet Junto Project 0258: Sonic Climate
Express your local weather in sound.

San Francisco, late afternoon, December 10, 2016. Clearing after several days of rain. Typical weather this time of year. Automobiles pass by on wet street. Children come out to play. Wind chimes gently blowing in the breeze.

Street sounds and rain by Corsica_S and jmbphilmes from Freesound.org. Digital rain created with Reaktor. Children sounds are by klankbeeld from http://www.freesound.org/people/klankbeeld/ and my own recording (recorded with an iPad on October 14, 2015). Wind chimes are a composite of recordings by InspectorJ from Freesound.org and my own (recorded with Zoom H5).

Image by “Bill” on LoveThisPic.com

4 Likes

I wanted to use a recording I had made of my furnace blower, since it relates to the climate here in southeastern Michigan. I had several false starts that didn’t bear fruit. As I experimented, we had our first major snowfall this season, as shown in the track photo. Ultimately, the furnace blower recording was granulated in The Mangle and Kaivo and treated with Permut8 to produce this piece.

Paul

https://soundcloud.com/plusch/seven-inches-of-snow-disquiet0258

5 Likes