https://soundcloud.com/triermusic/they-dont-get-your-sense-of-humor-but-they-willdisquiet0244-euro-mixin
I managed to squeeze in a disquiet project despite an incredibly busy new school year. I was hoping to achieve my goal of reinventing Eno’s semi-stochastic Music for Airports album, but I ended up going in a slightly different direction (and perhaps falling back into old habits!)
Pitch-shifting and time-stretching were the name of this game. I started with modifying these source samples down as low as they could go, and lovely tones emerged. Feedback squalls became thoughtful long tones. Then, I pitch-shifted and time-stretched the excerpts to make them match the subsections of the golden mean. I let the length of time to fill determine how much I time-stretched the samples: long lengths of time fill meant severely down-pitched samples.
The feedback squall reappears to punctuate transitions between sections.
The other central component of this piece is a slow increase in gain to the golden mean point. I put a limiter on the track to keep the level even, but the gradually increasing gain creates distortion and changes the timbre of familiar samples.
The title comes from a piece of advice my kid gave me after I led her choir rehearsal tonight.