https://soundcloud.com/user-208393504/3-log-disquiet0285

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Hey All, I found 3 bar codes from google images. The first 2 were those kind that are used for smart phones that do magical whatever. “Whatever” because I refuse to get a smartphone and consider them hard drugs. I wish I could throw my flip phone away but it is convenient sometimes. I drew midi notes that looked like the barcodes. Mainly squares with random stuff in the middle. The last bar code was old school and I used it on a drum track with the lines being a bass kick and the spaces a snare thick line being a double kick. Added another few drum spice tracks. I did this last night falling asleep since Marc was on California time. Woke up this morning to do the write up.

Peace, Hugh

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http://hbrecordings.bandcamp.com/track/taxonomy-hb745-disquiet0285
It reminds me when I started “hb”. I had been used barcode as artwork.

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https://soundcloud.com/glsmyth/pavane-for-a-broken-wubby-disquiet0285

I selected barcodes from the three ingredients of my typical breakfast - Shredded Wheat (big biscuit), milk and sugar. From the barcodes I extracted the numbers, which I had represent notes (I did end up changing two of the 36 notes so that it would make more sense). Each barcode is a voice in this string trio, with the barcode for the Shredded Wheat earning the theme.

I wrote this in response to the demise of my granddaughter’s pacifier, which was a sad but necessary experience in her evolution.

A “pavane” was originally a couple’s dance, originating in the 16th century, and was generally fast. Over the years the dance morphed to become much slower. The most well known pavane is Ravel’s “Pavane pour une infante défunte” (Pavane for a deceased infante), which is generally thought to be mournful, but actually invokes a pavane danced by a child long ago. The point is that over time the meanings of words change. I selected the title partially for this reason, as over time a small child’s world necessarily changes as she gains experiences and has circumstances forced on her.

This piece is written for violin, viola and cello and the score is available at http://bit.ly/2roHJip.

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Barcodes generated at www.barcodesinc.com/generator/index.php
Barcode 1 = disquiet 0285 - percussion track
Barcode 2 = disconcert - “bell” track
Barcode 3 = a consumer apparatus - voice track

took short sections of barcodes 1 & 2 and longer section of barcode 3; replicated them with sound.

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liked for not using percussion as well as use of the word “Wubby” :sunglasses:

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took the first three things I found in the pantry–happened to be cookies, cocoa and coffee (!), loaded three drum racks (not thinking about it too much) and eyeballing the barcodes turned them into 3 ableton live clips. then copied each clip and assigned it to a different synth (Synth1, obxd and Tyrell). In the beginning I introduced the clips 1 by one then sped up and slowed down the clips to form a few different scenes. No effects besides compression.

sounds like coffee and cookies! I wonder if corporate america knows something

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Hey everyone,
https://soundcloud.com/user-651760074/march-of-the-vicesdisquiet0285

March of the Vices(Disquiet0285) https://soundcloud.com/user-651760074/march-of-the-vicesdisquiet0285
I knew time would be short this weekend, so constraint and levity were employed. I found the 3 UPC symbols on the counter Friday before work. Think of Neil Peart’s 3 C’s of survival in his book ‘Ghost Rider’, with a twist! I used the lines representing the 10 digit code as a binary beat like start, with each number having a combination of wide and narrow bars. This gave a 20 beat part for each UPC. This in turn gave me 5- 4 bar measures to work with for each track. This began as a percussion only piece but blandness led to a more rounded result. One UPC is the beat in Recife, the wide band is kick and narrow a hit. Another the Chicago bass line of 2 notes.The last UPC is used amongst four other synths for leads, samples and noise, also with 2 notes each. Simple approach with quick and slightly goofy results, but fitting considering the UPC sources! This started with a faster BPM, but slowing it down gave it the plodding march sound that inspired the name :slight_smile: Played in Gadget, bounced each track into Cubasis for final mixing with only Room Verb added there. Happy Fathers Day to all you dads out there!
Videos- https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCc_iQ5JFusPt9EIwKIZ5rew

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Again this week I felt inspired to compose two tracks to contribute. The idea behind both was the same: to study the closest barcodes I could find and then go to the synthesizer and attempt to transcribe my impressions from watching into music. Arpeggiated sounds fitted best, I found, and used them above and below and in-between all the other weird stuff I played.

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Again this week I felt inspired to compose two tracks to contribute. The idea behind both was the same: to study the closest barcodes I could find and then go to the synthesizer and attempt to transcribe my impressions from watching into music. Arpeggiated sounds fitted best, I found, and used them above and below and in-between all the other weird stuff I played.

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Picking three random objects (a packet of painkillers for my shoulder, a guitar effects pedal box and one of my own book publications), I started thinking about applying the barcode to a rhythmic structure. Since I am currently recovering from a shoulder injury, getting busy with graph paper and midi drum roll tracks was not a realistic task. Instead, I investigated the iOS store and found Baracodas (https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/barcodas/id430909025?mt=8&affId=1671662&ign-mpt=uo%3D4). This app nicely communicated with network midi to trigger Ableton Live. The slightly lop-sided rhythms created lent themselves to some more glitchy rhythms which were given some light processing (bit of dubby delay seemed to make things groove a little more smoothly. A bit of fun!

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The first barcode was a graphical extension of Morse code. That’s how Norman Joseph Woodland arrived at his barcode prototype in the 1940’s while living in his father’s beachfront apartment. One imagines Woodland drawing with a wooden stick in the soft Florida sands, extending a series of dots and dashes into the cryptic patterns we all recognize today.

Morse code is commonly thought to be a mechanism of distress. Everyone knows the code signifying “SOS,” for example. The lyrics of “Dot Dash,” a song by punk legends Wire, appear to reference a more neutral approach to crisis. The narrator’s indifference to an upcoming automobile accident is oddly casual, almost clinically observant: “Progressive acceleration / Skidding, but the expression / Remains pan.”

It’s interesting how, decades after Woodland revolutionized the transactional landscape, our emotional response to barcodes is one of lax familiarity. We get bored with innovation when we’re constantly exposed to it. Using a self-checkout scanner at the local grocer has all the excitement of waiting for a traffic light to change. We simply go through the motions: beep, navel oranges, two for a dollar. Beep, bag of crisps for one seventy-nine. Whatever.

For this piece, Suss Müsik created a nine-part sequence based on three barcodes. Each “hit” was played using pieces of wood and overlapped according to variances in line thickness. As the rotation became more dense, a bit of reverb and panning was used to separate the layers and compress the more piercing frequencies.

Noting that one of the barcodes resembled an elongated set of piano keys, Suss Müsik identified individual notes and arrived at a somewhat accidental chord sequence that deadens the senses after two measures. Perhaps that’s what Wire was getting at with “Dot Dash” and the lesson of Woodland’s invention: random discoveries and events are unavoidably circumstantial, and the emotional responses they elicit can be surprisingly mundane.

The piece is titled Philco, named after the company who purchased Woodland’s patent in 1962 after IBM declined to pay his asking price.

Postscript: the wood percussion by itself is actually quite interesting, if a bit dry. If there is interest among Junto participants in hearing this part as an isolated track, let Suss Müsik know via comment and we’ll post it.

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This is one of those projects were I go “This can be done in code! :imp:

My approach was to start by programming a small script in Processing (using an external lib) that scans my webcam for barcodes and then sends them as an OSC-message to SuperCollider.
In Supercollider the barcode got translated into a pattern (rythm) and a percussion like instrument was spawned with random variables to play said pattern.
At the time of performance I altered between 3 barcodes (that worked with my webcam) from a guitar stand, a cookie jar and a bag of crisps. These were layered multiple times and at different offsets (Read: I don’t know how many patterns I ended up with). Later I added some effects in Ableton and using an outboard reverb.
All in all this was great fun :slight_smile:

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The playlist is now live:

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I can’t believe how some of you guys arrived to very nice results using the suggested procedures (choice of 3 barcodes, interpretation of the numbers on it, etc) my tries were hopelessly unmusical, so I cheated, shoot me!
To me barcodes must sound like pattern based delays or filters, like a chop-down plugin à la skidder.
I took a piece I was working on, quite melancholic chord progression performed on different bell-like sounding synths (DX7 etc). Applied the bar code numbers from 0 (short) to 9 (long) and proceeded to chop down audio decay for each chord following that pattern (0-9) but eventually I gave up.
Then I used different constant delays and skidder FX but changing the setting time/pattern from one measure to the next, so every chord has it’s own repetitive tail. In a way the full track could be read as a barcode interpretation. That’s the best I could do to fit this week’s assignment, sorry!
Cheers
DD

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grabbed the nearest book and painstakingly drew the barcode as a midi file
had this running through some instrument samples and fx. i really could not be arsed to draw two more barcodes so when the feedback had died down i played the same barcode again x2
i think i did well to leave some rhythm in; kind of allergic to rhythm at the moment: i’ll bring it up next time i go to the doctors.

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So this is a first for me: Having read and listened to some different contribution I felt I could expand my program to do more. I was especially inspired by @George_Smyth 's use of ‘barcode values’ to come up with a melody. So here is my first ever second take on a challenge:

My program now creates a rythm from the bars in the barcode and choose the notes to play based on the digits of the code, mapped to a minor scale (to avoid too much atonality). Supercollider then spawns an instrument (an old additive saw wave synth I have made) much like the old code with random parameters.
I have added reverb, analog delay and subtle distortion in post.

Edit: I almost forgot: Only one of the barcodes from yesterday was reused. I ate the bag of crisps and I have misplaced the cookie jar, so instead I used the packaging from a stable machine and a book on shorebirds.

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The voice track makes this delightfully confusing.

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Why thank you; delightfully confusing was exactly what I was going for :smile:
It was a recording I made in a waiting room; two conversations going on at the same time - one in Spanish, the other in Chinese.

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Some good sounds here in the playlist, sadly I was not able to take part this week due to other non-musical family commitments and besides the sun is out this weekend and we have some genuine hot weather which is a rarity in England!
I would say however that I love ISBNs (the barcode numbers that appear on books). I should say that I work part-time in a bookshop so the 13 digit ISBN number is something I am familiar with and I such a book nerd I have read about the history of the ISBN! Had I been doing this weeks junto I would have used the following ISBN / Barcode number;
9781623568900 which is the IBSN for the excellent 33 1/3rd book on Aphex Twins Selected Ambient Works by none other than @disquiet

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