Hey All, Penciled in a some honeycomb shapes on a midi roll.Went full bee on a synth. Freaked out a guitar with a bouncy beat. This poem excerpt was perfect.

Peace, Hugh

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made by converting a beehive picture into sound using
flexibeatz.weebly.com/paint2sound.html 6 seconds of which was recorded in Audacity then layered and looped 6 times in Ableton with 6 second fade ins and pitched up & down in increments of 6 semitones then panned in 6 directions, all to mimic the structure of a hexagon… sort of. the end result came out so noisy that it resembled an apocalyptic event and after further reading about beehives I came across www.abc.net.au/news/2017-05-08/c…g-to-bees/8507408 it seemed to fit.

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Using the Acid Machine 2 from last week´s disquiet junto to create an underlying rhythm to resemble the constant movement and noise in a bee hive. When you watch a bee hive - the same with ants, for example - there seems to be constant chaos everywhere, but it all is so unbelievably organized, every bee has its task and knows exactly what to do. Unfortunately, with the excessive use of pesticides, one of the disastrous effects is that they have effect on the bees´memory, which they are losing if exposed to too much pesticides. - But this fits in with other effects of us polluting mother nature earth, like 57% of the insects having become extinct…But this is another story.
I wanted to represent both aspects with my three little miniatures, busy as a bee…the seeming chaos and the organized and regulated structure behind it.
Now, I am very excited to listen to what the other participants create with this topic. Have a nice weekend

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I did a bees thing

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https://soundcloud.com/cboulter/october-27th-2017-disquiet0304

Here’s mine. Synthetic bees, getting busy inside their synthetic hive. Six tone scale, six step shift register for the hexagons.

Done mainly on the eurorack: Ornament and Crime is the main culprit covering the shift register and the scale, under a certain amount of modulation. Four triangle-y waves are different types of bees, then run through some fx to make them sound like there are more of them. Some hissy and scrapey noises added for evidence of their industry.

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at the weekend we were trying to find my uncle’s house and i remarked that we would’ve found it easier if told it was near the houses that looked like beehives.
i didnt know that hives referred to manmade structures - bees make nests.

i thought about honeycomb structure before on this album: https://sevenism.bandcamp.com/album/heavy-air

here, i wanted to tessellate hexagons of notes (but all that means is i played 2 notes at 3 simultaneous octaves). i used a sample of bees inside a hive (https://freesound.org/people/pillonoise/sounds/353199/) and tried to make it musical with lots of fx.

⬡⬡⬡⬡⬡⬡

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Hello Juntonia! :slight_smile:

No electronic tweaking this week, just messing around with recordings of marbles or ball bearings in a salad spinner. A swarm of each and then a ‘lead line’ of just 7 marbles interacting.

Have a great week!

H U :slight_smile:

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Suss Müsik once visited a biodynamic farm in Kentucky. The influence that bees have our ecosystems, both natural and artificial, cannot be overstated. The basic structure of a honeycomb can be found replicated in a variety of industrial uses, from thermoplastic engineering to aerospace.

The architecture of a honeycomb is both hexagonal and quasihorizontal, meaning that each layer is built with a set of open and closed facets. The open ends are shared by opposing cells, which strengthen as they nest into one another. This ensures that the least amount of material is used while protecting the comb’s structure when honey is harvested.

For this weirdly pastoral piece, Suss Müsik sought to create a hexagonal and quasihorizontal musical composition using a similar approach. We played six “cells” on acoustic guitar with open ends, each sounding incomplete when played in isolation. It is only when the fragments are butted against each other that a musical function emerges.

To replicate the spirit of worker bees toiling, a subtle tambourine rhythm keeps time as the guitar parts ebb and flow, perhaps referencing the result of honey being harvested. Just as hexagonal patterns discourage bees from building larger combs, the lattice of guitars is constrained by the simple economy of a repetitious strum in three drone-like phases.

The piece is titled Broodcomb, named after cocoons that darken over time. This is the effect of “travel stains” caused by bees working inside cells of unharvested honey.

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For this 304th Disquiet Junto project, I focused less on the structure of the hive and more on the structure of the swarm. There’s two drones (just realized this is a great dadjoke pun) that react to a central sequence, a hive reacting to itss queen. As the queen’s emotion changes, the bees respond. Recorded on four tracks of cassette tape with MN Phonogene and MI Clouds playing the part of the drones, Rene / STO / DPO FM’ing providing the core drone samples and the central voice of the queen.

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I wanted to use pairs of oscillators sharply PWMing each other to give the impression of both interaction and flight. I chose a pentatonic scale to represent the harmony of the swarm. Polyphony and some panning gives the impression of different members of the hive coming and going. Originally I planned on many more takes to create a denser picture but settled on a more restrained scene.

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The process of conceiving of this was to 1) test out the ES General CV in a more directed way than I had been over the past week 2) evoke the manifold scale of activity inside and outside of a hive. So, in 3-layer Arp mode with modulation from Tides and Rene, a Vibraphone, Xylophone, and warm pad were fed into Clouds in Beat Repeat mode. The triggering of the GCV and the slicing of the resulting sound were in 3/1 and 3/2 polyrhythms to organize the hexagonal primary and triangular Bravais lattices of graphene (the album art). The drones are vocals and Mangrove: the vocals mimicking the sound of standing in an active apiary and the Mangrove calling back to a childhood memory of a low droning pulsation coming from a hive that had formed in my bedroom wall. Further vocals processed through Morphagene are sliced up and granularized version of me counting – i.e. just number station fun – to image the life of a worker drone.

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Inspired by the hexagonal harmonic table of the C-Thru Axis, and grantmuller.com/projects/harmonictable/, clicked on C, then the six notes bordering C, then the 12 notes bordering those six, then the 16 notes bordering those.

Multiple instances of Loom 2 and AAS String Studio, and the mandatory delays and reverbs… PSP Stomp Delay, Eos, Modnetic and UltraReverb. Closing out on a CC0 recording of bees by the hive.

Hope you enjoy.

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https://soundcloud.com/ohm-research/horde-disquiet-0304

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https://soundcloud.com/nuunnuun/beehive-disquiet0304

I’m stoked to (finally) submit a track to a junto project! I’ve been following it for a long time but never managed to take part. Until now!

/// process
I started by looking at pictures of beehives on google. From there i got the idea to create a midi track in Ableton and manually ‘paint’ the structure of the beehive with midi notes. I then looking for the appropriate instrument to play these midi notes. I choose Aalto’s FM Plonk (by Richard Devine). I tweaked the settings a little to suit my taste (a little more reverb for example).
Thereafter i remembered i had a recording of bees (and frogs) from a couple of years back. I added this layer. The result is a mixture highly abstract synthetic sounds, representing the structure of the beehive, with the sounds of the bees themselves, buzzing around and in this structure.

/// tools
Ableton live
Aalto by Madronalabs

///
Screenshot of the Midi Beehive :slight_smile:

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“I remembered I had a recording of bees (and frogs)” made us smile :smile:

Awesome track. Extra points for including a MIDI schematic.

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First Junto. And first time posting new music in over 15 years (!) Thanks @disquiet for the constraints and inspiration.

https://soundcloud.com/tchotchkes/disquiet0304-lets-buzz-10292017

Main sequence derived from hexagon shaped pattern on the grid keyboard.
6/8 timing.
Background drone.

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This is beautifull! I’m glad you’re posting music again :slight_smile:

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i thought to make something in 6/8 time to reflect the cell structure of the hive. there would be a ‘queen’ sound which would continually replicate itself. after listening to many samples of hives this is what came out. the concepts are not really reflected, but there is a swelling, chaotic, yet unified feeling.
virus ti, squarp pyramid, delays, panning, filter and compression applied in ableton.

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https://soundcloud.com/ethanhein/live-from-the-hive-disquiet0304

When I think beehives, I think hexagons, so that was my organizing principle. The electronic percussion play a pattern from the Groove Pizza consisting of three rotated hexagons, like so: apps.musedlab.org/groovepizza/?sou…museid=SyJNQyrRZ

The bassline and synth parts have buzzy tones and play an augmented triads and a hexatonic scale, respectively. The synth is modulated by some Muddy Waters guitar riffs from his song “Honey Bee,” which beside the title has a nice 12/8 triplet feel for more hexagonalness. Finally, there are some samples of the whole tone scale riff from “You Are The Sunshine Of My Life” by Stevie Wonder - the whole tone scale forms a hexagon both on the chromatic circle and the circle of fifths.

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Whoa Groove Pizza! That’s way more than 20 characters of cool.

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