All three samples were used–looped, pitched up and down, reversed, etc. in real time on an iPad using Samplr. Not sure if the results are “old jazz” – was ECM around in 1904?

3 Likes

I am loving that all of these sound so deranged :smile:

3 Likes

I liked the idea of making a forgery of an old jazz song but the Edison cylinders didn’t provide the materials I needed for samples.

So I took cues from music, particularly the tuba bass parts.

Izotope’s Vinyl VST was used to give a grainy finish, which is also in mono.

And, when I began pondering what imagery I’d use for the video, I found Georges Méliès film La Sirène from 1904.

8 Likes

Terrific! 20 characters

2 Likes

https://soundcloud.com/suss-musik/ozokerite-disquiet0325

Suss Müsik likes the sound of dust on a vinyl record. A compact disk with dust on it simply won’t play. That’s a design flaw, in our opinion.

The Edison Spring Motor Phonograph was invented in 1895. The sound was emitted by a machine that rotated a ceresin wax cylinder across an incising needle at around 120 RPM. A standard-size cylinder tended to yield between two and four minutes of audio, roughly the length of a church hymn or short monologue.

Due to the high cost of replication, there was initially no method for mass-producing multiple quantities of the same recording. By 1901, however, several innovations cheapened production costs while improving sound permanence: more durable wax mouldings, spring-generated motors, and less penetrative needles. There’s no science for removing dust.

The subtle beauty of ambient detritus has been explored by a number of artists over the years. Junto participants might be familiar with Stephen Vitiello’s electronic compositions accompanied by visuals, or perhaps Stegan Betke’s grimy dub tracks performed under the name Pole. Nina Katchadourian went so far as to create an audio tour of the dust buildup at New York’s Museum of Modern Art. Suss Müsik can only imagine how thrilled the janitors must have been.

For this short piece, Suss Müsik sampled the “dusty” pieces of the recordings along with a couple of shorter bits. The sounds were looped through a ring modulation process at various speeds, with the occasional burst of brass or vocals. The lovely, swooping brass bit at the end was left unaltered. The effect is something like what might have happened if the Mille Plateaux label had existed sometime between 1890 and 1915.

The piece is titled Ozokerite, named after the naturally occurring substance from which wax is made. The image is a magnification of household dust from Suss Müsik’s headquarters.

6 Likes

I won’t get the time I wanted to spend on this week’s Junto - but I wanted to do SOMETHING.
So I took a simple idea of alternating chunks of audio from each track, lined up so that there are some interesting musical phrases created and also a bit of surreal fun. The opening reminds me of the Goons! Anyway - it is there for a bit of fun and for others to play with if they want.

https://soundcloud.com/ikjoyce/gooning-arounddisquiet0325

6 Likes

Here’s mine. The idea was to make it sound as if it were from the same general era; I’d say I’ve pretty much failed in this, unless tape spliced drone efforts were more common in the early twentieth century than I know.

Tools used were three key Eurorack modules; Morphagene, SMR, and Clouds.

3 Likes

That’s pretty great. What did you end up using as the source audio?

1 Like

Hello,

Here is my contribution. Took the samples, sliced and tortured during a 5hour Jam, and took the best 4 minutes. Last time i will jam with that kind of sound/samples. It almost burn my brain! ;).

I found this one pretty hard but interesting as always.

Cheers,
PiL

3 Likes

All sounds from Ableton’s Suite, except for Vinyl and a muted guitar pluck that’s looped throughout.

I debated whether or not to label it as a response to the Junto.

It mightn’t have used the samples but figured it was a response since I wouldn’t have recorded it otherwise.

1 Like

Every project is defined in part by the deviations.

5 Likes

That should be an Oblique Strategy :slight_smile:

2 Likes

https://soundcloud.com/ohm-research/strokka-disquiet-0325

2 Likes

so… kind of “accidentally” threw the brief out of the window as I started manipulating samples of the source material, got a little carried away and ended up with lo fi electronic doom metal… or something. pretty sure it wasn’t a thing in 1903. oops. anyway, made by pitch shifting the aforementioned samples along with a bunch of reverb plugins. badly mixed on headphones on a broken laptop with a barely functioning soundcard (i may upload a better mix at a later date, but was right at deadline and wanted to submit something). as I do with all projects involving archival recordings from the early 20th century I try to maintain a consistency of theme with the Ghost Ship concept and am slowly accumulating a playlist here soundcloud.com/hxdk/sets/ghost-ship-in-a-storm which i’m hoping to something with at a later stage. anyway

1 Like

23:33 … late entry … to be honest, I used an already composed jazz fake track and replaced all voices with some of these old samples, maybe ten seconds in total. The track is completely done in Caustic for Android plus some Audacity.

1 Like

Here’s my click and pop fest:
https://soundcloud.com/rleydon/century-waltz-disquiet0325

3 Likes

Hey All, I was kinda thinking like a square dance where the guy is telling people the dance. All from the samples except drums.

NON SUBMISSION-I also did another one for lovers of tubas and tap dancing.

Peace, Hugh

1 Like

Colonel Vern and the Protodadas, recorded at the Edison Labs in 190X.

Concatenative synthesis seemed the laziest way to use the Edison cylinder recordings to create a new track, as it would minimize the required cutting and pasting.

I extracted five corpuses from this material, one assembled from the spoken word introductions and the other four from instrumental segments. These were noise-reduced in Audacity to minimize hiss. For each corpus I set up an instance of Echobit’s Mosaic plugin, each driven by its own drum beat, the tracks sequenced using Numerology’s timeline.

For antiquing I used two Reaktor ensembles: Platter by Oldstench (for crackle and hiss) and The Cornet by Boscomac (for phonograph horn simulation).

1 Like

When archeologists dig up some Edison cylinders 1,200 years from now, this is what their computers came up with.

2 Likes

Day late and…you know the rest, trying to get back in the swing during an extended stretch of sobering reality.
Cheers to all and thanks for listening

1 Like