@RichieWitch I wanted to thank you for taking the time to listen to everyone’s tracks and for your appreciative words on my piece. I don’t think I was very interesting to watch. I slouched in a big chair with my laptop and Pro Tools, listening to the sounds and working on the piece for two hours with ear buds, since I was too lazy to get up and get my good headphones. I think I got up to get a glass of water. But you probably meant looking over my shoulder at the screen, and hearing what I was hearing. I love the idea of just letting the material speak to me and my job is to enable it, but not to try to force it.
You inspired me to do what I often try to do but seldom do, which is play through everything posted. I followed your lead and wrote notes on many of the pieces that spoke to me in some way. All the pieces have some worthwhile qualities and I enjoyed listening to everything. It is an honor to be privileged to do that.
@TobiasReber We all thank you for your generosity in providing the sounds and the impetus for @disquiet to post this week’s prompt (and two others recently). It looks like the Steinatelier listening booth is within Carlo Bernasconi’s plant and showroom in the city. That’s a very apt spot for hearing these stony sounds.
@VonnaWolf Great sense of being there in that space. Then things get more mangled and timbrally experimental. It seems you wanted to let the sounds speak for themselves and lead you to your destination. I had a similar intent when I made my version. I love that sound that comes in around 5:10. Is that made from the original recordings? @bassling thought they were reversed-sounding tones. Cool stuff.
@RupertL This has a hypnotic quality at the start. Then it gets dreamy and delicious as it progresses to a very far out space. You took that snippet and really went with it!
@Randomshuffle Really cool space you go to with all the sounds. It makes me imagine a vast mechanical lair of our insect overlords, or something.
@duckpow I do agree that this feels like a cinematic prelude to a Frankenstein factory horror film. Nice drones! Are they made from resonating samples from the stone factory?
@Aaah Nice melodic and rhythmic work with the samples.
@bassling Wonderfully produced Morlock Stomp music. The dwarves are having a hoe-down!
@davidstelfox Simple, meditative.
(To be continued in two more posts, as only ten individual references can be included in any one post. I hope I’m not transgressing too much.)