Harry Smith, for instance. The Anthology is a great artistic achievement, and one can’t help but listen to it in the context of Robert Frank’s The Americans, but therein lies the problem. It totally transforms, and in fact aestheticizes its subject. Would any of the musicians compiled in the Anthology have recognized themselves in how they were presented? Why would their own positions be any less legitimate? Why, indeed, does any of this stuff need recognition much less appropriation from the official art world?

Smith and Frank were complex characters, both had reasons to be considered outsiders. But let’s take a look at Smith’s film work and who else constituted his milieu, there was Oskar Fischinger, Stan Brakhage, Warhol, Brecht and so on. In other words, urban avant-gardists. Frank was compared to Diane Arbus, Lisette Model, people at the time who were pushing the edge of what was possible with photography. Certainly not Frank’s subjects, did they not also take photographs?

Look, Smith is one of my favorite artists in any medium especially as far as Americans go but there are problems that go along with the tremendous achievements including that of the Anthology. I don’t mean to exaggerate my criticisms here it is just a standpoint worth considering.

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But there’s the rub.

To what extent do those from largely privileged, urban and academic contexts who determine the overall ‘structures’ and ‘essences’ of folk music really comprehend the consciousness(es) from which it emerged?

What results when the ‘art world’ gets involved is an aestheticization of the material, an inventive reprisal of such ‘structures’ and ‘essences’ that leaves the economic violence behind such consciousnesses largely unaddressed.

How much “folk art” these days is stored in freeports?

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LOL I think you have misunderstood the use of “uptown” here- as an Appalachian colloquialism this is probably closest to telling someone you think their music is too bourgeoisie.

(EDIT: Sorry, I think I misread you - will leave this clarification in here in case others do not speak hillbilly)

No, I understood you correctly.

Which is to say (in response to @ht73) that the art world is largely irrelevant to folk.

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But then when speaking of ‘structures’ ‘essences’ and the like one invariably falls into the language of that world, especially as understood on a forum such as this and from a standpoint such as that of an academic study. While the art world may be irrelevant to folk that does not absolve the former of a certain ethical responsibility, it is precisely the inscrutable face of the Other that demands such responsibility.

I’m reaching for a concept such as Levinas’ “beyond essence” or “otherwise than Being” and failing badly, so I’ll stop here.

I hear you. We’re in the art world, so we must take on the concepts from that world in addition to whatever else we discuss. I guess.

Or not. We can put on our straw hat and head outside to play the songs our grandparents played, on our washtub bass, in peace, free of all these uptown concepts to distract us.

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I’m real sorry you fellas are burdened with that art stuff, it must be rough. (spits)

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@deltasleep I’m fascinated by your avatar. Feels so on-topic.

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I was wondering, does any one know the process behind creating the high pitched synthesised sounds in the track ‘John Taylor’s Month Away’?

Timestamps: 3.20, 3.50, 4.00ish etc

I’ve been thinking of sounds similar to these for quite a while and have had the name ‘streamers’ associated with them for a while now in my head, but not sure from where I got this. Perhaps someone else here knows a more common name for them, or one I haven’t just made up!

Always thought they were beautiful ways of making subtle transitions but haven’t quite been able to get there with making them. I did make some other cool things along the way though, so all is not lost.

Hopkins is fond of eventide processors which have a lot of pitch shifting algorithms, custom plug-in chains, and Roland SH-09. I’m guessing those are involved in creating the sound.

Interesting interview with him here: https://www.xlr8r.com/gear/in-the-studio-jon-hopkins

The sound at 3:20 sounds like a concertina/accordion to me rather than something synthesized.

Ah yeah, it’s not that sound I’m on about. I gave each timestamp with a few seconds ‘count-in’ so that the sound didn’t just play the moment people skip to there.

I’ve probably read just about every interview by this point aha! Researching him for part of my dissertation :slight_smile:

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Look into Leafcutter Johns discography, first and second albums on planet mu should be of interest, haven’t necessarily kept up in recent years.

Also, if you can find it, ‘Spiritual Sci-fi’ by Kurt Weisman on Important recs is a gleaming example that is fairly unknown.

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Hi,
I believe there are more people than me making both electronic compositions and traditional songwriting, maybe even blending the two. So I figured it would be worth starting a thread and giving those thoughts/discussion a home.

I’m using ”folk” as a tag to imply conventional song structures – verse, chorus, bridge/middle eight within the limits and constraints of a “3-minute song”. Yet, I’d be interested to hear about songwriting + experimentation in any genre – soul, pop, rnb, rock, country etc.

The term Deep Folk I nicked from Ben Watt (Everything but the girl) who has created a few mixtapes called Deep Folk where he mixed folk songs with field recordings and tape echo.

A few threads before have touched on the subject:

To start it off:
Sometimes I find it challenging trying to blend the folky with electronics. If I start recording/producing the track and go too far with traditional instruments like guitars/bass etc I sometimes find it difficult to make the electronic sounds fit. It’s as if they are intruding. It might be easier perhaps, if I create some kind of electronic/experimental foundation and then create the “conventional acoustic order” on top. What’s your experience?

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Thanks for drawing attention to this discussion. The following may or may not be worth the reader’s time. :no_mouth:

Expressivity has become an issue for me in recent years. I’ve done instrumental electronics in the style often tagged online with e.g. the trio of ‘ambient’, ‘experimental’ and ‘electroacoustic’. Those words are terrifically broad, but we have an idea of the foremost sound that they happen to have come to characterise. I’ve used lots of choral samples and field recordings and other textures. I still come at doing music with such material in mind, but I don’t know how to use it to express some themes - parenthood, emotional insecurities, other personal-life stuff that I feel increasingly compelled to vent somewhere - to my satisfaction.

When I’ve made instrumental music it’s partly been a kind of yearning for some impersonal organic texture, for a total absorption in some idealised (and totally unrealistic) macro-level natural landscape. A bit like sitting somewhere and just listening and sensing (even though the music doesn’t ‘sound’ like that at all). Whether as method and metaphor that’s cool or foolish or problematically flawed, it doesn’t so much get at that personal-life stuff. In other words, sticking in a few lyrics obviously tends to establish a closer narrative relationship to this or that memory or message than does simply telling (oneself or others) that this drone track is ‘about’ something. So I’m turning to lyrics and singing (which I’m not very good at but who cares) and am trying to bring about some kind of middle ground between musical material as I know how to make it and something with lyrical significance. I think that area leans more towards the former, as so far I’ve structured songs fairly freely. There’s also an undeniably vain thrill in considering myself a singer-songwriter. I’m an impatient amateur, but in truth I’m the same with the instrumental stuff, merely a bit more experienced.

In short, I find it enjoyable to be applying my preferred processes to songwriting, something less familiar.

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There is a whole Global Bass genre which I would recommend you looking into.
One of my friends is a fairly recognised artist within that community in Hungary. Send me a PM if you want me to put you in touch with him.
Edit: I just saw that the post is from 2018 hahah

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It’s interesting. I come from the the opposite direction. Pretty comfortable with writing a campfire song, but really puzzled right now about my drone-project in VCV-rack.

For me electronic music has presented opportunities to try out lots of different sounds and genres. Techno, house, lofi-beats etc and now perhaps ambient - but my longterm goal is to come up with fusions that I find interesting. Creating new connections.

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I find it helpful to frame this as an orchestration problem when blurring genre boundaries, rather than as a traditional v electronic instrument problem. Pairing sounds and/or instruments together in a way that works for the song/piece is always a complex puzzle. But when we learn to write/produce within an idiom or genre, habits and conventions can do the work of solving that puzzle for us. To me when sounds/instruments are overcrowding each other or don’t gel, it helps to work from what role they each play, and to find ways to make space for each through bringing more contrast and purpose to their respective role.

I find listening to composers talk about those problems especially illuminating for myself. Not just ‘academic’ composers, also film music composers: disciplines where people are required to be reflective about orchestration, and to communicate their choices verbally.

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Thanks, those are some great tips. Thinking of each arrangement as voices (like actors in a play) with different roles I’m sure could clarify a lot of things. To identify the role for each instrument beforehand is probably the way to go. Too often I tend to compose as I record.

I realize another thing that could possibly help is to allow my electronic instruments to “move some air” as they are recorded. Send the sources through amps or speakers and mic them up. Or of course reamping when the mix isn’t working out.

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