NOISEUSSE RECORDINGS

Archive of ‘ETC.’

Just got an archive CD of lost Play and Chefkirk tunes. These releases will be uploaded at some point in the next couple of weeks.

Also, Future Gods is half sold and the majority of the remaining copies are promised to friends and other distribution channels, so if you are still wanting a copy, please order soon. It is likely that we will no longer be selling it after July 31st.

Thanks very much to those of you that have thrown down for a copy! We really appreciate the support!

In other news, a redesign of our site is slowly but surely being worked on, when we launch the new verison there may be a call for new works. Huzzah!

We’re back

July 14th, 2008

So after a massive hard drive failure and 4 years of laziness, we’re finally back online. Expect new things soon.

I’ve had new Synapse.Project releases sitting on my computer for a loonnng time, and I think play has some tracks that we posted right before the crash that should probably go up as well.

Also, I’m planning to make some Synapse.Project tapes available, which will be the first physical release this label has ever done.

Stay tuned. I promise, this time we are back for good in the hood!

Cex: In Lieu of an Interview

April 14th, 2004

Backdating this to when Rjyan originally sent it over. This was up on the site before we had the big crash.

We met up at one of his shows back when Noiseusse was still based in Colorado; we talked about goths. We sent him ten questions, and in hindsight, they were far too serious at the time, and I think we made him nervous. He sent this back to us instead of going off of the questions we sent him. Ended up being far more interesting this way.

If I were in a darker way, if things might have steered me deeper towards the life of a more committed lover, I would be a failure for not having pictures of any of their feet. I will never sniff shoes or jack off in a shoe store, nor ever have the desire to, and I definitely don’t get any kind of orgasmic satisfaction from anything involving my partner’s feet, but they are there, and they communicate something. If I were lover on my business card, this would be important—this would be the most important. Everyone else rushes headlong into the enjoyment of the most obvious regions, and although some other more subtly powerful places (neck, shoulders, wrists, hands, etc.) benefit from their convenient accessibility during the primary dance, there is significant power and much magnified closeness to be achieved in the furthest boundaries of our partner’s body. No one else has appreciated this part I hold here, this is a wellspring of beauty and energy as-yet completely untapped. It is a joyful reversal of the capitol-V theme: instead of hunting for a physical Virgin to physically claim, to flood with a new pleasure for the first time ever, to give a tangible form to feelings that could not even have been conceived of before this moment —to de-flower, the pleasure of a physical presence, a space filled up—we hunt for an emotionally innocent place, a place not yet affected by any conception of the presence of love, a hidden grove not yet trodden by any man’s influence, and we bathe it in light, in a low, spreading, genuine love. We look into the shadow cast by the squat walls around our perimeter and we find raw beauty in plain view there in the dark. We show the whole that there is a part to take pride in which was merely a part that existed before. We gain a unique type of access to the center of the whole through the appreciation of one specific and previously minute extremity. We empower the once-mute, bringing heat and energy from there to the center, to the conscious, we make an uncharted patch into an exclusive generator of pleasure and then we are there, in that place, permanently. We are not the architect but we have re-formed the structure in a small and positive way, others will pass through the structure but we leave it changed. We create and take away something internal and something physical, both unique— the physical proof, harmless and exciting to release to a stranger, and not much a trophy to be coveted by others. We do not fetishize the object because the object is useless without its context; within the deeper connection is the true gratification we seek. The picture is an aid to recreating the power of that connecting, conjuring that moment, not the end goal. It helps to sustain the special connection by revitalizing the weaker, visually-dependent parts of the memory.

Just the very bottom of the thigh, unmistakably female, soft skin of the calf bulging slightly with an audible softness, the slender leg held by it’s own weight in the cradle of sheets, sheets on an anonymous working bed made sacred for one night, pushed slowly across the white fabric, foot turning out, exposing the heel and turning from the painted nails to the bottom of the toes, stretching.

I’m backdating this to about the time when the interview originally took place. This was up on the site before we had the big crash.

Play had met Howard though the electro-music.com message board, which at the time everyone on Noiseusse was pretty hooked in with. Enjoy. Really glad to have this back on the site.

Play: So mosc, in 1968 you began playing the then new Moog Modular synthesizer. In the 1970′s you studied Electronic Music at Mills College with Robert Ashley. You worked as a freelance composer for commercials and industrial films, hosted a radio program on experimental music, you worked as an electronics technician for Donald Buchla and got a masters degree in electrical engineering at Berkeley. In 1981 you began a 15 year career at Bell Labs where you participated in the design of some of the first DSP chips. From my view as a relatively recent inductee into electronic music, this kind of career appears almost mythic. What was it like in those early days and how do you feel about them now that the technology has bloomed to the point where almost anyone with a computer can make electronic music?

Howard Moscovitz: When I got into electronic music, it was a fringe thing and very experimental. There were very few recordings available, and very few instruments. Before the Moog Modular synthesizer there was virtually nothing you could buy as an individual to make electronic music. I started with music concrete, naturally recorded sounds manipulated with splicing tape, tape echo, and all kinds of electro-acoustic transformations. I used shortwave radio for much of my source material.

The introduction of Moog Modular synthesizer changed everything. After Walter Carlos’ Switched On Bach hit record, everyone had heard of the Moog Synthesizer. The timing was good because at about the same time, relatively affordable 4 track tape recorders became available. I was very fortunate to study music composition with William Hoskins at Jacksonville University in Florida. He had just gotten a new Moog and he allowed me to do all my music composition work in electronic music. Just a few hours with the Moog and I was hooked for life.

In those days, electronic music was almost always experimental; no pop tunes. Most people interested in it were very serious in alternative music and the avant-garde art movements. We were attracted to electronic music because it sounded new; it enabled freedom of musical expression.

As time moved on, more and more manufacturers started making analog synths and there were many technological developments, but basically, the compositional method for me involved the use of a multi-track recorder doing several passes, one voice at a time. When smaller portable instruments showed up, we started a lot of live performances, usually improvs, for small but enthusiastic audiences.

As electronic music and synthesizers became more mainstream in the 70s through the 80s, I became less enthusiastic. The music was very conventional. Rock music started using electronics in the introductions of pieces before the big beat kicked in, totally predictable. The instrument makers were going to the market with keyboards, instruments that played 12 tones per octave. When samplers became big, the most popular use was canned samples of conventional instruments. Kurzweil made a so-called break through synth that was noted not for new and innovative sounds, but for it’s ability to reproduce a grand piano. Scheesch, I was into experimental music and it seems that after 1970 the world was going backwards. I wasn’t at all interested in some of the emerging electronic music pop music, Jarre, TD, ELP, etc.

I became interested in synthesizer design because there was very little happening in the synthesizer industry that appealed to me. It was more fun to design and build your own instruments than to play some commerical box. It helped a lot to work for Donald Buchla; I learned a great deal from hanging around him. I once asked him to teach me electronics and he said “no”, but if I found a circuit on one of his schematics that I couldn’t figure out, he’d explain it to me. Also, Stanley Lunetta was making small synths using surplus electronics and I became a follower of his and built several Lunettas. I followed this interest, got educated in electrical engineering and got a job at Bell Labs as an engineer.

At The Labs, I worked with a group of engineers, led by Jim Boddie and Dick Pedersen, working on a new kind of chip, the Digital Signal Processor, DSP. To me this was great; a microprocessor specifically designed to process audio signals; an open architecture limited only by the programming. DSPs are now the core of virtually every commercial synthesizer, not to mention every telecommunication system and virtually every telephone for that matter. It was very exciting to be part of the team that developed the DSP.

In the 1990′s, things started changing, helped a lot by the DSP. Innovative new synthesizer designs, like the Clavia Nord Modular and Symbolic Sound’s Kyma, both DSP based, provided musicians and sound designers with powerful new tools which were vast and almost limitless. In recent years, general purpose microprocessors used in personal computers have reached levels of performance where DSPs aren’t even required. This has put incredible technology in the hands of many people. The great thing is this technology is no longer focused on making great fake pianos and saxophones, but products are available that support advanced processes such as pitch shifting, vocoding, morphing, time augmentation, looping, voice synthesis, and of course, emulation of the great voltage controlled modular synths.

So, I feel great about this. A kid with a laptop and a little software has much greater capability to produce electronic music than the most expensive research facilities had just a few years ago. More exciting to me, is that people are using this to make very interesting and inventive new music.

P: Is it possible for you to describe some of the projects you were part of? What were some of the main goals of Bell Labs at that point, or more specifically, your design team?

H.M.: Well, I had a great time at Bell Labs. Aside from working on the DSP chips, I got into UNIX and software development. I was the manager of a team which worked on design automation, then called silicon compilers. The goal was to write programs that described a chip and the layout files would be made automatically. This was very challenging in the 1980s, but it’s mainstream stuff now. Those were fun times; I wrote several computer languages. One of my most interesting jobs was as the technical program manager of the Bell Labs HDTV development project. This was a joint project of AT&T and Zenith. The work involved not only chips for video compression, but for audio as well. There were even chips we were making for radio frequency transmitters and receivers. This was very stimulating technically, but there was incredible politics and intrigue.

P: You have started a wonderful community over at electro-music.com. Can you remember the spark that led to this idea and by what mechanisms it grew so quickly into a meaningful net community? Do you see communities like this leading to a new age in consensus and democracy?

H.M.: Although I kept on composing music in my personal studio during my engineering days, I wasn’t active in the musical community. When I retired from corporate America (maybe I should say, when corporate America self-destructed), I wanted to get into the scene as a composer. I tried to get a job as a music professor at a major university, but they were interested only in people with PHDs. The music scene seemed really fragmented. Academic music was aloof from any other music. The beat (dance, techno etc.) music was separate from ambient. Space music was sort of a separate scene that is very big in Philadelphia it turns out. There were many genres.

I wanted to be part of a music community, something like what used to exist with the Impressionists, the Serialists, The Expressionists, Les Six, Motown and others in music history. These were people who explored new music together, supported each other, and by being part of a community gained strength in their creative endeavors and in their ability to attract an audience.

I started electro-music.com with the goal of building that kind of community on the internet. With today’s technology, we can have an international community. We don’t need to be collocated to interact. Electro-music.com is a place where we learn from each other and expand our horizons. There are people into hardcore noise, synth pop, techno, ambient, space music, soundscapes, dance and even neo-romantic music composed for conventional instruments. There are serious musicians with years of experience and people just starting out. There are gear heads and laptoppers.

This project has changed my life. I’ve learned more about music in a little over one year than I could have imagined. I’ve met great people from all over the world. I appreciate music I would have detested before. As we grow, we’ll start to attract the attention of an audience. Then, I hope we can use the internet technology to maintain control over the distribution of our music. A rising tide raises all ships, that sort of thing.

Yes, I see other communities forming all over the net. This is great.

P: Let’s talk about your music. What were some of your early influences and what led you to become a composer of electronic music?

H.M.: I’ve kinda already answered that a bit. The most influential electronic music for me was Luciano Berio’s Paroles. I also love the music from Forbidden Planet. I love reading what John Cage writes about music, but I don’t like to listen to his music. I love the classics, especially Bach and Mozart. I like the philosophy of Schoenberg and the Serialists, and I even like their music. I’m a fan of The Beatles and Bob Dylan. Robert Ashley taught me how to change perspective. I guess I learned more about thinking from him than about music. I dig jazz, especially John Coltrane. I was greatly influenced by Charles Ives, especially the last movement of his 4th Symphony. It has several choruses and orchestras playing in separate times with different conductors. I was very moved by Robert Schuman who wrote: “He who is destined to conceal and render imperceptible the tyranny of the bar in music will, at least apparently, set this art [i.e., music] free…” This phrase, “the tyranny of the bar line”, is almost a mantra to me. I find it really hard to relate by big beat music.

P: The structure of performance has become somewhat of a controversial issue since DJ’s began to take the spotlight and especially since the advent of the laptop performance. Do you follow any particular ideology of the performer audience relationship? What’s a typical Howard Moscovitz performance like and what are some of your favorite performance memories?

H.M.: I guess I do have have some biases in this regard. To perform before an audience is a great privilege. Electronic music is very mysterious to an audience; they don’t know what to expect. They don’t see familar instruments. They wonder: “What is this music? How long will it last? Is it intended for serious listening or background? Did the performers write this? Is it prerecorded?”

I think it is essential to speak to the audience and explain what it is they are going to hear. I want them to feel comfortable and receptive to the music. I think it helps them to hear my voice and get some idea as to who I am, what I’m about. I tell them, “I love these electronic sounds. I think they are beautiful. I hope you enjoy them too.”

A typical performance of mine is 100% improvised. My favorite memory is playing in Trondheim, Norway, in September, 2003. After I played an improv on a borrowed Nord Modular at a concert arranged by Stein Grebstad at the TEK electronic arts center, a couple of very young local musicians came up on stage to jam with me. They had some various noise boxes and modulators – stomp boxes and such. I had never met them before. They were very nervous and asked me “what should we do?”. I said something like. “Try to play something that is similar to or contrasts what you hear the other two people playing. If you hear yourself dominating, back off. If you hear a big hole, jump in. Maintain a lot of eye contact with the other two players. Let’s just have some fun.” We had a blast.

That’s pretty much what we do in Xeroid Entity, a trio I’m in with Greg Waltzer and Bill Fox. I enjoy playing with them a great deal. We used to design all of our pieces, with structure, and even themes. Now, we just sit down and start playing.

Making music is really making love.

P: And lastly, a random question: how do you feel about Merzbow?

I hadn’t heard of Merzbow before you sent me this question, so I went out and read some about him. I’ve listened some mp3s on the web, including a concert in Vienna from a few days ago. This is great. My stuff isn’t too different from this. I’d love to jam with him. Thanks for turning me on to him.

PAST WORK EXPERIENCE:

I ran for congress and lost.

I produced a Hollywood slasher B movie.

I bought an oil company, but couldn’t find any oil in Texas; company went bankrupt shortly after I sold all my stock.

I bought the Texas Rangers baseball team in a sweetheart deal that took land using taxpayer money.

Biggest move: Traded Sammy Sosa to the Chicago White Sox.

With my father’s help and nearly the same name, was elected Governor of Texas.

ACCOMPLISHMENTS:

I changed pollution laws for oil and power companies and made Texas the most polluted state in the nation.

I replaced Los Angeles with Houston as the most smog ridden city in America.

I cut taxes and bankrupted the Texas government in billions in borrowed money.

I Set record for most executions by any governor in American history.

I became president after losing the popular vote by over 500,000 votes,with the help of Republican appointments to the Supreme Court.

ACCOMPLISHMENTS AS PRESIDENT:

I attacked and took over two countries.

I spent the country’s surplus and bankrupted the treasury.

I shattered the record for biggest annual deficit in history.

I set economic record for most private bankruptcies filed in any 12 month period.

I set all-time record for biggest stock market drop in its history.

I am the first president in decades to execute a federal prisoner.

I am the first president in US history to enter office with a criminal record.

In my first year in office set the all-time record for most vacation days taken by any president.

After taking the entire month of August off for vacation, I presided over the worst security failure in US history.

I set the record for most campaign fund-raising trips of any other president in US history.

In my first two years in office over 2 million Americans lost their jobs.

I cut unemployment benefits for more out of work Americans than any president in US history.

I set the all-time record for the most mortgage foreclosures in a 12-month period.

I appointed more convicted criminals to administration positions than any president in US history.

I set the record for the lowest number of press conferences than any president since the invention of television.

I signed more laws and executive orders amending the Constitution than any president in US history.

I presided over the biggest energy crises in US history and refused to intervene when corruption was revealed.

I presided over the highest gasoline prices in US history and refused to use the national reserves as past presidents have.

I cut healthcare benefits for war veterans.

I set the all-time record for most people worldwide to simultaneously take to the streets to protest me (15 million people), shattering the record for protest against any person in the history of mankind.

I dissolved more international treaties than any president in US history.

My presidency is the most secretive and unaccountable of any in US history.

Members of my cabinet are the richest of any administration in US history (The ‘poorest’ multimillionaire, Condoleeza Rice, has a Chevron oil tanker named after her).

I am the first president in US history to have all 50 states bankrupted at the same time.

I presided over the biggest corporate stock market fraud of any market in any country in the history of the world.

I am the first president in US history to order a US attack and military occupation of a sovereign nation.(Except for my Dad)

I created the largest government department bureaucracy in the history of the United States.

I set the all-time record for biggest annual budget spending increases, more than any president in US history, while at the same time proposing tax cuts.

I am the first president in US history to have the United Nations remove the US from the human rights commission.

I am the first president in US history to have the United Nations remove the US from the elections monitoring board.

My administration has the least amount of congressional oversight than any in US history.

I withdrew from the World Court of Law.

I refused to allow inspectors access to US prisoners of war, as prescribed by the Geneva Convention.

I hold the record for most corporate campaign donation.

My biggest lifetime campaign contributor, who is also one of my best friends, presided over one of the largest corporate bankruptcy frauds in world history (Kenneth Lay, former CEO of Enron Corporation).

I spent more money on polls and focus groups than any president in US history.

I am the first president in US history to unilaterally attack a sovereign nation against the will of the United Nations and the world community.

I am the first US president in history to have a majority of the people of Europe (71%) view my presidency as the biggest threat to world peace and stability.

I changed US policy to allow convicted criminals to be awarded government contracts.

I set all-time records for the number of administration appointees who violated US law by not selling huge investments in corporations bidding for government contracts.

I failed to get Osama Bin Laden ‘dead or alive’.

I failed to capture the anthrax killer who tried to murder the leaders of our country at the United States Capitol building. After 18 months I have no leads and zero suspects.

I removed more freedoms and civil liberties for Americans than any other president in US history.

In a little over two years I created the most divided country in decades, possibly the most divided the US has ever been since the Civil War.

I entered office with the strongest economy in US history and in less than two years every economic category plunged.

RECORDS and REFERENCES:

I have at least one conviction for drunk driving in Maine (Texas driving record has been erased and is not available).

I was AWOL from National Guard.

Records from my tenure as governor of Texas are in my father’s library, unavailable for public view.

All records of any SEC investigations into my insider trading or bankrupt companies are sealed and unavailable for public view.

All minutes of meetings for any public corporation I served on the board are sealed and unavailable for public view.

Any records or minutes from meetings I (or my VP) attended regarding public energy policy are sealed and unavailable for public review.

July 29th, 2003

Mikko Virtanen (.fi) wrote:
> Okay, I understand you. It [astrology] isn’t meaningless for people who use it and
> use it in extent so huge scale that their lives are actually controlled
> by it because of sole belief alone. Of course these things matter, but I
> believe this only matters sociologically. Not that it wouldn’t matter
> for those people, though.. that is subjectively.

Play wrote:
This is what we all do. We believe things to such a degree that they become part of the structure of our consciousness. Some pick only logic and materialism, a lot, actually. I have pity for those people. There is no room in their lives for the unexpected, magical or transcendental. They must feel constantly disconnected.

It’s easy to write off astrology as delusion. In fact, that’s probably accurate in some instances. However, it is no less delusional than someone who believes that life is only made up of what we can prove scientifically and it doesn’t come with that arrogance.

I believe that there is no right or wrong way to think, we get to choose how we think and it will, to some extent, define the world around us. Right now the majority of people in the west, the dominant power on this planet are materialists. The result of this set of beliefs is technology at the price of destruction on a mass scale. I could give a rat’s ass whether mysticism is ‘true’ or not. The fact is that people who believe in it and follow it treat each other and the world around them with respect and care and they create meaning in their lives. That’s value.

-end mail–

Relativism is destroying reality. As Theodore Sturgeon put it “We say ‘On the other hand…’, we say ‘However…’”. It’s easy not to believe anything when we know so much. Sifting through beliefs, trying to decide which are right and which are wrong, which ones we should believe in, is an impossible task. We think “There are no right beliefs”. What we’re left with is a meaningless world in which we suffocate on information, most of it poison. People don’t mean what they say anymore. Look at the news. Politicians use words like ‘liberate’ to decribe invasions. We now have to “endure freedom”. No one says “Hey! Wait a minute, that doesn’t make any sense.” We just absorb it and generate some kind of explanation of how one could view the the situation that way.

B..U..L..L..S..H..I..T

That spells bullshit. “Ok”, you say, “What can I do about it?” I will tell you. Believe. Believe something, anything as long as it comes from you. Humans have remarkable facilities for synthesizing information. Take what you know and perform some alchemy with it. Don’t just be a passive information transferring agent. Start swimming in the sea of information. Start re-arranging, being active. Or limit yourself to taking in only what information you are capable of processing without surrendering your powers of observation and intuition. Don’t let yourself be overloaded and give up. Think, damnit.

REMEMBER THE BABY.
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