[Date Prev][Date Next]   [Thread Prev][Thread Next]   [Date Index][Thread Index][Author Index]

Re: Fripp and Eno



Hello,

History can be tedious indeed. However, most things that are informative 
can be tedious.In fact, I believe the literal translation of the word is:  
Incredibly boring tedious information that accumulates over the years & 
can be summed up in two words, " Who cares? "

 I remember a fellow while I was in school in Nashville who used answering 
machine message tapes to record loops & then play two or more on different 
cassette players in his room to create aleatoric music. I started using 
the same technique but recorded the loops onto an 2" eight track I had at 
the time. My friend told me of a composer he had heard who used tape loops 
to both record & perform & I believe the name was Ussaschevsky.

 As an interesting side note, once I started using the answering machine 
tapes a local Radio Shack almost resorted to banning me from their store 
as they were the only inexpensive source of these tapes & the bloody 
things broke so often I was constantly returning them. When asked why I 
was having such a problem with the tapes, I replied I was a Music Major at 
Belmonte College & I was using the tapes to compose aleatoric music. The 
idiot who was apparently the manager of the store said that using their 
tapes for that purpose was not covered by any Radio Shack guarantee, I 
asked him to show me in writing where Radio Shack had this policy 
specifically stating that recording aleatoric music voided their 
guarantee. What was surrealistic at the moment was the sound system was 
playing the Hungarian composer Ligeti's "Atmospheres"........ and yes, 
there was a guy standing in the shadows dressed in black smoking a 
cigarette too..... and an old priest with a large black hat walked into 
the store carrying a even larger black satchel.... very strange........ 

According to Seamus Online:

Ussachevsky was one of the most significant pioneers in the composition of 
electronic music, and one of its most potent forces. He produced the first 
works of “tape music,” a uniquely American synthesis of the 
French musique-concrète and the German pure electronic schools. 

However, doing a search on Fripp's diary using Ussaschevsky name did not 
produce any results.
If interested, you might also take a look at the following link:

livelooping.org/researchpaper/Chapter_3.pdf

> 
> History can be tedious. I'm pretty sure that Vladimir Ussachevsky
> performed a piano piece by Otto Luening in the fifties that clearly
> used the sound on sound tape recording technique that would later be
> used by Terry Riley and even later by Fripp & Eno. I don't have the
> title, but I'm pretty confident on this. The Ussachevsky recording
> that I heard wasn't very interesting and I don't think it's really
> that important who was first. Riley really explored looping as an
> instrument, and I think he's really the first looping composer and
> performer.
> 
> On Fri, Oct 8, 2010 at 10:15 PM, Toby G <carpet8@mac.com> wrote:
> > I wonder if the first record player, tin can recording device or 
>whatever,
> > carved one groove at the same radius the first time it was tested.  
>Like,
> > they didn't think to make it a spiral?
> >
> > t
> >
> > ----- Original Message -----
> > From: Gareth Whittock
> > To: loopers-delight@loopers-delight.com
> > Sent: Friday, October 08, 2010 10:10 PM
> > Subject: RE: Fripp and Eno
> > Not many people know this but I invented looping by placing a piece of
> > cardboard over the erase head of a WEM copicat tape delay unit.
> > It was only much later that I discovered that other people had also
> > discovered it using other means ;-)
> >
> > Peace
> >
> > G
> >
> > ________________________________
> > From: mark@markfrancombe.com
> > Date: Sat, 9 Oct 2010 00:40:05 +0200
> > Subject: Re: Fripp and Eno
> > To: Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com
> >
> > thats right actually...
> >
> >
> >
> > On Fri, Oct 8, 2010 at 11:10 PM, andy butler <akbutler@tiscali.co.uk> 
>wrote:
> >
> >
> > mark francombe wrote:
> >
> >
> > Stockhausen is known to have used the technique
> >
> > afaik Stockhausen had a completely different technique
> > using just one tape deck with an actual loop of tape.
> >
> > The tape heads were reordered, so instead of going
> > Erase>Rec>Playback like in a regular deck
> > they were changed to
> > Playback>Erase>Record.
> >
> > andy
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > --
> > mark francombe
> > www.markfrancombe.com
> > www.ordoabkhao.com
> > twitter @markfrancombe
> > http://vimeo.com/user825094
> > http://www.looop.no
> >
> 
> 
> 
> --
> Art Simon
> simart@gmail.com
> myspace [dot] com/artsimon

>



Mark Showalter
Minden Jot!

myspace.com/folkstone57
http://www.last.fm/music/Mark+Showalter
<a href="http://www.mylivesignature.com" target="_blank"><img 
src="http://signatures.mylivesignature.com/54488/99/F2BFFC9AD8D6528EA1E10C1043965108.png"
 style="border: 0 !important; background: transparent;"/></a>


-- 
_______________________________________________
Surf the Web in a faster, safer and easier way:
Download Opera 9 at http://www.opera.com