2.26.2009
"Burn This Motherfucker Down"
That is the theme for this week although I will not be saying that word on the air, nor using it again whenever I address the theme for this week. This blog is rated T for strong language.
2.23.2009
TRS (#5) 2-24-09 : Songiness
Okay this week I'm having fun... intergrating Brain Joseph Davis as the fabric that holds my "songiness" theme together and bouncing these fried tracks off more or less listenable stuff from Madlib to Monkey Chants to Talking Heads to a plundered Micheal Jackson... it's just an experiment...
1. Lady Be Good - Ella Fitzgerald - from the Ubuweb : ethnopoetics... check the link for some words about scat, Louis Armstrong, and a connection between jazz and dada
2. Brian Joseph Davis - from Ten Banned Albums Burned Then Played (a contemporary sound project which is just as it sounds) - Stravinsky
3. Madlib - from Beat Konducta vol. 5+6 two tracks, back to-back (a twofer Tuesday ha!): 1) Infinity Sound & 2) Sacrifice
4. Ketjak : The Ramayama Monkey Chant- (9 minute excerpt) - also from ubuweb : ethnopoetics (I liked how this fit with the skipping, repetitive nature of B.J. Davis "burned albums"
5. Brian Joseph Davis - Ten Banned Albums Burned Then Played - Sex Pistols
6. John Oswald - Plunderphonics - Micheal Jackson "Dab"
7. Sonic Youth - Goo Interview Flexi - from disc 2 of the Goo reissue
8. Brian Joseph Davis - Ten Banned Albums Burned Then Played - The Beatles
9. Talking Heads - This Must Be The Place (Naive Melody) - from the album Speaking in Tongues
10. Morales-Taniel_Sin-Cabeza_15-Movimiento-sexual (I don't know where I got this [I thought ubu] but I can't find it again and I don't know anything other than the file's name, sorry)
11. Negativland - Richard Nixon Died Today - from the album Thigmotactic
12. Brian Joseph Davis - Ten Banned Albums Burned Then Played - First Family/Louie Louie
13. New Humans - You Must Be Free - from album New Humans
14. Brain Joseph Davis - Ten Banned Albums Burned Then Played - 2 Live Crew
15. David Dondero - Song for the Civil Engineer - from the album The Transient
Hopefully soon I'll have the podcast as a feed... until then, any interested parties can click on the title of each week's show (ex. TRS (#5) 2-24-09 : Songiness) and find it logged on Internet Archive. Thanks for listening.
1. Lady Be Good - Ella Fitzgerald - from the Ubuweb : ethnopoetics... check the link for some words about scat, Louis Armstrong, and a connection between jazz and dada
2. Brian Joseph Davis - from Ten Banned Albums Burned Then Played (a contemporary sound project which is just as it sounds) - Stravinsky
3. Madlib - from Beat Konducta vol. 5+6 two tracks, back to-back (a twofer Tuesday ha!): 1) Infinity Sound & 2) Sacrifice
4. Ketjak : The Ramayama Monkey Chant- (9 minute excerpt) - also from ubuweb : ethnopoetics (I liked how this fit with the skipping, repetitive nature of B.J. Davis "burned albums"
5. Brian Joseph Davis - Ten Banned Albums Burned Then Played - Sex Pistols
6. John Oswald - Plunderphonics - Micheal Jackson "Dab"
7. Sonic Youth - Goo Interview Flexi - from disc 2 of the Goo reissue
8. Brian Joseph Davis - Ten Banned Albums Burned Then Played - The Beatles
9. Talking Heads - This Must Be The Place (Naive Melody) - from the album Speaking in Tongues
10. Morales-Taniel_Sin-Cabeza_15-Movimiento-sexual (I don't know where I got this [I thought ubu] but I can't find it again and I don't know anything other than the file's name, sorry)
11. Negativland - Richard Nixon Died Today - from the album Thigmotactic
12. Brian Joseph Davis - Ten Banned Albums Burned Then Played - First Family/Louie Louie
13. New Humans - You Must Be Free - from album New Humans
14. Brain Joseph Davis - Ten Banned Albums Burned Then Played - 2 Live Crew
15. David Dondero - Song for the Civil Engineer - from the album The Transient
Hopefully soon I'll have the podcast as a feed... until then, any interested parties can click on the title of each week's show (ex. TRS (#5) 2-24-09 : Songiness) and find it logged on Internet Archive. Thanks for listening.
2.18.2009
Next Week: Song Show
I will actually play songs in next week's show. It should be musical. And songy.
2.12.2009
TRS (#4) 2-17-09: Repetition
This week's show was created in a collaboration between Eric Asboe and myself. Eric is a local writer/artist who I had the good fortune of meeting last fall. I invited him along to an Anat Pick reading at the Dey House and since then our common interest in sound art, ubuweb, and (for lack of a better term) "the contemporary art practice" has congealed into a rewarding communication of which this week's show is one result.
As well as suggesting all the pieces played on this week's show, Eric is also performing work from his series Mornings (2008-2009). Of his work (or maybe, just in general) he says, "Dada sound poetry asks the listener to reconsider the traditional meanings of language through an evacuation of sense. The repetition in these pieces also challenges traditional meanings of language but by evacuating the sense from language that is readily understandable, even simplistic."
This is idea we are interested in when we say we are interested in the idea of repetition. Thanks for listening.
1. Eric Asboe - Excerpts from Mornings (2008-2009) "May"
2. Robert Ashley - She Was A Visitor
3. Janek Schaefer - Love Song
4. Alex Bag - "Call Me" - Excerpted from "Untitled Fall '95"
5. Eric Asboe - Excerpts from Mornings (2008-2009) "November - December"
6. People Like Us - An Induction is a Draft is a Gust of Air - (this links to their video)
7. Eric Asboe - Excerpts from Mornings (2008-2009) "May"
8. Robert Ashley - She Was a Visitor
9. Janek Schaefer - Love Song
10. Alex Bag - "Call Me" - Excerpted from "Untitled Fall '95"
11. Eric Asboe - Excerpts from Mornings (2008-2009) "November Through December"
For more information about the show read further.
To tell your story write: instituteofstorytelling@gmail.com
As well as suggesting all the pieces played on this week's show, Eric is also performing work from his series Mornings (2008-2009). Of his work (or maybe, just in general) he says, "Dada sound poetry asks the listener to reconsider the traditional meanings of language through an evacuation of sense. The repetition in these pieces also challenges traditional meanings of language but by evacuating the sense from language that is readily understandable, even simplistic."
This is idea we are interested in when we say we are interested in the idea of repetition. Thanks for listening.
1. Eric Asboe - Excerpts from Mornings (2008-2009) "May"
2. Robert Ashley - She Was A Visitor
3. Janek Schaefer - Love Song
4. Alex Bag - "Call Me" - Excerpted from "Untitled Fall '95"
5. Eric Asboe - Excerpts from Mornings (2008-2009) "November - December"
6. People Like Us - An Induction is a Draft is a Gust of Air - (this links to their video)
7. Eric Asboe - Excerpts from Mornings (2008-2009) "May"
8. Robert Ashley - She Was a Visitor
9. Janek Schaefer - Love Song
10. Alex Bag - "Call Me" - Excerpted from "Untitled Fall '95"
11. Eric Asboe - Excerpts from Mornings (2008-2009) "November Through December"
For more information about the show read further.
To tell your story write: instituteofstorytelling@gmail.com
2.08.2009
TRS (#3) 2-10-09: Boundaries
Boundaries... storytelling... from within the institute we broadcast our tales even as the tales we tell broadcast our buildings... oh, I'll quit being so enigmatic and just say: welcome to this week's show.
1) The first 7:11 excerpted from Vito Acconci's Bristol Project (I've been waiting to play this awhile and if you're getting up at 4 am this will probably lull you right back to sleep but it promises a nice nod back off to...) The entire piece is nearly 50 minutes; a quite lovely, audio glimpse "that informs" (sorry, art school verbiage) Acconci's later work...
2) "Interior Conversations #1" - This week features UI sculpture graduate student Erica Damman, as she discusses windows in the air, doors through trees, and her work in the Institute of Storytelling...
3) Kenneth Goldsmith, excerpt from Traffic (from a 3-28-07 reading at Moma) (12:14)
4) JohnEKilowatt performs "Panther Rabbi" (6:20)
5) John Cage and Rahsaan Roland Kirk "Sound?" will fill out the remainder of the hour... I feel a little guilty about putting such a long piece on the air (and for saturating my show with John Cage in the early goings) but I think this is justified because his ideas are such a fundamental backbone for the ideas I am after in this show on a weekly basis, but also specifically this week's "boundaries" slant. This piece is brilliant, it's actually a film, the link for the film is above, you should watch it. (26:37)
I want to especially thank Erica Damman for her collaboration this week and support of this radio show/project in general. In our conversations leading up to this week's "interview" she spoke of the following poem... Her piece (see photo below), named after it's title, is located at the new U of I Studio Arts building and I've included the poem because this is the internet and information wants to be free:
Because You Asked about the Line between Prose and Poetry
Sparrows were feeding in a freezing drizzle
That while you watched turned into pieces of snow
Riding a gradient invisible
From silver aslant to random, white, and slow.
There came a moment that you couldn't tell.
And then they clearly flew instead of fell.
---------
And on a trivial note: Nemerov was brother to the late, great photographer Diane Arbus... thanks for listening...
1) The first 7:11 excerpted from Vito Acconci's Bristol Project (I've been waiting to play this awhile and if you're getting up at 4 am this will probably lull you right back to sleep but it promises a nice nod back off to...) The entire piece is nearly 50 minutes; a quite lovely, audio glimpse "that informs" (sorry, art school verbiage) Acconci's later work...
2) "Interior Conversations #1" - This week features UI sculpture graduate student Erica Damman, as she discusses windows in the air, doors through trees, and her work in the Institute of Storytelling...
3) Kenneth Goldsmith, excerpt from Traffic (from a 3-28-07 reading at Moma) (12:14)
4) JohnEKilowatt performs "Panther Rabbi" (6:20)
5) John Cage and Rahsaan Roland Kirk "Sound?" will fill out the remainder of the hour... I feel a little guilty about putting such a long piece on the air (and for saturating my show with John Cage in the early goings) but I think this is justified because his ideas are such a fundamental backbone for the ideas I am after in this show on a weekly basis, but also specifically this week's "boundaries" slant. This piece is brilliant, it's actually a film, the link for the film is above, you should watch it. (26:37)
I want to especially thank Erica Damman for her collaboration this week and support of this radio show/project in general. In our conversations leading up to this week's "interview" she spoke of the following poem... Her piece (see photo below), named after it's title, is located at the new U of I Studio Arts building and I've included the poem because this is the internet and information wants to be free:
Because You Asked about the Line between Prose and Poetry
by Howard Nemerov
That while you watched turned into pieces of snow
Riding a gradient invisible
From silver aslant to random, white, and slow.
There came a moment that you couldn't tell.
And then they clearly flew instead of fell.
---------
And on a trivial note: Nemerov was brother to the late, great photographer Diane Arbus... thanks for listening...
2.04.2009
This week's show: The Boundaries of Storytelling
This week we'll delve into a subject larger than we can possibly handle... the boundaries of storytelling. We may feature more than our usual amount of talk as I converse with some local avants about putting glass in fences and windows in the sky... we'll hear a reading by an odd fellow who thinks he may just know the perfect ritual for extinguishing the sting of broken hearts... and we'll back all this up with some breath-taking beats (the writer kind) and broken video game soundtracks... stay tuned.
2.02.2009
TRS (#2) 2-3-09: Nothing (or a Running Joke About 4.33)
Hello and welcome to this week's edition. By now you've surely found that I like to blog more than I like talking on the air... this week we move into our prerecorded format... and when I say "we" I am talking about me three times: there is the live "me" in the studio (just because it's prerecorded doesn't mean it isn't live (or does it?)), there is the field reporter me (you'll hear my interview on nothing with UI Professor David Dunlap), and there is the third me I haven't yet discovered (this me, the blogger me, perhaps, the John 2.0)... I am dumping M.T.sun or any of its incarnations because it just doesn't work on RADIO...
This week's lineup: ( or an awkward progression into something):
1) People Like Us... "Nothing" from the Abridged Too Far
2) Yoko Ono... "Snow is Falling All The Time" from the publication Aspen
3) John Cage... "excerpt of an interview" from Norton Lectures
4) Meredith Monk... "RALLY"... from Airwaves
5) Yves Klein... "excerpt from Monotone Symphony" event on a historical evening
7) Brian Joseph Davis... "Elua" a "cover of Sony's best song"
8) bpNichol... "Dada Lama" from Ear Rational
9) Christian Bok... performs "Ursonate" by Kurt Switters
10) Siegfried Fink... "Metallophonie" from Sound Sculptures
and I tagged track 5 from DJ Spooky's Rhythm Science on at the end to fill the hour... it contains some Gertrude Stein for good measure...
Thanks for listening.
Also I would like to extend my thanks to David Dunlap for the 1st official interview of TRS... (sound clips interspersed)... and for his conversation regarding Travis FREEMAN (an artist who attempts "nothing" with much more success than I...) and Alva Gene Dexhimer... TRS is a proud sponser of the Men's Cold Pork Drawing Club even though we are 2/3 vegetarian.
Notes have been noted: for next week The Boundaries of Storytelling
This week's lineup: ( or an awkward progression into something):
1) People Like Us... "Nothing" from the Abridged Too Far
2) Yoko Ono... "Snow is Falling All The Time" from the publication Aspen
3) John Cage... "excerpt of an interview" from Norton Lectures
4) Meredith Monk... "RALLY"... from Airwaves
5) Yves Klein... "excerpt from Monotone Symphony" event on a historical evening
7) Brian Joseph Davis... "Elua" a "cover of Sony's best song"
8) bpNichol... "Dada Lama" from Ear Rational
9) Christian Bok... performs "Ursonate" by Kurt Switters
10) Siegfried Fink... "Metallophonie" from Sound Sculptures
and I tagged track 5 from DJ Spooky's Rhythm Science on at the end to fill the hour... it contains some Gertrude Stein for good measure...
Thanks for listening.
Also I would like to extend my thanks to David Dunlap for the 1st official interview of TRS... (sound clips interspersed)... and for his conversation regarding Travis FREEMAN (an artist who attempts "nothing" with much more success than I...) and Alva Gene Dexhimer... TRS is a proud sponser of the Men's Cold Pork Drawing Club even though we are 2/3 vegetarian.
Notes have been noted: for next week The Boundaries of Storytelling
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)