We’ve been releasing some pretty dark episodes of late. There was the distorted Degenerates, the psychotic Mixmaster Satan, the electrocutional Artificial, and the pissed-off Angry Beavers. But this week’s episode The Swarm outdoes them all in its deeply disturbing drone. Plug all impressionable ears: this one is positively possessive!

The Swarm stars Anderson Cook from Ortolan on guitar, voice, and no-input mixer; Dylan Simon from Mass at Dawn on Shruti Box, Echoplex, Sears & Roebuck Tremelo Unit, Ring Mod, Gong, and voice; DaveX on processing via phone line; and myself on delay.  I also did the live mixing, editing, and post processing.

Tread lightly.

DaveX is a busy man.  He hosts a weekly experimental radio show called It’s Too Damn Early on WDBX in Carbondale, Illinois.  He runs the popular experimental music blog Startling Moniker.  He is the founder of the micro-label Naked Arrival.  Starting April 4th, he’ll be hosting ANOTHER experimental radio show called Sounds Like Radio on the long-reaching WSIU at Southern Illinois University.  As if that isn’t enough, he’s also the brainchild behind the second annual Southern Illinois Noise Summit, a festival of noise, avant-garde, and experimental bands set to take place April 18th at the Carterville Civic Center in Carterville, Illinois.  And yet, he managed to find the time to answer some questions from his former ~ORE~ co-host and college friend, me.  Here’s the Theatre Intangible interview:

T: Tell me about your new show.  How will it differ from Its Too Damn Early?

D:  Sounds Like Radio will be heard each Sunday morning, from 3-5 a.m., starting April 4th. Like It’s Too Damn Early, it is a program of experimental music, but I’m intending to present more academically-oriented works than I would ordinarily play. This extra two hours is basically going to let me focus much more deeply on the areas of experimental music that I already air by splitting them up somewhat. I’m sure there will always be some crossover, but I’m already starting to identify albums mentally with one of my shows or the other. “Sounds Like Radio” is pre-recorded, so some of my randomness in programming will have to go out the window– but I’m hoping that what I lose will be offset by the ability to present more complex shows. I’m actually very happy to have adopt a new method, I wouldn’t have wanted to do the same thing twice.

T: Southern Illinois had no experimental scene to speak of when we started ~ORE~ in 1998.  How have things changed in the last 12 years?  What part have you played?

D: I still doubt we have enough going on to claim in as a “scene,” but that might just be my discomfort with the word. Mostly what’s important now is that people who are interested in odd sorts of music and art are more likely to be talking to one another than in years past. I think my WDBX broadcast It’s Too Damn Early has played a significant part in accomplishing this, but there’s definitely a lot of credit to be shared for where we’re at. Once you have good communication going– and not just “top down” communication from radio hosts or promoters, but from from one artist to another, it’s pretty hard to kill the sense that things are moving forward.

T: I distinctly remember the first time I ever heard the phrase “circuit-bending” was out of your mouth in the late 90′s.  To demonstrate, you pulled apart an old toy keyboard, stuck your fingers on the circuit board, and created otherworldly sounds.  Since then, circuit-bending has become an underground phenomenon.  You had a real dissatisfaction with the world around you (a trait which some didn’t quite know how to take, if I remember correctly.)  But it disguised an almost-boyhood sense of wonderment for the hidden, the untried, and the mundane things that others took for granted.   What is it about your personality that leads you to the bizarre, the difficult, and the innovative?

D: Well, I certainly didn’t invent circuit-bending– and I know YOU’RE aware of that, but I’ve got to make sure your readers do as well. Do some digging, and you’ll find Reed Ghazala in that particular nexus. It’s worth your time! But yeah, you nailed me. If I was dissatisfied, it was because I kept waiting around for other folks to see all these incredible things that are off to the side of our normal path. I’ve been called “easily amused” more than a few times, which also seems appropriate. The world is just full up with amazing things! But in regards to circuit-bending, I think what was most appealing to me was that it was a convenient concept for a lot of my own scattered ideas to group around. Sort of like mental kitty litter, with clumping action. For me, circuit-bending was a physical incarnation of how I’d always looked at things– broken into their elements, free of a designer’s impetus, raw. So I took circuit-bending and applied it to everything; like I said, it helped me think about other ideas more clearly. Try it with anything!  Look at my auto-art with the Wordle program.   That’s basically circuit-bending, if you take it outside a circuit. I’m using various online software to do something it wasn’t designed for at all, just breaking it apart into the elements I find useful. It might be that circuit-bending is just folks getting back to our tool-making caveman roots.

T: You released a do-it-yourself cd-r of experimental works back in the late 90′s called Electric Kitten Vomit at a time when cd-r releases evoked impressions of amateurishness.  Nowadays, cd-r releases almost seem like badges of honor, handmade curios, and prizes to be collected.  Can you talk a little bit about EKV and the works you’ve made since?

D: That particular CDR was pretty amateurish, as I recall. Still, it had a lot of heart, and I’m happy I put it out there. Electric Kitten Vomit was pure experimental music. Just my unfiltered creative efforts, almost like proto-art, or primitive work. As a listener, I have a good appreciation for this sort of thing, but it’s harder to be objective when it’s your own work. I’m looking forward to seeing it on Mutant Sounds someday; I’m sure it will have some overblown description, which will tickle me pink. The funny thing is how much of an afterlife these little CDRs have. You run into people who’ve heard it, or find one staring out at you from a thrift store shelf. I think of them as little crumbs, but I’m not certain where they lead.

T:  Tell me some of your favorite memories of hosting It’s Too Damn Early for the past  9  years.  Any particular favorite in-studio improvs?

D: One of my favorite shows so far was  an in-studio performance by saxophonist Randall Hall. In addition to some marvelous work with processed saxophone, Hall took the time to demonstrate some extended techniques with his instrument, even soliciting ideas from us for how to prepare the bell. I wish more people could have up-close encounters with music like this– music is almost totally a pre-packaged experience for people now; I suspect that our collective appreciation and understanding of sound suffers due to this remove.

The first annual Noise Summit was a pretty big deal for me. Fifteen musicians and a handful of half-stack amps, drums, pedal gardens… all crammed into the front room at WDBX. It’s not a very large space to begin with. I also enjoy my odd, latenight callers. We have a love/hate relationship– we love to hate each other. I get drunk-dialed at least once every show, and they’re usually a riot. Requests for Primus, complaints about dance-ability, genuine concern for my mental well-being. But some of these people keep calling back, so I know they’re listening, and I accept them as part of what makes It’s Too Damn Early what it is. I hosted two separate teams of ghost-hunters live on the air, performed live mixes with sounds mic’ed up around the nighttime neighborhood, and recorded albums live on-air as well. There’s really too many neat things that have happened to begin numbering them. When I look back through my STARTLING MONIIKER blog, I run into stuff I’d forgotten about. Dan Godston playing trumpet with two birds flying around the room; doing a whole show with a single jambox during the master control remodeling; or just the many early mornings I spent alone, blowing my mind with some obscure LP, watching the sun rise through the window.

T:  Who is one of your favorite avant-garde artists from the old guard, and what lesson can modern day musicians learn from him/her?

D: I bet she wouldn’t appreciate the “old” tag, but I’m going with Joan LaBarbara. I love her work; everything I’ve heard from her just resounds with her own joy at doing what she loves, and having fun doing it. I won’t set up a complete dichotomy between generations of musicians on this issue, but I will say that I think that this sense of joy should be apparent in anyone worth listening to.

T:  Who are some of the modern avant-garde/experimental artists that really excite you?

D: Let’s just pick three, or we’ll be here all day playing “memory.” Right now; I’ll say Frank Rothkamm, Bryan Day, and Tom Nunn. Day and Nunn both build instruments, and I suppose one could include Rothkamm in that category if virtual instruments or programming thereof is accepted. But again, it’s their total devotion to what they’re doing that excites me. I’m also usually happy to find that they’re all quite good at exploring ideas and sounds that just don’t seem to exist anywhere else. It also helps that each seems to have a terrific ability to fully grasp what they reach for– particularly Rothkamm, whose command of music is simply astounding. Oh! And George Korein. He’s as full of ideas as I am, and also talks a mile a minute. A kindred spirit! This video sums it up.

T:  What about on the local scene?

D: No question here. Karthik Kakarala. He’s got a zillion side projects, but I suspect that they’re all slowly converging on a single “ground zero” target. With any luck, it will be a Karthik vs. Karthik split LP. Another Southern Illinoisian of note is Courtney Cox, who records the occasional tape as Trash Ant. I’m firmly convinced that his stuff is genius, but I’d be damned if I can completely explain why.

T:  How long have you been blogging on Startling Moniker and where does it fit within the larger experimental community?

D: I think I’ve been blogging since November of 2006. You’ll have to do the math on that. Right now, I’m mostly using STARTLING MONIKER as an addendum to my broadcasts. You could think of it as the “required reading” for all the shows. Naturally, there’s some local promotion that makes its way in, and the occasional review. I’ve been back-and-forth on reviews for some time now, but I think I’ve mostly given them up. If I’m playing an album, it’s worth picking up, okay? I’d much rather read a well-written critique of an album any day, personally, but I don’t have enough time to write these in a regular manner. Caleb Dupree does a great job with these at Classical-Drone … and of course, there’s Paris Transatlantic … I’m not certain how STARTLING MONIKER fits into the overall community, to be honest. Hopefully, I’m bringing some awareness of Southern Illinois and small-town experimental art to the bigger cities.

T: Tell me a little bit about your micro-label Naked Arrival.

D: There have been 3 releases, the last of which is an ongoing free cassette release of “Mystery Tapes,” cassettes that feature random ITDE programming and improv sessions. These are all unique, but cannot be ordered directly. Instead, I am leaving them in various places slowly over the course of the next couple years.

T: You released a recording by your daughter. What’s that all about?  Do you see that same mix of impatience and fascination in your kids?

D: The Style City CDR is my daughter’s first release. It’s free online, but also available in a trades-only edition of 10. She surprised me with some minimal synth drone recordings; about half of which is paired with lyrics about sickness, death, and giant robots. I knew that it had to have a proper release, so we worked up a really nice package for it. I helped with burning the discs and assembling the packages, but she was in full control of every artistic decision. For anyone who digs outsider art, this is a good disc to look into.

She also has a track on Dictaphonia vol.6, as “Golden Roses”.

I think all kids are pretty much a mixture of impatience and fascination. It’s adults who tend to lose these qualities.

T:  This is your second year putting on the Southern Illinois Noise Summit?  What’s different about this year?

D: Last year, I promised a bigger venue, which I have delivered– we’re going to be at the Carterville Civic Center on April 18th, at noon. It’s still free, but now you don’t have to cram in a tiny room with a bunch of sweaty people and sit on an amp.

T:  What do you look for in players for the summit?

D: I’m looking for a balance of things. On the one hand, Southern Illinois is growing it’s own experimental music from seed. So I can’t be as picky as someone who’s organizing a festival in New York, or San Francisco. It’s appropriate to accept a certain level of artistic growth, and not worry overmuch about the overall professionalism of the artist or band. The Noise Summit is as much a concert as it is a chance for us to inspire and inform each other, and also the audience. So I’m looking for people who want to explore these outer edges of music, not just folks who already have a pedigree. If there’s someone down here who’s never played out, but just spent the last few weeks recording tapes backward in their closet and banging a mic around, I want them here– performing or not. We can all be inspired by one another, and I think we all have something worthwhile to share. Come, and bring your curiosity with you!

T:  When the summit is over this year, by what criteria will you define it a success or failure?

D: I will declare it a failure if, at any point in time, a new-age drum circle breaks out.

________________________

DaveX’s discography:

Electric Kitten Vomit – Self-titled
Electric Kitten Vomit – The Avant-garde Revolts
DaveX – The Only Motion Is Returning
DaveX – The Resurrection of Body and Song
DaveX – Tenex
DaveX – Improv For Folded Signals
DaveX – Gimmie More (Chopped and Screwed Media Defender Remix) http://www.mediafire.com/?6edxtmes5y0

Appears on:

Theatre Intangible Podcast Volume 4 – The Sound of Teeth

~OrE~ Prefab Audio Extrapolations – Various, appears throughout
Microcassetor 2 – Ekevee – Improv with Audience
Ekevee – Improv with Pearlcorder
Eld Rich Palmer Off-Line – Electric Kitten Vomit – Track 1
Eld Rich Palmer Off-Line – Electric Kitten Vomit – Track 2
Southern Illinois Noise Summit, 2009 – DaveX – Solo    (part 1 of full comp) (part 2)
Southern Illinois Noise Summit, 2009 – DaveX – w/Karthik Kakarala
Dictaphonia vol. 1 – DaveX – Keeping My Hand In
Dictaphonia vol. 4 – DaveX – Wire/Recorder
Mystery Tapes – Series of 41 Randomly-released tapes, appears throughout

DaveX, my former ~ORE~ co-host, host of It’s Too Damn Early on WDBX, and writer for the experimental music blog Startling Moniker just added another feather to his cap.  His new show  “Sounds Like Radio” will premiere on WSIU in Carbondale, IL April 4th from 3-5am.  More info can be found at Startling Moniker.

The local Carbondale newspaper The Flipside wrote an excellent interview with Dave, although the cover photo leaves something to be desired.  (Dave’s take on the cover here)  Do check out the interview.  Dave gives one of the best explanations of experimental music I’ve heard, and he rightly points out that the process can be as important, if not more important, than the results.   Sometimes a piece of equipment (or a concept), should be celebrated for what it is.  If I finally get one of the Moogerfooger pedals I’ve been salivating over, it may sound out of place or muzzled in one of my rock songs.   Only when unconstrained by a format can I discover it’s true potential.

Theatre Intangible will have our own interview with DaveX very soon.  Stayed tuned, and if you live in Southern Illinois, tune into WSIU on April 4th.

Lest you think it’s all trophies and roses here at Theatre Intangible, we bring you an episode from our original incarnation, ~ORE~ Prefab Audio Extrapolations.  Tonight’s episode is called Menial.  Our idea was to interview various workers and pontificate about what it means to work menial jobs.  Somehow, the point got muddled by “investigative” journalism on how my roommate Jason and I were gay.

I know.

We recorded this episode way back in 1999 on the campus of Southern Illinois University at the student station WIDB.  It is not one of ~ORE~’s proudest moments.  But what can I say?  I’m a masochist.  And a sadist.  Which is why I’m offering it up for you fine people.

Enjoy.

From ~ORE~ Prefab Audio Extrapolations, originally broadcast 04/15/99.  Starring Dave Armstrong, Tony Youngblood, and a cast of dozens.

It’s Sunday, January 17th, 2010 and today’s podcast is a blast from the past — Doug’s Party, a show from  ~ORE~ Prefab Audio Extrapolations.

~ORE~ Prefab Audio Extrapolations was the predecessor to ~ORE~ Theatre Intangible, broadcast from 1998 to 2000 on the student run radio station WIDB on the campus of Southern Illinois Universty in Carbondale, Illinois.  The show was hosted by myself and Dave Armstrong, now the blogger DaveX on the popular experimental music blog Startling Moniker.  Doug’s Party was the 13th episode of that show and the first Prefab Audio Extrapolation-era show of this podcast.  We hope to bring you more of the old shows in the coming months.

Doug’s Party was based on recordings we made during a college party thrown by our friend Doug Bigham.  It’s a time capsule of 1999.  Clinton was president.  The Matrix had just been released. Listening to this show 10 years later brings back a lot of fond memories, some cringes, and some surprises.  The soundtrack is filled with instrumental versions of songs I was writing at the time – many of which I’d forgotten about.

Despite everything, Doug’s Party holds up pretty well.  It’s a bit juvenile, and a bit too beat-driven (although I think that was part of the joke), but it really does capture a time in my life, all my awkwardness, and all my hang-ups.  Perhaps it will do the same for you.  I’ll end this intro with the text from a flyer I wrote in April of 1999, promoting the premiere broadcast of the episode.  Enjoy.  – Tony Y.  January 2010

P.S.  Almost forgot to mention — the intro music was pulled from a WRVU-era Theatre Intangible episode called Jazz Moped.  It gives the intro a film noir feel.  Look for the whole episode as a podcast soon.

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Dougs Party Flyer

This was an original flyer we made for the episode Dougs Party

It was Thursday night April 1st, 1999.  We had just finished ~ORE~ episode 12.  I was feeling a bit depressed.  The person we had assigned to the guitar only played bad covers of Bush songs.  When I asked him to make something up, he said, “That’s all I know.”  He was right.  Moving his fingers to unfamiliar territory and taking a chance in the unknown would have killed him on the spot.  Se we made do.

After the show, Dave, Metty, Kate, and myself decided to go see The Matrix.  It merely depressed me more.  A normal little abnormal movie.  When we left the theatre, we were greeted by our good friend Doug.  If you don’t know Doug, then you don’t know Carbondale nightlife.  Doug is famous for throwing earth-shattering, law-breaking, stress-busting parties.  He had asked me to attend on many an occasion.  I have never attended.

But on this night, I felt different.  It was something in his tone when he explained his “post-April fools extravaganza.”  It had a lot to do with his grim look of doubt when he said, “I might as well not even ask you, Tony.  You won’t come.”

Now I had to come.  I had to re-instill the power of hope into Doug’s heart.  Dave and Metty agreed to attend.  It was to be.

Friday came.  Metty had devised a group look.  We were all to wear complete black.  She bought three pairs of shiny glasses and three pairs of Easter ears.  After wrapping the ears in tinfoil and donning them, we became, “The Easter Matrix.”  Jen G. decided to come along for the ride.  Sensing drama, I brought my tape recorder.

I can’t explain the events that happened that night.  It was a moment in time, encapsulated in a Memorex mini-tape recorder.  All I will say is this: There was music, there was drinking, there were women, there were men, there were flirts, there were snobs, there were airheads, there were soda thieves, there was a big-pecked J.W., there was his overweight bald crony, there was Pixies, there was bad B-52 sing-a-longs, there were quiet moments of reflection, there were insults, there was Becka, there was an explanation of reality by a drunk guy, there was underage drinking, there was Anne, there was barking, there were red lights, there were police, there were near-death experiences, and there were three misplaced Easter Matrixes looking for an answer to it all.

We were foolish, self-proclaimed bunny/bad-sci-fi conglomerates.  We tried to create an antagonist, initiate conflict all for the sake of the radio show.  Becka had suggested Firskie as the villain.  She was attractive, sweet, and everybody liked her.  Who would suspect?  But as we were greasing the gears in the villain-instilling machine, a much darker foe crept up unsuspecting.  We were taken by complete surprise when J.W. spoke those first insults.  I can remember it like it was this morning: “Keep trying and maybe you’ll get it someday!”  In that moment, J.W. in his big-breasted bravado, had opened the biggest can of springy, salty worms that Carbondale has ever seen.  What followed was scary.  I have it all on tape.

We have edited Doug’s party into sixty minutes of music, words and drunk ramblings.  I do believe it to be a sociological gem.  And yet, I feel that our conflict with J.W. to be somewhat unresolved.  Perhaps he will read this and hunt us down.  I hope so.  I hope so.  I’m willing to risk the bruises, the cuts, and the contact with squishy breast material to bring this matter to a head.  And, if it’s good, perhaps we’ll play it on the radio.

Tony Y. – April 1999

Starring Charlie Rauh, Chris Rauh, John Bohannon, John Westberry, DaveX, and Tony Youngblood.

It’s Sunday, January 10th, 2010 and today’s episode is The Sound of Teeth.

We recorded this episode in my basement on August 22nd, 2009 live on a Tascam 80-8 ½” 8 track reel to reel.  It’s taken me this long to edit it.  The Sound of Teeth features Charlie Rauh on Guitar, Chris Rauh on Bass, John Bohannon on Accoustic Guitar and Effects, John Westberry on Drums, and myself on Jenn Analog Synth and Field Recordings.   Some of the field recordings were pulled from Freesound.org. (See below for Freesound contributors.)  DaveX contributed the show narrative.  I did the live mixing, the post-mixing, and the editing.

The Sound of Teeth was the second episode we recorded on the reel to reel and the first of which to premiere on this podcast.  The sound of the tape gives the episode a real organic, textural quality – further explored by the addition of various forms of hiss & pop, such as vinyl clicks, mosquitoes, frying oil, and dirt in the volume knob of an old electric organ.   All of the performers on this episode really shine, and it’s one of our best yet.  It was a hell of a job to edit.  Enjoy.

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The following samples were used under a Creative Commons license from Freesound.org.  The usernames of the sound creators follow the number in the track titles.  Extra special thanks to Freesound and the contributors.
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