The blog of author Dennis Cooper

Records 4

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The Voice-O-Graph was a do-it-yourself recording studio the size of a small closet. Walk inside, close the door, deposit 35 cents and make a record of your own. The machines cranked out a lacquer-coated disc that held about a minute of crackling sound. It was first created in the late 1930s and used until the late 1950s. Soldiers and loved ones could send their own voices in place of a written letter during World War II.

 

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Turntablist and artist Christian Marclay created an album — using a 4-track in New York City, March 1985 — composed of other records. All seems pretty normal, but the thing is, Recycled Records’ Record Without a Cover was sold without a jacket or cover, and it even came with the instructions “Do not store in a protective package.” Marclay’s concept was to let the natural ageing process make each individual record unique. Through scratches, and dust caught in the grooves, the record’s deterioration make it constantly evolve. If it could be described, think: a warped history of the universe.

 

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German genius Peter Lardong came up with the idea to create records out of chocolate and, believe it or not, they can be played on a standard phonograph. He creates the records by pouring his time-tested recipe of melted chocolate into a silicon mold of his favorite vinyl. He places it in the refrigerator to set and voila. Each disc can be played up to 12 times before it’s too worn out, and that’s when you eat it.

 

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Robot with record player brain

 

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Buried in the midst of a load of LPs I recently bought was a clear virgin vinyl LP in a plain white jacket. The odd thing about it is there are grooves cut both sides with nothing on them. The dead wax on side one has inscribed NITTY GRITTY and BP 360 LP1 along with NW RTI 19724. Side two dead wax has 13875 and BP 000. Any ideas what this is and what it was for….we’d be interested to find out.

 

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Minimal sound maker and DJ Graham Dunning’s practice begins with vinyl destruction and is likewise closely associated with a communal nostalgia for the experimentalism of the 1960s. Dunning starts with modified and destroyed lps, carving records into sections and reforming them. In a video introducing his practice, he names this ‘sampling’, which is somewhat akin to digital sampling, where sound sections are edited to form accessible clips of music to be employed by the DJ. As well as playing vinyl, Dunning builds upon and extends his turntables so that they become triggers for electronic devices and a mechanical means to produce timed sounds.

 

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‘I first heard of the importance of Jack Goldstein’s records from Dan Graham, who was particularly insistent on the records, citing Two Wrestling Cats, 1976. When I tried to imagine the sound two wrestling felines would make, an image of two cats rolling on the floor came to mind––which was exactly what Jack had intended.’

 

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These are not a direct substitute for pressed records. These are 100% hand-made, in real time. If the record is 10 minutes long, it took 10 minutes to cut plus setup time. This labor, coupled with the maintenance and knowledge required makes these lathe-cuts more expensive (per piece) than a larger pressing of vinyl.

 

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Jeroen Diepenmaat ‘Pour des dents d’un blanc éclatant et saines’ (2005), Record players, vinyl records, stuffed birds, sound. Dimensions variable.

 

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Music lovers can now be immortalised when they die by having their ashes baked into vinyl records to leave behind for loved ones. A UK company called And Vinyly is offering people the chance to press their ashes in a vinyl recording of their own voice, their favourite tunes or their last will and testament. Minimalist audiophiles might want to go for the simple option of having no tunes or voiceover, and simply pressing the ashes into the vinyl to result in pops and crackles.

 

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In 1967, the BBC created its own record label, designed to exploit the demand for commercially released TV tunes, comedy shows and, finding an unlikely niche in the market, sound effects, the best remembered being their three horror-related collections. Volume 1, Essential Death & Horror, appeared in 1977 and offers a dizzying collection of 91 different effects. Particular favourites of my own include an actually rather disturbing electronic workout, ‘Monsters Roaring’, and ‘neck twisted and broken’. Such was the success of Volume 1, a follow-up album arrived in 1978 – Volume 2: More Death and Horror. Rather more ragged than the first release, we are treated to even more inclement weather and death rattles – of particular note is ‘death by garrotting’. There was one final outing, the paltry twenty-five minutes of Volume 3: Even More Death and Horror. Easily the most startling record of the three, the methods of torture are truly imaginative; ‘self immolation’, ‘female falling from great height’ and ‘tongue pulled out’.

 

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Knowing how easy it is to scratch records or make them skip with the slightest bump, it might seem counter-intuitive to put a record player into a moving car. But the automobile record player, first introduced by Chrysler in 1956, contained a number of features that would keep the music going even when there were bumps in the road. Part of its downfall can be attributed to the fact that the Highway Hi-Fi required special records; you couldn’t simply pull a record off of the shelf and play it on your road trip. Rather, drivers had to purchase all of their music again in the new proprietary format. Since the machine was only available on new vehicles and not as an aftermarket accessory, there wasn’t a huge commercial demand for it. Moreover, the devices had the nasty habit of breaking often and Chrysler wasn’t thrilled with the cost of fixing all of those under-warranty units. By 1957, just one year after their initial introduction, Chrysler withdrew support for the ill-fated gadgets.

 

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Glass disc recordings, produced photographically in the 1880’s by Volta Laboratory Associates – Alexander Bell, his cousin Chichester Bell and Charles Sumner Tainter. Smithsonian officials unsealed them in the presence of Bell’s daughters and a grandson in 1937.

 

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Chris Supranowitz has made some images of a record’s grooves using an electron scanning microscope. For the vinyl record sample, he simply cut a small section of a record and attached it to a sample stub via carbon tape. He then sputter coated approximately 90 Angstroms of gold onto the grooves. Since the sample was relatively thick (2-3 mm) carbon tape was applied along the side to ensure good conductivity. It’s finally clear what the grooves actually look like!

 

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Jacques Tati with record player

 

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In 1973, the Kingdom of Bhutan issued several unusual postage stamps that are playable miniature phonograph records. These thin plastic single-sided adhesive-backed 331⁄3 RPM discs feature folk music and tourism information. Not very practical for actual postal use and rarely seen canceled, they were designed as revenue-generating novelties and were initially scorned as such by most stamp collectors. They are now fairly scarce and valuable and are sought after by both stamp and novelty record collectors. Their small diameters (approximately 7 and 10 cm or 2.75 and 4 inches) make them unplayable on turntables with automatic return tonearms.

 

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Nam June Paik ‘Listening to Music Through the Mouth’ (1962)

 

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NON’s Pagan Muzak (Gray Beat, 1978) is a one-sided 7-inch with 17 locked grooves and two center holes, meaning each locked groove can be played at two different trajectories as well as any number of speeds. The original release came with instructions for the listener to drill more holes in the record as they saw appropriate.

 

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The Hi-Fi murders were the killings of three people during an armed robbery at a home audio and record store called the Hi-Fi Shop in Ogden, Utah. On April 22, 1974, three enlisted United States Air Force airmen, named Dale Pierre Selby, William Andrews, and Keith Roberts drove in two vans to a Hi-Fi store on Washington Boulevard, Ogden, just before closing time. They entered the shop brandishing handguns. Two employees, Stanley Walker, age 20, and Michelle Ansley, age 18, were in the store at the time and were taken hostage. Pierre and Andrews took the two into the store’s basement and bound them. Later, a 16-year-old boy named Cortney Naisbitt arrived to thank Walker for allowing him to park his car in the store’s parking lot as he ran an errand next door; he was also taken hostage and tied up in the basement with Walker and Ansley. Later that evening, Orren Walker, Stanley’s 43-year-old father, became worried that his son had not returned home. Cortney Naisbitt’s mother, Carol Naisbitt, also arrived at the shop later that evening looking for her son, who was late getting home. Both Orren Walker and Carol Naisbitt were taken hostage and tied up in the basement. With five people now held hostage in the basement, Pierre told Andrews to get something from their van. Andrews returned with a bottle in a brown paper bag, from which Pierre poured a cup of blue liquid. Pierre ordered Orren to administer the liquid to the other hostages, but he refused, and was bound, gagged, and left face-down on the basement floor. Pierre and Andrews then propped each of the victims into sitting positions and forced them to drink the liquid, telling them it was vodka laced with sleeping pills. Rather, it was liquid Drano. The moment it touched the hostages’ lips, enormous blisters rose, and it began to burn their tongues and throats and peel away the flesh around their mouths. Ansley, still begging for her life, was forced to drink the drain cleaner too, although she was reported (by Orren Walker) to have coughed less than the other victims. Pierre and Andrews tried to duct-tape the hostages’ mouths shut to hold quantities of drain cleaner in and to silence their screams, but pus oozing from the blisters prevented the adhesive from sticking. Orren Walker was the last to be given the drain cleaner, but seeing what was happening to the other hostages, he allowed it to pour out of his mouth and then mimicked the convulsions and screams of his son and fellow hostages. Pierre became angry because the deaths were taking too long and were too loud and messy, so he shot both Carol and Cortney Naisbitt in the backs of their heads, proving fatal for Carol but leaving Cortney alive. Pierre then shot at Orren Walker but missed. He then fatally shot Stanley before again shooting at Orren, this time grazing the back of his head. Pierre then took Ansley to the far corner of the basement, forced her at gunpoint to remove her clothes, then repeatedly and brutally raped her after telling Andrews to clear out for 30 minutes. When he was done, he allowed her to use the bathroom while he watched, then dragged her, still naked, back to the other hostages, threw her on her face, and fatally shot her in the back of the head. Andrews and Pierre noted that Orren was still alive, so Pierre mounted him, wrapped a wire around his throat, and tried to strangle him. When this failed, Pierre and Andrews inserted a ballpoint pen into Orren’s ear, and Pierre stomped it until it punctured his eardrum, broke, and exited the side of his throat.

 

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Gregor Hildebrandt’s ‘Kassettenschallplatte (Cassette Record)’ (2008) is a sculptural work composed of hundreds of feet of wrapped cassette tape, a fetish object for which one medium has been rendered useless to embody the equally nonfunctioning image of another.

 

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Record player ring

 

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In the late 1920s and early 1930s the Vitaphone sound system used large 33 1/3 rpm records to provide the soundtrack for motion pictures. The record rotated in the usual clockwise direction but the groove was cut and played starting at the inside of the recorded area and proceeding outward. This inside start was dictated by the unusually long playing time of the records and the rapid wearing down of the single-use disposable metal needles which were standard for playing lateral-cut shellac records at that time. The signal degradation caused by a worn needle point was most audible when playing the innermost turns of the groove, where the undulations were most closely packed and tortuous, but fairly negligible when playing the outermost turns where they were much more widely spaced and easily traced. With an inside start the needle point was freshest where it mattered most. Almost all analog disc records were recorded at a constant angular speed, resulting in a decreasing linear speed toward the disc’s center. The result was a maximum level of signal distortion due to low groove velocity nearest the center of the disc, called “end-groove distortion”. Loud musical passages were most audibly affected. Since some music, especially classical music, tends to start quietly and mount to a loud climax, such distortion could be minimized if the disc was recorded to play beginning at the inner end of the groove. A few such records were issued, but the domination of automatic record changers, and the fact that symphony movements, for example, varied greatly in length and could be difficult to arrange appropriately on 20-minute disc sides, made them no more than curiosities.

 

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For their single “Blue Ice”, Swedish indie group Shout Out Louds came up with the idea of making a functional record on ice. 10 press kits consisting of silicon mold, a bottle of distilled water, and complete instructions were sent to select media and fans. Of course the record would only last in one play, and your needle is most likely to be ruined after, but the less-than-perfect crackling sounds have their own lo-fi DIY charms.

 

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Performance artist and experimental musician Laurie Anderson invented the Viophonograph in 1976. Its violin body turns a custom 7-inch vinyl record which is played by a needle mounted to a bow, all fed into an amplifier.

 

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Artist Pieterjan Grandry has broken a major barrier between the unreality of the Internet and the rest of the real world. Grandry has successfully taken animated GIFs and made them analog. His device, based on a pre-film form of entertainment called a phenakistoscope, uses frames from a GIF printed onto transparent material as individual frames and placed on a wheel. Once spun and illuminated, the images form a single moving picture — in this case, a head bobbing cat.

 

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A record album is stuck in record 3 of the 5 record changer in my Sharp Audio Disc A4 Player. How do I get it out? Record changer not responding. Disassembly may be required to get access to the stuck record and remove it.

 

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In the 1946-1961 era, some ingenious Russians began recording banned bootlegged jazz, boogie woogie and rock ‘n’ roll on exposed X-ray film. The thick radiographs would be cut into discs of 23 to 25 centimeters in diameter; sometimes the records weren’t circular. But the exact shape didn’t matter so much, as long as the thing played. “Usually it was the Western music they wanted to copy,” says Sergei Khrushchev, the son of Nikita Khrushchev. “Before the tape recorders they used the X-ray film of bones and recorded music on the bones, bone music.” As author Anya von Bremzen elaborates: “They would cut the X-ray into a crude circle with manicure scissors and use a cigarette to burn a hole. … You’d have Elvis on the lungs, Duke Ellington on Aunt Masha’s brain scan—forbidden Western music captured on the interiors of Soviet citizens.”

 

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Ottawa band, Hilotrons are releasing nuggets of their music on plastic records that only work for an all-but forgotten children’s toy. The Fisher Price record player is actually a simple wind-up music box, and each indestructible little plastic record is a spool that triggers different notes. What you get is the creepy, tinkling tones featured in the video below.

 

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Jasper Johns’ ‘Scott Fagan Record’ (1970) is a lithograph of Scott Fagan’s ‘South Atlantic Blues’ record, released in 1968. Fagan is the father of The Magnetic Fields singer and songwriter, Stephin Merritt. Although they had not met, John’s ‘Scott Fagan Record’ was instrumental in reuniting Merrit with his estranged father. Writer Mark Swartz had posted an image of John’s lithograph on his Tumblr, which Fagan found while searching for himself on Google. He contacted Swartz, and a relationship eventually created an opportunity for Merrit and Fagan to reunite, along with Merrit’s mother, Alix. Fagan and Swartz created a Kickstarter to fund a tribute album of a man interpreting his son’s (Merrit’s) songs, to which Jasper Johns contributed. The sentimental nature of the work is also present in the imagery, recalling Johns’ early “Target” paintings.

 

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Evan Holm: There will be a time when all tracings of human culture will dissolve back into the soil under the slow crush of the unfolding universe. The pool, black and depthless, represents loss, represents mystery and represents the collective subconscious of the human race. By placing these records underneath the dark and obscure surface of the pool, I am enacting a small moment of remorse towards this loss. In the end however this is an optimistic sculpture, for just after that moment of submergence; tone, melody and ultimately song is pulled back out of the pool, past the veil of the subconscious, out from under the crush of time, and back into a living and breathing realm. When I perform with this sculpture, I am honoring and celebrating all the musicians, all the artists that have helped to build our human culture.

 

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Imagine a turntable but instead of a needle, you have a pizza sauce spout, and instead of a record, you have pizza crust spinning so the red sauce can cover every inch. Imagine no more. That’s how pizzas get made at Costco. Workers put the dough on the turntable and the pizzas gets expertly covered in a controlled flow of sauce from the machines.

 

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WOW is a vinyl record containing a single ultra-low frequency which will alter slightly depending on the mechanical components of your record player. Use more than one system to play several records simultaneously and the air around you will start pulsating. Play 33 ⅓ Hz on 33 ⅓ rpm or 45 Hz on 45 rpm. Feel free to use the pitch wheel or even touch the record to control the sub-sonic wave field. Your choice of record players, the number of records and the character of your room create your individual listening experience.

 

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In over fifty new paintings depicting the circular labels of assorted vinyl albums and singles, Dave Muller draws upon his endless fascination and encyclopedic knowledge of music and its capacity to shape both individual and cultural identities. He culls resonant records from the ‘20s through the ‘90s, some familiar and others forgotten, tapping into shared poetic moments and a collective dialogue.

 

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A record player sits on the floor, shown from above. Slightly off-centre in the corner of a room, it lies surrounded by cables and a power strip. Through a transparent lid, the white label of a black vinyl disc catches the eye. This painting by German artist Gerhard Richter depicts the record player of Andreas Baader, member of the German terrorist group Red Army Faction (RAF), inside Baader’s cell at Stuttgart-Stammheim prison, and was painted after a police photograph.

 

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Many might say it is impossible for a tortoise to survive three decades living in a record player inside a filthy storage room. Those people would also be wrong. One fateful day 30 years ago, a pleasant Brazilian family lost their tortoise named Manuela. Manuela apparently got trapped in the storage room where the man of the house, Leonel Almedia, stored a variety of worthless junk, including electronic devices. Inside a record player is where Manuela the tortoise would call home for 30 years.

 

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22 picture discs


Anti-Flag ‘Bacon’


Skid Row ‘Youth Gone Wild’


Rev Jim Jones ‘Thee Last Supper’ WSNS 1984-PSYCHIC TV/TG


Metallica Interview LP


Fat Boys ‘Pizza Box Set’


Trick ‘r Treat Soundtrack Album


Urine Junkies ‘Abscess’


MF Doom ‘Rhymes Like Dimes’


J Dilla ‘Fuck the Police’


Sebadoh ‘Limelight’, ltd. ed. released to ‘honor’ Rush’s 40th anniversary


Revolting Cocks ‘Beers, Steers & Queers’


Uriah Heep ‘Backstage Girl’


Acid King ‘Busse Woods’


NZI 490004G605


David Bowie ‘Valentines Day’


Erika’s Hot Food to Go


Ozzy Osbourne ‘Miracle Man’


Guns n’ Roses ‘Nightrain’


Danny Brown ‘The OD’


Malcom McLaren ‘Madame Butterfly’


Queen ‘I’m Going Slightly Mad’


Lord Finesse ‘E-mu EP’

 

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One of Afro-Peruvian artist William Cordova’s recent sculptures, “Greatest Hits (para Micaela Bastidas, Tom Wilson y Anna Mae Aquash),” is a 13-foot tower of 3,000 stacked records accented with pieces of broken discs. Inspired by historical movements such as Dada and Arte Povera, Cordova created the tower to recognize those who have been overlooked in mainstream music. He wanted the piece to acknowledge past artists who added to the genre even if they had not produced a “greatest hit.”

 

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New five pound note plays vinyl records

 

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Rutherford Chang has a unique vinyl collection. He only collects the Beatles first pressing of The White Album. I interviewed him: Q: Did you grow up in a house of Beatles fans? When did you first hear about the Beatles? and about the white album? A: My parents are from Taiwan and didn’t listen to the Beatles, so I didn’t grow up with the music. I bought my first White Album at a garage sale in Palo Alto for $1 when I was 15 years old. Q: So how did you get familiar with the Beatles? A: They are the biggest band. Q: Are you a vinyl collector? A: Yes, I collect White Albums. Q: Do you collect anything other than that? A: I own some vinyl and occasionally buy other albums, but nothing in multiples like the White Album. Q: Why just White Album? why not Abbey road? or Rubber Soul? A: The White Album has the best cover. I have a few copies of Abbey Road and Rubber Soul, but I keep those in my “junk bin”. Q: Why do you find it so great? It’s a white, blank cover. Q: Are you a minimalist? A: I’m most interested in the albums as objects and observing how they have aged. So for me, a Beatles album with an all white cover is perfect. Q: Do you care about the album’s condition? A: I collect numbered copies of the White Album in any condition. In fact I often find the “poorer” condition albums more interesting.

 

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Never mind the surface noise, artist Jeff Thompson is making records without any music whatsoever. His pop-up shop White Noise Boutique explores the different qualities of white noise, where each customer will receive an utterly unique form of white noise based on a set of algorithmic decisions they make, pressed onto 7″ vinyl record. Visitors will “select from a variety of random ‘seeds’ and number generators” to determine the quality of the sound, which has been developed by Thompson from devices like untuned FM radios and a Type 1390-B tube powered noise generator.

 

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50 Locked Grooves by Audio-Visual artist Haroon Mirza made from cardboard, tape, glass amongst other things. Double pack contains 2 identical 12″s designed to be played together. Play any loop with any loop to unlock the music inside.

 

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Aphrodisiacal record

 

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In Dario Robleto’s ‘Sometimes Billie Is All That Holds Me Together’ (1998), several new buttons were crafted from melted Billie Holiday records to replace missing buttons on found, abandoned or thrift store clothing. After the discarded clothing was made whole again, it was re-donated to the thrift stores or placed back where it was originally found.

 

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C.C. Records (2013), an installation work by Duto Hardono is inspired by the city of Cairo & the most popular icon at the moment General Abdel Fattah Sisi himself, hence the title–if you’re an Egyptian, you might get it–the work stands as a satire comedy of the recent political life & situation of the country. The audiences create their own combination of the broken-into-half C-shaped Egyptian records & make their own mix of composition. Sometimes it creates a unique locked grooves that plays a loop over & over again. The audiences also choose their own speed whether it’s a 45 or 33 revolution per minute.

 

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For ‘Years, artist Bartholomaus Traubeck fashions a slice of tree trunk into the form of a vinyl record, with the tree-trunk’s rings resembling the spiral groove of the now-outdated audio format. Using a record player with a special sensor, computer software is used to translate the trunk rings into notes and then “play” them as melodies.

 

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Meredyth Sparks Record Player 1977 (sleeves), 2008

 

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Making a comment on Christian Marclay ‘Record Without a Cover’ João Paulo Feliciano, together with the Serralves Museum of Contemporary Art, is releasing ‘Cover without a Record’. The object, a gate-fold album cover, is produced on a standard record plant on edition of 1000 copies.

 

 

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p.s. Hey. ** myneighbourjohnturturro, Hey there, neighbour (of JT). Cool and somehow not a surprise that you’re keyed into a lot of the same things I am. No, I have not heard that new Saint Abdullah & Eomac thing, but be assured I will hunt it post-haste. Thanks. We’re in the standard, obnoxious routine of having to wait for a festival to accept the film for its premiere, after which hopefully it can start getting out there in a more generous way. It’s such a racket. So, thanks, hopefully in not too long. My world’s doable, and I hope yours is actually inviting. ** PL, Your first club, like, ever? Wait, you said ‘club’, so never mind, assuming club’ and club are distinct entities. Well, great luck. There are about four sites where I look for slaves. The main and most useful one is called Recon. ** Lucas, Hi, Lucas. Ah, great, so there you go. I’ll find ‘what happens next’, thank you. Intriguing. ‘Malady of Death’ is a favorite novel of mine, so, yeah, agreed. I’ve never seen ‘Agatha and the Limitless Readings’. Okay, I will get that under my belt, or, well, under my forehead at least. My day was mostly trying to catch up on things, largely email, on which I am hugely behind. So it was kind of productive but nothing much. I got a ticket to see the ‘avant-premiere’, as they call it over here, of the new Leos Carax film with Mr. Carax in attendance, so that’s as close as I got to your ‘Desertshore’ moment. Dang, you’re in a pretty place. Gorgeous, it was. Here’s a non-real, muted person saying hi to you. ** _Black_Acrylic, Hi. Happy that the Murder Boys met your unimpeachable standards. I’ll get the Actress, but in nondescript mp3 form as I don’t have a turntable. Tragically. ** Steve, Hi. The Gordan album is especially good, I think. Jacklen Elswyth: no. I will. Glad you liked a couple of things. I think I did end up on tumblr a fair amount. It housed things I could use in my blog making somewhat frequently. It was also a major gif storehouse. Still is, but to a hugely lesser degree. ** tomk, Hi, T! Thanks, pal. Good stuff. I strongly suspect there is no playlist of my, what, 168 and counting gigs. You’d have to be pretty extremely nerdy to spend those hours. Oh, shit, I’m sorry to hear the real life messes. But, yeah, it’ll be fine, seriously. I remember when I had chicken pox as a kid. Man, that shit itched. I think I still have a little pock mark or two from my excessive itching. Love, me. ** Misanthrope, Hi. Okay, I’ll see what if any friends would go with me to an Olympics thing and pony up. You’re right. I think Sinner is interesting. And Alcarez. I’m sort very vaguely tuning in. ** Cletus, Thanks, pal. I’m glad someone other than me loved/despised Hideous Figure. ** Dominik, Hi!!! I can’t believe it either. I don’t believe in curses, but I think we’re got one. I started the email dispersion, and love will hopefully keep on track today because I am way, way behind. Like way. Because your laptop not crapping out is so important a goal, I am just going to redouble your assignment to love for today. Love, protect Dominik’s electronics today and every day, that’s an order, G. ** Harper, Tell me about it. Jesus. I very proudly had a little poem thing that Candy Darling wrote in an issue of my old zine Little Caesar back in the late 70s. I love ‘Women in Revolt’. What’s that famous line … I know I’m going to get it wrong … ‘You’re not a blonde on a bum trip, you’re a bum on a blonde trip!’ Glassian headaches: haha, how precise and, yes, been there. ** Justin D, Hi, Justin. Glad you liked it. The Kee Avil album is really good. I love ‘Helicopter’ of course. I think it’s one of Deerhunter’s very best songs, and I’m blown away that Bradford did that. He used to be a regular commenter on my blog ages ago before Deerhunter blew up. Thanks for the link. I’ll listen to the track once I get out of here. How was your day? Did you make progress on anything you aim to? ** Darby🤨, I was about to say I miss methruns. but I actually don’t. I’ve heard of Failure, but I haven’t heard them. Will do. Yay, about the camera. Don’t drop it, haha. I do naturally, yes, like Acid Bath and Boris. I met Boris, or a couple of them. They’re buddies with my friend Stephen O’Malley (Sunn0)))). They were stand-offish but very polite. Wow, I am behind. It’s been a year since TdF? That’s scary. You looked very exciting while you were writing that. I look like this while I am writing this. ** Nicholas., You don’t do gluten? I think I would starve to death if I couldn’t eat gluten. Gluten is practically all I eat. You played video games all day! I’m very green. And wrote a song?! Titled after something of mine?! Wow. I’m almost finished with the p.s., so I will sit back, crown myself with headphones and sonically luxuriate within mere minutes. Thank you! ** Oscar 🌀, Nice. I actually really want that Elmo for real. And I bet I can make one. You writing your name on a piece of paper and holding it up to a mirror and deciding you’re going to legally change your name to Racso then doing that and then looking in a mirror and saying ‘Hi, Rasco’. Do you realise that my name backwards is sinned? How cool is that? Oh, write something. I encourage you, obviously. You’ve been flexing your writing muscles with these comments, and now it’s time to get ‘serious’. My day needs to be work-y today, and that’s my goal. My week? That and trying to solve hideous film related problems and going to the private opening of a Matthew Barney show at Foundation Cartier and helping a friend edit her short film and maybe going to a book launch event tonight and … that’s it so far. What about your week, eh? I’m reading the Candy Darling biography. Sweet about you and the Perec novel. It’s great, I think. If I lived in the country, I think I’d have a pet goat or two, wouldn’t you? I think they’re an underrated species. ** Okay. Today you get the 4th iteration of the blog’s occasional, ongoing Records posts. As franchise entries go, it’s better than ‘Indiana Jones 4’ but not as good as ‘A Nightmare on Elm Street 4’. See you tomorrow.

19 Comments

  1. myneighbourjohnturturro

    Hey. So I just listened to Hideous Figure and damn! So good. I used to be such a noisenik, been a while since I went digging around, I feel that Prurient’s Frozen Niagra Falls is some form of definitive statement on noise, the level of ambition and attention to detail still blows me away. Re the film I hope it gets moving soon. I was trying to locate a copy of Permanent Green Light on DVD or something but with no joy. I bought Like Cattle Towards Glow in my local fopp which was a pleasant surprise. Is PGL out of print everywhere? Sad times. Do you like Bertrand Bonello? I’m going to see his new film later, it looks super intriguing. I loved Nocturama. I bid you a very sunny and highly caffeinated good day.

  2. Bernard Welt

    Ehhhccchhh you’re busy busy busy and so am I. Unfortunately I still have a couple deadlines before I leave town on Friday for about ten days, so I’ll text tomorrow and see if you have any availability while I’m still in Paris.

  3. Misanthrope

    Dennis, Yes, Alcaraz and Sinner are playing in the semis tomorrow. Both are playing great. Should be a fun match. I like Sinner a lot. He’s cute in this sort of homely way. Very coltish or something. Really nice lad.

    I think, too, just being at the Olympics and at that event and with all those people…it’ll be fun as hell. I wish they had them in DC or something. 😛

    I do want to get up to the US Open this next year. I was thinking about this year, but I’ll be doing something else in October probably and can only use so much leave and all that. David, of all people, wants to go to a live tennis match. He and my mom watch it with me all the time, so I guess it makes sense.

    Did I tell you that Alex has been on me to play tennis with him, saying he’d beat me? We’ve played twice. It didn’t go well for him, hahaha. Like, people just don’t get it. They think you can pick up a racquet and just go out there and swing away and be Federer. Um, no. Still fun for us, though.

  4. Misanthrope

    Oh, God, I remember those plastic records. I loved them. Haha.

  5. Lucas

    hi dennis! really cool post today. the idea of baking one’s ashes into a vinyl is kind of insane and funny to me, but what record would you do that with, if you had to? I think I would choose… probably rehearsals for retirement or pleasures of the harbor by phil ochs, since that would at least mean that I (or my family, I guess) would own one of his albums physically. I know he’s not exactly popular but it’s insane how hard to find they are, especially in cd.

    nothing much is better than bad, I’d say? I checked out the trailer to the new leos carax film and it looks super intriguing. I’ve somehow never heard of him until now, oops. but tell me what you thought of it, I’m curious. my ‘desertshore’ moment today was realizing an appointment I was really dreading and thought would be today is actually on friday. hopefully yours, if you had one, was more uplifting haha. also since I’m mostly over the stress I had this weekend I’m working on that short story I told you about again! it’s not great, I think, but I’m trying to have faith in myself.

    since the weather isn’t as pretty today and there’s nothing to photograph, all I have to offer you is also a gif of a non-real person, who’s presumably listening to the hi yours said to me. https://shorturl.at/f9DBO

    have a great day!

  6. _Black_Acrylic

    Another great Records Day! Certainly the most charismatic of formats, and one with definite aphrodisiac properties to boot. Said it many times before but you really should invest in a record player of your own. Your ears will only thank you!

  7. Dominik

    Hi!!

    As always, I’m forwarding this post to my brother who’s in love with everything record-related. Thank you!

    Honestly, it’s hard not to feel like this movie project is cursed, yeah… Love should really do something about it…

    Thank you for reinforcing the importance of my laptop’s survival in love’s mind (heart?). It survived today’s massive workload without any problems, so I’m grateful.

    Love starting a zine for AI-generated obituaries, Od.

    P.S. I’m going home for a few days, so I’ll be back on Tuesday! 😊

  8. Bill

    That Graham Dunning techno installation is hilarious. And that’s actually a 5 pound note used as a needle? Wow.

    Many interesting gig items yesterday, Dennis. I’m not a techno fan, but that wiggly British Murder Boys track is pretty fun. And I’m a big Chris Corsano umm fan.

    I’m hanging with some out-of-towners this week, so will just be popping in and out. We’re supposed to get a heat wave, yikes.

    The new Brian Evenson collection is pretty good so far. I see it’s finally available as an e-book. I coughed up for the limited edition signed hardcover, which was held up for months, sigh.

    Bill

  9. Steve

    I hate to keep complaining about health issues, but I’ve come down with a respiratory bug and had to cancel tomorrow’s dental surgery. (I tested negative for COVID, but I still have a fever.) I will call the office again to schedule it once I’m feeling better, but I just wish this was over.

    The malleability of records is incredible. Did Yury ever see those Russian X-ray bootlegs?

    The Japan Society announced their July “Japan Cuts” series yesterday. The lineup looks great – new films by Shinya Tsukamoto, Shunji Iwai, Gakuryu Ishii and Takeshi Kitano, with revivals of Shinji Somai’s MOVING and Ishii’s AUGUST IN THE WATER, among others.

    The niche corners of Tumblr were attractive (like the “Hot Men of Al Jazeera” blog), but the site was so hard to search that I struggled to find them.

    I have 2 new reviews – my June music roundup for Gay City News, on Arooj Aftab and Pride Month Barbie (https://gaycitynews.com/june-lgbtq-music-arooj-aftab-pride-month-barbie/) and Takashi Miike’s LUMBERJACK THE MONSTER (https://artsfuse.org/293384/film-review-lumberjack-the-monster-a-petrified-forest/).

  10. Charalampos

    Hello. I just want to say So nice to see non US orders for Flunker being out and proud. Will order later in the month.
    Nice you enjoy the Candy biography. I will try and order ASAP and the author’s other book I want to tell you more but the heat has me feeling so weak for real…
    I would Love to read this poem of Candy’s especially now that I try to write and draw so much
    So many stuff in my mind and nobody to share them with
    One thing by association I was thinking aloud the other day, how come a biography on Paul Morrissey does not exist and analysis of those super rich films? I wonder

    Hi from super Hot Crete

  11. Harper

    Hi Dennis! Wow, that’s so cool about the Candy Darling piece in Little Caesar. I finished the biography today and have been crying uncontrollably ever since haha. It affected me A LOT. I feel like a kid who’s discovered something for the first time.
    With what I write, I try to get far away with any voice I’ve been forced against my will to adopt. I don’t put a lot of direct emotion into my work because I want to create a style that says nothing and reflects everything, ambitious yes but I have no other way of putting it. And as far as style goes I’m trying to create something that creates a general impression of me, which the words might not directly articulate. I keep thinking about that purported Pynchon quote that ‘every weirdo in the world is on my wavelength’. I want to do something that’s what Lou Reed’s ‘Transformer’ sounds like. God, I’m talking out of my arse but I hope this makes sense.

    Anyway, I also filled in an application for this weird but cool bar today. They don’t have a thing online so I had to go in and write on a piece of paper the old fashioned way. Questions on the application included: do your best drawing of a penis, What is your opinion of baked beans? If you could be half man, half something else, what would the other half be? I got a kick out of that, I drew a girl with a dick which either means I’ve got what they’re looking for or will be rejected. I really liked it there but I’m not going to keep my hopes up.

  12. Justin D

    Hey, Dennis! I really like those Russian x-ray bootlegs. Also, the idea of listening to someone’s ashes simply as pops and crackles is sad yet sweet. Something about the ash vinyl deteriorating with each play strikes me as sort of poetic. My day was decent. I got some work done this morning, then went for a nice long walk around our neighborhood. After that, I went out to get my Dad a birthday card/gift (just a gift card, as he is impossible to shop for). So I suppose I was sort of successful in accomplishing what I needed to. How was your day?

  13. Uday

    Oh yeah you’re not in the same place. Maybe when I get my copy of Flunker I mail it to you for signing? I do indeed feel good! The election went better than expected. Read your Poetry Project interview, was pretty groovy (records, groovy—geddit?). What are your thoughts on vaping? I’m trying to get my friend off it. Not for moralistic reasons, merely aesthetic ones. I much prefer it when they smoke cigarettes. The little neon plastic boxes are embarrassing to be seen around and I’m searching for redemptive qualities.

  14. Nicholas

    Howdy! Yeah I am celiac actually fun fact about me I was like made mentally ill and not as hot as I could have been due to said celiac for like 24+ years till I found out and stopped my gluten consumption totally. And I mean literally as soon as I stopped and a year after my body had finally dealt with all the trauma I was losing weight and on the path to sanity. That’s my story for today what’s up what’d you eat and what’s your lucky number? BRB & TYYLXOX

  15. Nicholas.

    Howdy! Yeah I am celiac actually fun fact about me I was like made mentally ill and not as hot as I could have been due to said celiac for like 24+ years till I found out and stopped my gluten consumption totally. And I mean literally as soon as I stopped and a year after my body had finally dealt with all the trauma I was losing weight and on the path to sanity. That’s my story for today what’s up what’d you eat and what’s your lucky number? BRB & TYYLXOX

  16. Nicholas.

    Howdy! Yeah I am celiac actually fun fact about me I was like made mentally ill and not as hot as I could have been due to said celiac for like 24+ years till I found out and stopped my gluten consumption totally. And I mean literally as soon as I stopped and a year after my body had finally dealt with all the trauma I was losing weight and on the path to sanity. That’s my story for today what’s up what’d you eat and what’s your lucky number? BRB & TYYLXOX

    P.S may have commented a bunch idk

  17. Racso 🌀

    Today: a major news group posts articles titled ‘hi, Dennis!’ with no other context across every single one of their outlets; it could be about any Dennis in the world, but you know it’s about you.

    This post was great! Super good with morning coffee. I love ‘Kassettenschallplatte’ quite a bit, there’s just something about it. And the Soviet-era X-ray bootlegs too, of course. Do you ever listen to white noise? I think it’s interesting how many sub-genres of white noise there are — pink noise, brown noise, green noise, blue noise, black noise, etc. I wonder what makes people go for one over the other.

    The film problems seem to be a real bummer — any end in sight? Hopefully the other things balance it out somewhat, especially the Matthew Barney show, which sounds super cool. My week is looking alright! Still dealing with some forms/admin stuff (boring), but one of my really close friends is coming up from England this week, so I’m going to get to see her which is great. How’s the Candy Darling biography? Also RE: goats, yes, absolutely, and in the absolute dream scenario maybe a few Valais Blacknose sheep too.

  18. Darby 🐇

    I like the chocolate record I wonder if it tasted good.
    Oh, what! you haven’t listened to Failure? They’re so good! All their albums are amazing and I recommend listening to their first album obviously “Comfort” Good band.
    Nope! No dropping cameras 100$ Well, I have to buy a strap for the body before I can guarantee that.
    gifs!
    You look a lot more happier than I though you’d look writing
    https://media.tenor.com/AGgVj_aylZUAAAAM/coraline-dad.gif
    This is what I always imagined.
    I discovered I had no food of mine in the fridge the other day and went out to buy stuff. So I got something called “fish tofu” which puzzled me so I bought it. I like going to the Asian market, I got some seaweed, the best, Falafel? Which ive never had before. Poki, noodles and some other stuff..
    I love noodles.

    • Darby 🐇

      also tired, sorry for grammar errors.

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