200e Patch Book
2008-06-11 by Kai Franz
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2008-06-11 by Kai Franz
Most of the time i just rebuild some patches from a patchbook to understand the system my new synthesizer / modular system.
I wonder if any of you can show me some simple 200e patches.
Thanks
Kai
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]2008-06-11 by mritenburg
A great place to start is the Easel manual that floats around in PDF form. Google it. Also, the MARF manual floats around in PDF. Another good source. --- In 200e@yahoogroups.com, Kai Franz <kai200e@...> wrote:
> Most of the time i just rebuild some patches from a patchbook to > understand the system my new synthesizer / modular system. > > I wonder if any of you can show me some simple 200e patches. > > Thanks > > Kai
2008-06-12 by JB
As for some patch ideas you should be able to distill a few from the archive of this list. Complex patches are tedious to document... especially since we cannot share presets. 2008/6/12 mritenburg <mritenburg@yahoo.com>:
> A great place to start is the Easel manual that floats around in PDF > form. Google it. Also, the MARF manual floats around in PDF. Another > good source. > > > --- In 200e@yahoogroups.com, Kai Franz <kai200e@...> wrote: >> Most of the time i just rebuild some patches from a patchbook to >> understand the system my new synthesizer / modular system. >> >> I wonder if any of you can show me some simple 200e patches. >> >> Thanks >> >> Kai > > > > ------------------------------------ > > Yahoo! Groups Links > > > >
2008-06-12 by mritenburg
Kai, Here is the answer to your private request. I posted it for the group so others can benefit. Easel Manual http://www.wavemakers-synth.com/buchla/PaMtEO.pdf MARF (Buchla 248) http://rubidium.dyndns.org/~magnus/synths/companies/buchla/ For this link you will have to scroll down to read the manual. This manual describe the original 200 series MARF, but I have found that much of it applies to the 200e series DARF and ARF. Enjoy, Matt
> > --- In 200e@yahoogroups.com, Kai Franz <kai200e@> wrote: > >> Most of the time i just rebuild some patches from a patchbook to > >> understand the system my new synthesizer / modular system. > >> > >> I wonder if any of you can show me some simple 200e patches.
2008-06-13 by tmeade1974
Ross, The description of the 222e on the Buchla website is pretty clear about the panel arrangements for the 222e. The spacial sensor goes on the top boat, with the tactile unit directly below it on the bottom boat. You would definitely not want the sensor unit on your extra 4 boat next to the tactile unit as it would limit the use of the rings if laid flat. It MIGHT be possible to put the tactile sensor on the 4 boat and with the sensor on the top boat in the cabinet. I don't see why this wouldn't work actually. I know you don't want to hear it, but there are good reasons why many of us suggested the 18WLS to you based on the modules you wanted. The other option is getting one 12WLS now and another later. --tom --- In 200e@yahoogroups.com, amnesia <amni56@...> wrote:
> > Hi all > > I havent had an answer to my question as yet. :-( > > Say I decide to buy a complete 12WLS and a year later a extra 4 boat > with the Kin Port. Will I be able to do that. have it all connected? I > understand it wont be in the cabinet. > > Please dont answer saying " dude get a 18WLS" :-) > > Also the people who own the Kin Port do you find the mass of patch > cables get in the way of using an 18WLS? > > cheers > Ross >
2008-06-13 by amnesia
Hi all I havent had an answer to my question as yet. :-( Say I decide to buy a complete 12WLS and a year later a extra 4 boat with the Kin Port. Will I be able to do that. have it all connected? I understand it wont be in the cabinet. Please dont answer saying " dude get a 18WLS" :-) Also the people who own the Kin Port do you find the mass of patch cables get in the way of using an 18WLS? cheers Ross
2008-06-13 by amnesia
Just a heads up to you lucky people near and around SFO http://bp0.blogger.com/_FMBJEkaC8Lw/SFHrAyNaBZI/AAAAAAAAU0I/-IVY9O8ym1U/s1600-h/PR_TMC+edit.jpg I would love to get a copy of this book signed by Don and Morton, Raymond..Can someone help me out if you are going? I am on the other side of the world and would dearly love to be there. Cheers Ross
2008-06-13 by amnesia
I assume quite a few of you collect and love early electronic music...... I just bought Warner Jepson double CD on melon expander warner jepson “totentanz and other electronic works 1958-1973” double compact disc set * bugs at large (2:43) 1967 * blood knot (7:27) 1970 * skate date (0:41) 1970 * laughter after (4:37) 1958 * rirlwa (2:00) 1970 * good humor man (2:34) 1967 * jacks (1:36) 1967 * jail gate crazy (1:03) 1958 * splace (1:20) 1967 * totentanz (35:05) 1967 * the dog (1:53) 1970 * for trying out loud (0:42) 1958 * the big purr (0:58) 1958 * the awakening (20:03) 1968 * see is never all the way up (24:44) 1973 ... by far the most anticipated early-electronic music reissue around these parts since it was announced a year or so back ; this double-disc collection of just about everything by bay-area outsider / composer warner (ne “warren”) jepson, including his totemic (... and previously creel pwned) lp “totentanz” :: ... now why the melon expander didn’t use that image on the cover is beyond me ... but i digress. what we do get here : a bunch of amazing bedroom-lineage electro-acoustic experiments dating back to 1958 (!!!) - most invoking mysterious bleep-infused landscapes with tons of psychedelic organ (played on an instrument hand-painted by bruce conner !!!) & tape mangling, prepared piano / strings & a few fairly harsh early/primitve synth-stunners done on the buchla @ mills & the experimental television center ... these lead up to the album’s centerpiece ; the full 35-minute “totentanz” - of which i described (in reference to the o/p creel pone version) thusly :: ... this one that has “nurse with wound list” written all over it; yet - nary a mention in the notes to said 1979 lp and just about anyone anywhere on out on our global interweb... purportedly the score to a 1971 ballet by carlos carvajal, totentanz overwhelms us with its mystery while revealing only the most gratifying collection of sounds from the early electronic music canon imaginable ... the a-side piece contains a long section of tape-based concrète; lo-fi pre-industrial thudding, dissonant piano stabs. and much repetition (you’ll want to crawl inside this bit and never come out...) - this gives way to a great blast of weird-synth patterns that closes out the side... on the flip there’s even further mystery layers, which slowly give way to the most amazing bit of terry riley lineage repetitive minimal synth figuring and blasted spring reverb & gated riffing. completely awe-inspiring (with a demonic-looking cover depicting some sort of skeletons-and-ghouls-as-wedding-processional ceremony no less.) the second disc continues on in the same trajectory, with a few shorter pieces giving birth to the epic, 20+ minute “the awakening” & “see is never all the way up” ... of course, i’m going to go ahead and highly recommend this to just about anyone with even a passing interest in early electronic music’s dalliance with 60s/70s psychedelic culture - it’s a landmark release & mitchell brown has done a bang-up job w/the reissue, including contemporary liner notes from jepson & copious information as to his modus / motivations ... essential. melon expander press release... warner jepson “totentanz and other electronic works 1958-1973” 2xcd melon expander 005 the act of dusting off old forgotten master tapes, and old people too, can reveal a myriad of results. crappy music that sounded great to the stoned performer at the time, crappy music that sounded great before time ate away at the tapes, great music trapped behind various complications, or, in the case with warner jepson, great music from a composer enthusiastic about revisiting it. jepson recorded over 200 ” tape reels full of electronic sounds at the san francisco tape music center, mills college and the national center for experiments in television (ncet). some of them were used as soundtracks for theatre productions and art films, and some were heard ephemerally at art galleries, parties and “happenings” in the late 60’s and early 70’s. only one document was ever released - the soundtrack to totentanz, a theatre work by carlos carvajal, on an lp that yielded a circulation of only 300 copies in 1971. this 2xcd release is a reissue of that totentanz lp plus many other pieces that vary in content from his late 50’s “musique concrete” experiments to rhythmic prepared piano and tape pieces to sprawling meditative sound paintings done on the 100 and 200 series buchla synthesizers. the opening track “bugs at large” might bring to mind synthetic rhythms that weren’t commonly heard until 20+ years later in the “techno” genre of late 80’s detroit. aside from totentanz, none of these works have been heard by anyone in well over 30 years. he worked with many people who may be on the radar of folks buying this cd. whether it was taking photographs of steve reich or john cage, playing piano in terry riley’s first ensemble of “in c”, or scoring the soft-core porno “luminous procuress” starring the cockettes, jepson kept busy in a vital time for creative art and music. though somehow it seems he’s slipped through the cracks of time and needed a healthy dusting off. this release happily rides the coattails of his re-emergence: inclusion in the “visual music” exhibit at the los angeles moca in 2005 (the 1973 video work “illuminated music” with stephen beck) and spring 2008’s “california video” exhibit at the getty center (a 50 minute solo video/sound work made at the ncet in ’75). the cd booklet features liner notes by the composer as well as paintings he made in the late 50’s. sounds have always been attached to some real and material object that emanated them, followed the same course as their source. but with the advent of tape and recorders after wwii, this was no longer true. sounds no longer would be derived from what one saw or could see. with the tape recorder musicians could revel in unknown worlds of sound. and that we did, splicing, re-ordering, reversing, speeding up and slowing down sounds to see what we could find or create. with the sounds a tape recorder could make, the mind would imagine new unseen objects with unheard-of-before sounds because the sounds did not come from an object one could see. unknown objects would be evoked from new sounds and these new unknown objects lay in the mind's imagination. furthermore, inertia and speed always had a hand in the shape of sound, how it began and ended. thanks to magnetic tape, a sound could start and stop and last longer and be louder than could a sound from a real object. to this extent it paralleled what a musician did when he made a musical sound, struck one or shaped one into a melody. but musique concrete were sounds drawn from non-musical things, any thing, and could be altered to resemble no thing anyone had even known, seen, or heard. then there were rhythms, new and strange, beyond what a human could accomplish. manipulating tape sounds produced accidentally and unpredictably incomprehensible and unimaginable rhythms. it was in 1957 in ann halprin's basement studio that i put together my first musique concrete piece for her branch dance. around this time i started taking and printing photographs, explored oil painting and entered the sfmoma annual with a 4x4 ft painting/construction of piano keys, undershirts and paint tubes. 1961 saw a 6 month run of helen adam's ballad opera san francisco's burning for which i played my piano score of 60 songs. this new world of sound was expanded further when don buchla created in 1963 his first and glorious 100 series synthesizer and installed it in the sf tape music center at 321 divisadero st. the sequencer--the name meant something completely different from later sequencers-- hooked me. it made rhythms that were fast, rare, and instantly changeable. the syncopations possible were terrific. my first small piece was used for ''the lovers" scene in totentanz. soon after, the tape center and the buchla box were moved to mills college where pauline oliveros and then tony gnazzo became its caretakers. the doors to the studio there were never locked then; i would reserve the 8pm time slot and stay as long as i wanted. occasionally i would find nothing and go home early and dejected. i had no mastery over this magical machine. i took my first discoveries to a party; everyone was fascinated. the sf art institute asked me to play them at noon for the students. painter lee adair asked if i'd play them at her opening, leading to a long stream of openings including two very large ones for the museum of modern art. the usual string trio was now replaced by four huge rock and roll speakers in the four corners of the marble rotunda; the sound spread out into the halls and galleries. i found one man dressed in a business suit sitting smack in front of one of those behemoths; god knows what he was experiencing. one elegant elderly lady passing me said the music was 'sexual'. i would never argue the point. in my nights at mills over the next three years i recorded 200 half hour reels of sounds that i would use at parties, openings, exhibits, films, theater, ballet, even a saks 5th ave fashion show by oscar de la renta. i have used only a fraction of these reels. so much needs to be transferred to semi-permanent medium. james broughton, not long after i'd scored his film the bed, put me in touch with a fellow student, carlos carvajal, who needed a composer for the work he was choreographing for the sf ballet. he described the scenes i would score and explained a time-sensitive situation. i spent the following nights into the mornings at mills combining musique concrete and buchla synthesized sounds into the 40 minute score, taking segments into carlos's sessions with his dancers to see if they worked. in a month, during which my son was born, we were done. totentanz opened april 1 st, 1967 at the s.f opera house. a few patrons walked out in the third section, as i expected, where the sounds were mostly sine waves and not very rhythmic. carlos left the sf ballet to form his own company, dance spectrum. he revived totentanz in the spectacular space of grace cathedral in feb 1971 and repeated it every other year until '82. the gothic atmosphere and 7 -second echo did wonders. after the show i hawked my lps of the music. only somewhere near 300 copies circulated. in the mid 60's hi-fi manufacturers added quadraphonic sound to home systems. so i decided to make my next ballet for carlos quadraphonic. since the mills tape studio had only two, not four, ampex machines, it meant recording sounds from one machine to the other to make tape i, then doing the same to make tape ii, keeping in mind the sounds of the two tapes, for they had to mesh when played together. to check the mesh i had to play the two tapes on the two machines making sure they started together precisely. if something didn't mesh, i had to go back, record or erase sounds on one tape and then put on the other tape to listen to them again to check the mesh. things got even hairier further into the 20 minute score. a lot of time was spent lifting off and placing on the source tapes and the two master tapes; sometimes i'd lose track which recorder had which tape. on this cd the 4 tracks of the awakening have been combined down to two. in 1973, the national center for experiments in television had an opening for a composer-in-residence. when i inquired, it was suggested i score a video that stephen beck, inventor of his beck direct video synthesizer, was working on. one day i remember, pierre schaeffer, practically the founder of musique concrete, was visiting the n.c.e.t. the next day i was hired. the buchla synthesizer there was the next generation, the 200 series. it inspired me much less then the 100 series, whose sounds seemed to reflect the earth and nature, animals and primitive mysteries from the ground. the 200 series made more electronic, pure sine waves, cold. it was difficult finding satisfaction; still i ended up scoring a 40 minute piece of scenes in the woods, then five more works which were broadcast on pbs. one, "see is never all the way up" was by artist william roarty. it was dark with an amorphous form, with little color and little movement except for its outline of shimmering dots. what to do? serve music with its own momentum or serve the momentum of the image? since sound relates to its source, i chose the latter, and made a sound that shimmered and barely moved. the sound made me think i was on a train listening to the track. i kept tied to roarty's image longer than i expected i could or should, but as often happens, what first seems too odd eventually can become intriguing and attractive. just before the n.c.e.t. died in 1975, i hooked 2 wires from the buchla box to larry templeton's fantastic video mixer and discovered images of extraordinary color. some of them are in the la getty california video exhibit of 2008. one evening i thought to do what many before me have done: stick something into the strings of the piano-maybe an eraser--to have a different sound. "rirlwa" & "the dog" came from these sessions. around this time bruce conner gave me his farfisa organ that he'd painted on. i'd mix it up with the prepared piano tunes. they were never to be heard by anyone until 30 years later by mitchell brown, the producer of these cds. - wj 2007 ... disc 1 tracks 1, 6, 7, 9 are from tullium, the score to david william's environmental sculpture, hansen-fuller gallery, 1967 disc 1 track 2 is from the score for blood knot; american conservatory theatre 1970 disc 1 track 10 is the complete score for totentanz, a ballet by carlos carvajal 1967 disc 2 track 4 is the score for the awakening, a ballet by carlos carvajal 1968 disc 2 track 5 is the score for the roarty video see is never all the way up, national center for experiments in television (kqed) 1973 all tracks performed and recorded by warner jepson 1958-1973 laughter after, jail gate crazy, for trying out loud & the big putt assembled by mitchell brown, fall 2006 mastered by thomas dimuzio at gench studios, san francisco, ca, 2008 produced by mitchell brown all paintings (1957-1960) and photographs (2006) by warner jepson video synthesizer photos are stills from a video made at the ncet, 1975, by warner jepson design by ben wolfinsohn special thanks: ben wolfinsohn, thomas dimuzio, erik hoffman, joseph hammer, ken lee, don buchla, larry templeton, and rodney and his fantastic plastic record shop (where in 2002 the $100 totentanz lp was acquired, planting the seed for this release)
2008-06-13 by jon schatz
On Jun 13, 2008, at 8:36 AM, amnesia wrote: > Hi all > > I havent had an answer to my question as yet. :-( > > Say I decide to buy a complete 12WLS and a year later a extra 4 boat > with the Kin Port. Will I be able to do that. have it all connected? I > understand it wont be in the cabinet. > > Please dont answer saying " dude get a 18WLS" :-) > > Also the people who own the Kin Port do you find the mass of patch > cables get in the way of using an 18WLS? hey, i asked don the same question and the answer is "dude, get a 18wls". there's no easy way to connect a single boat to a 12wls setup. there's apparently a way to connect two full cabinets though. thanks, -jon "There are no differences but differences of degree between different degrees of difference and no difference." - James, William. "Subjective Effects of Nitrous Oxide." Mind. 1882; Vol 7.
2008-06-13 by don hassler
I'd be more inclined to simply pull modules from your then preexisting 12wls to the then new 4 boat, and locate the 222 properly in the 12. Swapping modules inside the 200e is for the most part, very very easy. They are very well thought out internally. --- On Fri, 6/13/08, amnesia <amni56@tpg.com.au> wrote:
> From: amnesia <amni56@tpg.com.au> > Subject: [200e] unanswered question > To: 200e@yahoogroups.com > Date: Friday, June 13, 2008, 11:36 AM > Hi all > > I havent had an answer to my question as yet. :-( > > Say I decide to buy a complete 12WLS and a year later a > extra 4 boat > with the Kin Port. Will I be able to do that. have it all > connected? I > understand it wont be in the cabinet. > > Please dont answer saying " dude get a 18WLS" :-) > > Also the people who own the Kin Port do you find the mass > of patch > cables get in the way of using an 18WLS? > > cheers > Ross
2008-06-13 by rick
I havent had an answer to my question as yet. :-(
Say I decide to buy a complete 12WLS and a year later a extra 4 boat
with the Kin Port. Will I be able to do that. have it all connected? I
understand it wont be in the cabinet.
Please dont answer saying " dude get a 18WLS" :-)
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ross,
The correct answer is "Buy a 18WLS" i am sorry I know thats not what
want to hear but that is the best solution for what you are after... I
think most 200e owners will tell you to leave room for future
expansion... the postion of the 222e in the cabinet it critical to ring
response, even if you mount other modules besides the 222e in the
external boat it will end up being more costly and less
portable... the 18WLS is still very portable.
[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]2008-06-13 by tmeade1974
While we are on this slightly OT thread...... I was just about to order this cd from mimaroglumusicsales and wanted to know if anyone can recommend anything else to accompany my order. I have several of the Creel Pone disks (Greek, Hungarian, Melbourne, Dockstader stuff, and the Creel Pone 4 disk set). Anything else in those realms, maybe something Buchla specific (just to stay on topic :) thanks, -tom
2008-06-13 by fredw@lmi.net
Whenever you remove and reinstall the 200e modules, take a sharpie or other larger black marking pen, and make a stripe on each side of the edge connector near the key. This will make future changes easier. F.
2008-06-13 by ezra buchla
the 222e touchplate and interface modules are connected by an extra ribbon cable. so you probably wouldn't want to put them in different cabinets. you could put them both in the 12 and use the extra boat for other things, preferably some relatively self-contained sub-unit like 261/292/291/281 or whatever. if you really want a 12p cabinet and an extra boat, i'd say go for it, you can always experiment and see what works and what doesn't within that. eb
On Fri, Jun 13, 2008 at 9:15 AM, tmeade1974 <tmeade1974@yahoo.com> wrote: > Ross, > The description of the 222e on the Buchla website is pretty clear about the > panel > arrangements for the 222e. The spacial sensor goes on the top boat, with the > tactile unit > directly below it on the bottom boat. You would definitely not want the > sensor unit on > your extra 4 boat next to the tactile unit as it would limit the use of the > rings if laid flat. > It MIGHT be possible to put the tactile sensor on the 4 boat and with the > sensor on the top > boat in the cabinet. I don't see why this wouldn't work actually. > I know you don't want to hear it, but there are good reasons why many of us > suggested > the 18WLS to you based on the modules you wanted. The other option is > getting one > 12WLS now and another later. > > --tom > > --- In 200e@yahoogroups.com, amnesia <amni56@...> wrote: >> >> Hi all >> >> I havent had an answer to my question as yet. :-( >> >> Say I decide to buy a complete 12WLS and a year later a extra 4 boat >> with the Kin Port. Will I be able to do that. have it all connected? I >> understand it wont be in the cabinet. >> >> Please dont answer saying " dude get a 18WLS" :-) >> >> Also the people who own the Kin Port do you find the mass of patch >> cables get in the way of using an 18WLS? >> >> cheers >> Ross >> > >
2008-06-13 by ezra buchla
i recommended this release to the list a few months ago. it's worth reiterating the recommendation; this is some great music. mitch brown who runs the label is a very excellent dude, he sorted through literally 100's of hours worth of tapes to find the best of the best...
On Fri, Jun 13, 2008 at 8:44 AM, amnesia <amni56@tpg.com.au> wrote: > I assume quite a few of you collect and love early electronic music...... > > I just bought Warner Jepson double CD on melon expander > > warner jepson "totentanz and other electronic works 1958-1973" double > compact disc set > > * bugs at large (2:43) 1967 > * blood knot (7:27) 1970 > * skate date (0:41) 1970 > * laughter after (4:37) 1958 > * rirlwa (2:00) 1970 > * good humor man (2:34) 1967 > * jacks (1:36) 1967 > * jail gate crazy (1:03) 1958 > * splace (1:20) 1967 > * totentanz (35:05) 1967 > > * the dog (1:53) 1970 > * for trying out loud (0:42) 1958 > * the big purr (0:58) 1958 > * the awakening (20:03) 1968 > * see is never all the way up (24:44) 1973 > > ... by far the most anticipated early-electronic music reissue around > these parts since it was announced a year or so back ; this double-disc > collection of just about everything by bay-area outsider / composer > warner (ne "warren") jepson, including his totemic (... and previously > creel pwned) lp "totentanz" :: > > > ... now why the melon expander didn't use that image on the cover is > beyond me ... but i digress. what we do get here : a bunch of amazing > bedroom-lineage electro-acoustic experiments dating back to 1958 (!!!) - > most invoking mysterious bleep-infused landscapes with tons of > psychedelic organ (played on an instrument hand-painted by bruce conner > !!!) & tape mangling, prepared piano / strings & a few fairly harsh > early/primitve synth-stunners done on the buchla @ mills & the > experimental television center ... these lead up to the album's > centerpiece ; the full 35-minute "totentanz" - of which i described (in > reference to the o/p creel pone version) thusly :: > > ... this one that has "nurse with wound list" written all over it; yet - > nary a mention in the notes to said 1979 lp and just about anyone > anywhere on out on our global interweb... purportedly the score to a > 1971 ballet by carlos carvajal, totentanz overwhelms us with its mystery > while revealing only the most gratifying collection of sounds from the > early electronic music canon imaginable ... > > the a-side piece contains a long section of tape-based concrète; lo-fi > pre-industrial thudding, dissonant piano stabs. and much repetition > (you'll want to crawl inside this bit and never come out...) - this > gives way to a great blast of weird-synth patterns that closes out the > side... on the flip there's even further mystery layers, which slowly > give way to the most amazing bit of terry riley lineage repetitive > minimal synth figuring and blasted spring reverb & gated riffing. > completely awe-inspiring (with a demonic-looking cover depicting some > sort of skeletons-and-ghouls-as-wedding-processional ceremony no less.) > > the second disc continues on in the same trajectory, with a few shorter > pieces giving birth to the epic, 20+ minute "the awakening" & "see is > never all the way up" ... of course, i'm going to go ahead and highly > recommend this to just about anyone with even a passing interest in > early electronic music's dalliance with 60s/70s psychedelic culture - > it's a landmark release & mitchell brown has done a bang-up job w/the > reissue, including contemporary liner notes from jepson & copious > information as to his modus / motivations ... essential. > melon expander press release... > warner jepson > "totentanz and other electronic works 1958-1973" 2xcd > melon expander 005 > > the act of dusting off old forgotten master tapes, and old people too, > can reveal a myriad of results. crappy music that sounded great to the > stoned performer at the time, crappy music that sounded great before > time ate away at the tapes, great music trapped behind various > complications, or, in the case with warner jepson, great music from a > composer enthusiastic about revisiting it. > > jepson recorded over 200 " tape reels full of electronic sounds at the > san francisco tape music center, mills college and the national center > for experiments in television (ncet). some of them were used as > soundtracks for theatre productions and art films, and some were heard > ephemerally at art galleries, parties and "happenings" in the late 60's > and early 70's. only one document was ever released - the soundtrack to > totentanz, a theatre work by carlos carvajal, on an lp that yielded a > circulation of only 300 copies in 1971. > > this 2xcd release is a reissue of that totentanz lp plus many other > pieces that vary in content from his late 50's "musique concrete" > experiments to rhythmic prepared piano and tape pieces to sprawling > meditative sound paintings done on the 100 and 200 series buchla > synthesizers. the opening track "bugs at large" might bring to mind > synthetic rhythms that weren't commonly heard until 20+ years later in > the "techno" genre of late 80's detroit. aside from totentanz, none of > these works have been heard by anyone in well over 30 years. > > he worked with many people who may be on the radar of folks buying this > cd. whether it was taking photographs of steve reich or john cage, > playing piano in terry riley's first ensemble of "in c", or scoring the > soft-core porno "luminous procuress" starring the cockettes, jepson kept > busy in a vital time for creative art and music. though somehow it seems > he's slipped through the cracks of time and needed a healthy dusting > off. this release happily rides the coattails of his re-emergence: > inclusion in the "visual music" exhibit at the los angeles moca in 2005 > (the 1973 video work "illuminated music" with stephen beck) and spring > 2008's "california video" exhibit at the getty center (a 50 minute solo > video/sound work made at the ncet in '75). > > the cd booklet features liner notes by the composer as well as paintings > he made in the late 50's. > > sounds have always been attached to some real and material object that > emanated them, followed the same course as their source. but with the > advent of tape and recorders after wwii, this was no longer true. sounds > no longer would be derived from what one saw or could see. with the tape > recorder musicians could revel in unknown worlds of sound. and that we > did, splicing, re-ordering, reversing, speeding up and slowing down > sounds to see what we could find or create. with the sounds a tape > recorder could make, the mind would imagine new unseen objects with > unheard-of-before sounds because the sounds did not come from an object > one could see. unknown objects would be evoked from new sounds and these > new unknown objects lay in the mind's imagination. > > furthermore, inertia and speed always had a hand in the shape of sound, > how it began and ended. thanks to magnetic tape, a sound could start and > stop and last longer and be louder than could a sound from a real > object. to this extent it paralleled what a musician did when he made a > musical sound, struck one or shaped one into a melody. but musique > concrete were sounds drawn from non-musical things, any thing, and could > be altered to resemble no thing anyone had even known, seen, or heard. > then there were rhythms, new and strange, beyond what a human could > accomplish. manipulating tape sounds produced accidentally and > unpredictably incomprehensible and unimaginable rhythms. it was in 1957 > in ann halprin's basement studio that i put together my first musique > concrete piece for her branch dance. > > around this time i started taking and printing photographs, explored oil > painting and entered the sfmoma annual with a 4x4 ft > painting/construction of piano keys, undershirts and paint tubes. 1961 > saw a 6 month run of helen adam's ballad opera san francisco's burning > for which i played my piano score of 60 songs. > > this new world of sound was expanded further when don buchla created in > 1963 his first and glorious 100 series synthesizer and installed it in > the sf tape music center at 321 divisadero st. the sequencer--the name > meant something completely different from later sequencers-- hooked me. > it made rhythms that were fast, rare, and instantly changeable. the > syncopations possible were terrific. my first small piece was used for > ''the lovers" scene in totentanz. > > soon after, the tape center and the buchla box were moved to mills > college where pauline oliveros and then tony gnazzo became its > caretakers. the doors to the studio there were never locked then; i > would reserve the 8pm time slot and stay as long as i wanted. > occasionally i would find nothing and go home early and dejected. i had > no mastery over this magical machine. > > i took my first discoveries to a party; everyone was fascinated. the sf > art institute asked me to play them at noon for the students. painter > lee adair asked if i'd play them at her opening, leading to a long > stream of openings including two very large ones for the museum of > modern art. the usual string trio was now replaced by four huge rock and > roll speakers in the four corners of the marble rotunda; the sound > spread out into the halls and galleries. i found one man dressed in a > business suit sitting smack in front of one of those behemoths; god > knows what he was experiencing. one elegant elderly lady passing me said > the music was 'sexual'. i would never argue the point. > > in my nights at mills over the next three years i recorded 200 half hour > reels of sounds that i would use at parties, openings, exhibits, films, > theater, ballet, even a saks 5th ave fashion show by oscar de la renta. > i have used only a fraction of these reels. so much needs to be > transferred to semi-permanent medium. > > james broughton, not long after i'd scored his film the bed, put me in > touch with a fellow student, carlos carvajal, who needed a composer for > the work he was choreographing for the sf ballet. he described the > scenes i would score and explained a time-sensitive situation. i spent > the following nights into the mornings at mills combining musique > concrete and buchla synthesized sounds into the 40 minute score, taking > segments into carlos's sessions with his dancers to see if they worked. > in a month, during which my son was born, we were done. totentanz opened > april 1 st, 1967 at the s.f opera house. a few patrons walked out in the > third section, as i expected, where the sounds were mostly sine waves > and not very rhythmic. carlos left the sf ballet to form his own > company, dance spectrum. he revived totentanz in the spectacular space > of grace cathedral in feb 1971 and repeated it every other year until > '82. the gothic atmosphere and 7 -second echo did wonders. after the > show i hawked my lps of the music. only somewhere near 300 copies > circulated. > > in the mid 60's hi-fi manufacturers added quadraphonic sound to home > systems. so i decided to make my next ballet for carlos quadraphonic. > since the mills tape studio had only two, not four, ampex machines, it > meant recording sounds from one machine to the other to make tape i, > then doing the same to make tape ii, keeping in mind the sounds of the > two tapes, for they had to mesh when played together. to check the mesh > i had to play the two tapes on the two machines making sure they started > together precisely. if something didn't mesh, i had to go back, record > or erase sounds on one tape and then put on the other tape to listen to > them again to check the mesh. things got even hairier further into the > 20 minute score. a lot of time was spent lifting off and placing on the > source tapes and the two master tapes; sometimes i'd lose track which > recorder had which tape. on this cd the 4 tracks of the awakening have > been combined down to two. > > in 1973, the national center for experiments in television had an > opening for a composer-in-residence. when i inquired, it was suggested i > score a video that stephen beck, inventor of his beck direct video > synthesizer, was working on. one day i remember, pierre schaeffer, > practically the founder of musique concrete, was visiting the n.c.e.t. > the next day i was hired. the buchla synthesizer there was the next > generation, the 200 series. it inspired me much less then the 100 > series, whose sounds seemed to reflect the earth and nature, animals and > primitive mysteries from the ground. the 200 series made more > electronic, pure sine waves, cold. it was difficult finding > satisfaction; still i ended up scoring a 40 minute piece of scenes in > the woods, then five more works which were broadcast on pbs. > > one, "see is never all the way up" was by artist william roarty. it was > dark with an amorphous form, with little color and little movement > except for its outline of shimmering dots. what to do? serve music with > its own momentum or serve the momentum of the image? since sound relates > to its source, i chose the latter, and made a sound that shimmered and > barely moved. the sound made me think i was on a train listening to the > track. i kept tied to roarty's image longer than i expected i could or > should, but as often happens, what first seems too odd eventually can > become intriguing and attractive. > > just before the n.c.e.t. died in 1975, i hooked 2 wires from the buchla > box to larry templeton's fantastic video mixer and discovered images of > extraordinary color. some of them are in the la getty california video > exhibit of 2008. > > one evening i thought to do what many before me have done: stick > something into the strings of the piano-maybe an eraser--to have a > different sound. "rirlwa" & "the dog" came from these sessions. around > this time bruce conner gave me his farfisa organ that he'd painted on. > i'd mix it up with the prepared piano tunes. they were never to be heard > by anyone until 30 years later by mitchell brown, the producer of these cds. > > - wj 2007 > > ... > > disc 1 tracks 1, 6, 7, 9 are from tullium, the score to david william's > environmental sculpture, hansen-fuller gallery, 1967 > disc 1 track 2 is from the score for blood knot; american conservatory > theatre 1970 > disc 1 track 10 is the complete score for totentanz, a ballet by carlos > carvajal 1967 > disc 2 track 4 is the score for the awakening, a ballet by carlos > carvajal 1968 > disc 2 track 5 is the score for the roarty video see is never all the > way up, national center for experiments in television (kqed) 1973 > > all tracks performed and recorded by warner jepson 1958-1973 > laughter after, jail gate crazy, for trying out loud & the big putt > assembled by mitchell brown, fall 2006 > mastered by thomas dimuzio at gench studios, san francisco, ca, 2008 > produced by mitchell brown > > all paintings (1957-1960) and photographs (2006) by warner jepson > video synthesizer photos are stills from a video made at the ncet, 1975, > by warner jepson > design by ben wolfinsohn > > special thanks: ben wolfinsohn, thomas dimuzio, erik hoffman, joseph > hammer, ken lee, don buchla, larry templeton, and rodney and his > fantastic plastic record shop (where in 2002 the $100 totentanz lp was > acquired, planting the seed for this release) > > > ------------------------------------ > > Yahoo! Groups Links > > > >
2008-06-13 by mritenburg
Can you define "have it all connected?" What do you mean by that exactly? --- In 200e@yahoogroups.com, amnesia <amni56@...> wrote: > > Hi all > > I havent had an answer to my question as yet. :-( > > Say I decide to buy a complete 12WLS and a year later a extra 4 boat > with the Kin Port. Will I be able to do that. have it all connected? I
> understand it wont be in the cabinet. > > Please dont answer saying " dude get a 18WLS" :-) > > Also the people who own the Kin Port do you find the mass of patch > cables get in the way of using an 18WLS? > > cheers > Ross >
2008-06-13 by JB
ha ha me too 2008/6/13 tmeade1974 <tmeade1974@yahoo.com>:
> While we are on this slightly OT thread...... > I was just about to order this cd from mimaroglumusicsales and wanted to know if anyone > can recommend anything else to accompany my order. I have several of the Creel Pone disks > (Greek, Hungarian, Melbourne, Dockstader stuff, and the Creel Pone 4 disk set). Anything > else in those realms, maybe something Buchla specific (just to stay on topic :) > thanks, > -tom > > > > > > > > ------------------------------------ > > Yahoo! Groups Links > > > >
2008-06-13 by mcb, inc.
On Sat, 14 Jun 2008, amnesia wrote: > Just a heads up to you lucky people near and around SFO > > http://bp0.blogger.com/_FMBJEkaC8Lw/SFHrAyNaBZI/AAAAAAAAU0I/-IVY9O8ym1U/s1600-h/PR_TMC+edit.jpg !@$#^!@#^% I'll be out there two weeks too late. (And Stuart Dempster performing as well....) -- Monty Brandenberg
2008-06-13 by amnesia
Yes I can recommend quite a bit of amazing early electronic There is a triple CD by Dieter Feichtner - Anthology Vol 1 - its all moog, synthi etc he was a jazz guy and this is his experimental side. http://www.canto-crudo.com/dieter-feichtner/dieter-feichtner-anthology-e.htm The Hub - Boundary Layers on Tzadic = Bischoff, Perkins etc triple CD of computer imrprov from the 70s 80s http://www.tzadik.com/ Hecker/Hasswell - Upic Tracks on Warp - Xenakis is computer screech ( I hear Hecker has bought a 200e so I expect to hear some amazing stuff from him) Then there is my unreleased 25 CD collection of Serge, Synthi improvisations,Recorded over the last 5 years,,if I ever get off my arse to send them out :-) All the Creels are worth grabbing. I assume they are now no longer releasing cds. Ross tmeade1974 wrote:
> > While we are on this slightly OT thread...... > I was just about to order this cd from mimaroglumusicsales and wanted > to know if anyone > can recommend anything else to accompany my order. I have several of > the Creel Pone disks > (Greek, Hungarian, Melbourne, Dockstader stuff, and the Creel Pone 4 > disk set). Anything > else in those realms, maybe something Buchla specific (just to stay on > topic :) > thanks, > -tom > >
2008-06-13 by amnesia
plus there is some great free music of Serge and 200 Buchla www.oxo-unlimited.com tmeade1974 wrote:
> > While we are on this slightly OT thread...... > I was just about to order this cd from mimaroglumusicsales and wanted > to know if anyone > can recommend anything else to accompany my order. I have several of > the Creel Pone disks > (Greek, Hungarian, Melbourne, Dockstader stuff, and the Creel Pone 4 > disk set). Anything > else in those realms, maybe something Buchla specific (just to stay on > topic :) > thanks, > -tom > >
2008-06-13 by jon schatz
On Jun 13, 2008, at 2:06 PM, amnesia wrote: > plus there is some great free music of Serge and 200 Buchla > www.oxo-unlimited.com i stumbled on analogik1 a few months ago; it's great and all done on a serge and buchla 200. thanks for pointing me to the second volume. for anyone who hasn't heard it do check it out. thanks, -jon "There are no differences but differences of degree between different degrees of difference and no difference." - James, William. "Subjective Effects of Nitrous Oxide." Mind. 1882; Vol 7.
2008-06-13 by amnesia
last one Bernard Parmegiani 12x CD release of everything he has released todate on GRM.
2008-06-13 by amnesia
http://share.ovi.com/channel/cray5656.audio Here is some stuff from my 25 CD collection Serge . Synthi, plus delayed improv tracks with Don Hassler on Buchla 200e (named HH... or HasslerHealy) and me on Serge. Hi Don :-) all the STE named tracks are from improv sessions by VICMOD ( we meet once a month and build Ken Stone kits) http://www.flickr.com/photos/cray5656/ I cant wait to get a 200e. I will stop posting for the day :-) Ross > >
2008-06-13 by amnesia
http://www.flickr.com/photos/cray5656/2109571298/sizes/l/ some of my Creel Pones
2008-06-14 by amnesia
just found out my brother is going to San Francisco in October...I would love him to collect my Buchla and bring it back in person to Australia...is it possible to collect from Don etc? > >
2008-06-14 by Dhymitruy Bouryiotis
I did - he was cool about it, even tho' I was about 3 days late. On 13-Jun-08, at 9:58 PM, amnesia wrote: > just found out my brother is going to San Francisco in October...I > would love him to collect my Buchla and bring it back in person to > Australia...is it possible to collect from Don etc? > > > > > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
2008-06-14 by don hassler
Hate to imagine how trsnsportation security, baggage or customs might handle it. These days... --- On Sat, 6/14/08, amnesia <amni56@tpg.com.au> wrote:
> From: amnesia <amni56@tpg.com.au> > Subject: Re: [200e] can a person pick up their buchla from Berkley > To: 200e@yahoogroups.com > Date: Saturday, June 14, 2008, 12:58 AM > just found out my brother is going to San Francisco in > October...I > would love him to collect my Buchla and bring it back in > person to > Australia...is it possible to collect from Don etc? > > > > > >