Last night, my MOTM system underwent a trial by fire. UberKunst, a band in which I "perform", played live on KDVS radio (Davis, CA., noise capital of the world). Formerly, my participation was defined by "pounding on junk" and "breaking shit". But last night I pulled apart my studio (one of those things I swore I'd never do), grabbed everything I could imagine useful, jammed it into the car, and trekked out 50 miles to that wonderful noise haven. Oh, did I mention I hadn't thought about playing the MOTM until about 3 hours before the show? We were met by some really friendly and cool people (hi Brian!), and a groundskeeper who was obsessed with being cited for us driving onto campus. We unloaded, and we (7 people) settled into a corner of this tiny studio (oh, about 10'x15'?). I set up my mixer for microphone and bass (damnit, now I really know I need a preamp module!), powered everything up, and patched a bunch of modules. At it worked! Well... at first. It should be noted at this time that two modules in the system had never been powered up, never been tested. At all. They were constructed, slapped in, and expected to work. Well, more accurately, I really *hoped* the would work. One did... the other, once it was patched in, blew away power from *all* the modules. Even after it was un-patched. Oh dear. I'd like to say that I kept my cool, but that would be a damned lie. It took me a few minutes to recollect on what I had done, eliminate the module, and start over. (There will be another post detailing the problem with that module... d'oh!) So here's what I had, and what I intended to do. I had 120, 440, 410, 420 (broken), 110, 320, 800, and 820. Nothing to actually produce sound... so I took my trusty (POS) bass, turned up the volume ALL the way, massively over-pre-amp'ed it, and had a nice source of static and bass tones. This was filtered, FM'ed, mux'ed, fed back, ring-moddled, resonated, and generally f---'ed with. It might be a good time to mention that I hadn't done this as anything like a performance before. I mean, knob twiddling in the studio, sure... but that was just kinda expiriementing. As I learned, that's nothing like playing live. I think I didn't really figure out what was working until about 1/2 way through the performance. As a little plug, KDVS has the show available for streaming and/or download from their website! If you feel like submitting yourself to some really wacky cheesey noise-rock, go to http://www.kdvs.org/grid.shtml, and click on the "Live In Studio A" link at the bottom of the schedule for Thurseday. (I think you can get the real-audio stream from ftp://kdvs.org/pub/audio/LiveInStudioA.rm.) I think it will only be there for a week, and (fair warning) contains a little profanity. We don't start playing until about 4 minutes in... at least, I don't remember that intro bit being us. I think I was still freaking out a little. And you can only really start to hear the MOTM work in "Kill Everyone", about 24 minutes in. It's the deep bass rumbling. It's more pronounced at 32 minutes in, although not to be confused with the real bass player or the digital flanger thingy which others were playing. I ended up not using the mic at all. The bass was a noise source at all times. Late in the show, it was actually strummed on / hit / played by my fiance / wife, and I mess with that. It's probably much more "musical". I'm know the 820 never came into proper play. The EG was little used. I tried to take advantage of the 410, but it took me awhile to realized I mispatched it (output to output doesn't do anything, kids!)... and once I fixed that, I still couldn't hear it in the mix. But the 120, 440, 110, and 320 were very largely used. In the future, I'd love to have a working 420, a 300 (hey-- a pitch controlable sound-source! What a concept!), and a freakin' pre-amp! <grin> I'm also really looking forward to the pedal interface, and I should get off my butt and build the Time Machine. Lastly, and I'll check my archives in a few minutes, what's the best way to get a power supple in a pop-up SKB case? A full sized SKB is just too big to do this often... The MOTM was certainly only one aspect of what UberKunst performed, but I had a blast. Thanks for listening to me ramble on about it. :)
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Trial by fire
2001-09-28 by Brousseau, Paul E (Paul)
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