Freedom Town: Aesthetic and Recreational Lawn Alternative

  • Wanna Join? New users you can now register lightning fast using your Facebook or Twitter accounts.

Nuttkase

not nolettuce
Jun 5, 2002
38,746
159,552
113
44
at the welfare mall
Any of the brehs ever deep fried clams? (i wann replicate Ivars Nuttkase @Nuttkase , BUTCHER 206 @BUTCHER 206 )
Seeing I dislike all seafood, no.

RIP Butcher
 

Nuttkase

not nolettuce
Jun 5, 2002
38,746
159,552
113
44
at the welfare mall


Halim El-Dabh - "Wire Recorder Piece" (1944) said:
This is possibly the earliest piece of electronic music ever composed, or more specifically, the first piece of electronic tape music, also known as "musique concrete" or "electroacoustic" music.

Halim El-Dabh, then a student at Cairo, Egypt, produced this music piece using samples taken from an ancient Egyptian "Zar" ceremony. He edited, manipulated and arranged these sounds to create the earliest piece of electronic tape music. He first presented his piece at an art gallery event in 1944, predating Pierre Schaeffer's musique concrete recordings by four years.

Having borrowed a wire recorder from the offices of Middle East Radio, El-Dabh took it to the streets to capture outside sounds, specifically an ancient zaar ceremony. Intrigued by the possibilities of manipulating recorded sound for musical purposes, he believed it could open up the raw audio content of the zaar ceremony to further investigation into "the inner sound" contained within.

According to El-Dabh, "I just started playing around with the equipment at the station, including reverberation, echo chambers, voltage controls, and a re-recording room that had movable walls to create different kinds and amounts of reverb." He further explains: "I concentrated on those high tones that reverberated and had different beats and clashes, and started eliminating the fundamental tones, isolating the high overtones so that in the finished recording, the voices are not really recognizable any more, only the high overtones, with their beats and clashes, may be heard." His final 20-25 minute piece was recorded onto magnetic tape and called The Expression of Zaar, which was publicly presented in 1944 at an art gallery event in Cairo.

This version is a 2 minute sample of the original 20-25 minute piece.