I would. Progresses are encouraging for readers, and writing mine has been helpful for me to get my thoughts in order and to be able to see my own progress more clearly. Progress on the theremin can be slow at times with lots of rather dismal plateaus - at times like that it's good to be able to look back and see that you actually are getting somewhere.
The somewhere that I was at yesterday was Sonic Weekender II. Here's a cross-post from the WLM forum about it.
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It was fun!
When I got home I sorely missed the peace and quiet of the Sonic Weekender. This is probably a unique perspective, and stems from the builders earnestly removing major structural elements of my house with pneumatic drills this afternoon. Currently half a dozen slender iron poles appear to be the difference between a home and a pile of rubble, although I am sure they are merely precautionary.
I will never think of Barry White the same way again. That is one of twenty reasons to want Sonic Weekender II, the album. Yup, 20. On Sunday evening we sat and listened to an hour's worth of truly excellent music.
Not that that was the only music made in the house. While Pierre and Ann were busy in post-production people continued making more. Some was recorded, some just for the fun of it. I worked on a miniature, 52 seconds long, with my little toy theremin and GarageBand.
Soon after I was hauled into Matt's conspiracy to set up a second studio, a rat's nest of whatever was to hand, Arthur's Mungolator, Kiki's AirFX, a Kaos Pad, keyboards, computers, wires, wires, wires. The first piece went on for ages - musically it felt like being pursued - I added a theremin track, all good stuff but no time wasted mixing down, on to the next piece, then
a long time
spent getting the sounds just right, and keeping the seriously overworked mixing board in line, and we're good to go. And eight minutes later there is an amazing, raw industrial piece in the bag - but it needs something extra - Banjo! So we have the Abattoir Hoedown, and for the finishing touch, Guitar Gordon (me Theremin Gordon) does his thing - his thing requiring the ability to coax a broad variety of unexpected sounds from a poor, unsuspecting electric guitar with, at times, an electric fan. A damn fine track - constantly inventive - and, as I was playing mini-Pierre, I get to listen to it while I type this. Shivers down the back.
But this is just what I was up to - the place buzzed with activity. Working backwards, in the morning Arthur, Marc and I improvised a three theremin piece - the highlight of the event for me - just a simple idea, and it worked from the get-go - I love the sound of multiple theremins and it's a real dream to work with musically like-minded people too.
The day before was just as good, but it's a bit of a blur at the moment, so I'm signing off.
Happy Camper, Gordon.
Oh, Arthur's meal was another highlight. Very good.
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OK, cross-post over. Now let's revisit the theremin bits with a bit more detail.
The Gakken mini-theremin piece. Done the same way as The Housefly's Lament remix (http://youtube.com/watch?v=OKN5y49mijs) - one track, heavily modified in post-processing. Working title - Gakken Monster - which later mutated to Kraken - afterwards I discovered that the Kraken was a giant squid, and the piece is not very squidy but the sound of the word is right, so Kraken it is. My last few etherwave recordings have avoided post-processing - I've been working on what can be performed live by a single player - me - so it was fun to play with effects in GarageBand for a while and, I only recorded the one track, then duplicated and time-shifted it in GB, applying different effects to each copy. So this is a track which can [i]theoretically[/i] be played live solo - given sufficient outboard effects boxes.
The trio. Title currently