Sunday, 28 March 2021

March, wherefore art thou?

 Yeah, seem to have lost track of March this year. Can happen. Friday today and all seems well with the world. About to ascend for some noodling, and to decide if I actually want to flog that Minilogue xd since someone is after it. I should find a way to fit a Blackbox into the Studio of Light as, without one, the place is far less attractive as somewhere to noodle. Alas, the mixer in there is really basic so would need some way to easily capture any instrument - might have to consider the (larger and nastier) Behringer MX-whatever that has been leaning against a wall for a while. I *think* that has a bus I could use. 

Got a couple of review in the latest Audion - not Andy's very positive one but a couple of Alan's usual 'oh it's him' type reviews. I don't seem to be their cup of tea, although this one seemed better than most. I suppose I should listen to Nurse With Wound at some point and find out how far away I am from the ultimate in musical expression. I wrote a poem once:
Nurse With Wound
Dog With Vomit
I'm Going To The Moon
With Wallace & Gromit
I like it anyway. 

The english press don't like Nicola Sturgeon and neither does my wife. 

I weakened and ordered my third Blackox. Decided I want to keep the xd. 

Got a great critique of the novel from John Christian, who doggedly fought his way to the end. My abrupt style failing to hook him though, making me doubt the approach I've all but taken for granted. A lot of my decisions appear flawed from the point of view of a reader, so maybe I'll never improve. 

Got the cover done thanks to Tim who attended to the text, colour and layout. Have sent a proof print but after John's comments, wondering if I should throw it all out and start again. Not gonna of course but it does feel like I'll never improve much. 




Wednesday, 24 March 2021

My best review in yonks

 From someone whose respect I admit to still needing, Andy G. From Inkeys Facebook:

https://www.facebook.com/inkeys

PAUL NAGLE – Accidental Hermit Album
There will be those of you who've been eagerly following the musical worlds of Paul Nagle, and his alter ego, Wiley Peyote, over the last couple of years or more.......and those of you who've not......the latter, probably still thinking of the magical releases that he released in ye olde UK Electronica days. Either way, the one thing you can say about Paul and his electronic music universes, is that the one word you can't level at him is “predictable”......”prolific”, for sure.....even “progressive” (no, not progressive in the sense you're thinking, o Genesis fan of little brain).....I mean, genuinely progressive – and this is no exception.
Bearing a few resemblances to recent things I've heard by the likes of Leicester's “Endgame” and similar, as well as seriously early T Dream/Vuh, etc, this is a three part, 71 minute journey into uncharted reaches of the electronic music galaxy – places you never knew existed. The result is.......astonishing.......
“Part 1”, at over 25 minutes in length, spends its first half in eerily, unnervingly cosmic mode, as various layers, textures, extended chords, other worldly sonic explorations, undercurrents of cosmic bliss and floating piano chords, all coalesce to produce an unending blackness with a light at its farthest reach, giving you the idea that is, indeed, a purpose for the existence of the music that's currently immersing you. Just about halfway, there's this huge drone that spirals into being, climbs into the black hole and abruptly disappears, only to be repalced on the other side by a mighty electro-percussive sounding rhythm that circles round and round and round and round, gradually adding shifting textures, more rhythms, now booming out at the bass end, drifts of droning electronics, almost feedback-laced top textures, then morphing into a kind of sequencer-like domination that sounds like Edgar Froese's “Aqua” album in an alternative dimension, and this section rattles on for several minutes, to great effect, before, it too, fades, and then it's back to the eerily dark side of the gloom, only then for this violin to appear out of nowhere, set to a horizon of cosmic drift and blissful rivers of synth wonderment, and all of a sudden you're on a cliff under sunny skies, looking wistfully out to the unending sea that is before you, looking up to the unending sky that's above you, alone and far from home, but somehow calm and comfortable in your surroundings – and so, it ends.
“Part 2 – just short of 22 minutes – kinda clanks into life before the clank subsides, and this multi-layered set of electronic drones, melodic meanderings, spine-tingling drones, unnerving drifts and early T Dream choral synth magic (“Albert Hall”, anyone?”), pours forth in a kind of “early Popol Vuh in a black hole” manner, shifting from side to side, drifting in and out, before the musical canvas subsides, a gently bouncing rhythm appears, the main drone continues, the sound of a tabla-like percussive element appears well in the distance and now a top layer of serene cosmic synth flow, occupies the space all around the core rhythmic element, and the way it charts a territory through both musical light and darkness at the same time, is something that has a jaw-dropping context to it, the likes of which I've truly not heard anyone manage, as it's usually one or the other. As to continues, neither side wins, both dominate and the effect is quite breathtaking. Around the 8 minute mark, it all fades, a kind of “backwards sounding” electronic layer appears, only for ringing, piano notes to act as the polar opposite, again this yin and yang of musical exploration, coming into play. Then a booming bass layer appears, disappears, and a positive forest of synth insects comes out at night, before something calms it all down as a shadowy figure moves through the trees, flute-like synth magic emanating from the fibre of his very being as all life stands in awe of the magnificent sounding choral synth layer that moves mysteriously through the undergrowth. A few minutes later, the forest gives way to an expansive desert expanse as tinkling rhythms appear, the pace accelerates, more deliberate rhythms well up, the gorgeous synths surrounds occupy a space all around you, as you now journey under an intensely hot sun towards into what seems like an infinite horizon, as rhythms disappear and all that remains are many magical minutes of cosmic synth bliss to take you on that trip, the end point gradually moving ever more distant.
“Part 3” - 24+ minutes – starts with the viloin from before – or is it viola? - as piano notes ripple on its surface, deep synth density rumbles down below, and a joyous sea of serenity gives you the feeling of looking back, recalling the days gone by where you'd walk through a vast building of corridors, almost church-like, with music emanating from every room as you passed by. Slowly this flows, almost like T Dream's “Zeit” given a more optimistic treatment in an altogether different universe, but one that slowly changes into a really dark place, as the viola, without changing a key, now sounds decidedly sad, a complete contrast to how it began, all thanks to the slow-burning electronic conflagration that's appearing to take over like some slo-motion forest fire, consuming all in its path, and then dominates the central musical framework, raging in an amorphous molten mass of cosmic electronics. Emerging from the wreckage, comes a stuttering rhythm, stumbling slowly over itself to get out alive, which it manages to achieve, only to mutate into something altogether more disarming, as drones, electronic textures, nerve-jangling synths and roaring electronic layers, all change the whole outlook of the track once more, only, mysteriously, to calm down rather than explode, rising up to fill the void – only to be abruptly silenced by this out-of-focus clanking synth rhythm that comes out of nowhere, again surrounded by all manner of electronic fx, textures, drones and layers, subsiding just short of 18 minutes in, and leaving behind, the blissful sounds of nature and equally cosmic synths, with the final 6+ minutes, building choral synth layer on choral synth layer, to create this anthemic sea of cosmic magic that rises up majestically and sees the track out on yet another journey into the far reaches of your mind.
As you might have gathered – a complete triumph and proof, if needed, that, 40 years on, Paul Nagle is still creating electronic music that will simply blow you away, as innovative as it is accessible, as creative as it is hypnotic.

Monday started well - got the in-progress artwork for the novel and it's great, Ben's really getting there. I realise these artistic types are never quick but it's going to be worth it, I can see now. Just the layout and text to do, as far as I can tell. I should decide whether to include an author photo in the place Amazon leave free. Maybe that polaroid one Tim did. 




Great review in Electronic Sound. I sent them a code for my new one but no reply as yet. I guess it was a bit foolish of me to hope.

Still tantalisingly at the last stage with book cover. Have finally admitted defeat re: getting the text done. For some reason Ben looked at my red dino head idea and used the same icky yellow colour and style of text for his own. No idea why as the pale yellow title vanished against the watery white and grey of the background. Fortunately Tim offered to ride to the rescue and sort it.

Two chances to see a kingfisher this week - today on the park with John and tomorrow near Tim's. Didn't turn on studio yesterday - walked into Leyland instead. Running out of places to walk to round here, going to have to go further afield or go crazy. Crazier. 

Wednesday, lovely sunshine. Broadband was off yesterday, water's off today, told you the apocalypse was near. No kingfisher today but at least saw the one on Moor Park. Lounged in the sun in the afternoon, idly but happily.




 

Tuesday, 23 March 2021

It's out!

 Yes, the world has been anxiously awaiting my new album and now it's anxiously sorting through the zillions of other albums also released today. What larks! I'm happy with it anyway and have given out a lot of free codes in an effort to be loved, or something.

Bought some nice binocs just in case I ever see a red-throated thrush again. RSPB say: "It is very hard to tell from this image but it wont be a red-throated thrush. This species has only been recorded in Britain once and that was back in 1994." So it can't be because nobody has seen one since then. Oh well. She then suggested a redwing, which it clearly wasn't. If anything it was a steroidal robin but hey ho.

Was up in the night with toothache - first time in many years. Dentist very kindly fit me in today and poked it and made me feel worse, especially when the antibiotics have to be taken three times a day with no alcohol in sight. Fortunately other pain reliefs are available. 

Did some video stuff for the next single and bought a decent editor - Videopad. I plan to make some videos of my own material once this pain goes away. Which reminds me...

Time has passed but I've had toothache so haven't felt like doing much.

The Touche arrived (plus a nice Serge Wavefolder module) and I'm in love. Very sweet for nuanced performance, I have the Toosh connected to the 4 CV buses of my Makenoise case so I can see each axis light up as I play - makes routing a doddle. Moved some modules around in the case as they are now mainly supporting and processing the MS20. Had to remove the Soma FX as it was too noisy and am contemplating ditching the Morphagene as I can never remember what's in it or how to find anything. Maybe I should wipe all the reels and start again. Maybe  should get something simpler like that brown one with the forgettable Celtic name.

Friday tomorrow and root canal work. My old NHS dentist removed the roots when he did my veneers but I think this last tooth was done by the new guy, who makes a lot of money doing it. Anyway, pain to come. Then it's my covid jab on Saturday morning, after which I can hopefully get back to drinking and making merry. 


There's a pic of my wobbly wood. I think I'll go and wobble it now for a bit. 

(This been sat in draft status for a while, dunno why. Losing the plot)

Sunday, 28 February 2021

End of Feb

 Well now


Did a few new things, totally failed to get a video for the next single. Stock footage not really cutting it apparently. Adding our own proved too much for Da Vinci Resolve 12.5 (old codecs I guess). Updated to 16.something but all icons etc. too small on this laptop, playback even more buggered. Then tried iMovie on Mac but as the Mac's old, it couldn't see Don's video either. Kinda frustrated but reminded me why I never try to make videos these days. Need a newer computer. Getting nowhere so passed on to Don. Feel bad but nowt I can do. I should perhaps see what it will take to get that iMac going again. Not sure how releasing a new single from an album already out on bandcamp is gonna work. 

Two new tracks done on Cirklon/Blackbox - today's still in progress but has potential. Had forgotten how well the MS20 works as a solo instrument - it slips in in places the Minimoog would bloat. Its triangley vibrato if invoked by the button/envelope has a lovely sound. Yes, I had some of the tequila today. 

Sunday, end of the month. Did the accounts and they added up, to within £3-4 anyway. Faffed a bit reconciling statements from bandcamp and paypal - the mix up of my personal stuff not ideal but all tallied in the end. Will be easier if I do more often. I messed with paint today. The woodland one is changing and although I'm still keeping it as an image, new colours and shapes are slipping into place as I mess with new brushes and try out some different techniques. Tempted to buy some startlingly bright paint even though it's expensive.




Dunno if I've pasted that image in before but what the heck! Oh, here's a shot of Spring at the Top Lodge from today (Beacon Fell in the background). Mum felt like a short walk, which is great and what a gorgeous day to say farewell to Feb. 


And another...





Wednesday, 24 February 2021

The album is finally out this week!

Yesterday afternoon was a good one - made some progress making interesting patches from the cello, violin and viola fragments. I was using MIDI-clocked grains quite a bit, creating these strange, cascading patterns. I could link it from here but, as usual, they'll be deleted by the time I post this blog. 

I made a further refinement to the DFAM setup - removed Stages as I decided to put in a different filter for the overall output of the drums. The Moog eurorack filter seemed to work well - and can be driven from any of the filter outputs of the DFAM itself. Stages is just another multi-functional module that I'd probably prefer to be simpler and less crammy. My Eurorack philosophy in a nutshell. I might swap it for the Natural Gate and see what difference that makes to the DFAM output. I guess having two delay modules in that tiny case could be considered overkill. Magneto is so damn large but it sounds great so I'll maybe ditch the tapographic delay. 

Made more sweet Sys8 patches. No need to sequence it from the Digitone either as its own sequencer has both step and real time modes so I can capture a few performance type things in it. Unlike the JD-XA, you can switch to a new patch when the sequencer is running and it takes over smoothly. Very useful. 

Monday now. Seems a little warmer than it was last week. 

Ah yes, the album. Not mine but the ANT vinyl/CD/download. I think on Wednesday it's the album of the day on Radio 6, meaning they'll play a track in every show throughout the day. If that doesn't cause several sales I don't know what will. I can see the admin part of the bandcamp page could get complex given Dean's gonna send out orders but they'll come to me initially, paypal too. This is when my total lack of organisation will  probably become clear. 

Turned a knob on the DFAM today and the whole thing fell off. Turns out whoever fitted the additional knobs to the sequencer and mixer screwed them so tightly they split some of the underlying stalks. I glued the top of the stalk back on (after spilling a bit of glue on the panel and sticking my fingers together) but I think I'll not reattach the larger knobs. I prefer to use the SQ1 as sequencer anyway so it's not a huge deal. 

Tried the Natural Gate in the Roland case and on power up it went crazy - all modules doing mad flashing lights and the audio output going ape. Didn't bother to faff any further with it. 

More plays on Radio 6. Wrote a very quick biog for Radio 6 as they're giving us lots of play on Wednesday. Dean's popularity and Don's songs could take us a long way. We'll see if there's a sales burst. 

It's Wednesday and we're album of the day. Been listening but I've discovered that commercial radio gives me a headache. Sales pootling along without going mad yet. I've been trying to do some video - stock footage and faffing so far but it's taking shape. A bit. Gonna film some knob twiddles and see if Don and Dean supply footage to cut in. Added some random text plucked from song. It's not great and the laptop is creaking like mad - but getting there. 





Friday, 12 February 2021

More gear swaps

 Yeah, what started as swapping a few eurorack modules switched to a swap of my Pro 2 for a System 8 and DFAM. As of right now, awaiting Parcelforce completing my half of the transaction (and worrying about the packing the longer it is in transit). The System 8 has some oddities - not least that its base mode operates in key-synced mode for the arpeggiator (unheard of in Roland synths before to my knowledge). It also had a broken Plugout 3 - ostensibly the JX-3P but a factory reset revealed it was, in fact, the SH-101. I think he maybe tried adding it but it didn't work out but either way, all good. The Jupiter 8, Juno and 101 are pretty decent additions and the JP8 arpeggiator works properly out of all the arpeggiators. The sequencer is pretty sweet too and can record up to 64 steps with 4 parameters recorded too. DFAM may or may not be useful (suspect not) but it's sat where the Tanzbar sat and offering some different noises - and timing if I use Steppy to drive it. Useful module that. Eventually the DFAM will either get passed on or move into the euro drums case and remain switched off. 

Had a nice walk today and now am contemplating a bit of whisky. Ordered more of that sherry-casked stuff cos it's delicious. 




The album is done and uploaded. I missed Bandcamp Friday but should I wait another month? Novel artwork still no progress, have given him another couple of weeks because, well, nobody's waiting for that either. ;)
Some artwork progress - he's on the right track too, phew. Worth waiting a bit longer. When I was looking through the text I spotted a couple of errors immediately, plus a typo. Guess I could go through it all again if I can bring myself to.

I completed the Schulze book. Sense Klaus himself was not involved at all and that the good stuff spread around the book comes from the few anecdotes compiled at the back from friends. It's basically about the albums released but written from the point of view of a non-musician megafan. I did learn the identity of Clara Mondshine though. Oh well. It's approximately as illuminating as the Roedelius book but I guess neither were written by writers. Back to mushrooms.

Friday today. More playing with the System 8, which could easily become a major favorite synth. I've created some great noises so far - and even did some good stuff on the DFAM. The trick is in using the SQ-1 sequencer instead of its own. Wild, I know, but it's just far superior and can get much more from the synth engine. I added Stages to my little case as a flexible modulation source. We'l see how that works out but if it doesn't delight, I know the much simpler Doepfer VC-envelope will.

The one I recorded the other day (with the DRM1 groove) is really rather good. Next time I fire up Cirklon I'll do some kind of finished take of it. Using Cirklon as my drum brain and the DRM1 as voices is going to be brilliant. My recent swaps have really worked out. I should get rid of other things I'm not using much, like the Minilogue xd maybe. 




I should also say that one thing that put me off the Sys 8 was its lack of aftertouch. However, on balance I now know I really like the feel of its keybed. The keys are a bit smaller than usual but nice and rounded and nicely responsive to velocity. Reckon I'm going to enjoy it loads.  

Sunday, 7 February 2021

Almost

 Worked on three different sections today - played a Lyra solo on the track where I'd thought of having Mark play. Remixed the string part again and made a small tweak to Martin's track. Once the violin is added could be there, still undecided about flute, could be unnecessary. 

Monday evening and Rick sent the violin part through, plus some noodles for me to granularise or generally faff with. I am very excited. Not super excited, but very. 




Wednesday. Tim was allowed to come yesterday so that was nice. Sold my Juno 6 and immediately ordered a green MS20. No, I can't explain it either - but they look so nice. This will be my 4th and there must be a reason I keep getting them (then selling later). Oh well. Comes tomorrow. 
Spent this morning faffing with cello additions - not sure I've made track better but have replaced a few of my dodgy phrases with Rick's nicer and more lyrical ones. Will let it lie a day or so then come back and see what I think. That could be the final bit before I send to get mastered. 

Weird. Chatting to Paul this morning I told him I'd never had to work and he had to remind me of an entire IT career that had somehow slipped my mind. Must have done 25 years and somehow I casually forgot all about it. 
Saturday night. We watched Parasite (very good) and I drank whiskey. Earlier I sent the album to Dean and it's on its way back already. Incredible! Recorded some MS20 noodles today which could be quite promising I think. Indeed, it began morphing into a minimal techno track without me even thinking about it. The Cirklon / BB setup is going to be another good one - different flavour than the Digitone / BB setup. 
Should be able to release album for next Bandcamp Friday. Ben has promised (again) he'll work on book cover. 


I'll take some more pix soon. This was the thing I recorded today. 

Dean did another brill job with the mastering. Just listening and feeling content.