Thursday, December 29, 2011

What's already there

I have spoken already about the crackling Public Address system, neglected on a dark street corner in Shibuya, Tokyo. I must double-emphasize that this is the source of much of what I do, for it is "what is already there".

Circuit artists such as Jessica Rylan will research intensively how certain chips will work under all circumstances, including when they are driven hard or "out of normal operating range". The famous olde chip, 555, is great at sucking up a lot of current while it oscillates, and in many modes it has no protection against over current. One time, in Portland Oregon, I got a quad 555 to bust its cap on my face, shooting hot silicon/epoxy at my glasses. Thanks for being glassed, the danger-boy says.

Chips can be damaged by the heat of over-current, alchemizing them into retarded beasts that sound like dying ducks.

The crackle-box by Michel Waisvicz, exploits the LM709 chip, an olde opamp with extra "compensation pins", originally intended for "general purpose audio amplification". But when used OUTSIDE its intentions, it creates those famous dying duck sounds that are quite diagetic in many a noiser's sets. You should read the schematic and look at the actual arrangement of transistors within the chip, noting that it is more "primitive" than current opamps such as the TL084, TLV2474, or LM324.

Now, Momus has pointed out that the unconscious is on the surface in Japanese culture, nothing is hidden. Likewise, transistor amplifiers are allowed to decay on the street, or in subway stations, becoming subtle noise installations that emit crackling and sometimes even synthesized tones, for natives to absorb directly into their collective subconscious.

This is where i prefer to start from, what is "already there" in a chip. A long time ago, I said to myself, "making CDs is bogus, i never liked being slaved to these discs. I eat chips instead, digesting them and farting them, and this is my art." remember the OLESTRA oil-slick chips?

Friday, December 2, 2011

Proposal for a Sculpture Garden

Indigenous nuts are falling in the sculpture garden, which due to its nature (wind, rain, and other elements) is composed of pieces made from chemically stable metals: stainless, painted steel, matte painted steel, and of course, Cor-ten. There is no aluminum, because only the highest grade of that metal are immune from aluminum decay, wherein it becomes chalky, alum. However, brass is possible, and it is the most resonant next to aluminum, which is the lightest and sweetest, containing many high overtones and sensitive to its surroundings.

It must be a metal sensitive to its surroundings, for Indigenous nuts are falling on it. These "events", "nut-falls", trigger an internal emotion in the metal, and this emotion was originally programmed by said sculpture's artist. The emotion is sonic, and we propose herein to capture such emotion with Piezo's, affixed with archive-grade removable gum, and connected on site to a certain "parasite", which contains the phollowing:
-small solar panel charging small battery pack, to constant power the embedded Arm Cortex, which can distinguish said nut-fall events and archive them in an attached 2 gigabyte flash memory (non volatile)
-solar panel which directly powers a "Ciat-Amplifier", to re-synthesize and diffuse the distilled sounds of nut-falls on sculpture. Coco-Techniques may be used for the stochastic processing of nut-fall data.

Since flash memory is non-volatile, the nut-falls are archived digitally as said distillum.

This is a piece for phall, when indigenous nuts fall (Beech, Oak, Locust Beans, Gumball Microseeds)