2 posts tagged “instruments”
I'll cop right up front to regurgitating a BoingBoing post, but it's just too cool to pass up, and I'm going to include videos right here instead of sending you to YouTube. The BoingBoing post consisted mainly of a quote from Sweatyfrog.com:
Maywa Denki is an art unit produced by Nobumichi Tosa. It was named after the company that his father used to run bygone days. Its unique style is indicated by a term he uses: for example, each piece of Maywa Denki's work is called "a product" and a live performance or exhibition is held as "a product demonstration." The products produced so far include "NAKI Series," fish-motif nonsense machines, "Tsukuba Series," original musical instruments, and "Edelweiss," flower-motif objet d'art. Although Maywa Denki is known and appreciated as an artist, its promotion strategies are full of variety: exhibition, live stages, performances, producing music, videos, writing, merchandising toys, stationery, and electric devices.
Here, then, is a clip from a Tsukuba Series product demonstration:
What neither BoingBoing nor Sweatyfrog mention is that Maywa Denki are coming to the US! They will be performing in Washington at the Kennedy Center in February 2008, according to their website.
Having used the word "favorite" in both of my first two posts, it is apparent that I will have to retire that word from this blog. At the rate I anticipate going, every song posted will be a favorite, or at least by a favorite band, and should be understood to be so. Doing a weekly two-hour college radio show in the 80s, I played plenty of songs that weren't favorites, but the more relaxed pace of blogging affords me the luxury of cherry-picking. Or did I really have that many favorites back then, and now in my 40s I just don't like as much?
The June/July 2007 issue of The Believer has an article by Paul Collins on "rock's rarest instrument," the Birotron, and lucky for us the entire article is online here. Being a piano player in my youth, I was into keyboard-oriented rock music; I liked the sounds of electric keyboards, but I never really got into the mechanics of them. So when I learned that the Mellotron produced its sounds by playing tapes, I assumed they were tape loops. Makes sense, doesn't it? Not so! It used strips of tape that had to be pulled back once they reached the end! The Birotron was Dave Biro's improvement on the Mellotron, using tape loops (unfortunately in the 8-track format) to produce a theoretically infinite sustain. The quite sensible concept did not pan out so well; see the article for the details. Collins writes, "[Rick] Wakeman toured with a prototype Birotron and recorded Yes’s 1978 hit single “Don’t Kill the Whale” with it—you can hear the endlessly held choir notes peeking through the mix at the very end of the song." That's useful if you have a copy to listen to, but if you don't, you can listen to it here:
Tormato