Disquiet Junto 0755 Give Way

 
The Junto assignment this week comes from my photo with the direction "Combine two tracks." 
 
A couple of weeks ago, after Marc posted Junto 753 interpreting the traffic sign, I was walking to the shops and pondered the "two tracks" message on the Give Way sign outside the Leeton Rice Mill.

It's not the first time this sign has given me reason to pause and ponder, see https://showcasejase.blogspot.com/2016/01/growing-old.html but I did suddenly see it in a new context.

So I sent it to Marc as a suggestion for a Junto and we considered options, with me promoting a broad interpretation that ranged from literally having two tracks giving way to each other through to arguing a Wayne's World-esque "Way!" could also be valid.

In that discussion I also noted that in the USA a "give way" sign is phrased as "yield" and knew it would appeal to Marc, because I think one of the fun aspects of the Junto community are those little insights one gains into other's lives and our locations in this small world we share.

The various meanings of the word "yield" have become more significant in my interpretation, which should become apparent by the end of this reflection.

At the time I resisted pointing out how the "two tracks" message is erroneous, as a railway track uses two rails and this particular site has two railway tracks that the road crosses, which became part of the interpretation that ended up informing my track for this prompt by using four tracks.
 
So it's two tracks combined, giving way to another two tracks combined. 

Since my exchange with Marc I noticed this Junto project would be my 500th video responding to a weekly prompt from Disquiet.

It's a surprising number, but the biglyness reflects how much enjoyment I've gained from these activities over the years.

Yesterday I thought I'd look over my playlist and see what suggested itself for the activity this week, finding a few things that seemed relevant to the location.

The first is a recording made from close to the site of the Give Way sign that was made in response to a project proposed by my compatriot and sometime fellow Cyclic Defrost contributor, Kate Carr.

That was Junto number 218, and my video shows the Rice Cooperative site that adds a distinctive hum through most of the year in my town of Leeton, New South Wales.

Rice is the crop that secured a future for the Murrumbidgee Irrigation Area, where Leeton was planned as an administrative centre, and it was proposed by the manager of the fruit cannery who the road Brady Way is named for.

Around the site of the Give Way the road Brady Way becomes Railway Avenue, and then later becomes Oak Street around where a bridge crosses the tracks, but none of this is very clear and that's another surprising thing about the location.

I often think this area in front of the Rice Cooperative is one of the wildest roads I've driven, because when you turn the corner you can be travelling at 60km/h and be confronted by a long freight train in your path or a B-triple truck on the wrong side of the road.

You will also find trucks parked wherever they please, including in the area between the two train tracks opposite to the old cindercrete railway station.

It really surprises me that the road traffic authority haven't taken more interest in this area, but I suspect the local council realise that it would impact on the travel of local residents as well as the traffic servicing the Coop.

By the way, you might sometimes eat some of the products from this site, as it's marketed as Sunrice and is a significant Australian brand with a corporate headquarters in town too.

Anyway, the second of my two tracks is 'Riverside' from Junto 284 and I think I remember that involved manipulating samples made from an artist working with river-based clay.

At that time I'd been reflecting in a soundtrack for an exhibition how the local Murrumbidgee River is part of exports from the industrial agriculture in our region, and thought to illustrate my track with water escaping from the Coop on a cool night.

The next two tracks used this week are also from Junto projects and there are few ways that the first two give way as I used a variety of filtering techniques, including EQ and sidechain compression, as well as effects from Goodhertz and Unfiltered Audio.

These are automated to increase throughout the transition.

The drums were taken from an early of iteration of the Junto trio projects, number 429, and a personal favourite as they prompted a wonderful spoken response from the poet Sam Knot.

The footage of the train travelling through the next railway crossing heading east from the one outside the Coop came from a self-initiated project I started in 2011 to celebrate the centenary of Leeton, see https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cVL_ObzijcM
 
That  video from Ramponi Park was used in Junto project 635, which I think might have been a direction to use a field recording to give shape to a musical composition. 

In hindsight, those tracks I made manipulating contact mic recordings of playgrounds were one of my formative experiences as a musician, and also reflected in my first Junto video for project 29. (Although, surprising in retrospect, at the time I wasn't sure it was appropriate and didn't publish it). See https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QxGVrTKfylE

The decision to work with video developed into the "For 100 Years" album and a series of screenings that I held, with some of that material contributing to exhibitions at the Griffith Regional Art Gallery in 2019 and Wagga Wagga Art Gallery in 2020.

Recently I asked ChatGPT what it knew about the artist Jason Richardson from Leeton and the result was skewed toward my electroacoustic work, which gained the most interest I guess.

Sorry, I seem to have rambled on, but it's been interesting for me to connect a few observations to coincide with this project.

The Junto is a significant part of my creative practices and I really appreciate the inspiration it has provided, especially now that I look back and see it constitutes around half of the material I've published on Youtube and that's likely a similar ratio on Bandcamp too.

And, for the bonus task that I also proposed to Marc, here's a modified road sign that amused me around the time I moved to the Riverina nearly 25 years ago.

 

Ben Gibbard on success

There’s a really famous quote from Itzhak Perlman, the violinist. He’s doing this concert and breaks a string, then breaks a second string, and he’s trying to finish the piece with two of the four strings left. Afterward, somebody asks him what that experience was like, and he says something along the lines of, “Sometimes it’s the artist’s job to determine what they can make with what they have left.” As I get older, that quote resonates with me more because I put in a lot more work to get a lot less back. As long as I end up with 10 or 11 songs every three or four years, that’s really what matters to me at this point. It’s not even about being prolific. I’d rather put out a really good record every 10 years than constantly put out material just for the sake of putting out material. When I feel I’ve done the best with what I have left and what I have in front of me, I consider that a success. 

The community


 

naviarhaiku649 – Leaning on my crutches


The haiku shared by Naviar Records this week brought to mind the expression from backstage in a theatre, "break a leg." 

I took the bass recorded for the Junto and experimented with faster drums, before reevaluating the piece at a slower tempo.

How the MIDI looks


 

Disquiet Junto 0754 The Blip

The Junto project is to "Interrupt an ongoing process."

I think gating is a versatile effect and almost everything benefits from it, aside from some recordings where it draws attention to itself.

To demonstrate I recorded a simple bassline and ramped up the threshold on the gate until it mutes near the end, before rolling back down again. 

A moat for the GOAT guitar design

Okay, so I was reading about AI and realised the audacity of Fender's strategy in claiming the S-shape (for Stratocaster) as entirely their own.

After seven decades and innumerable versions of the famous ergonomic double-horn shape, the recent moves to prevent others from using the design have put an ugly shade to the company.

Previously I thought that their decision was in response to the quality of Chinese counterfeits and my experience has been that Chenders offer a value that overshadows the original, especially since Fender guitars often lack the features they expect consumers to buy afterwards like better quality pickups and other parts.

The thing that occurs to me is that claiming the design, along with the legacy of Leo Fender in previous months, is it provides a moat for their business:

A moat is what protects a business from competition. The term comes from Warren Buffett’s image of a castle surrounded by water. The castle is the business; the moat is whatever prevents rivals from storming the walls. A moat might be a famous brand, a patent, a network effect, control over scarce resources, high switching costs for consumers, or a regulatory barrier that makes it difficult for competitors to enter the market. The deeper the moat, the easier it is for a firm to charge high prices, preserve margins, and survive imitation.

naviarhaiku648 – In the sky, the sound

The haiku shared by Naviar Records had me pondering what sort of sound would come from the sky?

So I wanted to revisit my track for the Junto this week and tighten it up, like a cherry blossom. 

Using an alternate take of the drums, I gated the guitars and added some effects. 

All I'm saying


 

Disquiet Junto 0753 5 Minute Wait

The Junto project this week is to "Write outdoors hold music for a single-lane tunnel entrance delay."

As I had been jamming along to a track that's about the five minutes recommended for this assignment, it was easy to record that part.

Then I came up with a few chords that sorta fit, and recorded bass afterwards. 

Saviorcaster

Saw this photo on Reddit and thought Fender should release a Jesus design guitar so that the market can decide.

Actually, it makes a lot of cents given the sheer volume (pun intended) of musical gear sold to churches. 

One of my favourite account signatures was on a forum while researching PAs that said "Turn it up for Jesus!" 

The Hello Kitty guitar seems to have led the way for sentimental crap like the current Pacman model from Fender. 

Elsewhere on the internet, I was surprised that Rick Beato went straight for the top and argued that the new CEO should resign from Fender. 

My feeling is that Fender has jumped from the pot and into the fire, but that few commentators have realised their existential threat developed from tackling the wave of quality Chinese-made counterfeit instruments.

Racism seems to be the only thing keeping a portion of Fender's fanboys behind the brand. 

Nick Cave on pop

No one willingly wants to be indie. The great beauty of pop music is that it is a joy machine.