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Wednesday, October 9
 

10:15am EDT

The Soundsystem as Survival and Resistance: A Black, Afro-Asian, and Indigenous Audio History
Wednesday October 9, 2024 10:15am - 11:00am EDT
Short Abstract:
This presentation explores Black, Indigenous, Afro-Asian, and Afro-Indigenous cross-cultural collaboration leading to influential innovations in sonic creative technology. Centering on the soundsystem as a form of self-determination and as a contemporary art form rooted in survival and resistance, the presentation aims to illuminate meaningful connections between ancestral and state-of-the-art sound technologies through the lens of critical decolonization theory. Highlighting innovations ranging from parametric EQ, radio, and the sound system as both cultural and analog technologies, the presentation shows how these could only exist through mutual influence and the building of nations and kinship across cultures bound by mutual experiences of oppression. These artistic traditions in music, gathering, and engineering emerged and continue to act as dynamic tools of survivance within Black and globally Indigenous communities. By skillfully using these tools, practitioners of these electronic and sonic art forms destabilize racialized boundaries and empower the collective ownership of cultural narratives—a fearless pursuit reflecting a shared vision of Black and Indigenous self-determination, liberation, and futurity for kin past, present, and future.

Extension:
The presentation’s audiovisual materials will comprise two aspects: archival materials from music and resistance movements in the featured locations and contemporary artworks dealing with identity politics and protest in connection with music. Featured locations will include, but are not limited to: Indian Country, USA & Canada; Kingston, Jamaica; Notting Hill, UK; and Detroit, MI. Timeline of technological innovation will center audio advancements in amplification and transmission within the post-transistor era (1947 - present), with a historical focus primarily from 1947 to 1996. Featured BIPOC artists and innovators in electrical engineering in the sonic arts will include and are not limited to: Hedley Jones, Tom Wong, and Don Lewis. Featured entrepreneurial artists in audio engineering, radio, recording, music and storytelling will include, but are not limited to: Vy Higgenson, Kemistry & Storm, Jeff Mills, K-Hand, and Patricia Chin. Featured Black, Asian and Indigenous owned radio stations and music labels that function as both mutual aid and community spaces will include, but are not limited to: Bvlbancha Liberation Radio, Cool Runnings Music, KTNN, VP Records, and the Sound System Futures Programme.

The objective of this session is to provide a brief overview mapping sound histories to the BIPOC innovators of origin with the aim of sparking generative discussion on Black and Indigenous creative technologies as both a cultural and computational history valuable and critical to the healing of community and dismantling of hegemonic societal structures. The session is structured largely in response to a critical lack of representation regarding BIPOC engineering history and legacy, and approaches this topic as a celebration of cross-cultural collaboration in a historical paradigm that often centers cross-cultural interactions as conflict-oriented. At the presentation’s conclusion participants will be encouraged to reflect on their own cross-cultural legacies as sources of innovation, as well as reflect on the unactivated dreams they may hold from their ancestors and how they might activate these dreams through sound, collective action, and community gathering.
Speakers
Wednesday October 9, 2024 10:15am - 11:00am EDT
1E08

10:45am EDT

De-Mixing: Should we just because we can?
Wednesday October 9, 2024 10:45am - 11:30am EDT
Multi-Grammy Award winners, Michael Graves (Osiris Studio) and Cheryl Pawelski (Omnivore Recordings) will lead a discussion exploring the intersection of historical/catalog recordings and technology.

We’re at a point in technological developments where tech tools can be used to fix flawed media, restore poor recordings or de-mix to remix sources.

We will share questions we ask ourselves when we consider employing new technology and discuss the responsibility we feel toward the art, the artist and the artists’ intent.

To help aid the discussion, audio samples will be played by:

Chris Bell (I Am The Cosmos)
Hank Williams (The Garden Spot Programs, 1950)
Art Pepper (The Complete Maiden Voyage Recordings)
Janis Joplin & Jorma Kaukonen (The Legendary Typewriter Tape, 1964)
Various Artists (Written In Their Soul: The Stax Songwriter Demos)
Speakers
avatar for Michael Graves

Michael Graves

Mastering Engineer | Audio Restoration Specialist, Osiris Studio
Michael Graves is a multiple GRAMMY-Award winning mastering engineer. During his career, Graves has worked with clients worldwide and has gained a reputation as one of the leading audio restoration and re-mastering specialists working today, earning 5 GRAMMY Awards and 14 nominations... Read More →
avatar for Cheryl Pawelski

Cheryl Pawelski

Co-Founder/Co-Owner, Omnivore Recordings
Cheryl Pawelski is a four-time Grammy Award-winning producer who has for years been entrusted with preserving, curating, and championing some of music’s greatest legacies. Before co-founding Omnivore Entertainment Group, she held positions at Rhino, Concord, and EMI-Capitol Records... Read More →
Wednesday October 9, 2024 10:45am - 11:30am EDT
1E09

2:00pm EDT

The Technical Legacy of Dr. Robert Moog
Wednesday October 9, 2024 2:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
This year marks the 60th anniversary of Dr. Robert Moog's AES paper, "Voltage-Controlled Electronic Music Modules" (paper number 346), as well as the debut of the Moog modular synthesizer. This along with a subsequent paper, "A Voltage-Controlled Low-Pass High-Pass Filter for Audio Signal Processing" (paper number 413) presented in 1965, form the basis for generations of electronic instruments that followed. Throughout his career, Bob Moog worked closely with artists to solve technical challenges that led to musically satisfying instruments. In this session we'll reflect on the development of these designs as well as the impact they have had on the industry from some of those who worked with Moog as well as designers who have built on this technical foundation.

This panel will be followed by a book signing at the AES Booth.

A Brief Testimonial on the Occasion of the 60thAnniversary of Bob Moog’s Historic AES Presentation on his Prototype Voltage-Controlled Modular System
By Albert Glinsky, author of Switched On: Bob Moog and the Synthesizer Revolution, Oxford University Press, 2022

Sixty years ago this week, Robert Arthur Moog, a shy, unassuming young man of 30, not generally known to anyone outside the world of theremin kits, sat at his little AES display at the Barbizon-Plaza Hotel in Manhattan, his table draped with his wife’s Indian print bedspread. Sitting atop it was his self-described “Abominatron”—four handmade modules with sheet metal panels hastily spray-painted, with jacks and knobs identified only by paper labels stuck on with rubber cement. He was surrounded on all sides by the titans of the audio electronics industry: Ampex, Scully, 3M. It was intimidating to a fault; he sat, hoping a few passersby would care to don a pair of earphones to sample the aural cherry pies or pumpkins of his State Fair-like presentation—a pleasant curiosity at best, he figured. Then something unexpected happened. As he famously recalled, a prominent visitor approached and uttered the words, “I’d like a couple of these and a couple of these.” He was in business, and he hadn’t planned on anything like that. History was made right then and there.


During this same 16th Annual AES convention week, on Wednesday, October 14th, at 9:30 in the morning, a session titled, MUSIC AND ELECTRONICS was chaired by the venerable Harald Bode. The second presenter of the morning, a certain Robert A. Moog of the R. A. Moog Company of Trumansburg NY, strode to the podium and read a 9-page typed manuscript titled, “Voltage-Controlled Electronic Music Modules.” Footnotes at the bottom of his last page credited a few predecessors on whose giants’ shoulders he felt he was standing—figures like Myron Schaeffer, Hugh LeCaine, and Bode himself. And the crowd was formidable: Le Caine was there, Bode, of course, and Harry F. Olson and Herbert Belar, inventors of the already classic RCA Mark I and Mark II synthesizers.


After the convention, Bob began selling custom variations on his prototype modules, and the rest, of course became history. But what some may not realize—something that really struck me as Bob’s biographer—is the influence, not just of the instruments themselves, but of Bob’s generosity in sharing the “recipe,” as I like to call it, for this groundbreaking system that would revolutionize music and sound art. Less than a year after his AES presentation, Bob published a detailed 7-page article in the July 1965 issue of the Journal of the Audio Engineering Society, replete with generous block diagrams, schematics, and photos. In the proprietary world of our current technology, this selfless, open-source act is astounding. Not that others hadn’t done this sort of thing before, and Bob had certainly come of age in the world of hobbyist magazines, DIY projects, and the brotherhood of tinkerers. But with the commercial potential of Bob’s system, it fairly gave the whole game away. Bob had inadvertently presented his own giant’s shoulders to the world, upon which so many others would stand—some eventually acknowledging the pedestal on which they held their own inventions, some not. But then, Bob’s passion was sheer invention, and often, as we know, to the detriment of profit and the big picture. But that was Bob: generosity of spirit, and the delight of scattering his seeds widely, even if some of it occasionally took root in competitors’ pastures. It’s not a stretch to say, and I say it with full confidence and conviction based on the facts: Buchla, ARP, EMS, and numerous others that followed—none of them would have been possible without Bob’s published recipe. The timeline bears it out, and some have openly admitted it.


The seminal genius of Bob’s work (and there are so many aspects to it), might be summed up by two statements he made in his AES talk that October morning in 1964. After citing several early historical attempts at producing music electronically, he explained, “The failure of any of these instruments to attain widespread success can be attributed at least partially, to the limitation on the degree of control which the performer is able to exercise over the instrument’s sounds.” He concluded his paper by saying, “In particular, the setting up of prototype experimental musical instruments, and the remote-control processing of conventional audio signals are ideal applications for the voltage-controlled modules.” Ideal indeed!! Amen Bob. And what a legacy you’ve left us. Thank you, and congratulations on such a rich 60-year legacy!!
Speakers
avatar for Michael Bierylo

Michael Bierylo

Chair Emeritus, Electronic Production and Design, Berklee College of Music
Chair Emeritus, Electronic Production and Design
MM

Michelle Moog-Koussa

Executive Director, Bob Moog Foundation
Wednesday October 9, 2024 2:00pm - 3:30pm EDT
Stage

3:30pm EDT

Newly Discovered Jazz Recordings at New York Public Library
Wednesday October 9, 2024 3:30pm - 4:15pm EDT
Last year saw the release of the Grammy-nominated album “Evenings at the Village Gate – John Coltrane with Eric Dolphy” on Verve. It was the result of many years of intensive detective work by Jessica Wood, Assistant Curator at New York Public Library’s Music & Recorded Sound Division. A long-missing cache of tapes from Richard Striker’s Institute of Sound, recorded by legendary New York engineer Richard Alderson, had been discovered and located by Wood.

Wood, Alderson, and NYPL Audio Preservation Engineer Jeff Willens then went through hundreds of tapes. Among them were unreleased studio and/or live recordings by Bob Dylan, John Coltrane, Nina Simone, Art Blakey, Thelonious Monk, and many other jazz and classical artists, as well as performers as diverse as Tom Paxton, Moondog, and poet Hugh Romney (aka Wavy Gravy).

In this talk, we will explain how this collection of vital, previously unknown recorded documents of the 1960s New York music scene was “lost,” located, and reclaimed by NYPL. We will also tell the story about how two of these unheard reels were brought to the public, filling some gaps in the Coltrane canon. And we will also share why a maverick NYC engineer at the top of his game, left the city and his invaluable tapes behind.

We will be playing samples from the Striker Collection during the talk and inviting attendees to help us “crowdsource” some of the unidentified recordings therein.
Speakers
avatar for Jeff Willens

Jeff Willens

Media Preservation Engineer, New York Public Library
avatar for Jessica Wood

Jessica Wood

Assistant Curator, Music Division and Rodgers & Hammerstein Archives of Recorded Sound, New York Public Library
Jessica is the Assistant Curator for the Music Division as well as the Rodgers & Hammerstein Archives of Recorded Sound at the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts. She previously worked as a project archivist at the Library of Congress' Music Division and as a sound recordings... Read More →
Wednesday October 9, 2024 3:30pm - 4:15pm EDT
1E07
 
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