The Next Track

Doug Adams and Kirk McElhearn
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Mar 31, 2017 • 32min

♫ Episode #46 – Percussionist Colin Currie on Performing and Recording Steve Reich’s Drumming

We talk with percussionist Colin Currie, who discusses performing and recording Steve Reich’s seminal minimalist work Drumming. This week’s guest: Colin Currie Show notes: Steve Reich: Drumming (the original 1974 recording) Steve Reich’s Clapping Music app The score of Steve Reich’s Drumming Colin Currie Group Record Steve Reich’s Drumming Colin Currie Group at the Southbank Centre, London, May 5, 2017 Steve Reich: Tehillim & The Desert Music Steve Reich’s notes about Drumming: For one year, between the fall of 1970 and the fall of 1971, I worked on what turned out to be the longest piece I have ever composed. Drumming lasts from 55 to 75 minutes (depending on the number of repeats played) and is divided into four parts that are performed without pause. The first part is for four parts that are performed without pause. The first part is for four pairs of tuned bongo drums, stand-mounted and played with sticks; the second, for three marimbas played by nine players together with two women’s voices; the third, or three glockenspiels played by four players together with whistling and piccolo; and the fourth section is for all these instruments and voices combined. While first player the drums during the process of composition, I found myself sometimes singing with them, using my voice to imitate the sounds they made. I began to understand that this might also be possible with the marimbas and glockenspiels as well. Thus the basic assumption about the voices in Drumming was that they would not sing words, but would precisely imitate the sound of the instruments. The women’s voices sing patterns resulting from the combination of two or more marimbas playing the identical repeating pattern one of more quarter notes out of phase with each other. By exactly imitating the sound of the instruments, and by gradually fading the patterns in and out, the singers cause them to slowly rise to the surface of the music and then fade back into it, allowing the listener to hear these patterns, along with many others, actually sounding in the instruments. For the marimbas, the female voice was needed, using consonants like “b” and “d” with a more or less “u” (as in “you”) vowel sound. In the case of the glockenspiels, the extremely high range of the instrument precluded any use of the voice and necessitated whistling. Even this form of vocal production proved impossible when the instrument was played in its higher ranges, and this created the need for a more sophisticated form of whistle: the piccolo. In the last section of the piece these techniques are combined simultaneously with each imitating its particular instrument. The sections are joined together by the new instruments doubling the exact pattern of the instruments already playing. At the end of the drum section three drummers play the same pattern two quarter notes out of phase with each other. Three marimba players enter softly with the same pattern also played two quarter notes out of phase. The drummers gradually fade out so that the same rhythm and pitches are maintained with a gradual change of timbre. At the end of the marimba section, three marimbas played in their highest range are doubled by three glockenspiels in their lowest range so that the process of maintaining rhythm and pitch while gradually changing timbre is repeated. The sections are not set off from each other by changes in key, the traditional means of gaining extended length in Western music. Drumming shows that it is possible to keep going in the same key for quite a while if there are instead considerable rhythmic developments together with occasional, but complete, changes of timbre to supply variety. I am often asked what influence my visit of Africa in summer of 1970 had on Drumming. The answer is confirmation. It confirmed my intuition that acoustic instruments could be used to produce music that was genuinely richer in sound than that produced with electronic instruments, as well as confirming my natural inclination towards percussion (I became a drummer at the age of 14). The transition from glockenspiels to the last section of the piece, for all instruments and voices combined, is made by a new musical process I call build-up and reduction. Drumming begins with two drummers building up the basic rhythmic pattern of the entire piece from a single drum beat, played in a cycle of twelve beats with rests on all the other beats. Gradually additional drumbeats are substituted for the rests, one at a time, until the pattern is completed. The reduction process is simply the reverse where rests are gradually substituted for the beats, one at a time, until only a section leads to a build-up for the drums, marimbas, and glockenspiels simultaneously. There is, then, only one basic rhythmic pattern for all of Drumming. This pattern undergoes changes of phase position, pitch, and timbre, but all the performers play this pattern, or some part of it, throughout the entire piece. Our next tracks: Kirk: Terry Riley: In C Doug: Boston: Boston If you like the show, please subscribe in iTunes or your favorite podcast app, and please rate the podcast.Special Guest: Colin Currie.Support The Next Track
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Mar 24, 2017 • 33min

♫ Episode #45 – Ask Andy, Hi-Fi Equipment and Speaker Placement

We welcome Andy Doe for another Ask Andy episode, where we discuss hi-fi equipment and speaker placement. “If you have a valuable disc, always use a brand-new needle.” This week’s guest: Andy Doe Proper Discord Show notes: Episode #41 – Whatever Became of EQ? The Master Set speaker placement system (PDF file) Kirk’s Doctor Evil chair (and cat): Our next tracks: Kirk: Soundbreaking: Stories from the Cutting Edge of Recorded Music Doug: Rolling Stones: 12 x 5 If you like the show, please subscribe in iTunes or your favorite podcast app, and please rate the podcast.Special Guest: Andy Doe.Support The Next Track
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Mar 17, 2017 • 30min

♫ Episode #44 – Bootlegs, Live Tapes, and Torrents

We discuss bootleg recordings, live recordings, and torrents. “Once we’re done with it, the audience can have it.” Jerry Garcia Show notes: Charles Dickens copyright International Copyright Act of 1891 Bob Dylan: Great White Wonder Bob Dylan: The Basement Tapes Complete: The Bootleg Series Vol. 11 Charlie Parker: Complete Dean Benedetti Recordings Flick Lives has an archive of Jean Shepherd recordings for download Bob Dylan: The Bootleg Series, Vol. 4: Bob Dylan Live, 1966: The “Royal Albert Hall Concert” Taping the Dead archive.org Wolfgang’s Vault Our next tracks: Kirk: Durutti Column: Domo Arigato Doug: Plastic Ono Band: Live Peace in Toronto 1969 If you like the show, please subscribe in iTunes or your favorite podcast app, and please rate the podcast.Support The Next Track
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Mar 10, 2017 • 29min

♫ Episode #43 – Streaming Music 2.0

Chris Connaker joins us to discuss how music streaming service can make the next step. People just want to hear the song they want to hear. This week’s guest: Chris Connaker of the The Computer Audiophile website Show notes: This week’s guest: Tidal Deezer Elite Qobuz Spotify hits 50 million paid subscribers SiriusXM radio Pandora Our next tracks: Kirk: Leon Redbone: Long Way from Home Doug: Cactus: Cactus If you like the show, please subscribe in iTunes or your favorite podcast app, and please rate the podcast.Special Guest: Chris Connaker.Support The Next Track
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Mar 3, 2017 • 30min

♫ Episode #42 – Song Are Atoms, and Playlists Are Molecules

We take a close look at playlists. What they are, where they came from, and what you can do with them. Show notes: This week’s guest: High Fidelity, by Nick Hornby High Fidelity (movie) Elizabethtown Yamaha CD-C600BL 5-Disc CD Changer The True Story of Audion Search Results to Playlist script Join Together app Our next tracks: Kirk: The Clash: Super Black Market Clash Doug: Mogul Thrash: Mogul Thrash If you like the show, please subscribe in iTunes or your favorite podcast app, and please rate the podcast.Support The Next Track
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Feb 24, 2017 • 28min

♫ Episode #41 – Whatever Became of EQ?

Andy Doe joins us to talk about EQ. What is it, how does it work, do you need it, and where did it go? This week’s guest: Andy Doe Proper Discord Show notes: This week’s guest: Equalization on Wikipedia The Mysterious Loudness Control: What Does It Do? How to tweak your sound in iTunes and on iOS devices The Next Track, Episode #21 – Everything You Ever Wanted to Know about Subwoofers Our next tracks: Kirk: Grateful Dead: Morning Dew, 5/8/77, Barton Hall, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY Doug: Pink Floyd: The Wall If you like the show, please subscribe in iTunes or your favorite podcast app, and please rate the podcast.Special Guest: Andy Doe.Support The Next Track
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Feb 17, 2017 • 34min

♫ Episode #40 – The Revenge of Analog, with David Sax

Author David Sax talks about his book The Revenge of Analog: why people like vinyl, and why other analog technologies are popular today. This week’s guest: David Sax, The Revenge of Analog: http://www.hachettebookgroup.com/features/revengeofanalog/ Show notes: This week’s guest: My review of The Revenge of Analog The Paradox of Choice, Barry Schwartz Do Vinyl Records Sound Better than CDs? Discogs Our next tracks: Kirk: Harold Budd: Perhaps Doug: Kirsty MacColl: Tropical Brainstorm If you like the show, please subscribe in iTunes or your favorite podcast app, and please rate the podcast.Special Guest: David Sax.Support The Next Track
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Feb 10, 2017 • 28min

♫ Episode #39 – Storing Media on a Network-Attached Storage Device

Doug and Kirk discuss storing a media library on a network-attached storage device. We focus on using a NAS with iTunes, but there’s some useful information for those using a NAS with other media software. Show notes: WD MyCloud EX2 Plex Doug’s Launch at Login applet How to map a network drive on Windows Our next tracks: Kirk: John Cale: Fragments of a Rainy Season Doug: The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion: Jukebox Explosion If you like the show, please subscribe in iTunes or your favorite podcast app, and please rate the podcast.Support The Next Track
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Feb 3, 2017 • 36min

♫ Episode #38 – New in Audio at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES)

Chris Connaker went to the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas. He reports for us on new audio equipment and the MQA music format. This week’s guest: Chris Connaker of the The Computer Audiophile website Show notes: Chris Connaker’s Long Strange Trip Chris’s overview of his visit to the CES Pandora is available in the US, Australia, and New Zealand The Next Track, Episode #6: What Is High-Resolution Audio? Chris’s 2014 article High Resolution Audio Isn’t Coming Soon From Apple Mastered for iTunes (PDF) MQA website, Wikipedia Steve Jobs’ Thoughts on Music, from 2007 Klipsch, The Three The Revenge of Analog, by David Sax AudioQuest Dragonfly Red DAC Our next tracks: Kirk: Genesis – Seconds Out Doug: The Bomboras: It Came From Pier 13! If you like the show, please subscribe in iTunes or your favorite podcast app, and please rate the podcast.Special Guest: Chris Connaker.Support The Next Track
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Jan 27, 2017 • 31min

♫ Episode #37 – Ripping DVDs and Blu-Rays, with Rob Griffiths

Mac writer Rob Griffiths tells us how to efficiently rip DVDs and Blu-Rays. This week’s guest: Rob Griffiths Show notes: The Committed podcast The Complete West Wing on iTunes (in HD) Revisiting ripping Blu-Ray discs Detailed instructions for installing the transcode-video tools Pioneer Slim External Blu Ray Writer BDR-XD05B MacGo Blu-Ray Player MakeMKV HandBrake 1.0 VLC Media Player transcode-video Installing transcode-video Difference Between Mp4 and M4v Change Videos from Home Movies to Movies, TV Shows or Music Videos in iTunes iFlicks 2 Hamlet, by the Royal Shakespeare Company A deep dive into HandBrake and Video Transcoding WD My Passport 4 TB portable hard drive Our next tracks: Kirk: King Crimson Doug: Public Image Ltd. – Album If you like the show, please subscribe in iTunes or your favorite podcast app, and please rate the podcast.Special Guest: Rob Griffiths.Support The Next Track

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