Category Archives: Audio Archive

Tales of the Live Music Archive

It’s quite tempting to visit Internet Archive’s Live Music Archive and be drawn to the bands you’re familiar with and adore. Grateful Dead, Smashing Pumpkins, Jason Mraz, Yonder Mountain String Band, and Guster all beg you to choose their name, boasting 300+ shows and countless downloads. Don’t get me wrong, I can click on some of those bands all day and get completely wrapped up in their myriad of live shows. One of the joys of the Archive, however, is to get exposed to those smaller bands that either are on the brink of making it big or have met their demise years ago with only the Archive paying them homage.

Here’s a teaser list of what you can find in the LMA with just a few clicks of the mouse:

  • Acoustic Vibration Appreciation Society is classic North Carolinian bluegrass that will make you dance.
  • Sara Petite, a singer/songwriter from the West coast, has a charming music style with meaningful lyrics.
  • Shell Stamps Band is a jam-band of sorts, a side project of the more well-known Ancient Harmony.
  • Betsy Franck and the Bareknuckle Band is a fun, worthwhile listen. They’re a gutsy, bluesy group from Georgia.
  • Charlie Parr is a supremely talented folk/bluegrass artist hailing from Minneapolis. You’ll hear washboards backing up Parr’s strong voice.
  • Madgrass offers a collection of covers with their own twangy spin. Covers include songs by Neil Young, Grateful Dead, and Old Crow Medicine Show.
  • The Microphones, fronted by Phil Elvrum and later renamed Mount Eerie, is an indie-rock band. The good, genuine kind of indie-rock with unique sounds and heartfelt lyrics.
  • The Strawberry Allstars, a pop electronic band from Maine, will surprise you with their creative use of fast techno sounds infused with a strong beat and interesting vocals.
  • Of course, there are valid reasons that some bands only have a couple shows uploaded and zero downloads, but, sometimes, those are just as much fun to find.

    –Cara Binder

    Picklist #3

    Some random morsels from the Internet Archive collections:

    1. Paul Otlet (pronounced ot-LAY; 1868-1944) is considered the “father” of information science. A Belgian lawyer and visionary, he aspired to create a central repository of all human knowledge. From the 1920s until the Nazis took Brussels, he began to build such a collection, called the Mundaneum, which housed a massive catalog made up of millions of 3×5 index cards. Each card contained data pulled from books for indexing and reuse. Otlet is considered by some to be the forefather of the World Wide Web. His 1934 magnum opus Traite de Documentation (Treaties on Documentation: The Book of the Book) has yet to be translated into English, but the Archive has digitized a collection of his essays.

    In the Archive’s Moving Image collection you’ll also find a 1998 documentary about Otlet, made for Dutch television and entitled Alle Kennis van de Wereld (“All the Knowledge of the World”). The documentary (23 min) is narrated by Boyd Rayward, Otlet’s biographer. It is in both English and French (and, unfortunately, has no subtitles).

    (See also Alex Wright’s 6/17/08 New York Times article, “The Web Time Forgot,” which discusses Otlet’s Mundaneum.)

    2. Arabian Nights with twenty color illustrations by the renowned French illustrator Edmond Dulac (1882-1953). Published by Hodder & Stoughton (1907).

    dulac2

    dulacillustration2

    dulac3

    3. Pete Seeger interviewed by Tim Robbins, “The Ballad of Pete Seeger,” an original radio documentary celebrating Pete Seeger’s life and times, and featuring a candid conversation with actor Tim Robbins and historic audio from the Pacifica Radio Archives. 4 DVDs and 2 CDs

    4.  The most popular item in the Live Music Archive, with nearly 2.5 million downloads, is OfARevolution (O.A.R.) Live at Madison Square Garden on January 14, 2006.  This Archive volunteer had never heard of the group before today, but according to the New York Times review of the 2006 show, the Columbus, Ohio, band has achieved success “by playing concerts nonstop and by encouraging fans to share recordings.”

    5.210px-toscaniniconducting4 Beethoven’s Symphony # 6, Pastoral.

    Legendary Italian conductor Arturo Toscanini conducting the BBC Symphony Orchestra. Recorded over several sessions from June-October 1937 at Queen’s Hall, London. Transferred and restored from the original 78 RPM RCA Victor set M-417 by Bob Varney.

    6. Bach’s Air on the G String and the estimable Sixth Suite for Unaccompanied Cello  make up concert 22 (Bach’s Songs of Strings) of the podcast collection of the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum in Boston.  This entire collection of 22 concerts is terrific.

    Picklist #2

    In search of unusual items at Archive.org…

    1) Anaïs NinWinter of Artifice, a collection of three short novels: Stella, Winter of Artifice, The Voice, with engravings by Ian Hugo. Some of the historical data surrounding this book is unclear. This was Nin’s second fiction book, originally published in Paris in 1939, the same year she moved to New York. The edition here was published by Alan Swallow, 1945. The book was written while Nin was undergoing treatment with the psychoanalyst Otto Rank (frequent traveler between France and America), with whom she had an affair. The 1939 edition contained the novella Djuna, which was supposedly omitted from later editions because it revealed too much of her relationship with Henry Miller and his wife June (In The Voice, the lead character is named Djuna). Nin was probably in her mid-thirties when the book was written.

    Anaïs Nin is best known for her erotic short stories, her multi-volume diaries and her association with Henry Miller, but she also had ties with a number of avant-garde filmmakers and musicians and wrote books such as this one – experimental, introspective and poetic. The narrative threads in these three works are fleeting and the characters stand in the shadow of the protagonist/narrator, but each story shares a distinct feminine voice, rich in interior monologue and psychic detail, sifting through thoughts and emotions, as if inspired by and continuing a psychoanalytic process.

    The atmosphere of The Voice, with Nin’s surreal descriptions of urban fragmentation set in the fictional Hotel Chaotica, brings to mind the Kienholzes’ installation The Pedicord Apts. (1982 – 83; at the Weisman Museum, Minneapolis), a recreation of a seedy postwar rooming house where visitors can eavesdrop on the individual dramas behind each apartment door. The protagonist Djuna is a mysterious woman who, under the care of a psychoanalyst known as the “Voice,” finds herself struggling in an emotional storm, hypersensitive to the minutiae and flux of life. Another patient, Lilith, later becomes the focal point, appearing to represent another aspect of the narrator, as Djuna’s lover, or maybe they are the same woman. Throughout the book there’s a theme of the search for a father figure – is it the Voice, or will he too be compelled to recount his inner experience?

    Excerpt from The Voice, Djuna speaking:
    “I have the fear that everyone is leaving, moving away, that
    love dies in an instant. I look at the people walking in the street,
    just walking, and I feel this: they are walking, but they are
    also being carried away
    . They are part of a current. Each
    moment that is passing takes them somewhere else. I confuse the
    moods which change and pass with the people themselves. I see
    them carried into eddies, always moving out of some state they
    will never return to, I see them lost. They do not walk
    in circles, back to where they started, but they walk out and
    beyond in some irretrievable way – too fast – towards the end.
    And I feel myself standing there; I cannot move with them.
    I seem to be standing and watching this current passing and
    I am left behind. Why have I the feeling they all pass like the
    day, the leaves, the moods of climate, into death?”


    2) Charlie ChaplinOne A.M. (1917; 17 mins.) Many know Chaplin’s feature films, such as The Gold Rush, City Lights, Modern Times, etc., while the shorts are often overlooked. There’s a famous Chaplin quote: “All I need to make a comedy is a park, a policeman and a pretty girl.” In this film he used almost nothing – a house stage, some props. The “story” concerns a man arriving home late at night; he’s had too much to drink and he needs to get from the taxi cab to his bed. By today’s standards it isn’t hilarious. In many of his films Chaplin’s funny faces can induce a smile, but here there’s only one close-up of a straight reaction shot. And from a contemporary point of view, there’s a sense of minimalism and repetition in the film as it runs through an imaginative inventory of obstacles. One striking aspect of this 90 year old film, aside from the stunt work, is the way the inside of the house becomes animated, like a fun house, where, in accord with the hero’s inebriated state, defamiliarized objects slip away, come to life and strike out, the environment becoming mutable, as if the intention was to create something like scenes that later appeared in the Dave Fleischer Betty Boop cartoons, using the available means of the day. If, by the conclusion, the character has finally arrived at his destination, there’s a sense that the film could just go on indefinitely, stuck in a hypnotic loop, as a testament to cinematic imagination, the physical world’s resistance to will, zero degree special effects and the film’s timelessness. (The item contains links to many other Chaplin films on Archive.)

    3) Rock music selections:

    The Grateful DeadDark Star (2.26.1973; starts at 48 min. mark; about 25 min.) Their improv classic, from one of the many well-crafted “Dead Air” programs, with host Uncle John. Dark Star never appeared on a full-length studio album. It was originally released in 1968 as a 2:50 minute single and later became a lengthy concert favorite. Lyrics: Reason tatters / Forces tear loose from the axis / Shall we go / You and I while we can? / Through the transitive nightfall of diamonds.

    Some musicians have authorized sharing of amateur recordings of their concerts and collection sites have been created on Archive. Once you’re on the collection main page for an artist, click “See recent additions” to view all items. Sample by using the stream player on the right, or if no player is available, clicking the M3U file on the left under “Stream” should bring up RealPlayer or iTunes. You can also download the songs as MP3s or other file formats. Here are some personal favorites (see also previous blog entry):

    Acid Mothers Temple
    Animal Collective
    Billy Bragg
    Camper Van Beethoven / Monks of Doom
    Vic Chesnutt
    Robyn Hitchcock / Soft Boys
    Henry Kaiser / Yo Miles!
    Low
    Mekons / Jon Langford
    Sleepytime Gorilla Museum
    DJ Spooky

    Crap from the Past – “Since October, 2002, Crap From The Past has aired on Friday nights from 10:30 – midnight on KFAI, 90.3 FM Minneapolis, 106.7 FM St. Paul. It’s also rebroadcast on various other affiliates around the world.” A terrific mix of rock/pop/soul. Many programs and new additions.

    4) Short classical music works:

    Carlo Barbagallo3 Gymnopedies. Lo-fi arrangements of the famous Satie pieces. Splendid!

    Dane RudhyarAutumn and Third Pentagram, two pieces for piano performed by Edmund Correia, 1981 (from Other Minds collection; date of composition not given). Rudhyar (1895, Paris – 1985, Palo Alto, CA) was a modernist composer and pioneering author on astrology. He was self-taught as a composer, created a technique he called “orchestral pianism,” published a book on Debussy, arrived in America in 1916, published a poetry book in Canada, relocated to Hollywood and appeared as Christ in the silent version of The Ten Commandments, developed an idea for “Introfilms” portraying inner psychological states (never realized), won a composition prize, published a book on Hindu music; after 1930 devoted his time to astrology producing a landmark book, then later to non-representational painting and the orchestration of his early piano works. (See: Slonimsky.) He believed himself to be a medium when composing and, rather than producing “works,” the results present the flow of psyche; however the monumental style has more in common with his contemporary Carl Ruggles than, say, Charlemagne Palestine.


    5) June SteelKienholz on Exhibit (1969, b&w film, 21 min., AFANA collection) – Step back in time for a tour of the junk environments of Ed and Nancy Kienholz at the LA County Museum of Art. The film documents the patron response to the exhibit, as much as the exhibit itself. Back Seat Dodge (photo) was conceived as a piece with popular appeal, a voyeuristic setting of a plaster woman and chicken wire man making out in the back of a dilapidated auto amid empty beer bottles and scraps of underwear. It was initially greeted with civic threats and mixed public reaction, and for a time the LACMA pledged to keep the car door closed to minors. It’s something like a room from the Pedicord Apts. on wheels, or an Origin of the World/Etant Donnés framed in an Ubik-ian shell. The film also features a nice post-Beat vibe throughout.

    6) Bertolt BrechtHouse Un-American Activities Committee hearings (1947; Audio; 24 mins.)
    In 1947, during the Cold War, Brecht was called to appear before the congressional committee and account for his communist sympathies. The questioning concerns meetings, trips to Moscow, publications, and culminates in a dispute over the correct translation of a song lyric. Consider this a short work of audio theater. The day after his testimony Brecht left for East Germany. (Did I read somewhere that the HUAC hearing scene with Woody Allen in The Front, 1976, was loosely based on Brecht’s testimony?)

    7) Slought Foundation:

    Evasions of Power (2007, 6 audio files, 10 hours total) – a conference in Philadelphia at the Slought Foundation, exploring “relations between architecture, literature and geo-politics.”

    On the Politics of Resistance (2007, video, 1 min.) – One minute clip of philosopher Alain Badiou.

    8 ) Slavoj Žižek, philosopher and cultural critic:

    Zizek lecture – Modern Times Bookstore, San Francisco, Sept. 5, 2008
    (audio, 72 min. lecture; 41 min. Q&A)

    Jared Woodard – Populists or Proletarians: Laclau, Zizek, and the Problem of Articulation – PDF, 2005, 12 page essay

    Jordon Zorker

    Picklist #1

    Miscellaneous picks from the Archive.org site…


    1) Classic book: The Duchess of Langeais by Honoré de Balzac

    This short novel tells a tragic love story, or a duel of personalities, in a style that seems surprisingly modern and with a brevity that makes online reading fairly painless. The Duchess is in her early twenties and of noble family. The General is a bit older, a military man returning from a hellish ordeal in the African desert, a shy amateur in matters of love. The story is told in flashback and begins near the end – after a long period of searching the General finds the Duchess has taken refuge as a nun in a Spanish monastery. The next scene returns to their first meeting, in the Faubourg Saint-Germain district, during the French Restoration, a period marked by the segregation of the upper-classes and nobles from the middle class and proletariat. There follows a passage critiquing the politics of the period, leading into the romance story as an example of the society’s shortcomings. During their courtship the Duchess exercises her skills as a coquette, but she’s portrayed sympathetically and with breadth. After many visits to her home and professing his love – but only being offered a foot, a hand to kiss, a scarf – an acquaintance informs the General that he is the victim of fashionable flirtation, whereupon he begins efforts to forcefully extract her surrender. The many barriers that come between them have an almost abstract quality: the Duchess’s religious beliefs which seem vague but later consume her life, a husband who lives apart and is never shown, physical partitions within settings, missed meetings, unread letters, etc. A surprising narrative reversal, which I won’t reveal, adds to the complexity of the structure. Another character of the story is The Thirteen, a mysterious organization with occult-like powers who comes to the General’s aid. The novel is dedicated to Franz Liszt and seems marked by the tone of organ music, with its mixture of orchestral immensity and darkness. The pleasure of reading Balzac is found at the level of the individual word as much as the story. There are many memorable lines and epigrams throughout, despite what may be a dated translation. An excellent feature film adaptation/interpretation was made by director Jacques Rivette in 2007, not yet available on Region 1 DVD.

    Project Gutenberg edition, translator not specified

    Project Gutenberg, Ellen Marriage translation

    William Walton translation, History of the Thirteen, with 5 etchings (detail shown)

    Audio – a film club discusses the 2007 movie

    2) One Minute videos:

    – Search Moving Images for “One Minute” and you’ll find short video reviews of books by the One Minute Critic. Here’s one introducing a relatively recent single-volume hardcover edition of 4 novels by sci-fi master Philip K. Dick.

    – Search Moving Images for “Lumiere” where you will find a series of short pieces inspired by the work of the pioneering French filmmakers, the Lumière brothers. The rules for the contemporary films state: “60 seconds max., Fixed camera, No audio, No zoom, No edit, No effects.” Here’s one showing a close-up of a lava lamp.

    3) Democracy Now! June 24, 2008 – this broadcast includes segments on the legacies of comedian George Carlin [1937 – 2008] and visionary Buckminster Fuller.

    4) The Venerable Dark Cloud – from the Other Minds collection, an excellent 45 minute commercially released but out-of-print album of Westernized gamelan music by Mantle Hood and Hardja Susilo, performed by the UCLA Performance Group (1958?; 1967 according to Other Minds). In the journal Ethnomusicology, Vol. 13 (1969), a blindfold listening test of this album (or another, if this was part of a series), was given to a group of gamelan teachers in Java, with their amusing complaints about “wrong tempo,” “too loud,” etc. (A gamelan group shown.)

    5) Crepusculum – Sky Diaries – a 2006 7 song EP of simple, quiet, impressionistic acoustic guitar music. The sort of thing that evokes nature images and the seasons – but it’s actually rather, er… nice. One track is an electronic remix.

    6) Some excellent Post-Punk and Post-Rock concert recordings from the Live Music Archives, in no particular order:

    Minutemen / Mike Watt
    Mission of Burma
    The Dream Syndicate / Steve Wynn
    Godspeed You Black Emperor! / A Silver Mt Zion
    Bardo Pond – 14 concerts
    Mogwai – 74 concerts
    Explosions in the Sky – 55 concerts, including from 2008
    Note: Once you click on the main collection page for each band, click “See Recent Additions” to view all items. Some items are in FLAC file format – requires free download from SourceForge.net to convert to WAV file. Be sure to browse the index of artists/bands.


    7) Of Human Bondage (1934) – Memorable melodrama about obsessive love and one man’s winding journey to find his place in life, starring Leslie Howard and Bette Davis. Howard is a failed artist who leaves Paris to study medicine in London. He suffers physically and emotionally from a club foot. In a cafe, he’s smitten by Davis, a coarse and manipulative lower-class waitress; she is destined to reappear throughout his life, each time creating various emotional and moral challenges for him. Howard struggles to advance professionally and in his personal life as Davis’ life descends, and while their encounters seem at first like another chance for happiness, they only serve for him to experience disappointment again. Both of the lead performances are very good and both actors are perfectly cast. There are enough narrative details and cinematic effects to give the film minor qualities. Davis enjoyed a long career and this film is a noteworthy entry in her oeuvre. Howard went on to star as Ashley Wilkes in “Gone With the Wind,” but was killed a few years later during WWII. The theme music, repeated in variations of mood, is by Max Steiner (Gone with the Wind, Casablanca). See also the Somerset Maugham novel.

    8 Continue reading

    Audio Poetry and Books

    Naropa Poetics Archive

    (AUDIO) – Over 800 programs of poetry readings, classroom workshops and performances of mostly post-WWII American poetry, from the Beats to Language poetry and beyond, but also many lectures covering the history of poetry. The recordings were made at Naropa University in Boulder, Colorado, founded in 1974 by Anne Waldman and Allen Ginsberg.

    The list below shows at a glance many of the poets whose talks are available in the collection. It’s not comprehensive, but it covers those with more than one entry (for example, there are over 100 Allen Ginsberg programs). It does not include all theme programs, panel discussions, faculty readings and tributes. (For those without a link, copy the name, click the link to the Naropa collection, then search from there.)


    Keith Abbott
    Kathy Acker – 1979 reading w/Michael Brownstein pt 1; pt 2
    Helen Adam (photo) – 1979 lecture pt 1
    Jane Augustine – on Clarice Lispector pt 1; pt 2
    Amiri Baraka – on speech, rhythm, sound and music
    Gregory Bateson – on consciousness and psychopathology
    Dodie Bellamy
    Bill Berkson
    Charles Bernstein
    Mei Mei Bersenbrugge – 2001 reading pt 1
    Robin Blaser – Where’s Hell?; Irreparables
    Lee Ann Brown
    Michael Brownstein
    William S. Burroughs, Jr.
    William S. Burroughs, Sr. – lecture
    Reed Bye
    Don Byrd
    John Cage – Empty Words, pt 1; Empty Words pt 2
    Jim Carroll – plays recordings of his songs, pt 1
    Steve Clay, publisher of Granary Books
    Andrei Codrescu – surrealism
    Jack Collom
    Clark Coolidge – jazz lecture; on Samuel Beckett
    David Cope
    Gregory Corso
    Robert Creeley
    Fielding Dawson
    Diane Di Prima
    Ed Dorn
    Rikki Ducornet
    Robert Duncan – 1976 lecture ‘Warp and Woof’, pt. 1; pt. 2
    Kenward Elmslie
    Clayton Eschleman – on translating Aime Cesaire
    Lawrence Ferlinghetti
    Kathleen Fraser
    Benjamin Friedlander on Paul Celan
    Alan Gilbert
    Allen Ginsberg – on Russian Futurists, w/Ann Charters; and more
    John Giorno
    James Grauerholz
    Robert Grenier
    Barbara Guest – a tribute
    Joy Harjo
    Carla Harryman
    Bobbie Louise Hawkins
    Lyn Hejinian
    Anselm Hollo
    Bob Holman
    Lisa Jarnot
    Jazz – lectures and performances
    Pierre Joris – Poems for the millennium, pt 1 of 4
    Jack Kerouac
    Kevin Killian
    Kenneth Koch
    Joanne Kyger
    Steve Lacy and Irene Aebi
    Vladimir Mayakovski – lecture by Andy Clausen, pt 1
    Bernadette Mayer
    Michael McClure
    Meredith Monk performance
    LeRoy Moore
    Thurston Moore performance
    Harryette Mullen
    Eileen Myles
    Alice Notley
    Peter Orlovsky
    Simon Ortiz
    Jena Osman
    Ron Padgett
    Michael Palmer – 2002 lecture; reading pt 1; pt 2
    Alexs Pate
    Julie Patton
    Bob Perelman
    Majorie Perloff
    Wang Ping
    Ezra Pound – diPrima on Pound
    Kristin Prevallet
    Carl Rakosi – reading his interview, 1987
    Margaret Randall
    Tom Raworth
    Joan Retallack – lecture: Stein’s influence on John Cage
    Chogyam Trungpa Rinpoche
    Elizabeth Robinson
    Jerome Rothenberg – lectures on ethnopoetics and shamanism
    Peter Rowan
    Sonia Sanchez
    Ed Sanders
    Leslie Scalapino
    Andrew Schelling
    Eleni Sikelianos
    Harry Smith – Native American cosmos – 07/08/90; 07/15/90; 07.22.90;
    Cajun Music; The Rationality of Namelessness
    Gary Snyder
    Juliana Spahr
    Cole Swenson
    Warren Tallman
    Steven Taylor – several lectures on music
    Lorenzo Thomas
    Edwin Torres
    Translation
    Chris Tysh
    Cecilia Vicuna
    Anne Waldman – on women writers
    Lewis Warsh
    Peter Warshall – on animal sounds
    Marjorie Welish – 2001 lecture, The Lyric Lately
    Philip Whalen
    Jim White
    Peter Lamborn Wilson
    John Yau
    And more…
    See also Ron Silliman

    The Other Minds Archive contains many programs of poetry, primarily by practitioners of Sound Poetry – Charles Amirkhanian, Bob Cobbing (photo), Henri Chopin, Bernard Heidsieck, etc.

    *******************************************

    LibriVox

    (AUDIO) – Recorded readings of classic literature. Many works are also available in their original language. Here I’ve made a selection of Modernist works using a single reader. This list is not representative of the variety of books available from LibriVox – from ancient classics to children’s books, and more popular authors such as Jane Austin and Mark Twain. These works are in the Public Domain and for many the text version is also available on Internet Archive.


    Recommended:

    Joseph Conrad – The Point of Honor
    T.S. Eliot – The Waste Land
    Theodor Fontane – Effi Briest (in German)
    Sigmund Freud – Dream Psychology; Reflections on War and Death
    G.W.F. Hegel – Introduction to the Philosophy of History
    Aldous Huxley – Crome Yellow
    Karl Marx – Eleven Theses on Feuerbach; Wage-Labour and Capital; The Communist Manifesto
    Nietzsche – The Twilight of the Idols
    Ezra Pound – Cathay
    Santayana – Some Turns of Thought in Modern Philosophy
    Gertrude Stein – Tender Buttons
    Wallace Stevens – Poems
    Virginia Woolf – Night and Day

    See other sub-collections for Audio Books and Poetry.

    Jordon Zorker

    How to Digitize an LP

    Help us preserve and distribute ephemeral culture! Here at Internet Archive, this is the method we currently use for converting music on a phonograph record to electronic files ready for upload to our site. You can skip reading this if you are already a veteran MP3 Blogger – this is ‘For Dummies’ – but we welcome your comments.

    Things you will need:

    • A standard turntable, the kind with stereo RCA jacks (as shown). If your turntable doesn’t have RCA jacks, then you may need a better turntable. Some modular record players might work if they have stereo outputs, in which case you will need a cable with the jacks on both ends. We use turntables capable of playing 33, 45 and 78 rpm records – such as the Audio-Technica AT-PL120 (about $150).


    • Continue reading

    Milestone: 50,000 free live music concert

    We have hit a major milestone:
    50,000 individual shows by 2924 bands
    are now freely downloadable and streamable from
    http://www.archive.org/details/etree

    What a success for the commons!

    (from Tyler’s post: http://www.archive.org/iathreads/post-view.php?id=195573 )

    Project starts in aug/sept 2002 …

    10,000 shows
    March 26, 2004
    http://www.archive.org/iathreads/post-view.php?id=13564

    16,000
    Aug 31, 2004
    http://www.archive.org/iathreads/post-view.php?id=21086

    20,000
    Feb. 3, 2005
    http://www.archive.org/iathreads/post-view.php?id=28212

    25,000
    July 21, 2005
    http://www.archive.org/iathreads/post-view.php?id=39351

    30,000
    Feb. 13, 2006
    http://www.archive.org/iathreads/post-view.php?id=56015

    35,000
    May 13, 2006
    http://www.archive.org/iathreads/post-view.php?id=61084

    40,000
    June 9, 2007
    http://www.archive.org/iathreads/post-view.php?id=128966

    45,000
    December 3, 2007
    http://www.archive.org/iathreads/post-view.php?id=168428

    50,000
    June 4, 2008

    I predict 55,000 by January 1, 2009. Let’s keep this project rolling! 60,000 by next memorial day? we’ll see! so much of the recorded library out there for all bands is already up on archive.org, the next 10,000 would have to be mostly new stuff. get out there and ask your favorite band if they are okay with sharing their live recordings on archive.org’s Live Music Archive project!

    Experimental film, etc.

    Lutz Mommartz

    (MOVING IMAGES) – Over 60 short works by this veteran German experimental filmmaker. Many of the films are without dialogue, but even those with non-subtitled German conversation can be appreciated for their poetic visuals and use of sound. New works are being added.
    Samples:

    Continue reading

    Modern music

    Other Minds Archive

    (AUDIO) – Radio programs from the San Francisco new music organization. Many of the episodes feature interviews with the composers.

    This list shows at a glance many of the composers you will find in the collection. It’s not comprehensive, it doesn’t include all of the many theme programs and performances. I hope to create a separate listing for Sound Poetry and Sound Art from Other Minds. For many of the artists there are multiple programs which are not listed here, such as the many programs devoted to John Cage.

    Highlights:

    George Antheil – Bad Boy of Music
    Robert Ashley
    Robbie Basho
    Cathy Berberian
    Alex Blake
    Pierre Boulez
    Henry Brant
    Anthony Braxton – 1971 interview; 1985 interview
    Gavin Bryars
    Harold Budd
    John Cage – an intro to Cage; short piece for toy piano; Cage & Feldman in conversation, Solo for Voice 58: 18 Microtonal Ragas; and more.
    Elliott Carter
    Henry Cowell
    Alvin Curran/MEV
    Francis Dhomont
    Paul Dresher – 1986 interview/music
    English Experimental Composers of the 1970s (Bryars, Cardew, Hobbs)
    Brian Eno – includes samples from his tape collection
    Luc Ferrari – Les Émois d’Aphrodite
    Ellen Fullman & Kronos Quartet – long string instrument with string quartet
    Lou Harrison – on gamelan; music for tack piano; his 78 rpm record collection
    Alan Hovhaness
    Jerry Hunt
    India – field recordings
    Mauricio Kagel
    Henry Kaiser
    Annea Lockwood
    Alvin Lucier – Islands; Tan – Nothing is Real
    Witold Lutoslawski – interview
    Tigran Mansurian
    Michael Mantler
    Richard Maxfield
    Darius Milhaud – concert of his music
    Moondog
    Charlotte Moorman
    Conlon Nancarrow – interview; music
    Phill Niblock
    Per Nørgård – 1970 interview
    Michael Nyman – “The Piano” soundtrack live; “Manhatta”; “Ballad of Kastriot Rexhepi”; String Quartet No. 3
    Pauline Oliveros
    Leo Ornstein – his music and a phone conversation on his 100th birthday
    Charlemagne Palestine
    Harry Partch
    Astor Piazzolla
    Eliane Radigue
    Steve Reich
    The Residents
    Terry Riley
    Ned Rorem
    Dane Rudhyar – two piano works
    Peter Sculthorpe – 1983 interview & Piano Concerto
    Nicolas Slonimsky – musicology lecture; on Frank Zappa
    Kaikhosru Shapurji Sorabji
    Karlheinz Stockhausen – 1967 interview
    Igor Stravinsky – in rehearsal
    James Tenney
    Edgar Varese – Documentary; on Ionisation w/Slonimsky
    Ivan Wyschnegradsky
    La Monte Young – work for a gong struck 42 times; Eternal Music; 1984 interview
    John Zorn
    Sound Poetry – Intro (Schwitters, Henri Chopin, etc.); Charles Amirkhanian’s first 1750 Arch Records LP

    New Music Seances – recorded at the San Francisco Swedenborgian Church, these concerts offer an imaginative mix of contemplative piano miniatures.
    Other Minds Festival – recordings of the annual concert series

    Improv:21

    (MOVING IMAGES) – A series of discussions and performances with leading artists of today’s improvisational music scene, organized by the ROVA Saxophone Quartet. New programs are being added to the Archive and eventually this series will reside in the Other Minds collection.

    ROVA Saxophone Quartet
    Oliver Lake
    Fred Frith
    Nels Cline
    Ned Rothenberg
    Carla Kihlstedt
    Miya Masaoka
    Gino Robair

    John Ronsheim

    (AUDIO) – History of contemporary Western classical music lectures with the Antioch College (Ohio) Professor. More than twenty lectures. According to one citation, Prof. Ronsheim lived in Italy after the war, attended Darmstadt, and met many of the composers whom he discusses. Lecture of November 28 covers Dallapiccola, Goethe Lieder, early Musique Concrète, electronic music by Boulez and Stockhausen, early Nono, Webern’s Op. 21. Classroom administrative content has been edited from the recordings. See www.ronsheim.org for more details.

    Naxos Classical Music Spotlight

    A series of short podcast documentaries from the Naxos label: John Adams, Bartok, Cage, Copeland, Philip Glass, Hovhaness, Ives, Mahler, Arvo Part, Shostakovich, Takemitsu, and more.

    Texts

    Nicolas Slonimsky – Baker’s Biographical Dictionary Of Musicians
    Landmark classical music reference tome, nearly 2000 pages. This is the 5th edition from 1958. (The last publication during Slonimsky’s lifetime was the 8th edition of 1992.)

    Willi Apel – Harvard Dictionary of Music (6th printing, 1950, 850 pages)

    Charles Ives – Essays Before a Sonata
    Claude Debussy – writings, scores, studies of Debussy
    Leo Ornstein
    Ezra Pound’s 1927 book on George Antheil, with a beautiful flip-book display (shown).
    Several books on Stravinksy, including his autobiography, conversations, E.W. White.
    Short piano scores from the early 1920s by Henry Cowell: Fabric ; What’s This; The Voice of Lir (with Leo Ornstein’s ‘A la Chinoise’); Amiable Conversation.

    Experimental music

    – mostly non-classical, but including some musique concrète works, from the Netlabels subcollection:

    Miscellany

    Francis Dhomont remixes

    Jordon Zorker

    Justice League of Public Domain Victorian Characters?

    Yeah, it doesn’t exactly roll off the tongue. Alan Moore’s series, The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen , affords the readers a Steampunk setting for these fanciful creations of Victorian imagination.

    The original series, illustrated bye Kevin O’Neill, premiered in 1999 with Jim Lee’s Wildstorm Comics imprint and DC Comics formidable backing. Moore has noted as literary influences such diverse authors as William S. Burroughs, Douglas Adams, Aleister Crowley, and Oscar Wilde.

    The value of keeping literary characters available in the public domain is exhibited in not only Alan Moore’s authorship, but with the character’s portrayal across multiple forms of media delivery. It is unfortunate Moore has developed such an acrimonious relationship with Hollywood and we won’t have the chance to see his stories through a collaborative lens, as the movie industry takes his work from the page to the screen.

    At any rate, hope you enjoy a ride with some the iconic personalities of modern Western culture.

    Source works of the principal characters:

    Wilhelmina Murray

    • Dracula by Bram Stoker

    Archive related media: Movie

    Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde

    • The Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde by Robert Louis Stevenson

    Archive related media: Text

    The strange case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. Illustrated by Charles Raymond Macauley

    Dr. Fu Manchu

    • The Mystery of Dr. Fu Manchu by Sax Rohmer

    Archive related media: Old Time Radio

    The Shadow of Fu Manchu
    Serial melodrama, based on the stories by Sax Rohmer.

    http://www.archive.org/details/FuManchuOTRKIBM

    Allan Quatermain

    • King Solomon’s Mines by H. Rider Haggard

    Archive related media: Movie

    http://www.archive.org/details/king_solomans_mine

    Capt. Capt. Nemo (Prince Dakkar?)

    • Jules Verne’s Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea and The Mysterious Island

    Archive related media: Text

    http://www.archive.org/details/worksofjulesvern05vern

    Sherlock Holmes

    • Stories by Arthur Conan Doyle

    Archive related media: Audio Book

    http://www.archive.org/details/return_holmes_0708_librivox

    – baird