Interested to hear your thoughts on this conversation! By the way if you join either Sarah's or my Patreon there is a bonus video where we show some of our noise techniques and also we share over half an hour of modular synth recordings we did together which you're allowed to download and use freely in your own music :) patreon.com/andrewhuang patreon.com/sarahbellereid
@baplotnik3 ай бұрын
I pretty much only listen to classical music but I respect experimental music
@virusinethic3 ай бұрын
Thanks for that. I’m so glad to see that you two decided to gather and have this video
@sat12413 ай бұрын
what would really blow people's minds if you put together a small group of musicians playing acoustic instruments but for it to be all noise and played seriously
@baplotnik3 ай бұрын
@@sat1241 they've done that before on live TV
@sat12413 ай бұрын
@@baplotnik I don't think so, whats the Andrew Huang youtube video title? I'm not talking about making sound with found objects. I'm talking about making non-"musical" sounds on acoustic musical instruments
@CrankyOldNerd3 ай бұрын
The "I got in trouble for being creative instead of performative' comment about trumpet class hit me pretty squarely in the revelation moment thing. Its also amazing how that can 'stick' with you your whole life, some off hand comment by an instructor to a younger person and here it is 30 years later and it still defines things you do.
@bricelory95343 ай бұрын
To be fair, my classical experience *never* discouraged composition and exploration. I'm really sorry Sarah had to deal with such a rigid teacher as a youth. That's a sadly poisonous attitude for a teacher to have and convey.
@mortisCZ3 ай бұрын
It might be some classism but my teachers always told me that I can explore and compose when I learned to play and dissect what already exists. I got so bored after ten years of daily training that I can't find any joy in playing music even twenty years later.
@crhkrebs3 ай бұрын
To be fair, it’s not always the Professor. So decades ago, way before DAWs existed, my wife and I both took a Computer Music course at a local University Music Dept. The class was made up of about 60% music students, about 30% engineering students (taking their elective course), and the rest were “other”, such as we both (newly graduated Dentists). My wife had an ARCT in piano performance and I had a long interest in electronic music. Apart from a small group of outliers, the biggest resistance and push back in the course came from the music students. ‘This is dumb”, “This is just noise” “This isn’t music”, and “This hurts my ears”, were some of the refrains I heard. Conversely, the engineering students went whole hog into the course. I assume they enjoyed exercising a bit of creative freedom, away from their normal studies. Now this is just a sample size of one class and it was a long time ago, so things are probably different now. I downsized my 5U modular system a few years back, and what I discarded made up a small self contained system in of itself. Instead of selling it off, I donated it to another local University’s Music Dept. They were delighted and are expanding their Electronic Music” curriculum. A good sign.
@VampireHeart5183 ай бұрын
Right, I mean there's a whole branch called 'contemporary classical music' :)) that has been promoting the things discussed in the vid for aaa centuryy But yeah, instrument teachers often are... err... against it :)) and discourage their students from trying extended techniques at least...
@crhkrebs3 ай бұрын
@@VampireHeart518 the Professor teaching the computer music course was one of these ‘contemporary classical” composers. He was very open with his definition of music and noise and posed the same questions Sarah and Andrew did in the video. I think he played some computer music coming out of IRCAM that caused the one girl to claim, “This hurts my ears”. 🤔 It was a long time ago and I may have some details wrong,, lol.
@PauLtus_B3 ай бұрын
@VampireHeart518 I've heard a contemporary classical composter getting frustrated for feeling they're just not allowed to exist alongside the greats. There's definitely interest but ultimately most people are just focused on Beethoven, Mozart, Bach etc.
@DamianSol3 ай бұрын
I was a classical violin kid, started at 3 with Suzuki. Got very serious and traditional at 7, started entering concerto competitions. My teacher told me I could never be a composer, I was just a performer. Similarly discouraged me from learning guitar. I ended up playing Paganini’s 1st concerto for 3 straight years, which broke me, so he lost me at 16. I started a rock band, started learning jazz, never looked back. I’m still playing with those musicians I connected with at 16, 30 years later. I’m grateful for my skill and experience, but I have zero regret over leaving the fold. Now one of my favorite music activities is making interesting noise.
@Lime_Tree_Audio3 ай бұрын
I was just about to say... What about jazz? But you alread had ;-)
@SkribbleNL3 ай бұрын
I always find it so odd when someone else has such strong prejudice about yourself and tries to convince you, especially to a child which is clearly doing great and showing good learning capacities for a similar field/skill. Happy you got out and made friends for life!
@DamianSol3 ай бұрын
@@SkribbleNL I couldn’t agree more. And thank you!
@VampireHeart5183 ай бұрын
Did you look for a different professor?
@DamianSol3 ай бұрын
@@VampireHeart518 Eventually my teacher (he was head of the string department at the university I attended) retired, and I got a new teacher. She encouraged me to play jazz and introduced me to the Turtle Island String Quartet, one of whom she happened to be married to. That was the beginning of the end for me and the overbearing teacher, and I’m forever grateful to her
@wackyjjackie3 ай бұрын
The classical to noise pipeline is real and it cannot be stopped
@Sekuens3 ай бұрын
😂
@eyvindjr3 ай бұрын
It is, but it is already a tradition going pretty far back. I respect Andrew Huang for studying the roots of it! One of the main pioneers of "noise music" was born in 1883: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edgard_Var%C3%A8se
@hank15193 ай бұрын
Will I have to pay royalties to my toilet?
@UniMatrix_13 ай бұрын
real
@TheZanger3 ай бұрын
Years ago I sent my first ep to a programmer at a certain radiostation here in Belgium and the answer I got was that they were a bit scared of my music. At first I was a bit upset but eventually I realised that this was actually a great compliment. They had an emotional response and that’s what is important.
@VampireHeart5183 ай бұрын
I think it's mostly because people are programmed (no pun intended) by decades of movies to associate certain sounds with certain, VERY narrow, feelings. Much of the vocabulary in more avantgarde music is, in movies, used exclusively for horror basically... any dissonance, tension, weird texture, gestures, BAM, horror :)) urgh.
@PauLtus_B3 ай бұрын
I think so many people are so set on the things they know. When they don't immediately like it they reject it. I think it's sad to hear most people just have their music taste set from when they're 14, and then hear them complain that nothing gets to them as much anymore. …but the problem is that they're no longer open to let art shape their taste. Any time you come across something weird that you might not like but makes you feel something interesting it's a good time to keep exploring that.
@emaniacgames83913 ай бұрын
You two need to write the thesis. Write the manifesto. Indoctrinate the masses. Noise music is music. I love you both.
@alb_reuel3 ай бұрын
@@emaniacgames8391 try silver apples of the moon it was released july 1967, almost 60 years ago, youtube wasn't around yet. will blow your mind
@Crashinginthesamecar13 ай бұрын
Yep
@emaniacgames83913 ай бұрын
@futurememories1660 right, I haven’t dug very deep into noise music. But I do enjoy listening and making it. Any suggestions?!
@alb_reuel3 ай бұрын
@@emaniacgames8391 not exactly my cup of tea, but it's basically a world of its own, the 00s/10s (in the us) had a lot of bands that mixed noise and pop music, bands like black dice and (early) animal collective, i think it's a good entry point. japan has a pretty intense scene, lots of bands from there, same period. then theres some classic bands like boris and sonic youth, boredoms, deerhoof. punk was an easy gateway to noise too that's worth checking out, bands like throbbing gristle, or protopunk german act NEU. this coming from a more commercial side of things. the amount of jazz and more classical forays into noise go from free jazz (e. g. ascension by john coltrane), to xenakis, stockhausen, spectral music etc. it's absolutely a world of its own and fascinating. then again, not my cup of tea.
@VampireHeart5183 ай бұрын
Funnily enough, a manifesto has been written: in 1913 :D but yeah, more people need to get on board haha (&here is it: ''The Art of Noises (Italian: L'arte dei Rumori) is a Futurist manifesto written by Luigi Russolo in a 1913 letter to friend and Futurist composer Francesco Balilla Pratella. In it, Russolo argues that the human ear has become accustomed to the speed, energy, and noise of the urban industrial soundscape; furthermore, this new sonic palette requires a new approach to musical instrumentation and composition.'' en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Art_of_Noises#:~:text=The%20Art%20of%20Noises%20(Italian,Futurist%20composer%20Francesco%20Balilla%20Pratella. )
@billsallak48873 ай бұрын
Wow, this conversation is so wonderful and *so necessary*. I teach in a university music department and started an audio production program a few years ago in what was otherwise a conventional Midwestern public-school-teacher-training-oriented department, and so much of what your saying rings true with my own background and current situation. What amazes me are some of my colleagues' objections to this kind of work merely existing alongside other kinds of music-making in the department; it's almost like they view it as a sort of contagion. (It's not a universal attitude, but there's enough of it to make my job harder, and *definitely* enough to make some students' lives harder.) You definitely hit on some of the same issues I've dealt with, especially how working in audio/noise/tech smears the boundaries between composing and performing. And if you're working in something like VCV Rack, you're also smearing the lines between those activities and instrument-building, and that just doesn't compute in the classical world. It's much more like the pedagogical structure you find in an art department: classes are taught in particular techniques, working toward a more holisitic goal of individual student art-object-making. Anyway, thanks so much for this.
@andrewhuang3 ай бұрын
It’s so unfortunate to be met with those attitudes that aren’t even open to alternate approaches co-existing. You’re doing good work!
@warp99883 ай бұрын
As an acoustic guitar player, fret noise was my "bete noire" for a while, and then I learned to love it. When I play a real piano, it's the damper pedal sound. Real instruments have noise in them. It's part of them. The vocalist breathing is a part of the music too. These noises are part of us, and (at least notionally) our instruments being "alive". A lot of our inculturated values about "what is music" are nothing more, and nothing less, than social conventions. "I am a musician" is a membership in a social class, and there seems to be a lot of "policing" in human social classes. "You may be a musician, but you're not a CLASSICAL musician!". Translation: CLASSICAL MUSICIANS are REAL MUSICIANS, and you are not that. We also call this "gatekeeping". And it is. And humans do it in a lot of contexts. It's not very helpful, mostly. We tend to do that stuff and harm ourselves and others a lot, for what benefit? What are we protecting? Who or what are we serving by telling other people that their ideas and musical work are worthless, or "worth less"?
@fortissimoX3 ай бұрын
"We tend to do that stuff and harm ourselves and others a lot, for what benefit? What are we protecting?" In all these cases there's a deep insecurity of ego, which protects itself by all the means you've described. It's deeply rooted in all levels of society, music is in fact just a relatively benign example.
@SSquirrel19763 ай бұрын
Back in 2002 I was trying college for a second time and I was in a music appreciation class taught by this professor who was deep in medieval madrigals. One day she sat in on our smaller class when we had brought in examples of things we thought our fellow students would think wasn't music. I brought in Merzbow. One other guy in my class thought Merzbow was music and the TA challenged them on it. Afterwards I was talking to the professor and she was interested so I loaned her 3 albums. She claimed to listen to them and really enjoy it. Was an interesting class for sure
@basedvirtue3 ай бұрын
Madrigals and Merzbow! Two of the best things ever created :)
@steveapostolides29753 ай бұрын
I remember many years ago, reading an article about ‘creative listening’ It talked about standing in a busy street, and listening to the ambience as an orchestra, the rumble of traffic as bass, engine sounds as mid ranges, and maybe background birdsong, or people talking as top end. I still do this, and it was great to hear you both touch on this in this discussion. 💚😎
@unsoundmethodology3 ай бұрын
The discussion of "accidents" reminds me of the observation I always come back to, that so much in electric and electronic music comes about from accidents and side-effects. Feedback turned amplifiers into oscillators, the filters that the radio and telephone companies invented for keeping signals out became the ones that sculpt musical timbre, broken and clipping amps became desirable fuzz and distortion on electric guitars - and the volt-per-octave exponential curve in modular synths is mostly something BJT transistors just do. Of course people then worked very hard to tame all these, but it's amazing how so many of the parts and processes we work with were intended for some entirely different application or method of functioning.
@xkmtjxtnx3 ай бұрын
Andrew, i am so happy that you put out a video about this. I'm a noise musician and you're one of the people who made me interested in seriously taking up making music in the first place (i also have a history with classical music, i was learning piano in a music school from like 6 to 10 years old, but discovered noise more so through punk, hardcore and generally weird internet music later on in my early teens)
@HANGINGOUTWITHAUDIOPHILES3 ай бұрын
As Sun Ra so aptly put it “space is the place” for your mind. Forget the earthly constraints. It’s easy to nod internally about embracing the outer limits of perception but we often fall into habits and dwell in familiar lands. Nothing wrong with the house by the lake and the beautiful vistas but with all of space to explore it does invite the Intrepid to roam free. Really enjoyed this conversation :)
@paxson20003 ай бұрын
Yes we must “travel the spaceways” from sonic “planet to” sonic “planet”
@QuantumOptix3 ай бұрын
I wish more people could understand this about electronic music, there are those who claim that new technologies are 'ruining music' when in reality they are simply opening doors to infinite untapped creative realms.
@crnkmnky2 күн бұрын
🎶 _SPACE TIIIIIIIME!_ 🧑🚀
@wendelynmusic3 ай бұрын
I got into Electronics through Morton Subotnik, Wendy Carlos, Tangerine Dream and Fripp and Eno. I got into noise through Pierre Henri and Fred Frith and Henry Cow. I got into acoustic noise through Art Ensemble of Chicago, Sam Rivers Quartet and Anthony Braxton. The 60's and 70's was such an awesome time for musical experimentation. I was so lucky to be there for that.
@davidscanlan3 ай бұрын
John Cage: “Silence is music” Andrew Huang: “especially if there are blinking lights”
@Kevin-rk4qu3 ай бұрын
Reminds me of the song Echoes from Pink Floyd. 9 minutes into the song, it dives into complete chaos, but it felt appropriate as it was part of the journey of the 22 minute song. It makes you feel uncomfortable during this section as it doesn't sound like anything human, but once it transitions to the ending of the song, it completely elevates it.
@c.augustin3 ай бұрын
What immediately came to my mind: Musique concrète. It never became mainstream, but was very influential. Jean-Michel Jarre was a student of Pierre Schaeffer, and the influence can be heard in many of his pieces. Kraftwerk was influenced by it, and early Tangerine Dream clearly was (in their experimental phase). And many more.
@VampireHeart5183 ай бұрын
Yeah, and avantgarde *is* classical music. But WOW, didn't know J-MJ was a student of Schaeffer!! How cool
@mooseyard3 ай бұрын
Paul McCartney was really excited by musique concrete. He hung out with a lot of London's avant-garde in the mid 60s. It was his idea to use layers of tape loops in “Tomorrow Never Knows”, and I think he came up with the chopped-up bits of circus music in “Mr Kite”. Then of course John assembled the huge musique concrete opus “Revolution 9”.
@c.augustin3 ай бұрын
@@mooseyard Forgot about that!
@NavelOrangeGazer3 ай бұрын
Hip hop production especially the heavy sample collage approach is the legacy of musique concrete stuff like Bomb Squad, Madlib, etc.
@anothercouture3 ай бұрын
Fascinating chat. You two should do a podcast or series along these lines. I'd love to hear these ideas examined and explored in a longer form.
@achtube853 ай бұрын
I am not a musician and I found this conversation to be very inspiring. Embracing play and exploration in life as opposed to following a straight line that feels oppressive. Allowing ourselves to feel safe in these alternative ways to relate to our practice.
@vinceknowseverything3 ай бұрын
Sarah's thoughts and perspective about music and noise is beautiful! And Andrew has always pushed the boundaries when it comes to sound and musical creativity. You both are very unique musicians and a great source of musical inspiration!💙🙏🏻
@CatFish1073 ай бұрын
I absolutely adore Sarah's mindset and approach. Thanks for having her on for this chat. While the both of you were discovering these ways of thinking in the library at university, I've been discovering them on youtube. I very much appreciate the both of you, and others like you, who share so much knowledge and perspective with the world on here. Noisy textures and timbres have always tickled my "ooooh, shiny" response, every since I heard my first distorted guitar. Abrasive and aggressive resonates with me far more profoundly than pretty and smooth.
@xlat8083 ай бұрын
Great conversation. So much acceptance here. It made me cry.
@reset_rt3 ай бұрын
I absolutely loved sitting in and help edit this discussion. I really resonate with “leaving” classical music. I loved performing and playing with my flute, but wasn’t a fan of how rigorous and close-minded it was at times. I ultimately left to pursue more music composition and music production on my own time during my undergrad. However, it wasn’t until I encountered free improvisation and avante grade styles of music in the composition stream that really freed me from the strict black and white of ‘what is noise’ and ‘what is music’. I don’t own a piece of modular gear at all, but it’s extremely liberating to just make sound regardless of whatever the means, whether playing an instrument with extended techniques with no thought for notated composition, or pushing your sound into a random assortment of effects and experimenting what might happen. At the end of the day, if it sounds good, and you feel good doing it, then that’s great. 😊 No hate on classical music, as it got me started into my musical journey, but it doesn’t mean I have to end with it 🎶
@VampireHeart5183 ай бұрын
but... the avantgarde styles of music ARE classical music :) sure, many in the interpreting & instrument-playing field are against that too :)) I just want people to know that this is not a separate thing, it is a niche IN the classical world
@reset_rt3 ай бұрын
@@VampireHeart518 you're right! Definitely a more experimental niche :) and it did come from the western classical tradition
@renevanderkraats224Ай бұрын
While we're talking sound, I dig Sarah's voice. Soft, soothing....and sensual actually. Could listen to that lady for hours.
@derrickyoung4843 ай бұрын
Wow! You two are my tribe! And as a long time DJ (since 1979) and producer, you have articulated and validated where I landed. It’s normal now, but it surely not accepted by my music teachers back in the day. Thank you for this!
@paranoid973 ай бұрын
I resonate with both of you so much! i started like a traditional musician and later on, when i started my production road i played with so much noise and its very exciting!! This is gonna be a video that i'll be visiting from time to time i can assure you that, much respect and love ♥️
@hrlarson3 ай бұрын
I think it's not only classical, but a lot of people think about art in absolutes. "The perfect tone", "the best instrumentalist", "perfect pitch". There's a lot to be won if we just relax and enjoy. And I'm not talking about using high end equipment and make it sound like substandard supposed crap. Do your thing with your things where you stand.
@Aquarosegarden3 ай бұрын
Sarah needs to write a book. It's like music to my ears hearing her explain her brilliant perspectives ❤
@Somethingpolicysomething3 ай бұрын
I had a great teacher 20 years ago named Fred who told us to stop listening to, and categorizing things as music, but more appreciating sound. He made some remarkable electronic music from what most consider noise.
@VampireHeart5183 ай бұрын
Really. I think that approach nudges us to appreciate the life around us more too :)
@WorkignTF23 ай бұрын
This reminds me so much of the art history and philosophy of art I learned about in my fine art degree. The conversation about "what is music vs. sound" parallels so many of the attempts to ask "what is art". It's a shame - besides John Cage, I found there was a lot of condescension and dismissive was towards music in the fine art world. I think part of that comes back to how music vs. noise is constructed, and how music is pigeonholed by popular expectations into offering a limited range of aesthetic experiences. When sound is appealing, we call it music and valuable, and when it's unappealing, we call it noise and worthless - but art is far more free to be valued for being unappealing. I wonder if part of this double standard comes down to the simple fact that you can look away from something quite easily, but tuning out a sound is a much more difficult and slow process.
@VampireHeart5183 ай бұрын
And there are so many fantastic composers, both in the 20th century and living now! Great point - yes, there is more to the art and experience of music than just 'pleasant air wiggles' Interesting last point, it crossed my mind as well that it may be one of the reasons of many people's... hostility. I guess in the concert hall / space one feels a bit like being kept hostage. And usually you don't know how long each piece will take
@dougc843 ай бұрын
i’ve been playing music for over 20 years and love it. but the joy you both share in this conversation is on a completely different level. sarah’s excitement is genuinely exciting me. i want to hear more of you two discuss!
@Ian-gw2vx2 ай бұрын
I had no idea you both such an academic background. Good for you for following your heart. I'm 57 and still haven't found where i am going with my sounds. Thanks for the ref to experimental artists I hadn't heard of.
@OAmus3 ай бұрын
Amazing amazing! I've been following Sarah for a while, she is such an eloquent communicator on music and creativity in the broad sense. Will definitely be coming back to quotes from this video often.
@PEBeaudoin3 ай бұрын
this is something I think All of my students need to see from now on - it is just that good! Thank you both.
@DreamerAirazel3 ай бұрын
As I was growing up, I was thrown into the world of funky chords due to growing up in a baptist household. As such, my idea of music was already fairly broad. Around the same time, I played a lot of games from Nintendo (and a few from Sega), which introduced me to chiptune, jazz, rock, metal. The idea that noise could be a part of music was entrained into me by the very existence of the noise channel in 8-bit and 16-bit music, and I didn't even know that. I was then introduced to dubstep, drums & bass, liquid dnb, chipstep, et cetera; I also learned about drumline pieces, which are literally nothing by percussion doing their thing. With my progression of music exploration, it was easy for me to call these things music. But what is the difference between a drumline playing 12 different varieties of drums and someone playing on pots and pans with a wooden spoon? What's the difference between brush strokes on a snare drum and the chug of a locomotive's wheel-especially considering the brushes are often used to emulate a train's sound in concert bands? And once I found Andrew Huang's videos (Superfast Beatmaking, Song Challenge, random videos of taking random objects and making music out of them), I saw the connection immediately. I've long since reached the point of believing that genre cannot contain music-even music of similar vibe or history (just look at gospel, jazz, and blues). Noise is just what music is, and that is beautiful-genres are moreso the way we as creators narrow the scope of that noise to create the vibe we're looking for. Everyone makes noise-harsh synthesized static, the roaring distortion of a drop-tuning guitar, the scream of an overblown saxophone, the thunder of a rolled snare, the sea of voices cheering for the performers on stage. That's noise. That's music. All it takes is for the people listening to realize that.
@marcussmithereens-smithert54093 ай бұрын
I like that take on genres. Well put.
@ethermod3073 ай бұрын
You guys need to connect with the excellent composer/youtube creator/podcaster Samuel Andreyev. A discussion together would be extremely useful for a lot of people who seem stuck between various "walls" of sound creation.
@ToyKeeper3 ай бұрын
I learned music theory in school... but I didn't _understand_ it until I left that all behind and got into synthesis. Traditional music theory made it _much harder_ to understand anything, and mostly just felt like unnecessarily complex historical baggage. Nothing really "clicked" until I switched from piano to an isomorphic instrument, derived note scales myself from basic math, pulled out a spectrometer, and started making sounds from scratch with synthesizers. It also helped quite a bit to avoid deliberate or analytical methods and play intuitively by feel, like humming ideas into a voice recorder while going about my day, then later using that as a scaffold to build a song around... and adding layers by just jamming along with my incomplete tracks and saving the good bits. To understand music, I had to unlearn everything I was taught in music school.
@VampireHeart5183 ай бұрын
Could you exemplify what are the contents of what you refer to as 'music theory'? Genuinely curious, as I feel that americans have a different definition from what I'm used to :)
@ToyKeeper3 ай бұрын
@@VampireHeart518 Schools taught how to read sheet music and mechanically perform it, and based all music education on a system designed for the piano. This makes the key of Ionian C major easier, at the expense of almost every other key and scale, and artificially necessitates learning everything 12 times since it's different in each key. The actual reasons behind things weren't explored, and instead educators relied on a lot of rote memorization and a general sense of woo about how stuff worked. Mere musicians weren't meant to concern themselves with such things; they were meant to just practice repetition and obedience as tools of a conductor, who in turn was merely following instructions handed down from a wizard. Composing music was treated as an advanced topic, black magic, to be approached with caution and reverence, from a very deliberate and analytical perspective. It was like teaching someone how to create cooking recipes by teaching them about enzymes and peptide-protein interactions using pen and paper... when really they just needed to spend some time in a kitchen putting ingredients together to get a feel for what works. So I ended up having to learn all the important stuff on my own... mostly by just messing around and having fun with synths and loopers and spectrum analyzers and stuff.
@jared_bowden3 ай бұрын
I've never taken a collegiate-level theory course since I studied STEM in college instead, but from what I've seen the way it's typically taught seems "confused". In addition to 'historical baggage' (like using basso continue to analyze a piece built on fundamental bass, for example) it seems like the whole pedagogical approach struggles to separate music notation from music theory. Also everyone is obsessed with the piano, which probably stunts learning to an extent. I've thought about making a series that teaches theory in a more scientific way where subjects build off of each other, maybe some day I'll get around to it.
@jonathanwingmusic2 ай бұрын
I agree with this - concepts about music theory, composition, orchestration and the harmonic series all started to make so much more sense to me once I learned synthesis from scratch, which is really at its core a lesson in how sound works, and how/why instruments sound the way they do and what timbres and combinations can be created to either complement or contrast one another. Now when I approach composition, whether for electronic music or a acoustic instruments, I make more deliberate choices about both harmony and instrumentation informed by ideas of how waveforms work, also thinking about the contour of sound in terms of envelopes. So much that didn't make sense at first from my music theory books suddenly clicked when I thought of it from a synth perspective!
@briannolan3 ай бұрын
When The Beatles were recording I Feel Fine, John Lennon leaned his electrified acoustic guitar against an amplifier, which caused audio feedback. The band members liked the sound and asked producer George Martin to incorporate it into the song. He suggested putting at the beginning of the song. Lennon proudly proclaimed that it was the first intentional use of feedback in a studio recording.
@eddiethemusicproducer3 ай бұрын
I’ve always been a fan of Andrew and the channel and watching the creative process in each video. Even if I don’t vibe with the music of a specific video, I’m always inspired by the process of experimenting. It gives me the courage to step out creatively on my projects.
@CaptainGerBear3 ай бұрын
When you describe picking something musical out of acoustic chaos, that is really not dissimilar from seeing shapes in clouds, or seeing the suggestion of a form emerge from a speckled floor tile. This is something we do in visual media all the time, so it's not surprising to me that the same thing can be done with sound.
@garygimmestad42723 ай бұрын
About mistakes (I’m improvising these thoughts): For a listener, mistakes are only detectable if there’s a predetermined map; they’re heard as disruptions of expectations. Or in arhythmic noise music. To a performer, a mistake is an unrealized intention; instead there’s an unintentional sound. Our response to mistakes depends on genre. If it’s perceivable in, say, a performance of a Bach Prelude, a single note error might quickly disappear from consciousness if the performer carries on as if it didn’t happen (the performer may be internally aghast!). When there is no map, say, in a rhythmically erratic electronic piece, or Ornette Coleman playing free jazz, mistakes are banished. In the Bach, there’s no fixing it, there’s only carrying on. In jazz, a mistake might be perceivable but it can also be an opportunity. It’s only one psychological element for musicians, but one of the appeals of noise music is to live in a world where mistakes are banished.
@Sharpened_Spoon3 ай бұрын
This is such a valuable discussion! Thanks for taking the time to collate these thoughts for all the curious minds that may be looking for validation outside of their more traditional mentors. It hurt to hear Sarah describe her experience when branching into composition and being reprimanded; an artist seeking more perspectives for their craft should be praised, not shut down for the sake of retaining a tenure. Deeply appreciate what you both do for music!
@andrij.demianczuk3 ай бұрын
Also, I think that ‘play’ is so important to the creative and expressive process. I have the most fun just finding new ways to explore my world too.
@CengizArslanpay3 ай бұрын
As someone who is performing / composing Classical Ottoman Music and Noise I can say, the more you know more about the practice of both(it could be any) styles of music the more they improve each other reciprocally. Music in the end is an approach on making noise anyways :) There is a very nice quote of Larry Polansky: " Music shouldn’t be about me guarding my style or me putting down historical claims on things. It should rather be a fluid bidirectional and N-directional process. " Thank you for this video and have a creative journey! :)
@StudioMagnetique3 ай бұрын
Great conversation. Just a pleasure to listen to you guys riff on topics near and dear to me. Many thanks.
@tracyharms35483 ай бұрын
Love seeing you take on this topic together. I see myself yearning to jump in and interject but what you say here is all good and worth saying. Thanks!
@123jkjk1233 ай бұрын
Reminded me right away of Frank Zappa teaching Steve Allen to play the bicycle way back in 1963. He was definitely exploring the same questions - what is noise? what is music?
@VampireHeart5183 ай бұрын
A theme explored as well in the Classical world (which the avantgarde was a part of), starting about a century ago
@snidedj3 ай бұрын
Love this chat, thank you both. Interesting to hear lots of these concepts discussed out loud as I don't have the musical vocabulary to describe some of them. Also nice to hear the debate on what music actually consists of and how it can be expressed in different ways and how different people perceive and enjoy it.
@soundthirst3 ай бұрын
holy cow sara ! my one modular synthesis professor loves her !! glad to see it
@freedom48432 ай бұрын
Some great ideas from both of you - so liberating. Thank you.
@andrij.demianczuk3 ай бұрын
Man I am LOVING Andrew’s personal style these days. Dude’s on fire and looks like a million bucks! For me, I’m in love with the imperfection of medium. For example, I mistakenly found that my field recorder picks up some crazy frequencies from a PVM monitor I have in my studio. I found that experimenting with that using that as the center of my compositions brings them into realms I wouldn’t have explored otherwise. I like mixing classic jazz with electronic interference and feedback for example and it sounds unreal to my ears!
@Gongtopia3 ай бұрын
This sort of thing can happen in other types of music besides classical. Back when I was at university, I was at a school with a very successful jazz oriented music program. I liked jazz, but I was the outlier because, as a percussionist, I kept asking about sounds and noise. Finally, I asked my percussion teacher, who played in a well known symphony, about using sheet metal and other found items as percussion. They didn't know much about anything outside of strict classical percussion, but gave me a copy of the score for John Cage's 'First Construction in Metals'. This started me on a whole new journey of working with 'sounds' and I haven't stopped since!
@MxLaelia3 ай бұрын
I can relate SOOOO much, coming fron the same background: classically trained but then merged into electroacoustic which is, to me, the complete opposite, and made me explore the world of sounds. I love it! Thank you for sharing your perspective, thoughts, and experiences ❤
@fauxlamarr3 ай бұрын
Love this discussion. Super relevant to my current feelings about music and sound.
@highimpactsexualviolence55123 ай бұрын
not even five minutes into this video and it's already resonating a lot. From growing up in a classical music environment to getting interested in synthesis to learning about Pauline Oliveros to hearing the music in every sound (including all the sounds Sarah mentioned). Now I'm enjoying experimenting with anything from the usual melodic, blues/jazz style of improvisation to noise, synthesizers, guitar feedback and anything else I can get my hands on and it's been so freeing and encouraging me to expand my musical horizons, and it's great to see other musicians I respect sharing those same experiences.
@cillobillo10593 ай бұрын
Yes yes yes. Love to see Sarah Belle Reid. Can’t wait to watch this. Thanks
@EllaPlaysSynths3 ай бұрын
Yes!! I wrote my B.M thesis on Pauline's practice, and wrote series of pieces based on her approaches. So happy to see people like her, and Morton Subotnick mentioned here!
@analog-dreams3 ай бұрын
As someone who's really digging into ambient/"noise" music lately, this conversation was incredibly appreciated
@hatsuneKuuma3 ай бұрын
i've felt so alone in this pipeline for so long, i'd spent almost two decades trying to shoehorn myself into acceptance in the classical scenes with my wierd synth/trumpet practice, and it felt so futile so often. i love to see both of yall finding joy and success at the other side of this !!
@Flaaroni3 ай бұрын
This is the collaboration I never knew I needed, coming from a musician who also went through the classical to synth nerd pipeline
@jarosawmajchrzak57693 ай бұрын
that is incredible on so many levels - first, I agree with you both on this, let me call it, "modular music theory" - where you play with textures, modulation, noise filtered and enveloped etc. and so on. But the other thing is that I observe you both separately for some time and you brought a lot of musical ideas to me, and suddenly you both talk to each other and the two stories combine. And it makes perfect sense to me, as I new them as separate, but coherent. Like I would see my friends meet :)
@smrchk21333 ай бұрын
This was amazing! Super interesting and I can relate to literally everything you two talked about. I also left the world of classical music (conservatory classically trained pianist) and deep dived into electronic music in the broad sense of the word because I felt extremely restricted by all the shoulds and shouldn’t of the classical music world. And what a journey it’s been! My moto is: experiment, try new things, there are no rules.
@jonthecomposer3 ай бұрын
Maaaaaaaan! You guys are two people after my musical heart! Not necessarily because of genre or style or anything, but because of UNDERSTANDING. I think one of the biggest things people miss is that timbre IS the combination of a fundamental and/or overtones and/or noise. When I was young in the 80s, I got a CASIO SK-1 sampling keyboard. It was GREAT. And it had "drawbars" that weren't that, but you could press overtone buttons to create custom sounds where each press brought that overtone out a bit more. So 4 presses was more of that overtone than 2. So they did the same thing as drawbars. And that gave me a basic understanding of how sounds are "put together." Then from sampling and finding a bug where it might sample a sound and the sound only be a few milliseconds long. So if you looped it (sustain during key press), you would hear a note, not from the sound itself, but from the sound REPEATING. That gave me an understanding that octaves are just twice the frequency. From that I figured out how to compute the equal temperament tuning frequencies. Also, after having done a lot of home recording, I started "hearing noise in music" instead of the opposite. Like a lot of frequencies squished together can make speakers and ears unhappy. It's not that "noise" in and of itself is bad or unpleasant. It's that what people normally label as "noise" is irritating to them. Really, noise is just a lack of a prominent fundamental. Some noise you want. Some you don't. I did a recording once where the hiss of the mic was nuts. And I HATED it. But then, after a while when I started LISTENING, the hiss actually gave it a "mood" all its own. The song was meant as a 40s style piano, bass, drum, singer type of slow crooner tune. The more I listened, the more I liked it. Now, as soon as the song comes on, it's like a sigh. It just puts you "there" where you need to be with THAT particular song. It's kind of like how the mono and room noise of Procol Harum's original A Whiter Shade of Pale paints a sonic picture BEHIND all the music (which is phenomenal in itself). Finally, I'm no expert, but I have gleaned over the years that classical used to be a much more "open" genre. It was experimental and many composers - including much of the greats - would routinely improvise. I had a composition class that tore apart some Chopin sonatas and showed how he played loose and fast with the rules of that form. I don't remember that form necessarily. But the teacher was a real appreciator of music and really pointed out how his soft "rebellion" made his music stand out. Not saying it is always appropriate. But I AM saying that you never know unless you TRY! And maybe classical music has become a bit "lost in translation" over the centuries from a ferocious need to preserve itself in its most formulaic sense as to not lose its unique identity as a genre. I'd LOVE to see a very proper classical piece whose main theme is improvised on the spot. That would be.... beyond amazing. Sure. Jazz is great. Classical is great. But I really feel classical improv is a lost art and should definitely be brought back and treated with the respect it should be given.
@antfactor3 ай бұрын
Great discussion which hits on many interesting aspects of one's approaches and ways of finding joy through personal explorations. Great stuff - Cheers!
@peterscherr3 ай бұрын
Thanks so much for doing this, guys... I love both of your musics and presentations. You two together is a magical combination. How about a duo performance series?
@Mia1Goth3 ай бұрын
Great video Andrew, i am experimental music producer and for me this is the only way to be free to express yourself.
@gogotrololo3 ай бұрын
Classical does such a great job helping people appreciate all the subtleties in a sound, and it's no surprise that so many classical folks get really into noise or synth or whatever. Suzanne Ciani is a huge person like this, love her work!
@georgecarr95773 ай бұрын
Thanks guys! This was a GREAT conversation. Excuse me while I riff a moment but ... I just got back from week in Alaska during which I attended a July 4th parade, rode several trains, visited museums, took walks, got a ship to go out and see wildlife, etc. etc. AND I took along a 4 track digital tascam and a PO33. The PO33 is full with sixteen fresh samples from ???? and I have a full 30 minutes of field recordings from every imaginable sound scape taken mostly 1 minute but never more than two minutes at a time. So far I've made through about 10 minutes of the tascam stuff and already filled a whole new bank of 16 sounds on the Zeptocore - and that's by skipping a lot of stuff I plan to use eventually. In other words this conversation was so on point for me it's really serendipitous and I'm so inspired by it. Thanks!!!
@ManuBeker23 ай бұрын
Sarah was my teacher for a couple of classes at CalArts and she was an amazing teacher :') so cool to see her hanging with Andrew Huang
@wellurban3 ай бұрын
Great conversation! I always come back to John Cage’s saying, “The music never stops; only the listening”. I think this applies to all art: “art” isn’t something that’s inherent in the work; it’s a mode of attention. Pauline Oliveros addresses that beautifully as well. Once we’ve got past the somewhat pointless stage of asking “is this art?” or “is this music?”, we can get to more fruitful questions such as “is this interesting?”, “does this move me?”, or “what can I learn from this?”. It seems so pointless to gatekeep the definition of art when we can be creating and enjoying instead.
@lemon21253 ай бұрын
where did Pauline say that? I would love to read/listen to the context
@wellurban3 ай бұрын
@@lemon2125 I’m not sure if Oliveros said something specifically along the lines of the Cage quote: it’s more the general sense from her Deep Listening work that listening can be a creative act, no matter what you’re listening to. She defined Deep Listening as “listening in every possible way to every thing possible to hear no matter what you are doing”. I think that’s from her book “Deep Listening: A Composer’s Sound Practice”.
@omtakes2 ай бұрын
‘loved the discussion the discussion at 12m of random brilliance is similar to visual art, where old sketches and doodles can ignite and help lead the next complete illustration piece.
@plixeon3 ай бұрын
This was such a needed video. Thank you both for sharing these insights and perspectives.
@Nbrobst3 ай бұрын
Such an interesting conversation! I'm a painter who dabbles in music now and then and I found many parallels between my outlook on visual art and both of your thoughts on music. There really is no right or wrong way to create art (as long as no one is being harmed). Exploration, expression, and/or communication is art at its core. Thanks for posting this! P.S. I have your book but I still need to read it 😅
@Matt-Hazel3 ай бұрын
This conversation inspired me to rip this audio and make some rhythmic-ish sounds that pair with all of it to react to this excellent discussion. Thank you for bringing this to the world.
@C.D.Percussion3 ай бұрын
Interesting stuff. I think I had a somewhat "progressive" education while getting my masters in classical percussion. Partly because I had a lot of focus on chamber music (my bachelors) and modern percussion ensemble. John Cage and Iannis Xenakis (like you mentioned) are two Avant-garde composers using electronics elements that also wrote for percussion and made some of our most iconic pieces. In Denmark where I did my masters, I ended up working a lot with the electronic composition students since I never say no to a challenge and are a bit "crazy". The pieces I premier and performed where sometimes multi media and often more based on a general concept or "experimentation". I think you guys would have fit right in.
@ianhickey34233 ай бұрын
This has 100% been my experience with the starts of my real passion for sound, learning about deep listening techniques and playing music that's just a set of instructions. I'm really grateful to my university's composer's orchestra for giving me a chance to dive into interesting sound. I can't remember the name of the piece, but there was one we played where everyone played a random note and then gradually crept toward unison, or as the piece says, until it becomes "shimmering gold"
@MrJodava3 ай бұрын
What a beautiful talk, thanks for the good vibes!
@jimsime13 ай бұрын
Thank you for this wonderful, intelligent and inspiring conversation! Well done! ❤
@uncannyvin3 ай бұрын
The crossover I didn't know I needed. I always liked making noise and concrete music and this pushes me further.
@paintedfoxes98893 ай бұрын
As a multi instrumentalist who has a similar path in the 90s into the early 2000s i can relate to this. this is why i mess with synthsis, tape machines, samplers. filters , delays, so much fun to be made with all these tools. its not unlike a traditional artist getting into pinstriping and going with the flow of pulling lines . its almost a meditation compared to the traditional painter say doing a photo realistic painting. that free form simplicity can really tap into very musical experiences that are far more enjoyable then being able to noodle on my guitar with precision. with that said i enjoy both processes , mixing and matching tools can bring alot to the table. Chemical brothers got me away from alot of traditional sounds. and sampling can teach us new ways of timing, new ways of notation that might not have come naturally alone. and modular is alot like that aswell. its like looking at the clouds and seeing something in the clouds , a Rorschach test , you can find new ideas and it allows the brain to find things in what might be considered just noise. above all, its just fun. I love what is talked about here so much. thanks for sharing your stories and ideas on the matter.
@oo_rahbel_oo3 ай бұрын
well said.
@njcrossroads3 ай бұрын
What a wonderful conversation! I have an experience to share, when noise became music for me. I was in New York City many decades ago, riding the IRT subway from uptown to Grand Central Station on a hot summer day, when the train suddenly stopped between stations. Everyone in the crowed car was just waiting to get moving again, as the temperature slowly increased. I decided to move to another car, hoping it would be less crowded, so I slid the door open to do that. Instead I stayed outside between cars because there was a hint of breeze there. A few minutes later the train started up, and I remained out there. (Maybe not the safest thing to do!) As the train started up with creaks and groans, I found myself listening to the accumulation of sounds as if it were a piece of abstract music. The orchestra of wheel squeaks and bumps along the tracks quickly accelerated to a roar as the train picked up speed, swelling in volume and intensity to an almost unbearable level. But I kept with it, as the cacophony reached full speed, hurtling toward our destination. Then came an elaborate deceleration, as we slowed to come into the station, complete with loud brake squeals and hisses. It seemed to me like a structured piece of music, with intro, crescendo and resolution. When I stepped out onto the platform, I was in a higher state of consciousness, with every face and sound seeming to be part of a colossal multi-media movie. I was high as a kite! This lasted for several minutes as I walked down 42nd Street, until I passed a record store, and my attention narrowed to normal consciousness again. It was an experience I will never forget. It forever changed the way I experience sound and music.
@Sector_VII3 ай бұрын
FANTASTIC VIDEO! Growing up listening to mostly classical and traditional music genres gave me a sense of what music is "supposed" to sound like and how it's supposed to be written. It wasn't until I heard Aphex Twin for the first time where my perception changed and my world just grew even bigger.
@VampireHeart5183 ай бұрын
Classical music continued into the 20th century, so a lot of 'weirdness' happened in the classical world itself (maybe you know them, but I'll name some names: Stravinsky, Cage, Pierre Schaeffer, Xenakis, Ligeti...) It tends to fly under the radar so most people think it ended in like 1900 and then it evolved in film music :)) but there's a loooooooooot of fantastic stuf to be explored ^^
@Sector_VII3 ай бұрын
@@VampireHeart518 Yes! Stravinsky and Xenakis! It's incredible how classical music have inspired modern artists of today and the music they create. so much to explore here. Thank you for the recommendations!
@MargaretHarmer3 ай бұрын
Fantastic conversation! Love Sarah’s modular courses!
@pauldolman74873 ай бұрын
for people who take on an evolved way of living/working the perfection is in the imperfection and that can evolve and change each day.
@firewordsparkler3 ай бұрын
Love this so much. I feel like I'm probably part of the first generation to have grown up with KZbin as my intro to both "noise" and classical music, so it's super interesting to see how they feel at odds with each other in an institutional space when people like you both are applying theory to these newer and avant garde modes of music. Love it!
@VampireHeart5183 ай бұрын
They're only at odds in the instrument departments (and even there not fully). Composition is all about that noise ;)
@pablohrrg86773 ай бұрын
Music has two essential things: it happens through time and affects our auditory experience. Both are essential to our consciousness of the world and our auditory perception of beauty and ugly. When you change the timing characteristics of any musical composition, you change the musical message. Timing characteristics being rhythm (speed of changes), pace, direction, pauses, etcetera. Our auditory experience has to do with how our brains perceive any sound and its company (images, tactile/proprioceptive stymuli, even smells or tastes). The wind happens through time, is just white noise changing, moving the leaves and refreshing our skin. It can be music without all the academy.
@Kegnier3 ай бұрын
i started with noise and now i´m totally into classic. 😄 Coming from noise helps me to invent classic in a awesome new way. Mixing this old thinking with modern abilities is the most fun part for me.😋 Like in space. you got this majestic ever present nothing and sparkle it with this overwhelming little things that caught you, like a planet or a new form of life.❤🤯🙃
@SounflowProductions3 ай бұрын
Sound or music is like water, it flows in so many directions, and crosses many perceived boundaries
@ChasMusic3 ай бұрын
When I was a teen I loved listening to Steve Reich and Pauline Oliveros. I would also listen to WWV, the time signal station, for hours and hear that as music. Music and noise are in the ear of the beholder. While I didn't enjoy the excerpts that you included in this video, that's a reaction to those particular pieces, not to noise music in general. Everyone has different tastes and that's wonderful, otherwise things would get boring very quickly. Good for you for following your respective muses.
@bradybroussard3 ай бұрын
Awesome video!! Love hearing these thoughts as a self trained musician
@TheCompleteSpectrum3 ай бұрын
Oh man, what a great discussion! I really felt like I was listening to a couple of people who are thinking about music and creation similar to the way I do, which i wasn't actually sure was even a thing. You were talking about finding the beautiful passage in chaos. That really resonated with me; when people ask, I often describe the music we do as finding the beauty in chaos, then allowing that beauty to evolve (or devolve) organically. Eventually it becomes something...uh...palatable, I guess... or it denigrates into more chaos. I love that stuff and not just the sound, but the sometimes visceral physical experience of it as well. To me, that is the very essence, or kernel. of music (or any form of creativity really). I don't have the musical education either of you guys do, but I did do conservatory piano as a kid and do have a classical background and a working level theoretical knowledge. I'd be curious if, in the avant garde/experimental community, there is any correlation around what people originally learned and how they approach experimentation as they evolve.
@wavertone3 ай бұрын
'classical' music is like using calculus to paint a portrait; i am so happy you were able to open up to the entire world of sound.
@oscarsantos82613 ай бұрын
Sarah is so cool. We ran in the same circles and I always knew her path would lead somewhere cool
@wolfganggold3 ай бұрын
Sarah, I wrote you an email a while back where I told you about a very enjoyable jam session I had playing my guitar along with the rhythmic wash cycle of my washing machine. I really feel like music is ANYTHING that's rhythmically repetitive and really even things that don't really meet those criteria such as John Cage's 4'33". It's one of the main things that appeals to me about Eurorack...there are infinite possibilities contained within all those modules and I know you know that you often get the best and most interesting results when you hook things up "out of order". Great video!
@darwiniandude3 ай бұрын
I have no formal training outside a week of piano i rebelled against in primary school. Had a piano in the house I mucked around on from a super early age, doing simple scales frustrated me as I could already do so much more. Anyway progressed thought keyboards and synths but always gravitated back to a upright piano, not perfectly in tune, the overtones and the sound of the strings interacting when the pedal is down. More recently with a 2600 clone, I really enjoyed reading the original ARP 2600 manual. Meant for education, the original ARP 2600 manual available freely online is a real gem starting with how you hear and perceive sound and then later how that applies to recreating it. Great stuff :) But yes, I enjoyed this talk, thank you :)
@UnfinishedIdeas3 ай бұрын
I love the discussion at 16:40 around whether music should be enjoyable or whether it is allowed to be discomforting. As someone who was getting into music production around the dubstep era, I feel like some of the sound design there played pretty explicitly with this discomfort. The amazing video essay "All my homies hate Skrillex" gives a beautiful insight into how myself and many others got fully absorbed into this genre because of a fascination with discomfort and later came to hate the resulting arms race to the most loud drop. Of course many other electronic genres play with discomfort in super interesting way, so I would love to see this topic discussed further. Either way, thanks for the great video!
@alwayslosing8083 ай бұрын
Great conversation. Great thought processes throughout the video as well. One person who made me realize that the scope of electronic music can be quite literally anything was watching the late producer known as Sophie through her interviews. She explained that electronic music had no boundaries and could be comprised of whatever you could imagine and before that I was so rigid and closed minded in my thinking as to what approaching music should and could be. I thought there were all these rule sets and laws so to speak that we had to follow and that even extended to my insights with recording engineering as I got into that as well. My views started to broaden over time as I became more accepting of just what could be considered 'music' and I started to experiment with sound in general as well as applying different mixing techniques when approaching atonal sounds for example. I think the conversation about what music can be is extremely valid, it's nice that we're at a time where we can have such discussions and be more open about our experiences. Overall, fantastic video per usual. Good stuff!
@user-bf6gz8ej4o3 ай бұрын
Noise is kind of what a drum set is. People love it. Why? Because it makes noise. The cymbals especially. We love them for their round and full sound. It's not about notes or rhythms, just about the thick sound they create.
@JustinSBarrett3 ай бұрын
One of my favorite groups from the 80s was The Art of Noise. I discovered them via the pop hit "Paranoimia," but then grew to love what they did in combining non-musical and musical sounds into these beautiful pieces. Their album "In No Sense? Nonsense!" is one of my favorites. The songs themselves are beautiful, but the way they use other sounds to blend and shift between songs is also mesmerizing. True, they didn't get into the type of "noise" composition that this conversation covers, but I still appreciate what they did in pursuing music created via non-musical sounds.