Saturday, August 1, 2009
new post at billsallak.com
Hey everyone-- just wanted to let you know that there's a new post at the blog's new location, with breaking news about the forthcoming Easy Worship Operator album. Head on over, and if you're a subscriber using RSS, the new feed is here. Cheers!
Friday, July 31, 2009
fully migrated
All of the content in NoiseGarden has now been moved to:
www.billsallak.com/blog
I'll leave the entries up here as well, but all new updates will be coming from the new site. If you're an RSS subscriber, the feed is here.
www.billsallak.com/blog
I'll leave the entries up here as well, but all new updates will be coming from the new site. If you're an RSS subscriber, the feed is here.
This blog will eventually be moving...
...to a blog page at billsallak.com. It might take a while to get the entries migrated, and I'll get it up and running ASAP.
In the meantime, feel free to check the site out and let me know what you think.
Stay dry-- in OH this summer, that's not referencing sweat, but rain. C'est la vie!
Monday, April 20, 2009
Steve Reich Wins 2009 Pulitzer Prize for Music.
It's.
About.
(expletive)
Time.
It's a shame that he didn't win it for one of his landmark earlier works. Music For 18 Musicians is probably the strongest work, and Different Trains, though not my favorite Reich piece, would have been a perfect candidate from a marketing standpoint alone (and it's a really good piece to boot).
About.
(expletive)
Time.
It's a shame that he didn't win it for one of his landmark earlier works. Music For 18 Musicians is probably the strongest work, and Different Trains, though not my favorite Reich piece, would have been a perfect candidate from a marketing standpoint alone (and it's a really good piece to boot).
Oh well. We'll take the victories where we can. Ornette Coleman, David Lang, and now Reich. Anyone care to propose the next logical winner? Philip Glass? John Luther Adams? Can they give a posthumous one to Feldman, or Cage, or Miles Davis, or John Coltrane, or...
Thursday, April 16, 2009
Craftiness
One thing I find very helpful is having a resource where I can quickly go and get a small but pertinent piece of advice about art and creativity. While the advice is generally not as good as the advice I'd receive from a live human, this resource would be available 24/7, whereas people sometimes need to sleep.
My favorite is the aphorisms page at Guitar Craft. Guitar Craft was started in the mid-1980s by King Crimson guitarist Robert Fripp, and what started as a course in guitar technique broadened to become applicable in almost any way you choose to use it. The aphorisms touch on truth with speed and precision, and they've been very helpful to me. If you want another one, you can just refresh the page.
It's worth checking them out. (The one that came up just now was, "Sometimes no answer is an answer, especially when the answer is no." Not always sunshine and smiling bunnies, but useful.)
My favorite is the aphorisms page at Guitar Craft. Guitar Craft was started in the mid-1980s by King Crimson guitarist Robert Fripp, and what started as a course in guitar technique broadened to become applicable in almost any way you choose to use it. The aphorisms touch on truth with speed and precision, and they've been very helpful to me. If you want another one, you can just refresh the page.
It's worth checking them out. (The one that came up just now was, "Sometimes no answer is an answer, especially when the answer is no." Not always sunshine and smiling bunnies, but useful.)
Wednesday, April 1, 2009
The Approach of Sleep
Tuesday, March 31, 2009
Tech Rehearsal: grain of sand
Teched Alicia's piece tonight, and got to run it twice. Everything went great-- can't wait to perform it! (Performance info is over in the right-hand margin.)
My rig, all lit up and such (I'll have to clean up those cables for the show):
It's hard to see the kick drum behind the bongos, but it's not hard to hear it. Mwahahaha.
Come out to the show this weekend!
My rig, all lit up and such (I'll have to clean up those cables for the show):
It's hard to see the kick drum behind the bongos, but it's not hard to hear it. Mwahahaha.
Come out to the show this weekend!
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)