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Electronic music blog and experimental music blog by Dave House / The Reverse Engineer. Musings on music, inspiration and life. Please explore my site for free music and more info.

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Archive for January, 2010

Making an electric thumb piano

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010

A few years ago I bought the Gilles Peterson in Africa album which features many a fine tune but none finer, in my opinion, than the fuzzy, buzzy, plinky-plonky, frenetic madness of Lufuala NDonga by Konono No.1. Every so often I hear a piece of music and know that I’ve hit on something that will stay with me, and probably turn into a minor obsession. Such was the case with Konono No.1 and their contemporaries. I’ve since aquired the Congotronics 2 compilation which features similar stuff and, as suspected, I am now firmly obsessed with electric thumb pianos.

The sound of Congotronics is a sort of hypnotic DIY punk trance. The musicians, all of whom hail from the Congo, make their own instruments out of found and salvaged parts, resulting in a very lo-fi sound. The most distintive is that of the thumb pianos which are fitted with pick ups and then fed through various effects pedals, mainly distortion. It’s essentially street music but has aquired a bit of a following in recent years. There are clear comparisons between this sound and that of Western club music – the polyrhythmic structure, the repetitive hooks, the intensity and build up of the tunes.

My friend and musical collaborator Matt shares my obsession and, being something of a technical whizz, decided he would try his hand at building his own electric thumb piano. Various parts have been salvaged so far, such as a steel strut from an old wardrobe (apparently it will make an idea bridge.) He’s bought a pair of Belcat GT538 acoustic guitar pick ups and while he hunts down the wood for the body and the keys themselves (old bike spokes are the thing, we hear), the other day we attached the pick-ups to my ready-made, tried and tested, off the shelf (via Afrcia) thumb pianos to see what noises we could make.

Having strapped them to the body of the thumb piano with an elastic band and ran them into Matts mixer via a guitar distortion pedal, we weren’t getting much more than static and feedback. It turned out that the signal was way too weak – a preamp was needed. First we tried the little preamp that came with my Soundman OKM binaural microphones (being careful to feed it’s stereo input with a mono signal using techno-skills I didn’t quite understand), but this had no effect. In the end Matt, utilising more confusing technical wizardry, used his mixer as a giant and over qualified preamp to boost the signal. Lo and behold, distorted electric thumb piano noises! Yes!

pick ups attached to the bridge of the thumb piano

pick ups attached to the bridge of the thumb piano

Que an hour or two of us excitedly wiring our contraption through various different effects, having a good old play and getting over excited. Flanger and digital delay work very well, as does a Tonebender distortion pedal, although the latter would really benefit from a proper preamp and mixing some of the clean signal in with the distorted one. While the setup was far from ideal it has a lot of potential. I think Matts homemade masterpiece is going to be amazing.

thumb piano - pick ups - effects - mixer - joy!

thumb piano - pick ups - effects - mixer - joy!

Watch this space – Konono No.2 are coming… In the meantime, listen to some shonky snippets of the work in progress:

Electric thumb piano delay by thereverseengineer

Electric thumb piano distort by thereverseengineer

Electric thumb piano flange by thereverseengineer

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Posted in Audio Clips, Audio Experiments | 4 Comments »


 

Perfect tunes 1: You’re So Great – Blur.

Saturday, January 16th, 2010

There are certain pieces of music that I consider perfect. Not to say that I think they are a pinnacle of human artistic endeavour; just that for me, they couldn’t be improved upon. They do something to me. Quite what, I don’t know. (I often wonder at the validity of writing about music and art – I believe that art exists because words have limits. But to not write about it would defy the point in this blog, plus I like a challenge!)

So… having recently included Blur’s You’re So Great (from the Blur album) on a compilation for a friend it’s been doing the rounds in my playlists again, so I’ll start with that.

One of the few Blur songs penned by Graham Coxon (another of my favourites, Coffee and TV, is his too,) ‘You’re So Great’ is an understated, lo-fi ballad about a loved one brightening up an otherwise dreary world. The message is a simple one, almost in a ‘does what is says on the tin’ way.

Sometimes you don’t get past “you’re so great and I love you” when thinking about someone you adore. Or rather you get so far past it that in trying to catch the essence of your feelings you run out of suitable metaphors and adjectives and end up back where you started. There’s beauty in such simplicity; in economy of phrase. To adorn the sentiment with more words, mere words, misses the point.

This is why music is so powerful. There’s another layer behind the poetry of the lyrics. In the case of this song, the fuzzy, Sunday-afternoon monotony is present in the treatment of the vocal, which sounds like it’s coming via a phone line from far away. A slightly distorted, bubbly guitar forms a backdrop to a crisper rhythm line and an intermittent lead. The switches between minor and major chords and the joyful, effortless melody of the lead guitar take you from the buried, introspective fuzz of the verse to the uplifting redemption of the chorus, the words that form the title of the song being delivered acapella and almost deadpan at the choruses crescendo. The end of the song is a contemplative, lilting vocal ‘ooh’ and a gloriously uplifting looped guitar riff – affirmation that everything is going to be alright and a tingle down the spine moment for me.

The song strikes a balance between that kind of minor, downcast, melancholic slump of a mood and the balancing, stirring support that love offers. Both sentiments are present throughout the whole song which leaves it unresolved but neutralised. “I’ll feel like this again, but it doesn’t matter,” it says to me.

Read the lyrics to You’re So Great

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Posted in Perfect Tunes, music | 2 Comments »


 

Welcome to the Reverse Engineer’s blog!

Saturday, January 16th, 2010

Hello!

So, I’ve started a blog. As you might expect, the main focus of my posts will be music and sound, but I also want to write about the things that inspire me to make music. That, basically, covers just about everything. So there we go, in the first sentence of my first post I’ve justified how to bang on about literally anything under the banner of a music blog!

Seriously though, music and sound are so integrated into my life – I’m so nourished by them – that I wouldn’t know where to draw the line when considering my inspirations.  Conciously or subconciously they include the books I read, the people I speak to, the films I watch, stuff that I see, things that pop into my head in the middle of the night… Not to mention, of course, the huge array of music, new and old, I voraciously consume.

My hope is that this blog acts as a sort of log of my creative process. I’ll talk about the music I love, why certain sounds move me, and the ways and reasons I make my music. I’ll talk about what makes me tick, my outlook on life and the universe and my thoughts on what I’m reading or watching. For you, the reader, I hope that in amongst the inevitable waffle you discover some great new music, or are inspired in some small way. For me, the writer, perhaps the influences for a tune I make in the future will be tracable back to a post in this blog, thus completing a circle.

Anyway, enjoy, and see you soon!

Dave / The Reverse Engineer

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Posted in music | No Comments »


 

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