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"Both of these 
pieces are early and rather crude attempts toward using poetic forms to arrange 
sonic material rather than linguistic material. Each of them represents but one 
of the literally numberless transactions that are theoretically possible. 
Consider, for instance, the number of possibilities for sonically interpreting 
the concept of "rhyme" alone. Would it be more faithful to the concept of rhyme 
to pair two identical sounds with different digital effects, or to pair two 
different sounds that evoke each other in some way? Can properties of duration, 
intensity, timbre, or tone make two disparate sounds rhyme? Or can the operation 
be even more esoteric: can the sound of a bell be said to rhyme with the sound 
of a car horn? What about the sound of a bird with the sound of a dog? In these 
pieces, I'm more interested in experimenting with all these possibilities than 
arriving at any definitive solution to the problem. ITALIAN SONNET is mostly 
concerned with formal structure: arranging ten second "lines" of sound according 
to the familiar form, I've chosen to interpret rhyme as mere repetition. HEROIC 
COUPLETS goes a bit further: again, rhyme is interpreted as repetition, but here 
the use of digital effects attempts to create sound-pairs ("lines") that are 
similar yet distinct, and thus arguably closer to true rhyme. HEROIC COUPLETS 
also attempts to mimic the rhythm of the iambic line. Both of these pieces are 
starting points that represent the merest edge of the possibilities in the 
verse-to-sound transaction; I hope they'll be starting points from which I can 
develop more cunning solutions in the future. Oh, and for the curious: the 
voices on HEROIC COUPLETS belong to Edna St. Vincent Millay and the Dalai 
Lama."
"Seepferdchen und Flugfische for A 
Reading in Four Dimensions, February  
8, 2008 at Center 
for the Arts, Eagle Rock in Los Angeles, CA.
I began performing Seepferdchen und 
Flugfische by Hugo Ball a few  years 
ago. Every time I perform it, I sense that despite the apparent  simplicity of Ball’s composition, there 
are in fact explicit  performance 
cues embedded into the score. Obviously, a performer can  take the piece in any direction s/he 
wants, but for me, various sonic  
substitutions throughout the piece provide strict direction to the  performer: flusch to prusch; bessli to 
betzli; kata to kitti; and zack  to 
zick. And so, as I continued to perform this piece it guided me  towards a fairly specific range of 
recitations, which I eventually  
wanted to break with. For the performance recorded here, I had been  working on approaching the score with a 
granular sensibility,  segmenting 
out and over emphasizing leading sounds while allowing  gaps, glitches or verbal tics to provide 
moments of silence that are  often 
swept away in performances of Ball’s 
work."

"It's 
a sound text piece using environmental recordings of a restaurant and a rusty 
swing set in rural 
I have waited for him.  For 
want of a loom, I smashed furniture, slashed beds,
He's nuts: five AA meetings and he’s 
ready to breed, hollering waiting, a poor 
My pa is dead: I got the sperm and 
the house housekeeper, his assessor and judge.  
let’s go. Here’s some perfume and a 
novel for scolding his journeys. Here in my 
ya gal: My father’s dead; I watched 
termagant 
arms I ask him: why can’t he leave these 
these five months as he died 
Trojans 
alone? I know he never wanted to go.
ripped the diapers off 
his ass at 
the end. Loneliness gone, something of 
That’s death for you 
and creation 
comes after hospitals, sirens, and 
I love you very 
much. 
one-eyed worms. Of the shards, cobbled, 
dirty, we will build a tree as best 
we can for a bed.
I set my producer and musical 
director Bobby Perfect with the task of translating this visual poem to sound. 
We recorded the piece line by half line in two distinct yet related voices to 
reflect the structure of the poem on the page. The result of our collaboration 
is the sound file presented here."
"This is the first 
page from the first section of a new collaborative project by the two of us that 
systematically explores the nuanced veil of sonic frequencies, musical motifs, 
and choral/choiral environments beneath language. The whole work slips through 
words, falls, and oompalahs in circles until it returns with ancient grains in 
its earlobes and the dust of tomorrow sputtering from its open maw. This 
particular track is a plunderverse mix-and-mash text that we've overlaid through 
a technique that could be described as a literary version of John Oswald's 
plunderphonics. Two voices heard many ways, one sax player, and a hard slew of 
software. No maraschino cherries were worn in the making of this archive. I was 
going to go to college but I found that I already went."
"A voice synthesizer, 
some vaguely South Pacific computer processing, and a text created directly from 
the rough hewn stone of language itself renders this aural evocation of a sweaty 
robotic squirrel soul in the reverberant temple of love, or at least, the 
alphabet, the authentic pharyngeal post-Nostradamus prediction of the 
twenty-first century’s consonantal vowel shift."
 
 
"the lie and 
the reconstruction of sound belies the retrograded call of what is most 
immaterial.  material - inevitably - that the photoreproductive cues of the 
linguistic construct a soundscape that predicts what's known, already 
told.  the telling, in words that make no sense, signifies the vacuous, the 
obnoxious, the foreign.  insofar as a non-indicative, or paraleptical makes 
speeches, politics and reform is oblivious - the crystallization of its opposite 
brings interference and distraction.  the object (thing) bearing what 
little mind it manages in aleatoria, sutures."
 
 
"Sunfish is an 
opem, a performable poem of variable performance time, with multiple entry 
points. The reader orchestrates. Damn the sensitive arrogance of the tender 
crafty poet."
“
This project was borne out of a 
several year-long collection of discarded cassette tape retrieved from sides of 
roads.  The current installment are 
numerous strands retrieved in 
Technical Notes:  Some Digital Signal Processing [DSP] was 
employed to add richness toward creating an ambient piece for a broader 
audience.  However, most of the 
manipulated sounds occur from the weathered-state that the tapes were found 
in.”