PRICE:
$21.00
IN STOCK
ARTIST
TITLE
Slipping Control
FORMAT
LP

LABEL
CATALOG #
SHELTER 038LP SHELTER 038LP
GENRE
RELEASE DATE
5/27/2014

Slipping Control is Ben Vida's new LP. Slipping Control derives from the text piece "Tztztztzt Î Í Í...," written in 2013 by Ben Vida (and published as a book by Shelter Press). Composed to act as a score, a sound piece and as raw data for an electronic control source, "Tztztztzt Î Í Í..." became the intrinsic element that tied together some different pieces of art made by Ben Vida and presented at the eponymous show at AVA Gallery (NY, USA) in April 2013. "I was interested in the rhythm of speaking, interested in using the voice to create rhythmic patterns that would inevitably break out of time and become asymmetrical and awkward. I wanted to create one set of control sources (the text) and run them through a bunch of different systems (the video, the book, the record, etc.) and see how the original source material morphed and changed as it manifested in these different modalities. The process of developing each unique work involved setting the control paths for the text to be processed though. In terms of this path, the first step after writing the text was to find the primary filter of interpretation and translation that would start this process of slipping control -- and this is where Tyondai and Sara come in..." A Control Path may look something like this: Text > Performer/Vocalist > Voiced Recording > Electronic Analysis > Reconfigured Text > Audio Synthesis > LP Record. Or maybe like this: Text > Performer/Vocalist > Video/Audio Recording > Electronic Analysis > Audio Synthesis > Video Editing > Color Synthesis > Video Installation. Or this: Text > Performer/Vocalist > Video/Audio Recording > Electronic Analysis > Audio Synthesis > Video Editing > Color Synthesis > Video Installation > Color Field Panel Display. Or more simply: Text > Poster. All music by Ben Vida, with Tyondai Braxton and Sara Magenheimer. Mastered and cut by Helmut Erler at Dubplates + Mastering. Pressed at Pallas in an edition of 500 copies worldwide.