http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cZ56dnHal1g
Vinyl collage – Asia’s first album, an old 101 Strings record and “The First Family”, sliced on a table saw and glued back together.
Or – why they invented samplers.
via arratik
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cZ56dnHal1g
Vinyl collage – Asia’s first album, an old 101 Strings record and “The First Family”, sliced on a table saw and glued back together.
Or – why they invented samplers.
via arratik
supposedly theres some old Can record that has like hundreds of tape edits per song
Martin Tetrault (Canadian DJ) has done this since the 80's.
"Des pas et des mois" from 1990 is a great little album.
Woa, found a link: http://bravojuju.blogspot.com/2007/09/martin-ttre…
Sound Artist Christian Marclay did this with several albums, only cleaner. I wonder how his sound: http://hammer.ucla.edu/image/817/450/450.JPG__htt…
I can't believe they cut up a copy of The First Family! Heresy!
I'm still experimenting with adhesives – I used Gorilla Glue on that one, which probably wasn't the best choice for this application. I'm a big fan of Christian Marclay's (haven't heard Tetrault, I'll check him out), and I've been wanting to try my hand at making my own vinyl sound collages for a while. This was my first attempt.
@Graham – I have thirteen copies of it in my crates. The one I used was cracked and unplayable as a whole. I was able to scavenge that quarter of the record, so in a way I was giving it new life, perhaps?
Check out Milan Knizak "Broken Music". Quote:"In 1965 I started to destroy records: scratch them, punch holes in them, break them. By playing them over and over again (which destroyed the needle and often the record player too) an entirely new music was created – unexpected, nerve-racking and aggressive."
[youtube 88ONydyRX7c http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=88ONydyRX7c youtube]