Alien Jams with Guest Graham Dunning

This Sunday I had Graham Dunning as a guest on the Alien Jams show.  Graham is a sound artist and musician originally from Manchester but now based here in London.  He makes some really interesting music, much of his recent work involves found tapes and a lo-fi aesthetic, live sampling with cheap delay pedals and recording to 4-track tape. Throughout the show Graham plays some of his music, along with collaborative work he has done with other artists.

  

Here is some text taken from Graham’s website to give a little background on his work… 

  
“My working practice deals with temporality, memory and narrative through sound, performance and installation. I am interested in people’s discarded memories and the function of archiving. Found objects, photographs and recordings feature in my work investigating notions of the artefact and implied narrative. Experimentation is fundamental, and my practice is often informed by scientific or archaeological protocol. 
Various themes and processes recur in my work including: sound and its relation to loss, nostalgia as mourning; exploring the world through listening and the specific sonic topographies of specific places; the questionable historical or other “objectivity” of an object; organising, arranging, and composing versus unpredictable inputs, random factors and chance operations; archiving, collecting and documentation in tension with ambiguity and open interpretation; and analogue and digital technologies and their (exploitable) limitations.

I consider myself an autodidact in the artistic field having studied physics, acoustics, English literature, philosophy, politics and history as an undergraduate, and engaging in art via experimental music and recording techniques, live composition and improvisation, and a lifelong interest in collecting and archiving found objects. 

 Most of my recent works have been site-specific installations including an interactive installation commissioned for Luton, featuring ten turntables with dubplates of local environmental sound recordings to be played individually or in combination by the audience; a “listening post” in rural West Wales enabling visitors to hear the sounds of the site through surrogate ears mounted in birdboxes ten feet high; and a work on board a decommissioned light-ship which invited viewers to read from an annotated copy of Joseph Conrad’s Lord Jim into a microphone, their voices altered through a remote reverberation chamber built in the bowels of the ship from existing structures.

 My performances explore the relationship between sound and music with rhythmical elements and drone, repetition and variation. I perform using modified turntables, altered and adapted records, field recordings pressed to dubplates and self-built electronics. I also make sounds using other objects on the turntables, using the stylus as a primitive pick-up. The sounds present on the records I use are less important to me than the sounds I can impose onto them. As such, a metal disk with a hole in the middle is as valid a sound source as a pristine vinyl recording.” 

-Graham Dunning, from his website, grahamdunning.com 
Twenty Nine Of The Best Recordings I Never Got Round To Making, Closet Music
 Laurie Spiegel- Patchwork
Graham Dunning-  Pent Cuckoo
Colin Webster- Katepistimum (Graham Dunning remix)
Henk Badings- The Woman of Andros
Graham Dunning- Music By the Metre (edit)
Sickness of Snakes- Various Hands
James Alaska and Graham Dunning- Contenmer
Ensemble Economique- Monsoon Clouds
Graham Dunning- To Look at Her Sinking
Bruno Spoerri- Cosmotoxology
AAS- Crystal Palace Rocket Final Device (edit)
Thought Broadcast- Conflict Dub
Graham Dunning- Tape Ghost 2

 Graham playing at Boiler Room 2012 

The House of Wrong

The House of Wrong is a monthly radio show on NTS hosted by Andrew McGhee, from 9-11pm on Fridays.  Andrew asked me to be a guest on his show, and I got a chance to play some of my favourite alien jams!  For the first part of the podcast, Andrew sets the bar high with some pretty fantastic musical selections.  Check out the show here…
                                NTS // House of Wrong & Alien Jams by Kit Records on Mixcloud

March Thirty-First

X-Ray Pop- Amazone
Severed Heads- Jetlag
Fad Gadget- Pedestrian
Coil- Teenage Lighting 2
Goblin- Profondo Rosso
Edgar Froese- Macula Transfer
Sickness of Snakes- Swelling of Leeches
Lloyd Cole & Hans- Joachim Roedelius- Selbstportrait- Reich
Fifty Foot Hose- Rose
Fifty Foot Hose- Opus II
Francois de Roubaix- Astralement Votre
Thought Broadcast- Portrait Heads
Chrome- ST 37
Coil- Things Happens
Johnson Engineering Co.- Beating the Hell Out of Carmina
Yellow Magic Orchestra- Computer Game
Terekke- Pf Pf Pass

Mark Brend Interview

Silver Apples  

  

Today’s show featured an interview with musician and writer, Mark Brend.  I also included some of Mark’s music from the new Ghostwriter EP, Dimensions.  


Raymond Scott – Tempo Block
Ghostwriter – Dimensions Chapter 2
Miklus Rozsa – Spellbound (prelude)

Mark Brend, Ghostwriter/ The Sound of Tomorrow: How Electronic Music Was Smuggled Into the Mainstream – Interview

White Noise – Firebird
Ghostwriter – Autobiographical Sketch Number 1
Barry Gray – Except from ‘Hoover Keymatic Washing Machine’ Documentary Score
John Baker – Omo and Giro Advert
The Byrds – Moog Raga 
Fifty Foot Hose – If Not This Time
Lothar & The Hand People – Wedding Night For Those Who Love
Silver Apples – I Have Known Love

The Sound of Tomorrow


Mark Brend is a writer and musician, currently living in Devon. He has kept busy over the last few months with his new book recently published, called The Sound of Tomorrow: How Electronic Music Was Smuggled Into the Mainstream, as well as a new EP under the name Ghostwriter.

Mark kindly agreed to do an interview for the Alien Jams Radio Show, which I’m really excited about.  You can listen in to tomorrow’s show to hear Mark talk about his writing and musical endeavours.
 Mark’s shed where he works in Devon 

March Seventeenth

The Space Lady- I Had Too Much To Dream Last Night
Lloyd Cole and Roedelius- Pastoral
Asmus Tietchens- Lourdes Extra
Codek- Closer
Gay Cat Park- Television
X-Ray Pop- Gogol Le Mongol
Nino Nardini- New Invention
Klaus Schutlze- Frank Herbert
Fall of Saigon- On the Beach at Fontana
Mmplez- Izod Days
Alwin Nicolais- Frail Demons- Dance 1
Oliver Messiaen- Turangula Symphonie 6th Movement

(X-Ray Pop)