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Real Life and The Movies: Volume 1

by "Blue" Gene Tyranny

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about

The waking dreams that friends and i have concocted and are part of ... the music that walks with the symbols (movies) ... the situation before symbols happen (real life) ... our own bit of heaven, our own raisin' hell. The music – rock/natural sounds/psychic experiments/crazed, gentle documentary – the instruments – the band (guitars, bass, vibes, horns, electric violins, garbage percussion...)/keyboards, electronics and voices– the pieces – I WAS A TEENAGE ASSASSIN FOR THE CIA (film)/THE BUST/BLACK FOREST TRADING POST (film)/PLANET TO PLANET-EAR TO EAR/PALS (Touch andAction-at-a-Distance/MY SONG (video)–the places–New York/Texas/nothing (nowhere)/California/Michigan, during times of humor, excitement, and in the slightly troubled silence of our hearts (aww... well/yes). - "Blue" Gene Tyranny, 1981 (from the original Fun Music cassette release)

credits

released July 12, 2024

Originally released on cassette by Philip Perkins as Fun 21 on the Fun Music label.

Remastered for re-release by Stephan Mathieu.

Cover photograph by Philip Makanna.

Liner Notes by "Blue" Gene Tyranny.

BLUE' GENE TYRANNY

REAL LIFE AND THE MOVIES, VOL. 1

SIDE ONE

1. Theme Music for Sally Kellman's "I Was A Teenage Assassin for the C.I.A."

She was his translator. She was to be his poisoner. But she changed her mind.

Yes, it's all true. Sally has the newspaper clippings and has made a wonderful pop comedy political piece based on this information about the C.I.A. hiring a young woman to become Castro's "translator" in the early '60s. Her real job was to feed him poison that would slowly make him crazed, and then, dead. But she decided "oh, the hell with it," and flushed the stuff. This song is a memory of the '60s Detroit Motown style, where every week or so a new and elegant variation was made, commenting upon the previous week's song (a real family business), the telegraphing locomotive bass line, a drone with internal motion, producing the world's most hill-and-dale'd 45's.

Steve Mackay – saxophones
Michael Richards – guitar
Jerry Myers – drums
"Blue" – keyboards

Recorded at Army Street Studios, Jim Keeler, Engineer, 1980

2. The Bust (from music for Megan Terry's "Viet Rock")

LBJ throws empty beer cans at his cattle from a passing limo while bebop musicians in transit interpret it all after midnight at the jazz club under the icehouse.

Bo Diddley and Lyndon B. Johnson meet on a street corner in Texas. I'm 14, and the drunk cop shines the light in my eyes, and says, "Where you goin' this time of night? Maybe I oughta run ya in." (Sorry about the dialect). Cop drives off, laughing, to join his good ol' cop buddies for beers and poker at midnight in back of the icehouse on the corner of the block where I live. Below the icehouse is a really underground jazz club which I sneak into when I can get away with it. Musicians traveling from the South to California, getting arrested by the same cops, who take money for your ticket and their pocket. Meanwhile, Lyndon streaks across the Texas plain, scares the cows in his Caddy, crazy frustrated drunk (not the friendly kind), thinking, "Why, oh, why can't people understand? Why, oh, I say who oh why can't some people..." Goodbye, LBJ. Ladybird's airline, shipping to Vietnam, is doing just fine.

Vivian Shevitz – bass
Pete Kahn, John Littlejohn – saxes
Carter Threlkeld (Buzz) – trumpet
Dennis O'Brien (Cody Sparks) – guitar
Richard Dishman – drums
"Blue" – Wurlitzer electric piano
Micheal Richards – police voice
Lyndon Baines Johnson – presidential voice

Recorded live for N.E.T. television, Ann Arbor, Michigan, 1967

3. Theme Music for Andrew Lugg's "Black Forest Trading Post"

There is the eternal or at least unchanging postcard front of The Trading Post, whose guests, coming in by the backdoor, are mammoths, the planet Saturn, skyscrapers, whose intentions God only knows, but, one could say, are somewhere out there...

Ana Perez – guitar
"Blue" – keyboards, electronics, Chamberlin

Recorded at Center for Contemporary Music, 1976, some re-processing 1981

4. Music for Pat Olesko's "Nudes Reel"
She rises early in the morning. Gradually faster, she dresses and tries things on. Retreats for a moment from her wind-up toy existence, then starts all over again. Tristesse.

Paul Robinson – fiddle
"Blue" – Serge synthesizer, vocoder

Recorded at C.C.M. 1977, some re-processing 1981

5. Three Begins

Two readings of three proportional cuttings of hundreds of samples, which can be played forward and reverse in three speeds, their interplay and mixings describing the resultant illusion (no resolution) of complementary internal and external time. This piece was originally played with a reading of Dick Higgin's poem by the same name. Something about ducks and milkmaids and staircases. Frankie Mann says that some of the best music in the country is made by teenagers with cassette machines in their attics. I had only a crusty reel-to-reeler, and was 13, but the idea is the same, the direct transfer.

"Blue" – electronics
Recorded in San Antonio, Texas 1958, some re-processing C.C.M. 1981. Special thanks to Philip Krumm

6. The White Night Riot
Except for the TV audio, this recording was made on the run from the cops who were beating up on anyone. An older man was kicked by cops after he fell, another man helping him had his hip broken, and fire trucks deliberately charged into crowds, not in pursuit of a fire. I saw the second, and was told about the first. The fire was first inside when the outrageous verdict was announced, giving Dan White seven years (actually reduced by parole procedures) for killing in cold blood George Moscone, the liberal mayor, and Harvey Milk, the outspoken and lovingly gay city supervisor. Then the fire was outside, as police cars burned in front of City Hall, in righteous indignation. The humor in the gradually fragmenting speech of the media, who were making the mistake of trying to come up with a reasonable, or filtered, description of the situation, is amplified here. All sounds in this four-part work modulate continuously in a mono-to-binaural distribution, which describes the perceptual change in the sense of space that night, and physically, the ebb and flow of the people together and apart. There are low-frequency peaks, heard as untranslated signals, the internal and external pulses felt in the fully awakened (for better or worse) excitement, the 8 cps of the Earth, cop beepers, whistles, and body gestures that were actually present and amplified here by electronics. Some police in the following weeks wore Free Dan White T-shirts. He is like so many All-American boys who read romantic novels, excel in sports, grades, and everything except humanity, who kill themselves, or their girlfriends, and nobody seems to understand why. This society encourages people to want to be validated by measures outside themselves, thereby creating its own criminals (its nemesis) and dividing the people among each other, and dividing each person by the illusion of an extra "self." It has got to change, fundamentally.

"Blue" – electronics

Recorded in San Francisco, California May 21-22, 1979. A companion piece to The White Night Riot is Harvey Milk/Portrait on Lovely Music/Vital Records VR 101-06.

–-

SIDE TWO

7. Sound Module from "Back in Texas Again"
To be played at the same time as a theatre realization of the graph piece based on
artifacts and physical patterns from your home state. Tdistance and the patterns you have covered and uncovered since then. For Texas, I remember the lightning storms on a cloudless midday which would rattle the house like a cannon blast in your very own backyard, the funky rainy day and my uncle's ranch (away) somewhere. The original graph score with drawings, photos, maps, etc. got burned in the fire in 1975, but someday I'll do another. From the series How Things That Can't Exist May Exist (1958-present).

David Kapalian – electric violin
Dennis O'Brien (Cody Sparks) – guitar
Richard Dishman – drums
"Blue" – vibraphone
Recorded at home studio 1966 music/1967 natural sounds, some re-processing C.C.M. 1981

8. Music for David White's "33 Yoyo Tricks" simultaneously with Closed Transmission in Several Widths

The elegant prize-winning short with yoyo champ Danny Volk is here placed in an imaginary setting of lonely data transmissions over a vast or infinitely small range. When I went to Saturday afternoon movies in Texas, there was always a yoyo contest, followed by Flash Gordon and Gene Autry. The yoyo champ, who is so elegant and punk in this wonderful short film, is Danny Volk. I tried recording the actual sound of his yoyo, but tracing the passing gesture on the synthesizer recreated the illusion more articulately (the joke that a recorded yoyo just doesn't sound like a yoyo should). Lonely computers and slightly nuts computer talk across a universe scaled in various sizes by the size of its self-referential feedback loop – ear to ear, planet to planet, infinite connections. One imaginary setting for this conversation is a comfortable cool space, luminescent white and green, somewhere. "Talk to me Henry, hello basic agreement." Another, not imaginary but remembered (so it might as well be imaginary), setting is late night when his talk of flying saucers outside the window was just a ruse to get me in his bed. I loved his overture. Both computer tracks were recorded independently, so any coordination between the sides is purely coincidental.

"Blue" – electronics, RMI keyboard, IBM 7090 computer
Tom Schunior – programmer

"Tricks" recorded at C.C.M. 1976, "Transmission" recorded at the Logic of Computers Group, Ann Arbor, 1966

9. Pals/Touch and Action-At-A-Distance

A mix of three experiments from the "Live and Let Live" series: an E.S.P. transmission of friends to-now-unspoken opinions, a study for the procedure “Archaeoacoustics” for deriving information without artifacts of unknown pasts, a gradually opening feedback-stability study with mikes moved further away, windows and doors opened, etc.:

1. A study of advancing and refracted information waves, and predilection, and the influence of previous meetings. Two friends, five statements, and the statistical distribution of tries in guessing what statements we have written about each other (apparent ESP, the classic Rhine experiment). The hits became more significant over time. Observing with contrasts in mind makes necessary one kind of time description.
2. Inside a feedback situation with mics and speakers, the bell-like sounds occur at the points in the gradually revealed matrix of the room's resonant nodes (Eigentones) where standing waves interfere, like electrical charges at synapse connections in the brain. Gradually unfolding toward the outside, the speaker-mic distance is increased, angle and velocity of microphone to speaker wax and wane, the recording situation making possible more than could be heard by one live listener.
3. The recording/mixing setup is a feedback loop with interferences (airplanes, etc.). All parts of the mix and the person mixing affect each other. The surface noise is intentionally left in to show the presence of this live situation, the Brownian motions present in any size. From the Live and Let Live series, ways of making the invisible visible, the unnoted noticed, and so on, by creating transforming mediums, intermediaries.

Three general questions occurring during these experiments were:
1. Does knowledge depend upon certain ideal conditions and just one ideal observer?
2. Does E.S.P. increase in confined conditions (e.g. an atmosphere of sine tone feedback, as in tinnitus) or more open conditions (e.g. an atmosphere of white noise)?
3. Which behaviors or relationships are possible in differing states of matter (solid, liquid, gas, plasma)?

Johnathan Doff – voice
"Blue" – voice, electronics

Recorded at C.C.M. 1972 (feedback), 1978 (voices), 1979 (live mix). Special thanks to Sam Ashley and John Bischoff

10. Remembering (One track from a time travel piece)

The gradual internal visualization of a dear friend's face. The electronics are
automatic and on-going as they describe the internal shifts of amplitude, phase,
frequency and time which seem to have their own gestures and “opinions.” Spoken and internal language, and the Doppler shift in between. An infinite net between your brain and your face to the rest of the so-called real world. As you travel in time, you inflect differently, a transduction, a change of form without a change of energy, or use the same gesture and perform it with differing content, even for the brief moment going from your brain to a mouthed sound. If we are to believe that picture, playing speech like you play an instrument, so fine to do what is called remembering. Passionate love for a friend, and gradually his face appears. The video image: digital image of clocked time floating in peaceful blue.

"Blue" – voice, electronics

Recorded at home studio (backyard and inside), Oakland 1974, some re-processing C.C.M. 1981. This track was mixed with other music for "My Song" in Mary Ashley's video series "Klahoya".

Special thanks to Kenn Beckman for formatting these notes.

© 1981 Robert Sheff, San Francisco, California

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