Monday, May 25, 2020

Sonification: Catch frequency for five species of Nocta

This piece is based on sonification, turning data into sound. In the same way that people turn data into pictures (a simple example would be a graph) to better understand that data rather than staring at a table of numbers, data can also be turned into sound to gain insights. This particular piece was created by five species of Yellow Underwing moths (Nocta species). I run a catch and release moth programme at home, I took the 2019 data from the nightly catches and assigned the number of moths caught to the appropriate note in a scale (ie higher moths resulted in a higher pitch), while the timing relates to the date of the catch. It starts with a single species and then repeats as further species are added represented by a different instrument. There is a short section using the grandest instrumentation which represents the data for the Least Yellow Underwing which made the fewest visits. I made a very few “musical decisions” in removing a couple of days where I didn’t run the trapping programme. No moths were harmed in the production of this track.

The track is here: Bandcamp for Mark Dalton Griffiths

Now on Spotify

https://open.spotify.com/album/1kZWQSiksZrOqBGn7GYgld?si=4bbBJeCNS2GrMSCuhWkRRQ


Thanks to the Electronic Music Philosophy group and in particular “Skoddie Autumn Altair” for setting the challenge that led to the creation of this track (I had to look up Sonification). To hear some “proper” experimental music go here: https://electronicmusicphilosophy.bandcamp.com/

Sunday, May 24, 2020

Inside / Outside in a time of affliction (Covid 19)



Another Covid 19 inspired track. Recorded in April 2020 during the UKs lockdown in response to the Covid 19 pandemic. Only 1.30mins long it contrasts the outpourings of the internet in terms of news broadcasts and the now largely human noise free outside. You literally hear the sound of the birds & the bees. Nature carries on regardless.


Friday, May 22, 2020

Healer celebration dance by Oxfordian highlands indigenous people


I feel we are going through some changes in the way we think about the pandemic. I'm releasing a couple of tracks against the Mark Dalton Griffiths name recorded in April. First up is "Healer celebration dance by Oxfordian highlands indigenous people."

Recorded in April 2020 during the UKs lockdown in response to the Covid 19 pandemic. It became a habit to go to our front doors or balconies every Thursday at 8pm and clap to thank key workers, in particular those in the health service, for their work while the majority of the rest of us were confined to our homes. Our own village was no exception and in addition to clapping there was much banging of saucepans and someone even got out a hunting horn for the occasion. The short piece took a recording of one of the “clap for the NHS” sessions and looped parts of it. What came out was something vaguely akin to those ethnological recordings of some indigenous tribe made by some earnest academic. Thus we have “Healer celebration dance by Oxfordian highlands indigenous people.” It’s a celebration in the face of adversity.

Sun Glitter

Finally got this out on Spotify, Apple, Amazon etc. Rest of the Modular Studies Volume 1 album will be there sometime soon (ish).

Saturday, May 16, 2020

Something soon



I hope to be getting some material out soon. I have some older material that I need to get onto the streaming platforms and then I have a number of tracks complete that will go first on the streaming platforms and then probably on Bandcamp.

So right now there are some new modular tracks, a music concrete track, an experiment in sonification and alot more.


Mundane Music: Towel Rail

Another single source music concrete piece, "Towel Rail" is literally just that, a few hits on a metal towel rail, digitally proce...