The Amazing Rolo

Sound, music, art, interaction, etc

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Darkness


Darkness on Vimeo

Above you can watch a short movie I finished this week. It’s a strange sci-fi narrative that takes place on another planet, where sounds and lights are perceived differently than on Earth.

You can download an ipod-ready version here:
The Amazing Rolo – Darkness (34 mb)
(right-click, “save as…”)

And you can read about what I was trying to do (and how I went about doing it) here.

If you would like a higher resolution version just send me an email or leave a comment on this post.

Posted 5 years ago at 5:39 am.

1 comment

Tea + Jam


My friend Pete Vilk and I recently finished a little website about our Tea and Jam project. Check it out!

Tea + Jam

The idea was to build an interface where people could come help us make some sound and music while drinking tea in a relaxing atmosphere. We’re going to keep developing it, so this will probably evolve a lot in the near future.
This week I’m working on a short video. It will be done by Friday, I’ll upload it here as soon as it’s finished. See you then!

Posted 5 years ago at 3:15 pm.

3 comments

Video footage and Tea + Jam


Thanks to Anna Seppa, Alex Fong, and others, I have some video footage from my show at the Forest Cafe the other day. The audio is a bit distorted, but it’s rather fun to watch.

Before we get to those, if you’re interested in my current studio project you can read about it (and listen and watch videos) here. It involved building a tea set that generates music and sound. Very fun stuff.

And here are a couple of songs from the show.
Good For Me:

The Oh Be Gentle Strut click to hear the studio version:

Five More Minutes click to hear the studio version:

Each Possible Conclusion (featuring the Wii controller)

Posted 5 years, 2 months ago at 7:00 am.

5 comments

A few wii projects


No music this time, but here are a couple of other things for you.

As I mentioned earlier, one of my current school projects entails making “Loop Composer” software that uses a Nintendo Wii wireless controller as an interface.

I’ve finished a very early prototype, which you can play with if you happen to have Max/MSP, a Wii controller, and a bluetooth enabled computer. Click here to download the Max patch, directions, and a pdf of a short presentation I will be giving on thursday. If anyone does test it I would be grateful for feedback. Right now it is quite skeletal with very few features, but it responds well enough and I’ll be using it at my show tomorrow night. [edit: this version is no longer supported! go download the new, much fancier version]

Which reminds me, I’m playing a show with a lot of friends tomorrow night at 8pm in the Forest Cafe here in Edinburgh. It’s free and it should be a good time!

Last week I wrote a film sound analysis about silent Soviet film of the 20′s. Read it here! It’s called “The Sound of War in Silent Soviet Film” and talks mostly about The Battleship Potemkin and The End of St. Petersburg.

One of the scenes (from “The End of St. Petersburg) I talk about can be watched on youtube.

For some reason the other scene (from “The Battleship Potemkin”) won’t upload to youtube, but the full film is available for free download at archive.org.

Posted 5 years, 3 months ago at 8:46 am.

1 comment

Field Recordings


I’ve made some pretty cool field recordings recently, and I thought I would share the excitement…for starters, this is the sound from my window this afternoon:
Bagpipes in the distance

And 10 days ago I borrowed the binaural microphones from my school and went to a Hibernian FC soccer game with a friend. Here are some of the results:
The game gets started
Just after a goal is scored (the recording of the goal itself is too distorted, sorry).
You’ll notice that the stereo image is only really effective on headphones, particularly for those last two recordings.

You’ll also notice a nice little change on this blog…I’ve discovered a very cool little mp3 embedding system made by del.icio.us. Now you can just click the blue arrows to play, or right click (ctrl-click) the name of the song to download.

Posted 5 years, 7 months ago at 3:13 pm.

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Audio production in a nutshell

Yesterday I made a web tutorial/explanation about the work that goes into making an album – in particular, the forthcoming Groanbox Boys album. It has pictures, sound clips, and short discussions about the various stages involved:

http://www.theamazingrolo.net/groanbox/

Posted 6 years ago at 9:00 am.

2 comments

Exhale solutions.


This is a little anecdote about playing underground hip hop for high school students at a vocational school in France.

Click to listen or download.

It’s quite short and simple, I did it all this morning using music by Aesop Rock and an old NPR recording from last November.

In other news, I’m back in Pittsburgh. My trip to the UK was everything I was hoping it to be, and more. Now I’m looking forward to getting back to work on my Projects with a capital P.

[edit: whoops! That mp3 cut off before the end. I'm fixing it now, it should be fixed in a few minutes]

Posted 6 years, 3 months ago at 11:26 am.

4 comments

A car breaks down.


I’m not really sure how to describe this…I’ve been saying “sound documentary” but it’s really more of a story than a documentary. It’s the story of my car breaking down on the highway a few weeks ago.

In any event, I’ve been working on this for the past week or so. I wrote all of the text and music (except the Gillian Welch song, as you’ll see). The sound effects are a mix between stuff I recorded in my house and tracks from the BBC Sound Effects Library.

It’s long – about 15 minutes – and the file is about 16 mb, so be patient!

Click to listen.

Oh, and the song that I talk about at the end can be listened to in its entirety here.

Posted 6 years, 4 months ago at 9:52 am.

1 comment

I had the nicest dream.


Thanks to a little encouragement (and a lot of help) from my friend Jonathon I recently started learning how to use After Effects – the software that I’m now realizing is used to make every car commercial that you see on TV. I picked it up fairly quickly, probably because of the similarities with audio software. I think I’m only barely scratching the surface, but it’s a useful skill to have, and I thoroughly enjoy it, even though waiting for video to render is the most mind numbing activity ever.

In any event I used After Effects to compile a lot of footage that I took at the Farm one day over the summer, and I lengthened and remixed an old song of mine to create a music video! I’m fairly happy with it. I think it’s a good initial foray into the world of video.

Click here to watch or download. It’s a 20 mb quicktime file, so be patient! Make sure your volume is turned up or else it gets kinda boring.

Posted 6 years, 5 months ago at 8:39 pm.

3 comments

Tony the night guard


As I mentioned in the previous post, I’ve been working on a short sound documentary. I originally wanted to use it as part of my Handface documentary, but now I’m not so sure. In any event it was a very good exercise for me, and I hope you enjoy it. Click here to listen or download.

As usual, it will be much more enjoyable if you are able to listen on real speakers or headphones…laptop speakers are not so great.

Please let me know what you think! This was definitely an experiment so I would like to hear some opinions.

Posted 6 years, 5 months ago at 10:44 am.

9 comments