Friday, September 29, 2006

Joseph kelly and the deep structure of techno

Joseph kelly was a maverick scientist who, 40 years before the development of computer devices capable of processing musical sounds, first posited the idea that all music is techno, and began to seek formulae that would allow him to calculate the techno within different kinds of music. his vision was that science would expose the deep structure of all music, and would thus be able to derive new and theoretically perfect musical forms.

Joseph kelly's tree of techno diagram (enlarged to show genres of music developed after kelly's death)

kelly was also a pioneer of having a crafty toke as an alternative to getting violently drunk, but in the repressive climate of 20th century britain he was persecuted for his beliefs and his lifestyle. this ultimately resulted in his tragic suicide in the cells of lewisham police station in 1963, and kelly did not live to see his dream realised.


an excerpt from the details of kelly's original paper on the grand unified theory of all techno, 1957

the legacy of his work, however, lived on. kelly's genius inspired a generation of students who, with access to vastly superior research tools, fast computers, and skunk, were able to work out the details of the formulae which kelly had sketched in the 1950s and 60s - and, crucially, to apply them to real music in real time.
  • in 1984 atkins, fowlkes, may and saunderson (a research team based in north america) published reports of musical forms approaching theoretical perfection, based on the application of kelly's ideas to contemporary non-techno musical forms such as funk and european synth pop. they eventually produced techno's famous d-type, or detroit, variant.
  • this research was followed within only a few years by the publication, by hawtin et al., of g2m-variant (2nd generation minimal) techno.
  • further research in the uk by scientists such as goldie, fabio and grooverider applied variations of kelly's formula to jazz and reggae, resulting in the isolation of a stable form of d/b-type techno (drum/bass variant).
  • meanwhile the hbp (hard banging party) techno variant was developed in mainland europe by academics such as picotto (1989 - present) and liebing (1992 - present).
the museum's ex-curator, donald wiltshire, developed a recursive version of kelly's formula which we believe has allowed us to isolate techno in its purest form: mathematically perfect techno. and professor carl loftus has successfully adapted kelly's formulae to restore the techno basslines of music recorded prior to the discovery of bass in 1960s jamaica.

museumoftechno.org

Thursday, September 28, 2006

Open source is great, I really love that a open community of developers often can create better products than a commersial company. Here are my picks from sourceforge.net:

Notepad++
A great notepad alternative, specially if you are coding. Allows fast color highlighted viewing in almost any language.

Gimp
Easy to use photoshop alternative, should be able to do almost anything the big boys can. There is also a version that mimics the photoshop interface somewhere on sourceforge if you look for it.

MediaCoder
Ever needed to recode some audio/video to another format?

code::blocks
Throw in a visual assist thing and I would quit using visual studio. For small projects and with good typing skills this is great.

Filezilla server, Miranda and Gaim are also useful tools, check them out.

Other stuff that is free of charge and serves as better alternatives to popular software:
CCCP codec pack
realplayer alternative
quicktime alternative
xchat 2
Foxit Reader
uTorrent

I was bored ok? allright that should do it..

Wednesday, September 27, 2006


Inspired by my frends blogging I decided I would start my own just for the hell of it.