Music

Happy Valley Band, bLectum from bLechdom, Zachary James Watkins

Blectum from BlechdomHappy Valley BandZachary James Watkins

About Happy Valley Band, bLectum from bLechdom, Zachary James Watkins

Indexical, Idea Fab Labs, and Unintelligible: Noise Against Capture present the deconstructed pop songs of the Happy Valley Band, glitchy techno of bLectum from bLechdom, and long-form drones of Oakland-based composer and electronic musician Zachary James Watkins.

April 20th, 2018, 8pm
Idea Fab Labs Santa Cruz
2879 Mission St. Extension
Santa Cruz, CA 95060

Indexical.org for tickets and information

Happy Valley Band
The Happy Valley Band is pop music as heard by a computer algorithm. Bay Area composer and performer David Kant translates machine learning analyses of pop songs into music notation in order to explore the biases and assumptions inherent in digital automation. The transcriptions, which are impossibly over-specific, microtonal, and brimming with artifacts of the machine listening process, are performed by the Happy Valley Band, a group of Bay Area and New York City musicians.

The project has been described as “a shitty MP3 to MIDI converter,” “the Shaggs meets Guitar Hero,” “James Brown backed by Sun Ra,” “the best executed worst idea,” and “generally distressing to listen to.” According to Kant, “it’s not exactly about getting machines to hear like (we presume) humans do. Machines hear in as many different ways as we design and build them. We should use machines to hear differently, not to reinforce our expectations — because whose expectations are they anyway?“ The project is about highlighting the assumptions implicit in algorithm design.
Photos
Videos

Madonna's Like a Prayer, as Heard by a Computer Algorithm

video:Madonna's Like a Prayer, as Heard by a Computer Algorithm

Happy Valley Band - Crazy

video:Happy Valley Band - Crazy
Comments
Explore Nearby