PDA

View Full Version : ´´Taking razorblades to his records ...´´


mr.shot
23rd June 2002, 18:03
The use of more than one tonearm on a turntable is not a new concept that Brinkmann is trying to lay claim to, though. “It’s an old idea,” he explains. “The audiophilists, they knew about this idea. In the ‘70s there was a Japanese turntable, the DQX 1000, that had the possibility to put three tonearms on. They used this for different kinds of records and for different kinds of music. They used a special cartridge for jazz music, another cartridge for classical music, they used it this way, but never two or three tonearms at the same time.” The urge to experiment lead to his trying the extra tonearm. “My records had started to bore me, so I tried to play them in different ways. So the first thing I tried was I built a turntable with the tonearm on the left side [instead of the right], so I tried to play my records from the middle to the outside. I also started to make scratches in my records with knives.”

Taking razorblades to his records was something he got into over a decade ago. “My friend had a record player that didn’t stop automatically, so when the needle entered the last groove [on one side of the record], it would go around and around and I heard the noise of it looping. I had this idea to take a knife and cut scratches into the last groove and immediately I understood that there’s a geometrical relation between the scratches and the groove. I learned that when you go deeper into the vinyl, there’s more bass, and when you put only very fine scratches, it’s a little like a hi hat. You can also do melodies, it’s not easy, but it’s possible. So, I started to scratch a lot of records, but at this time [back in the late ‘70s and early ‘80s] people laughed at this idea. Nobody took it seriously, I think I was the only one, so I had to wait a while to really start working with this idea in a different situation. This idea didn’t work with the punk and disco music, but now it’s not a problem because everybody’s now working with strange noises on record.”

He’s scratched up 80 or so records in his collection in this way, so he’s quick to offer up a how-to lesson. “It’s very easy because the record’s going around, and if you make four deep scratches like a cross, it’s something like a straight bass drum,” he says. “If you put four fine scratches between these deeper scratches, then that’s like a hi hat.” Brinkmann’s Ernst records are visual masterpieces. Take the record out of the sleeve and you can see the patterns the rhythms make in the vinyl because of this scratching process. “The Ernst records have very strong lines inside of them. The reason for this is that I recorded them at 133.3 beats per minute which is in relation to the cutting machine speed which you use to produce the vinyl, the 33.3 rpm. You can actually see the music because the instrument makes a line on the surface of the record. Because my Ernst records all play at 133.3 beats per minute, you can see all the scratches, it makes the music visible.” He’s eager to discuss this because it’s not just a recording fluke made available to the masses, it’s something he’s spent years working on. “I think there is a relation between visuality and listening. There is a strong relation between mathematics and music and geometrical problems, and I think a record is much more visible than a CD, for example. Sometimes it’s very useful to look at things and then maybe you understand something about them which you can’t understand when you don’t have this possibility to look at them.”

@m.
24th June 2002, 21:24
I learned this trick about 5 years ago - i don't use it out that much, but it makes for some interesting transitions when i have... the things some people come up with!

V Knid esq
25th June 2002, 02:10
Aren't you happy you live in an era when it's already been done, and you can just say "I cut it into a locked groove" instead of using three paragraphs to describe buggering your vinyl, and then use the remaining space to describe the actual music that you looped?

mr.shot
25th June 2002, 09:16
...ok,
but it´s not me doing scratches on vinyl! thomas brinkmann wrote this on a page...
I found it very interesting and thought you guys don´t heard of it...
cheers!:! :!

V Knid esq
25th June 2002, 10:47
Shit, sorry mate - didn't mean to sound sarcastic and rude, it is actually a properly useful article.

*note to self - don't go on the internet when massively drunk*

mr.shot
25th June 2002, 12:06
@ vs knid esq: ..no problem. I dont take those things serious, because always drunk!
cheers

aleks
25th June 2002, 17:49
drunk people i like lol

@m.
25th June 2002, 21:40
...like drunk i people.....

JE:5
26th June 2002, 00:01
I read somewhere that someone takes razor blades to cds to make loops, can't remember where the fuck I saw it though.

Articulate
26th June 2002, 00:08
ive got an article about Brinkman's surgery at home..
old,classical loop-source method.

mr.shot
26th June 2002, 15:43
:@articulate: where to find that article?I´m very interested in...

@m. & @aleks:you guys cool.we should post a new topic @no-future for anonymous alcoholics he!? it seems I´m not alone... :)
:)

aleks
26th June 2002, 16:02
my dad always said that i can become everything i want to...an engineer, kosmonaut etc...what did i become? an alcoholic..pretty sad, huh?