Getting a Head

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Getting a Head
BobOstertag GettingaHead.jpg
Live album by
Released1980 (1980)
RecordedJanuary, May, June 1980
VenueWashington D.C., New York City
Genre Experimental music, free improvisation
Length39:50
Label Rift (US)
Bob Ostertag chronology
Getting a Head
(1980)
Voice of America
(1982)

Getting a Head is the debut solo album of live improvised music by experimental sound artist Bob Ostertag. It features Ostertag playing a homemade real-time sound sourcing system with Fred Frith on guitar and Charles K. Noyes on percussion. The album was released on LP by Rift Records in 1980. It was later released on CD by ReR Megacorp in 2000, and by Seeland Records in 2001. In a review of Ostertag's 2009 book, Creative Life: Music, Politics, People, and Machines, Chris Gehman described Getting a Head as "wonderfully strange and inexplicable". [1]

Contents

The sound sourcing system used on Getting a Head comprised three reel-to-reel tape recorders and four to six helium balloons [lower-alpha 1] to control the tape tension. [4] It was conceived by Bryan Medwed and developed and deployed by Ostertag. Ostertag referred to this invention as "One of the first ... times that tape manipulation techniques developed by electronic composers for use in the studio were adapted for live performances and improvisation." [5]

Tape system

The idea behind Ostertag's real-time sound sourcing system came from Bryan Medwed, a friend from the Oberlin Conservatory of Music Ostertag and Medwed had attended. [3] Ostertag developed the concept and produced a tape loop recording and playback system. The device consisted of three open-reel tape desks placed side by side, with a spool of recording tape on deck one running through deck two and onto a take-up reel on deck three. [4] Deck one recorded the musician on channel one via the mixer, which was played back on the middle deck to the mixer. Channel one was looped back to deck one, via the mixer, where it was re-recorded. The middle deck also recorded the mix on channel two, which was played back on deck three. Channel two was looped back to the middle deck, where it was re-recorded. [3]

Ostertag modified the middle tape machine so its playback and recording speed could be changed during the performance. This increased or decreased the sound pitch and tempo. [3] To maintain the tape tension as the middle desk's speed changed, he ran the tape on each side of the middle deck through grommets suspended by four to six helium balloons. [lower-alpha 1] [6] [7] Ostertag manipulated the sound of performances by varying the speed of the middle deck and changing the combination of record and playback heads on the three decks. [7]

Ostertag said this experimental musical instrument was "highly unstable". The balloons rose and fell with the sound pressure created by the music, and often pulled the tape off its track in a breeze. He recalled: "'Playing' the instrument was an exercise in disaster control, while the [musician] performing with me was placed in the awkward situation of never quite knowing how the contraption would mangle the sound next." [7]

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic Star full.svgStar full.svgStar empty.svgStar empty.svgStar empty.svg [6]

In a review of Getting a Head at AllMusic, François Couture said Ostertag began experimenting with sound sampling a decade before it became a commercial viability. He called Medwed and Ostertag's invention "the strangest contraption". [6] Couture wrote that Ostertag's manipulation of Frith's performance produced "a warped mirror image" of his guitar that was "strange and unsteady". He felt that "In Tundra" is "much better", stating that Ostertag made Noyes' "eerie" percussion "nightmarish". [6] Overall Couture described the album as "a bit crude", but nonetheless "an interesting document". [6]

Gregory Sandow wrote in The Village Voice that the sounds in Ostertag's duet with Frith on side A "move in short, almost breathless little impulses" and are "lively and alert". [8] Side B with Ostertag and Noyes is more "peaceful", and Sandow felt that its final movement, with a sound loop repeating itself, "is especially lovely". [8]

Track listing

Side A
No.TitleWriter(s)Venue and dateLength
1."Getting a Head"Bryan Medwed, Bob Ostertag, Fred Frith Washington D.C., June 1980
New York City, May 1980 (last third)
18:40
Side B
No.TitleWriter(s)Venue and dateLength
1."In Tundra"Medwed, Ostertag The Kitchen, New York City, January 198021:10

Sources: Liner notes, [9] Discogs. [10]

Personnel

Bob Ostertag's homemade real-time sound sourcing system showing three reel-to-reel tape decks and four helium balloons. Getting a Head tape system.jpg
Bob Ostertag's homemade real-time sound sourcing system showing three reel-to-reel tape decks and four helium balloons.

Sources: Liner notes, [9] Discogs, [10] AllMusic. [6]

Sound and artwork

Sources: Liner notes, [9] Discogs. [10]

Notes

  1. 1 2 In some sources Ostertag says he used four helium balloons, [2] in others he says six were used. [3]

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References

  1. Gehman, Chris (Spring 2010). "From El Salvador to PantyChrist: Bog Ostertag's Creative Life: Music, Politics, People and Machines". Fuse . Vol. 33 no. 2. ProQuest   219930339.
  2. Ostertag 2009, p. 136.
  3. 1 2 3 Dery, Mark (August 1988). "Notes from the Underground". Keyboard . Vol. 14 no. 8. p. 28. ISSN   0730-0158.
  4. 1 2 Grella, George J. (January 20, 2016). "Ostertag, Bob [Robert]" . Oxford University Press . Retrieved May 9, 2019 via Grove Music Online.
  5. Ostertag 2009, p. 178.
  6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Couture, François. "Bob Ostertag | Getting a Head". AllMusic . Retrieved May 23, 2019.
  7. 1 2 3 Ostertag 2009, p. 135.
  8. 1 2 Sandow, Gregory (January 7–13, 1981). "Three Good Records". The Village Voice . XXVI (2). ISSN   0042-6180.
  9. 1 2 3 Ostertag, Bob (1980). Getting a Head (LP liner notes). Bob Ostertag. Rift Records.
  10. 1 2 3 "Bob Ostertag – Getting A Head". Discogs . Retrieved May 13, 2019.

Works cited