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TEDxMidAtlantic took place yesterday in Baltimore, MD. It has been a tremendous honor and a humbling experience to share the stage with Nobel Prize winners, human rights activists, notable public figures, amazing artists, and entrepreneurs. The reason I mention this here is because L2Ork also got its 5 minutes of fame as part of my talk on rediscovering the true potential of human hearing. On-demand video streams of all talks are available on the TEDxMidAtlantic’s website (NB: L2Ork segment also includes first publicly available video footage of L2Ork in action). Additional event info can be found on the TEDxMidAtlantic twitter channel. Special thanks to conference staff for organizing such an amazing event!

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Publicity!  And we didn’t even ask for it!  A recent article published by Con-Techie and Associated Content is the first official media coverage of L2Ork, which came out as a result of a Con-Techie team member apparently randomly stumbling across this site (not that we feel any less flattered).  The article, an interview with our very own Maestro of L2Ork Dr. Ico Bukvic, gives an overview of what L2Ork is, some of the reasons for building L2Ork the way we did, and a slight glimpse into the future the ensemble.  Here are the links to the Con-Techie and Associated Content articles.  Enjoy!

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A warning: I’m writing this from work, so it may be disjointed and horribly unentertaining.

I’ll be honest – I haven’t picked up a real instrument in about 4 years (the last time I legitimately played my trumpet was in New Orleans during the Sugar Bowl in 2005). During the summer months before school started I began to have dreams about playing in an ensemble. In an attempt to calm my mind I tried again to teach myself guitar but self-lessons didn’t pique my interests in the way they had before. And so I would dream of making music… until the semester started. I don’t know if it really was L2Ork that ended the recurring dreams or the exhaustive properties of working 45+ hours a week and taking 13 credit hours, but eventually they stopped.

Why do I bring this up? Well, it may not seem like much right now, but I think that what is being built in L2Ork is something spectacular.

I don’t know how much I am contributing – my music theory knowledge has dwindled after years of dormancy – but I do feel as though I can contribute in some way, shape or form.

Ico is getting stressed from having to constantly squash bugs and with the realization that a performance is only a month away I can only imagine him as Mario, running through the sections in the mini-boss castles in Super Mario Bros. 3 with the spikes at the bottom of a descending wall.  Luckily, though, I think that with the help of the members of L2Ork Ico will find that the wall only has spikes on one side and by jumping to the top of the wall can get to the Warp Pipes that lead to “L2Ork,” “…?…” and “Profit.”

I guess what I’m trying to say is that we are making music, we are an ensemble, we are dangerously close to a public performance and I believe that we will make it after all.

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Everyone goes through it, that stage when you’re first starting out with a project, getting your feet wet, figuring out what you’ve got to work with. Whether it’s mashing all of your expensive neon colored Sculpey together to make a pretty, neon, rainbow, clay snake or using all the Italian spices you can get your mitts on to make your first spaghetti sauce, it happens. It’s experimenting. Not only does it happen, it’s completely necessary.

It’s easy for already accomplished artists to forget that this is how everyone begins. Unless you’re some deaf virtuoso touting around the concertos you wrote whilst picking your nose at age five, in which case, you’re excluded from this, the first time you picked up a guitar, you didn’t start shredding like Steve Vai or paint the Persistence of Time on your first try (Dali). Maybe you could conceive more than stick figures or play a few power chords, but you had to start somewhere. People forget this. Unforgiving professors who are unable to fathom the varieties of individual learning curves each person has and why their students don’t understand basic things like the circle of fifths, they don’t remember that they once were probably in the same position. Or in a worse case, perhaps they were an exception, and it simply was second nature, these professionals lose track of the concept of teaching.

What makes L2Ork such a special thing is that everyone is learning. And everyone is in that beginning stage of understanding the new medium in which we are working. So like the kid who upon getting his hands on a sequencer for the first time made a hip-hop beat, we’ve spent the past few weeks playing with these wii-motes. Really. And it’s been incredibly fun, albeit absurd. We’ve glitched voice overs and presidential speeches, mapped soul-wrenching percussional smack-downs and the dings of little bells to wii-mote directional hits, bent the pitches of Chewbacca and Lightsaber samples played on top of dripping water loops vocoding our voices. Heck, I may even admit to being guilty of trying to make a hip-hop beat with these things.

On top of being a blast to play with, as I said before, this process of gaining familiarity with your instrument, an instrument that changed nearly every class period with updated patches and effects, was a necessary step. It showcased the wide potential of sounds we could create and the amount of fun we could have with our new instruments. It posed the question that every artist needs to ask in order to progress, where is this going? How are we going to get there?

A focus is emerging in L2Ork. Truth be told, I don’t  think many of us can answer these questions yet, but the fact that we’re asking them truly shows that a direction is starting to form. We may not be painting the Sistine Chapel’s ceiling any time soon, but we certainly aren’t finger-painting.

-Adam

Dig it: Radiohead/Hail to the Thief (I can’t help it, I always listen to this album in the autumn)

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Full Steam Ahead

So, we’ve hit a few roadblocks along the way, ironically most of them having little to do with L2Ork itself, and more with the Man-Bear-Pig flu (or whatever they call it these days). Now that most of us are back on our feet, we are moving full steam ahead.

After series of exercises exploring Wiimote/Nunchuk as an expressive hyerinstrument, we’ve settled on developing more elaborate iterations of exercises 4 and 5. Exercise 4 utilizes bowing metaphor to produce sound while allowing performers to shape and modify their sound through a series of gesture-driven filters (e.g. pitch-shifters, vocoders, delays, etc.). Exercise 5 deals with percussive side of things while still offering a relatively broad vocabulary of possibilities, ranging from sustained shapes to microscopic glitch-like slices.

Our L2Ork family has grown this fall to incorporate 9 new performers. In the coming days, as we create and distribute new blogging accounts, our new members will hopefully join me in posting their impressions of the L2Ork’s maiden journey (note to self: need to update the L2Orkists page asap). In the meantime, stay tuned for more L2Orklicious updates…

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