Submissions by onezero tagged just-intonation

Another one-guitar fingerpicking piece, on the microtonal Tele Deluxe in microtonal just intonation. There's a nice sparkle to some of these intervals. No inline effects--just straight into the UA Volt, with one channel for bridge, one neck, one both pickups. There is an additional couple of chords from the bridge in two places when the original line was a bit sparse.

There is the usual convolution reverb, and some compression/eq on the stereo mix.

The title comes from the Lough Allua, near Ireland regional road 584.

10 Allua.mp37.5mb

This week's track is a return to the fingerpicking guitar trio thing, this time with the Just Intonation Tele Deluxe. Digging into the mechanics of performance, there are hammer-ons I'd like to perform, but find difficult--at the nut, the neck is narrower than a few of my more-fingerpicking-compatible instruments (parlor guitar, PureSalem Mendiola). So it's interesting.

This one was a bit tricky to edit together--many parts begin on an off-beat, and recording over two sessions meant that the feel between some parts ends up quite different.

In any case, there's a gentle, contemplative vibe to this.

The title comes from the minor planet 583 Klotilde.

09 Klotilde.mp38.6mb

This is a bit of a departure from my usual no-effects approach. This one uses the microtonal just-intonation-fretted Tele Deluxe through the Reuss Effects Understate and Moyo passive volume pedal to take off the string attack. From there, the signal goes into a patch I've been working with in Max/MSP. The patch uses some tone-shaping (AudioThing Reels) and eight delays set to different long values, usually over 20 seconds and less than a minute. I'll assign each progressive note to a different delay, so the next repetition will have them appearing in a different order. Each delay has a send to a convolution reverb, here using an impulse from the Dan Harpole cistern.

The title comes from minor planet 582 Olympia

08 Olympia.mp313.4mb

Stylistically this is in keeping with the recent all-guitar pieces. I'd started with the thought of something sparser, but in the actual playing, things got a bit busier. Time for a change soon, I think.

Three tracks of microtonal Tele Deluxe parts caster fretted with just intonation intervals, going through the Reuss Effects Understate to give it a bit of sparkle.

In Ableton, there's the convolution reverb and a bit of compression/eq.

The title comes from the River Yarrow, which tracks alongside the A581 for a while.

Edit: updated the file to fix a couple too-obvious edits.

07 Yarrow.mp38.8mb

More all-guitar, and once again the Tele Deluxe fretted for 24-to-the-2/1 just intonation. I'd wanted something a bit more spacious than the last few, which manifests in the pauses for notes to fade out. Like last week, this also makes use of the (Reuss Effects Understate)[https://www.reusseffects.com/en-us/products/understate] for a bit of tone-shaping before it hits the UA Volt.

The title is from the River Allow, which is crossed by R576 at Kanturk. (I probably should have saved this title for piece 579.)

02 Allow.mp38.8mb

Happy new year! This one is similar to the last few years of guitar-only pieces I can put together in a few sessions, though there's a bit of a departure: I'd wanted to build a guitar with a neck fretted for just intonation, so I could experiment with precise intervals and precise difference tones. This piece started with the fingerpicking pattern you hear first, which foregrounds some of those difference tones, rather than sticking with consonance. Timing is a bit loose; I'd wanted to play with a little more elastic quality.

This ended up being a bit tricky to edit: initially, it was about six, seven minutes, though I reduced all of the sections to half, and took out a few. While I liked the suspension of time there, it maybe got a bit too meander-y at this slow tempo.

For this piece, I'm also reintroducing a pedal--in this case, the Reuss Effects Understate, which is a clean boost. The parts panned center and left get this, while the bridge pickup (panned right) does not. Otherwise, everything's straight into the UA Volt, which has a pretty good overdriven sound you can hear on some peaks.

There's some convolution reverb send, and the usual light compression/eq on the stereo channel.

The title comes from the somewhat arduous process of finding places with 575 feet of elevation above sea level. I ended up throwing in the towel and going with Presque Isle's Gull Point, which does have some patches surveyed at 575.

01 Gull Point.mp39.1mb