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Leo Coogan 7 months ago
parent 475a53768a
commit 1dc9f31888

@ -63,11 +63,7 @@ These tools dont succeed because theyre inherently powerful—they succeed
.HEADING 2 "Why Sound Design?"
.PP
Sometimes I wonder how many versions of rain I can make before it stops sounding like rain—still recognizable, still evoking the feeling. What if it becomes ghostly tonal water? Water that speaks unintelligibly? These questions dont come from textbooks. They come from somewhere deeper—a need to understand how sound shapes perception, how it marks a world and makes it real. Sound design gives us tools for understanding how sound shapes our perception
Alternative tunings challenge the defaults embedded in our musical culture. The twelve-tone equal temperament that many accept as “correct” reflects a historical compromise—a flattened framework imposed on what should be fluid and expressive. By exploring alternative tunings, I push myself to think in a different language, to question ingrained habits and assumptions about harmony, consonance, and the boundaries of musical space.
.PP
Alternative tunings is part of that. Using alternative tunings isnt just about sounding weird or experimental. Its about breaking out of defaults weve inherited uncritically. The twelve-tone equal temperament weve all been conditioned to hear as "correct" isnt neutral—its a historical compromise, a flattened grid imposed on something that should breathe and bend. When I use alternative tunings, its not to sound different—its about challenging myself to think differently, in that new language. Im trying to shake myself loose from habits, from unconscious assumptions about harmony, consonance, and the supposed "limits" of musical space.
.PP
This isnt just about aesthetics or attitude — its literal infrastructure. Hackers are building operating systems like NixOS, privacy-preserving currencies like Monero, peer-to-peer meshnets like Freifunk and NYCMesh, and audio environments like SuperCollider. This mentality — of making things open, modular, free, and reprogrammable — bleeds directly into electronic music. IDM artists often work with the same tools, write their own, or fork existing ones to do what the commercial world cant. Its not because they have more money or equipment — its because they have something big media cant buy: vision, curiosity, and the refusal to accept assumptions about how things “should” work. This is the kind of work that puts power into the hands of anyone with a laptop and time. And when people start reshaping their tools, they start reshaping their thinking. Thats where culture begins to change. What were doing — even quietly — is laying down the groundwork for a culture that doesnt need permission, one that already lives in the cracks of platform capitalism. Were not just reacting to the system. Were routing around it.
.PP
If theres a political project here, it doesnt unfold through slogans or manifestos. It unfolds through architectures of autonomy — practices that reclaim time, attention, and technique from systems designed to extract them. When we choose tools that are free and reprogrammable, when we prioritize experimentation over efficiency, when we share knowledge horizontally rather than gatekeeping it behind brands or paywalls, we arent just making art — were modeling the beginnings of a post-capitalist culture. One where value isnt defined by performance metrics, where creativity isnt subordinate to monetization, where aesthetic exploration is treated as a form of collective inquiry. This isnt utopian. Its already happening. Where will you be?
This approach reflects a broader ethos found in technology and art. Open, modular, and reprogrammable systems—like the NixOS operating system, privacy-focused currencies such as Monero, mesh networks like Freifunk and NYCMesh, and creative tools like SuperCollider—embody a commitment to autonomy and adaptability. IDM artists frequently engage with these technologies, modifying or creating tools to fulfill needs unmet by commercial platforms. This work depends less on resources than on vision, curiosity, and a refusal to accept prescribed limitations. Empowerment comes from access and the freedom to reshape ones tools—and through that process, new ways of thinking emerge. This gradual transformation is the foundation of a culture that operates independently of gatekeepers and corporate control. This isnt utopian. Its already happening. Where will you be?
.COLLATE

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