My trusty 1st gen ipod shuffle treated me to an interesting juxtaposition this morning: First, it played a random [unknown] track off the freely available Girl Talk album Feed the Animals, then it played Stark Effect’s “I miss you”, part of his freely available mic in tracks.
Girl Talk uses the most familiar snippets from the world of popular music and creates something wildly different — cultural touchstones (shibboleth?) become part of an alien hip-hop tapestry (alien, at least, to virgin ears — hilarious and catchy to all well-conditioned ears).
To describe the “mic in tracks”, we must take a journey through time to the dawn of file-sharing networks: A common cd-burning software at the time allowed users to record introductions to their mix-cd’s using whatever microphone happened to be plugged into the computer. These files were automatically saved with filenames like “mic in track 3.mp3″ or something (more information at the stark-effect site).
It turns out that a lot of people recording these “mic-in tracks” were also blindly sharing all of their local mp3 files with different file-sharing programs. The end result is that a napster search (or the equivalent) for “mic-in track” would return hundreds of these introductions. Heartfelt moments, random shout-outs — the stupidest most-intimate verbal shenanigans were laid bare for the world to see.
Anyway, the Stark-Effect guy did just that, and created songs out of the gems he unearthed. This particular song, “I miss you” mixes some dude trying to get his girlfriend to come back to him with some floaty girl talking about how much she loves somebody — romantic crap like that.
The individual pieces are not that interesting, but the mix paints a picture that feels warm and enveloping. Despite the lack of context surrounding the bits, the result is something that I think is easy to relate to.
These two songs work together to demonstrate the power — the art — of assembly and the cultural value of remix. I don’t want to dwell on this now, as it is duly dwelled upon elsewhere, but it struck me as worth reporting.
Check out the music!