Please listen in headphones to experience the spatial components. kaitlynaureliasmith.com/ / kaitlynaurelia Video shot by Sean Hellfritsch - / shellfritsch
Hey Kaitlyn I used Shazam to find one of your songs when I was at work. It came up as Sundry but I can't seem to find it anywhere. Can you help me out?
Hello, That is neat it worked with shazam! Im curious, where did you hear it? The album comes out Jan 20th. Here is a link to stream that song: westernvinyl.com/artists/kas.html
I forget which radio station but it played while I was playing around with the frequencies. Thanks a lot! I'll be looking out for your album on the 20th :)
Time flies. 9 years! Hope you're doing well. I took your recipe to the MakeNoise Shared System today. Your recipe is probably one of the most exquisite dishes in the Modular Cookbook.
Still, years later, the video I come back to in remembrance of why I wanted a Buchla Easel in the first place. Still engaging, still beautiful, still far too short. ♥️
This is absolutely amazing! I love how seemingly simple it is, but it has layers upon layers of the most subtle details and textures to it. It is so colorful and vibrant, is almost sounds like an acoustic instrument in that sense. Can't stop listening to this!
such a beautiful piece. i really love your approach to harmonies. your music is fresh not only sonic-wise, but you're also able to surprise my ears with the progressions. rare amongst modular artists.
Keep coming back to this one. The more I dig into, and explore, the Buchla World the more impressed I am with how deftly you navigate the controls on the Easel.
I've been listening to this off and on for weeks now, but today (while working) I looped it at least 5 times. Wonderful composition, and I rather enjoyed watching it performed. More! :)
Learned about you and the Buchla on WNYC's New Sounds with John Schaefer. What a delight to see and hear your music. Thank you so much for posting this. You're completely right about the headphone comment--it seems that so much music today ignores spatial possibilities.
very cool, nice that you can get so much out of it so quickly, makes me want to have an easel for sure now. I'd been wanting one since I saw Susan Ciani play one in the 70's.
One of the few videos which aren't just showing annoyingly cheap sounding bleeps and bloops from a buchla. This sounds beautiful and I'm glad to see that someone can actually operate this instrument in a pleasent way!
im so envious, ... that beautiful buchla must feel amazing to play! 🖖 ... it sounds amazing with you at the helm! u are masterful and so skilled.. and so much feeling u have ...an amazing musician ... I love your sound and your energy is beautiful! thanks for this 😉🌍🔗💙
Let me put it like this: when I see someone performing with a Buchla, I have come to expect a result which, to my ears, is very often pretty indistinguishable from the noise made by an airliner landing with retracted gear or a pretty large refinery imploding in a painfully slow process. It is a huge relief when I am surprised by hearing music, especially when it is beautiful music, as here. Thank you, Ms. Smith! :-)
WOW!!! What great camera work!!!! The Electric Music Box really needed your talented camera work. Usually the camera makes it look like a toy, which considering the price & quality of an ELECTRIC MUSIC BOX is an insult... Your camera gave the Buchla the love it deserves. And your musical composition was also great, but the close ups and slow pans were GENIUS!!! IMHO
Tim Shiel / Double J article brought me here. heard the Buchla mentioned in Wire magazine before, but never heard it until now. beautiful, will check out your album for sure.
Hi Kaitlyn, This gives me great hope for LIVE Electronic Music becoming more mainstream. Our ARTURIA Buchla Easel is great tool, but nothing like the real thing in the hands of a masterful musician! I'm so over pre-programmed Electronic Music, in it's various forms at the Dance Festivals. I'd love see more of your work. You are an inspiration!!! Hope that you make to Australia and knock-'em-dead, here? Kind regards, Richard Grosser