November 22nd – Saint Cecilia’s Day
Patron saint of musicians, composers and church music
trismos
/uploads/2007/11/trismos.mp3Her name means ‘blind’, she lived for three days after the executioner failed to de-capitate her. He struck his blow three times and ran away in fear when he had failed in his task. Blindfolded she lay and waited for death all the while singing hymns for her true love.
Sounding a trismos, the steady whistling noise that is a sound reserved exclusively for dead souls. Oh Cecilia you’re breaking my heart. You’re shaking my confidence daily. Shakin’ my cocaine and saltine. A misheard lyric. A misplaced sound. It’s much more important how language sounds than what its concrete content is. Oh Cecilia I’m down on my knees and begging you please to come home.Your blood pearl necklace of tangled fences. A song heard in dreams that carries us across the breach of sleep. A bridge, the middle 8. Richard Pryor’s funeral pyre. Bob Dylan’s burning guitars and boxcars. Clickity clack clack, don’t step on a crack or you’ll break your mother’s back. Bridges burned and backs turned. A structure seeks stasis by balancing forces in tension and compression. Verse Chorus Verse Chorus Bridge Verse Chorus Verse again.
Sea shanties, football chants, cowboy songs, church house songs, song of songs, protest songs, drinking songs, poor ol’ me songs and ballads.
If your dictionary doesn’t have it, then throw it out and await further instruction from Egyptian Kings at the candy store. Borrow a Jimi Hendrix riff, add a bird’s screech. Trismos. Trismos. Beg, borrow and steal suicides, accidents, disappearances and suspicious circumstances on a lake they call Gichee Goomee.
Minstrel songs, pop songs, rebel songs, dance reels, gospels, bad man ballads, national anthems, sing-a longs, lullabys, madrigals and spirituals.
There’s no treatment at the beginning of the song just a 57 marshal with a pick up on the guitar. An envelope generator responds to the playing and uses that info to dynamically control the bypass filter. Unlike typical auto-wah pedals, it produces considerably more complex effects. The filter is opened up and the drums spread back out and pan across the full stereo spectrum. The melatrone gives that string sound. The sound seems to come out of nowhere. As the chorus begins there’s a last note that rings through. It just plays one note, so its not really there long enough for anyone to notice that it is going on but it is what makes it feel that something really big is about to happen before the chorus starts again.
Oh cecilia you’re breaking my heart
I’m down on my knees and i’m praying
A different day means that the atmosphere and the air in the room is different and these subtle differences create a different sound. You see, said the blind woman, the weather affects the way the microphone hears what’s being played. Trismos tricks us.

Martirio di Santa Cecilia, Santa Cecilia in Trastevere, Roma, Italy


Comments
i love this trish xx
Posted by beatrice brown at 23:24 on November 28th, 2009
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