Music for Drowning
The Xenome Diaries
The Garlic Incident
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The Garlic Incident

βŠ™β€¦ …⨺ ◬… (Xenome 818)

It’s OK. She’s OK. No more whole garlic cloves in the pot roast.


Album Release: Walking to the Temple

So, I snuck out a new album on Bandcamp yesterday. A few folks were paying attention, so thanks to those who have already bought the album. It’s β€œname your price” until after the scheduled listening party on Thursday, so if you want to own it for free, now’s your chance. The price will go up to $5 Thursday afternoon and the album will only be available through 11/11.

Listening Party

As I mentioned above, I’ll be hosting a virtual listening party on Bandcamp on Thursday at 12:30 PST. Hang out and listen together and chat, ask me questions, or whatever. If you’ve never done one of these, it’s just synchronized listening with a text chat, but it’s a fun way to experience the music with the artist, in this case me. The album is around an hour and 15 minutes long.

RSVP

The Book of Xenomes

It’s been a long time coming, but the Book of Xenomes has finally been released, with a surprise foreword by composer and music theory guru Ian Ring. Here’s an excerpt:

Qid Love eschews random colonization of the pitch universe, and has instead developed a system of naming that encodes each scale’s structure in a meaningful form. Each musical scale is represented as a compact notation – a β€œxenome” – that functions like an acronym for the scale’s identity. Xenomes allow musicians to recognize and work with pitch-class sets intuitively, without needing to engage with the deeper mathematical calculations typically associated with set theory. The approach empowers musicians to bring the insights of xenomes directly into their practice, in a format that feels accessible and memorably simple. Notably, thinking of pitch-class sets as xenomes illuminates certain symmetries that will spice up your scalar vocabulary.

There is no expectation that the reader will already know set theory, hexadecimal notation, binary or modulo arithmetic. Qid explains each concept so clearly that both seasoned theorists and beginners alike will find the system intuitive and engaging.

Whether you’re hoping to deepen your grasp of musical set theory or are simply curious about an innovative approach to scale identification, this book offers a refreshing take. Qid Love bridges the gap between the highly theoretical world of pitch class set naming and the everyday reality of making music. A gift to musicians and theorists alike: a practical, accessible way to explore one of music’s more enigmatic subjects. - Ian Ring

I’m also thrilled that xenomes have been added to the scale reference pages on Mr. Ring’s β€œThe Exciting Universe Of Music Theory” website, right above Forte numbers. This is a huge moment of validation for me, and I’m extremely grateful to Ian for taking the time to read my book, write a foreword, and integrate my system into the most comprehensive scale reference on the internet.

Buy the Book!

Un-Release Party

On Monday 11/11, I will be hosting a small private ritual in Seattle for only the most willing victims. Seats are very limited.

Buy a ticket before it's too late

November 11th is Getting Close

After 11/11, all of my past Bandcamp releases are going into the Vault. If you want to purchase individual releases, take advantage of the current special price on my back catalog, or just stream for free like there’s no tomorrow, now’s the time.

Take a Good Last Look

Discussion about this podcast

Music for Drowning
The Xenome Diaries
My journey through uncharted harmonic realms via improvised musical meditations.