Essentially, “White Night” is an outwardly simple and fluent piece with a degree of inner complexity which prevents it from slipping to the background: “The piece consists of a dense, continuous four-note chord, each note in the chord recorded in a separate pass to one track on a Scully 4-track studio recorder”, Richard Lainhart explains, “Each track consists of a single sine wave oscillator which is frequency modulated by a group of eight additional sine wave oscillators. Those oscillators are all tuned to different tones, each harmonically related to the fundamental chord tone.”
Therefore, the musical action does not necessarily take place in the center, but in the harmonics: Richard Lainhart: “The result is a continuously-changing complex harmonic waveform (...), generating a continuously-changing complex timbre based on the fundamental pitch of the note.”
“White Night” by Richard Lainhart is available directly from the Ex Ovo site and will set you back 10€ (about $14,50).
Homepage: Richard Lainhart
Homepage: Ex Ovo Records
Therefore, the musical action does not necessarily take place in the center, but in the harmonics: Richard Lainhart: “The result is a continuously-changing complex harmonic waveform (...), generating a continuously-changing complex timbre based on the fundamental pitch of the note.”
“White Night” by Richard Lainhart is available directly from the Ex Ovo site and will set you back 10€ (about $14,50).
Homepage: Richard Lainhart
Homepage: Ex Ovo Records
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