{"id":125161,"date":"2024-12-20T09:39:09","date_gmt":"2024-12-20T15:39:09","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/toiletovhell.com\/?p=125161"},"modified":"2024-12-20T09:39:09","modified_gmt":"2024-12-20T15:39:09","slug":"by-wet-nurse-wolf-devoid-of-wolfish-rage-an-interview-with-ut-mutem","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/toiletovhell.com\/by-wet-nurse-wolf-devoid-of-wolfish-rage-an-interview-with-ut-mutem\/","title":{"rendered":"“By wet-nurse wolf, devoid of wolfish rage”: An Interview with Ut Mutem<\/b>"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Concrete music.<\/p>\n

On Friday December 20th,\u00a0the experimental looping tape manipulation project Ut Mutem<\/strong> will release their latest record\u00a0<\/em>Wet Nurse <\/a>via Dissociation Recordings<\/strong>. It is an impressively thoughtful and mature album, one that marks a moment of evolution and progress in the project’s short but prolific career. It is a meditation on new life pieced together by so many of the disparate sounds that make up living on any given day. I conducted an interview via email with Andrew Lee, the beautiful baby boy behind Ut Mutem, about the band, the new album, and just what musique concrete is anyways.\u00a0<\/em><\/p>\n

IGoM: For the vast uninitiated, tell us about Ut Mutem. From where and whence did this project spring?<\/strong><\/p>\n

UM: It all started during COVID lockdown when I was participating in a handful of online academic conferences. In one of my presentations, I used the example of tape decks and cassette tapes as a metaphor for bodies and DNA. Another graduate student in the audience hit me up afterward and asked if I experimented with tape music, which I hadn\u2019t ever tried at the time. He shared with me some of his excellent\u00a0musique concrete<\/em>\u00a0stuff, and we even almost joined forces to co-author an essay sort of combining our research and something having to do with tapes and plasticity or repetition and difference; I don\u2019t know, I can\u2019t remember exactly as it didn\u2019t come to fruition. But it did give me the idea to try tape loops out myself.<\/p>\n

I already had one of these newer Crosley radio\/cassette player combos as I do listen to tapes a lot. And it was easy to find a diagram demonstrating a few different lengths of tape loops you can make to get different lengths of time. And once I got my hands on some blank tapes, I tried out a simple, like, 5-second loop and recorded onto it from classical radio. From there I just started recording those loops into Garageband. I would then record another and layer it over the previous one, playing around with different arrangements and effects. I knew then that I had found something which I could really run with as a vehicle to compose music without any traditional instruments; I feel like I\u2019ve always been frustratingly bad at playing instruments. I also considered how this method provides limitless possibilities for collecting and collaging audio together, sounds that can be sourced from almost anywhere. I was already exposed to artists who were making music, at least in part, with similar methods; so, inspiration from those artists\/writers in books like Audio Culture<\/em>\u00a0and\u00a0Tape Delay<\/em>\u00a0took on more than just expanding my listening horizons but also pushing me to create for myself.<\/p>\n

\u201cUt Mutem\u201d also came from a conference presentation I gave. I was rehearsing an etymology of the Latin forms of the word\u00a0alter<\/em>\u00a0and its conceptual proximity to the Latin forms of the word\u00a0mutate<\/em>\u00a0(it was a conference on \u201cAltered States\u201d). This one worked much better than the tape one. I don\u2019t remember exactly why I landed on this, but my wife who was studying Latin at the time helped me with it. And, I didn\u2019t use this part in the presentation, but as I was flipping around a Latin dictionary going back and forth from \u201calter\u201d and \u201cmutare,\u201d I came up with\u00a0ut mutem<\/em>\u00a0(or some close variation of that). We translate it as \u201cin order that I should change.\u201d And I thought that fit quite nicely with how I was thinking about moving forward with recording tape loops\u2014never placing restrictions on my approach, allowing the process to change as necessary in order to continue creating.<\/p>\n