musinum

Tim Doyle, 63, Male, United States
www.musinumworld.comLast seen: yesterday evening

164555 plays since 14 Aug 2007

6,168 Loved Tracks | 155 Posts | 1 Playlist | 1,380 shouts

  • Add as friend
  • Send a message
  • Leave a shout

Your musical compatibility with musinum is Unknown

Get your own music profile

Recently Listened Tracks

Scrobbling from Android Last.fm (Musinum’s Mix Radio)
Gabriel FauréDolly-Tendresse Loved track Listening now
Stan Kenton and His OrchestraIntermission Riff Loved track 14 minutes ago
MINNIE RIPERTONOur Lives 20 minutes ago
Ricardo Lemvo & Makina LocaNganga Kisi 23 minutes ago
Brenda FassieVuli Ndlela (Remix) Loved track 29 minutes ago
Ayub OgadaOndiek Loved track 33 minutes ago
Thomas Mapfumo & the Blacks UnlimitedShumba 38 minutes ago
Soweto Gospel ChoirVuma Loved track 42 minutes ago
FreshlygroundFire Is Low Loved track 46 minutes ago
Kanda Bongo ManSana Loved track 51 minutes ago
Judith SephumaMmangwane Loved track 57 minutes ago
Brenda FassieSum' Bulala Loved track yesterday evening
Hidekazu WakabayashiThe Ice Bookshop Loved track yesterday evening
Mahotella QueensThina Siyakhanyisa (Bringing The Lights) Loved track yesterday evening
Ayub OgadaKothhbiro (Kenya) Loved track yesterday evening
Koffi OlomidéMotomolo yesterday evening
TiermesPsilocybe Semilamceata yesterday evening
Gelsomina + no XivicGelsomina : Everlasting Fire yesterday evening
Aura MsimangBlow In the Flame yesterday evening
Vusi MahlaselaSometimes You Just Can't Make It On Your Own yesterday evening
See more

Top Artists

1 Play
2 Play
3 Play
4 Play
5 Play
6 Play
7 Play
8 Play
9 Play
10 Play
11 Play
12 Play
13 Play
14 Play
14 Play
16 Play
17 Play
18 Play
19 Play
20 Play
20 Play
22 Play
23 Play
24 Play
25 Play
26 Play
27 Play
28 Play
29 Play
30 Play
31 Play
32 Play
33 Play
34 Play
35 Play
36 Play
37 Play
38 Play
39 Play
40 Play
41 Play
42  
43 Play
44 Play
45 Play
46 Play
47 Play
48 Play
49 Play
50 Play
See more

Top Tracks

1 Loved track
2 Loved track
3 Loved track
4
5 Loved track
6 Loved track
7 Loved track
8   Loved track
9 Loved track
10 Loved track
10 Loved track
12 Loved track
13 Loved track
14 Loved track
15 Loved track
16 Loved track
17   Loved track
18 Loved track
19 Loved track
20 Loved track
20 Loved track
20 Loved track
23   Loved track
24 Loved track
24   Loved track
26 Loved track
27 Loved track
27   Loved track
29 Loved track
29 Loved track
31 Loved track
32 Loved track
33 Loved track
34 Loved track
34 Loved track
36
36   Loved track
36 Loved track
36 Loved track
40 Loved track
40 Loved track
42 Loved track
43 Loved track
44   Loved track
45
45   Loved track
45   Loved track
48 Loved track
48 Loved track
50 Loved track
See more

Shoutbox

Leave a comment. Log in to Last.fm or sign up (it’s free).
See all 1,380 shouts

About Me

Sample all my Artist Radios and the groups they represent at



Meet and hear my friends at Chez Musinum


I make music here as Tim Doyle


More music (midi format), commentary, and ten thousand images at my website: www.musinumworld.com -- be sure to hover the images... half are hidden under the other half!



From "How to Listen":

What a heading! This guy has to tell me HOW to listen to his music? Well, no, I'd like it to speak for itself, but as with any musical form, there are ways of listening that may help to get the most out of what's there.

An example may help: Western classical music is traditionally complex harmonically (vertically), and relatively simpler melodically and rhythmically (horizontally). Much of the musical message is in the harmony, and the ear trained to listen to that music grows very sophisticated harmonically.

The classical music of (let's say) Northern India tends to find its complexity, and hence to convey much of its message, in melody, rhythm, and indeed, delicate nuances of scale and pitch, as evidenced by (e.g.) the introductory statements of scale and meter that begin a raga. The ear trained to that music grows correspondingly sophisticated in detecting the message conveyed in the rhythms and pitches it hears.

Two sets of ears, belonging to the same human species, and yet to the Western ear unfamiliar with Eastern music, the relative lack of harmonic complexity will perhaps make it sound like a pointless droning... The message in the intricate rhythms and precise shadings of pitch and ornament will elude it as much as any dog whistle or bat cry out of human range may do.

Conversely, to the Eastern musician, the classical music of the West may sound like the artless banging of a child on a toy drum... The shades of meaning and emotion which may induce in the Western listener every kind of emotion will be mostly lost on the ear not trained to decode the message.

Even within a genre like jazz, the "moldy fig" traditionalists literally could not hear what was happening in bebop when it first emerged. There were masterful musicians, and there were those who just "ran the changes" on the chords, but to the moldy figs, they all sounded alike, the transcendental and the mediocre. What our ears may now easily hear was not accessible.

Coming to the point, there are things to listen for in fractal music, in generative music in general, and in this music in particular. By and large, I like to let the music be what it is... I like to let the underlying structure show itself, and work itself out. (I'll explain more about that later.)

One point in particular about fractals, including fractal art and fractal music, is that fractals are defined by being "self-similar." That means that at any scale they appear to have the same structure. Think of an ocean coastline viewed from space, then the detailed shoreline as we zoom down, and finally the little irregularities, the ins and outs, we see as we walk along the water's edge. Or again of a tree branching and re-branching, and the veins in the leaves doing the same down to the microscopic scale.

As music is played out in the medium of time, what this means, at least in the case of music composed with the aid of the MusiNum program, is that the differences between, let's say, fifteen seconds and one minute from the point of origin of a fractal piece will be roughly the same as the differences between fifteen minutes and one hour.

If the pitch of various voices is rising, for instance, it will tend to rise as much in the last three quarters of an hour as it did in the last three quarters of the first minute. In the intervening time, many structures will tend to be, not repeated, but restated, at many scales of time. Patience may be required to accustom oneself to this form, but patience will often be rewarded.

The best way to listen to many of these pieces is not to bring prior expectations to them, but to simply let them be, as you might simply let the flora and fauna be on a nature walk, and observe them as they truly are. The gradual unfolding of qualities inherent in the structure is what is known as a "logarithmic spiral," and such a spiral can be observed in the growth of shelled animals such as the nautilus.

I will talk about more things later, including the "hinged" pieces in which the peak of excitement and change is in the middle of the piece. Enough for now.








2500: Angelo Badalamenti - Twin Peaks Theme
5000: Bruce Brubaker - China Gates
7500: Mystified - Plunder 2
10000: Phillip Wilkerson - Comfort Zone
11111: Metricks - Blue River
12500: Citadel of Mo - Third Eye
15000: Deepspace - Deserted Factory
17500: Felixdroid - Theme
20000: The Golden Dawn - MOONLIGHT
22222: David Elsener - The Subway Killer-Noise (Live With Noel Leu on Guitar)
22500: Spencer Brewer - Muse, The
25000: Vangelis - Irlande
27500: Dulci - Just a Gigolo
30000: Rodrigo Rodriguez - Turtle Ceremony
32500: Yuminale - The Valley
33333: Orchestra Baobab - Wango
35000: Roots Manuva - Witness - live
37500: Titee & Pixieguts - Year of the Future
40000: Keller Williams - Freeker By the Speaker
42500: Osmani Soundz - Spiritual Master Key
44444: Software - All We Hoped For
45000: Loscil - Discrete Entropy
47500: Validine Chronus - Ape
50000: Miwa Momo Hojo & Yuichi Nagao - Shiro
52500: James Yorkston and The Athletes - Woozy with Cider (original version)
55000: Slowdive - Missing You
55555: D+ - Green Party
57500: Frank Van Bogaert - Docking
60000: Valley of the Giants - Claudia & Klaus
62500: Ben Barden - Message for a Child
65000: Reigakusha - Kangen: Sandaien Ichigu: IV. Kyu
66666: White Rainbow - April 25th 11:14pm
67500: Betty Carter - Open The Door
70000: Djinnestan - Sail of Floss
72500: Mooma - The Herd Forming Song
75000: Akasha Voices - Part 4 Erde
77500: Lanikeha - Celui qui Chuchotait dans les Ténèbres
77777: paan - Trip to Norway
80000: Robert Henke - [diagonal]
82500: William Basinski - Melancholia 1
85000: Oscar Peterson - Love For Sale
87500: TYA - Baiame
88888: Ethan Rose - Rising Waters
90000: Rachid Taha - Malika
92500: Roy Hargrove - Dream Traveler
95000: BROTHERS JOHNSON - You Make Me Wanna Wiggle
97500: McCoy Tyner Trio - Changes
99999: Cul De Sac - Death Kit Train
100000: (2009-09-25 00:02:40): Deepspace - Sol
100001: Doc & Lena Selyanina - Ich Rufe
105000: Raymond Scott - Manhattan Minuet
110000: Adrian Carter - Don't (Laptop Mix) (with Kate Vale)
111111: Sonny Stitt - The Shadow of your Smile
115000: Marcus Miller - Blast
120000: Mulgrew Miller - When I Get There
123456: Diamond Joe - Don't Set Me Back
125000: This Mortal Coil - Waves Become Wings
130000: Groundation - Fourth Dimension
135000: Gene Harris - As
140000: Scott Hamilton - Stardust
145000: R'Yatis - Essence of Loss
150000: Richard Feynman - II. Song of the Universal

gotcha by anniversary tracks grabber


current eclecticism rating: Take your top 20 artists. For each of these artists, collect the top 5 similar artists. The resulting number of unique artists is your eclectic score. If the score is small (extreme = 5) your musical preferences are very limited, and if it is large (larger than 80, extreme = 100), then you have an eclectic musical preference. You can compute your own score

My eclectic score is currently

73/100



The 73 related artists for my profile are Aaron Marshall, Adrian Carter, Akashic Crow's Nest (2), Alfarspace, Amee Agaru, Andrew Lahiff (2), Arcticology (2), Baskyl, Boc Scadet, Collo, Crisopa (2), Cwtch (3), Daevine, Dean?, Deepspace (3), Dementio13 Feat Pixieguts (3), Der Rat, Digital Beat, Djinnestan (2), Enthrallment, Facial Vision, Felixdroid (3), Friends of redhalo (4), Fugdale (2), HealeyIsland, Jason Rubenstein, Jesus Diestre, Jourdan Laik, Kit Watkins, Lucette Bourdin, Lynn Johnson, Mario Raposo, Max Corbacho, Metricks (2), Metricks & GaiaBeat (2), Metricks & Phrulex, Metricks & Rakur, Michael Sandler, Milo Moesche (2), Mooma, Mystified & Saluki Regicide, Northcape (2), Oortcloud (2), PIXSID, Phase Speed, Phillip Wilkerson (3), Pilot of the Future, Remergence, Sabi, Saluki Regicide (2), Serge Blenner, Solar-Wind, Streams of Europe (2), Susperia-Electrica (2), THEreminGIRL, The Peach Tree, Tim Doyle, Titee & Pixieguts, Tom Earnest, Tony Gerber, Tree Helicopter, Trestal, Vlasta Marek, World Meditation Ensemble, Zen Hanami, dcallen, deecodee, dné, el_vis, iannis loumakis, inn3rflow, k.m.krebs, spoonPhase



Current super-eclecticism rating: Take your top 50 artists. For each of these artists, collect the top 20 similar artists (where the artist itself is the #1 most similar). The resulting number of unique artists is your super-eclectic score. You can compute your own score



My super-eclectic score is currently

561/1000



The most similar artists for my profile are HealeyIsland (13), Oortcloud (11), Streams of Europe (11), Jash (11), Dementio13 (9), Friends of redhalo (9), Titee (8), Dementio13 Feat Pixieguts (8), Jukeen (8), Facial Vision (8), inn3rflow (8), Felixdroid (8), Adrian Carter (8), Deepspace (7). Akashic Crow's Nest (7), Remergence (7), Saluki Regicide (7), Fugdale (7). Herrera (7), Milo Moesche (7)
















Since June 11, 2011:

Recent Activity