Most Popular
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Cleaning Up Foreclosed Homes After the Mortgage Crisis
Junk haulers expand their business in the wake of evictees leaving behind houses in terrible condition
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Doctors vs. Parents: Who Decides Right to Life?
Following surgery, Sabrina Martin's condition went south. And then, her family says, Children's Memorial Hermann Hospital set about arranging for her demise.
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Do You Have Multiple Personality Disorder?
Years after Sybil, the debate continues
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So Much for No Child Left Behind
School test scores rise as more low-scoring students drop out.
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Doña Rositas Jalapeno Kitchen and Perspectivas: A Window into Their World
A one-woman show and an art exhibit share the spotlight as part of the 2008 Texas Sor Juana Festival
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Sitting Down with La Porte's Buxton (13)
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Doctors vs. Parents: Who Decides Right to Life? (10)
Following surgery, Sabrina Martin's condition went south. And then, her family says, Children's Memorial Hermann Hospital set about arranging for her demise.
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Do You Have Multiple Personality Disorder? (7)
Years after Sybil, the debate continues
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So Much for No Child Left Behind (5)
School test scores rise as more low-scoring students drop out.
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Larry McMurtry and Willie Nelson in Houston (5)
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Should Bruce Springsteen Be Forgiven?
Arguments for reconsidering the missteps on the Boss's otherwise impeccable track record
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Sgt. Pepper at Discovery Green
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The Houston International Festival Is Upon Us
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Last Concert Café
Hippie wolves haunt and howl at the former whorehouse
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Larry McMurtry and Willie Nelson in Houston
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This Just In: Griffin Stolen from Bishop’s Palace in Galveston
12:59PM 05/07/08 -
Reverberations: Born Liars and The Heys
10:25AM 05/07/08 -
Astros-Nationals: One Game Over Five Hundred
12:07PM 05/07/08 -
Get Lit: Hamburger America: A State-By-State Guide to 100 Great Burger Joints, by George Motz
10:05AM 05/06/08
What we are writing about
- Altar Boyz
- Backroom at the Mink
- Cactus Music
- Chantal Akerman
- Continental Club
- Cuban immigrants
- Erykah Badu
- Frozen
- Houston art
- Houston local music
- Houston music stores
- Houston theater
- McGonigel's Mucky Duck
- Meridian
- Ornament as Art:...
- PlayStation
- Proletariat
- Roger Clemens
- Rudyard's
- Sig's Lagoon
- Sound Exchange
- southwest Houston
- Sugar Bean Sisters
- The Menil Collection
- There Will Be Blood
- Vinal Edge Records
- Walter's on Washington
- Warehouse Live
- Wii
- Young and Fertle
Recent Articles By Brian J. Barr
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Should Bruce Springsteen Be Forgiven?
Arguments for reconsidering the missteps on the Boss's otherwise impeccable track record
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Misfits, a Love Story
Punk for uncool kids in Nowheresville
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Neil Young
Live at Massey Hall 1971
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Gonzales
Solo Piano
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Billy Joel and Goldfish Sandwiches
Four artists share their guilty, and not-so-guilty, pleasures
National Features
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Broward-Palm Beach New Times
Last Step to Redemption
Drug counselor Richard Entrekin swam a little too easily in a sea of sharks.
By Amy Guthrie -
Village Voice
The Cro-Mag Diaries
Remembering the brutal life and times of John "Bloodclot" Joseph, New York hardcore icon.
By Rob Harvilla -
Seattle Weekly
Being Gary Busey
Everybody thinks Jeff Swanson is somebody famous. And he does nothing to dissuade them of the notion.
By Aimee Curl -
SF Weekly
Party Crashers
If you think Ralph Nader won't screw the Democrats again, you're not paying attention.
By John Geluardi
Analog America: A Four Course Meal of Found Sound
A new compilation of old answering machine tapes reveals unguarded analog moments
By Brian J. Barr
Published: May 8, 2008
At Hollow Earth Radio's basement digs in north Seattle, station co-founder Amber Kai Morgan keeps a stash of answering machine cassettes in a Mason jar marked "beans."
As self-proclaimed salvagers of prerecorded sound, Morgan and her boyfriend, Garrett Kelly, are junkies for this stuff. When the two launched their Internet radio station in 2007, part of their intent was to broadcast music otherwise unheard on mainstream radio. The other was to share the collection of found sound they had amassed as fervent thrift-store and yard-sale scavengers.
Kelly and Morgan specialize in answering machine cassettes, which they say often reveal the essence of what it means to be human and, in particular, American. "Growing up, I loved Charles Kuralt's America, and I've always loved This American Life," says Morgan. "And I've watched over and over Andrei Codrescu's documentary Road Scholar, about marginalized culture in America. I'm sort of obsessed with this type of thing."
In March the two pared their huge collection down to 32 favorites and released them on CD. Analog America: A Four Course Meal of Found Sound is a compilation of conversations, messages, greetings, arguments, phone transactions and church meetings — all gleaned from random people's old cassettes. The recordings are organized into four categories: Family & Friends, Work, Hobbies and Religion.
"These recordings are all pretty raw and real," says Morgan. She likens them to the fly-on-the-wall recordings released long ago by the Smithsonian Folkways label. "Like there's one field recording I can recall that was put out on Folkways, of a girls' summer camp in the '50s. And it was just a recording of cabin life where these girls are gossiping in their cabin. I just love that."
"Cindy, it's Jackson. Just wanted to, uh, touch base. I'm assuming that, because I haven't heard differently, that you'd pick the kids up. Umm...I'm in Chicago...will be getting outta here at about 10 o'clock tonight...."
The above snippet is the ending of "Single Mother," track six of Analog America. As a whole, this track is a great example of why collecting sound bites is intriguing to folks like Morgan and Kelly. The track is a set of messages they found on a single tape. It begins with a drunken man — presumably the boyfriend of the woman who owns the answering machine — asking to be called back. Next, a school secretary leaves a message informing the woman that her son is failing school, followed by an automated message from Hollywood Video stating that her rentals are overdue.
Next, the boyfriend calls back, but his message is cut off when the woman picks up the phone. Their conversation is recorded and we hear her fib that she never got his first message. The next message, quoted above, is from her ex-husband, calling collect from Chicago.
On one tiny answering machine tape, we're given a week-in-the-life snapshot of this woman's predicaments. We can assume she's a divorced single mother, with a son flunking school and a boyfriend she is not particularly fond of. On top of that, overdue fees are piling up at the video store.
It's almost as if someone recorded an all-too-real Raymond Carver story. Or several: On the track titled "Scooby," a mother talks on the phone with her infant son about what he watched on TV. The father is in the room with the son, but only pays attention to him when he's doing something wrong, such as beating a hammer against a table ("Don't").
On "Driving Cabs," a man named Art leaves a message, presumably for a wife he's recently separated from, explaining, "I've been driving cab for three days, getting up at 3:45 in the a.m., just tryin' to get it, uh, get things under control."
"I think that by listening to all of the Family & Friends messages, one could gather that we all play roles within our families and friendships and we react in typical ways," says Morgan. "That's the most uncanny thing to me about these tapes; I hear the same types of conversation patterns or situations over and over again with different people.
"The Work section is so freaking serious," she adds. "I think they demonstrate how it takes over our lives and how Americans allow work to define who we are. After listening to the Work section, I am totally ready for the Hobby section!"
If nothing else, she says, the compilation documents a not-so-distant pre-digital phone history, when analog tape recorders were our main form of leaving messages for each other. To borrow from Carver, Analog America is what we talk about when we talk via machines.
For more info on Analog America, visit www.noiseorder.com.









