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Musical Mad Scientist Concocts Bizarre Instruments, Strange Sounds

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Diego Stocco forged a niche for himself in the music world by creating sounds using custom-made instruments and unusual sources. His sonic palette includes sounds culled from sources as simple as sand and as drastic as a burning piano.

The hybrid instruments Stocco concocts, like the Experibass, generally involve sawing common musical instruments in half and attaching them to other instruments or less- conventional objects.

Film composers use Stocco's sought-after sounds -- which are delivered in a multisample format or in loops -- in their scores, earning the Italian-born experimentalist a full page of credits as “music sound designer" on IMDb.

For Guy Ritchie's recent production of Sherlock Holmes, he was credited as “featured soloist," because composer Hans Zimmer hired Stocco, who moved to Los Angeles in 2007, to perform parts on his Experibass.

These videos were made using pictures and video Stocco took during recording sessions. He composed the songs entirely from sounds created in each sound- design session. The text that accompanies the videos comes straight from Stocco.

Bassoforte
“A few days ago, I started thinking about how I could repurpose the keyboard of the dismantled piano I keep in the garden, so I thought to build a new instrument by combining it with some other parts I had lying around. I ended up with this mechanical hybrid thing I thought to call “bassoforte."

“The neck is from a broken electric bass, the bridge is a door handle, the pickups are from a guitar, and the part at the top where the strings are attached is a chimney cap, which works as a resonator as well as adding a percussive sound.

“The track I created is a tribute to my dad, who is a big fan of Western comic books and spaghetti Western films (and because of him, I am too)." --Diego Stocco

The Burning Piano
“I sampled sounds and noises while the piano was burning. Since I only had one take, I recorded as much material as possible.

“Initially I was pointing the gas-flame lighter directly at the strings, and I was playing single notes, but eventually the fire started to burn the hammers and other parts of the piano, and at that point the strings were exploding because of the temperature. Later during the day, I moved the piano and recorded additional sounds with the rest of the burned strings." --Diego Stocco

Music From Sand
“I had some sandbags in the backyard that I used in November during a rainy day. I was moving them to a different spot when I heard the noise of the sand. I thought that maybe I could try a new sound-design technique, so I bought some piezo-film transducers and started to experiment with them.

“The entire track is created only out of tuned sand tones -- no additional sounds or waveforms. I emphasized the inner notes of the sand grains and mapped them on a sampler as a series of instruments. The grooves are all played live with various techniques, including taping two piezo films to my fingers." --Diego Stocco

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