
goldstripe uses data read from the magnetic stripes of credit cards and bank cars to create a set of musical conditions for improvisation.
the sound sources are data captured and transcribed from the card reader and the software.
recorded 2006/2007
©+℗ mark trayle 2008 / registered BMI
Funded in part by the Richard Seaver Faculty Development Fund
Distributed in Portugal by Trem Azul
Published by Creative Sources Recordings
Mark Trayle, born Mark Evan Garrabrant (January 17, 1955 in San Jose, California – February 18, 2015 in Ventura, California) was a California-based musician and sound artist working in a variety of media including live electronic music, improvisation, installations, and compositions for chamber ensembles. His work has been noted for its use of re-engineered consumer products and cultural artifacts as interfaces for electronic music performances and networked media installations. Trayle studied composition at the University of Oregon with Homer Keller, and at Mills College with Robert Ashley, David Behrman, and David Rosenboom. Under Berhman’s tutelage he began building hybrid digital-analog electronics and used those (often with electric guitar and homemade performance interfaces) throughout the 1980s. From the late 1980s through the mid-1990s his work focused on the use of alternative performance interfaces to guide algorithmic compositions, as well as composing for and performing with The Hub.
