Matmos - "Mud Dauber Wasp" (Official Audio)
Listen to Matmos’s “Mud Dauber Wasp,” from their Smithsonian Folkways album Return to Archive. “Mud Dauber Wasp” is built entirely out of the serrated whir of the titular animal’s beating wings, sourced from the 1960 Folkways LP Sounds of Insects. The wasp's disconcerting buzz is masterfully flipped into lurching, blown-out techno.
In 1948, Moses Asch founded Folkways Records with a self-proclaimed mandate to record the sounds of the entire world. From the Sounds of North American Frogs to Speech After the Removal of the Larynx, Folkways documented the audible nooks and crannies of existence on hundreds of LPs produced by field recordists, scientists, and experimentalists probing the margins of the human soundscape. Seventy-five years later, electronic music duo Matmos have diced, looped, stretched, and recontextualized these recordings on their new album Return to Archive, which was assembled entirely from the so-called non-musical sounds released on Folkways. On just the album’s first track, dolphins, beetles, telephones, humans stretching the limits of their vocal cords, a shortwave radio, and metal balers co-mingle in a fantasia of sound both everyday and extraordinary. Each track on Return to Archive morphs its source material into something completely unexpected, honoring and expanding on Folkways’ legacy of sonic exploration. Featuring Evicshen and Aaron Dilloway.