Biography
John Hudak, also known as a poet of haikus, has recorded several albums of minimalist recordings that utilize normally undetected sounds in such everyday sonic patterns as traffic on a highway. Occasionally Hudak will utilize found sounds, but mostly he manipulates sources from field recordings. For several years he released a series of cassette-only releases of experimental recordings. His first CD was the Japanese-only release, Pond, on which Hudak toyed with hydrophone recordings of aquatic insects, arriving with a series of waves of buzzing drones. The piece was later featured at an exhibit at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City. On Brooklyn Bridge (1998), Hudak discovered hidden magnetic sounds on the famed New York City landmark played by the traffic as it crosses the bridge. 1999's Don't Worry About Anything, I'll Talk to You Tomorrow featured an altered answering machine message from the artist's mother. The softly textured and rhythmic Highway (2001) was recorded on the Brooklyn-Queens Expressway. In addition to his albums, Hudak has also taken part in online sound installations. ~ Geoff Orens, Rovi



 
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[Live @ 5] Fakertarian John Hudak tries to convince me to embrace woke leftist libertarianism
John Hudak - The Subterranean Pasture (Side A)
John Hudak - Tall Grasses (1994)
John Hudak - Listening To The Wind - Cassette (Banned Production 2014)
John Hudak - EI_2
John Hudak - Winter Rain Watching The Sky From My Window
John Hudak - Pond [full album]
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