(2023-04-05) Sloan How To Build A Spaceship
Robin Sloan: How to build a spaceship. As many of you know, I’m in a band with Jesse Solomon Clark, called The Cotton Modules. About eighteen months ago, we released our first album, the product of a hybrid human/AI collaboration. Our forthcoming release, titled The Greatest Remaining Hits, is a sci-fi concept album. But this newsletter isn’t about the album, which won’t arrive until May. It’s about the spaceship!
I’ve written a new short story, which we’ll publish alongside the songs. The important thing to know, for now, is that it’s about the voyage of the Deep Space Sloop John Bethel.
At some point, Jesse and I decided we ought to actually build this spaceship
We basically followed this video from Adam Savage step-by-step.
It was the next step that had, for me, motivated the whole project. Any sci-fi nerd of a certain depth and/or vintage knows about GREEBLING, the technique ubiquitous in movie model shops — like the fabled Industrial Light and Magic — for adding visual interest to a plain, smooth model. The technique is: buy a bunch of old model kits and bash them together!
Adam Savage had assured us that a single coat of gray primer would pull everything together: a sudden, snapping suspension of disbelief.
scroll back! Look again at the box of white plastic we started with. Isn’t it cool to know THAT thing is THIS thing? Doesn’t the gap between the real and the imaginary produce a tremendous crackle of energy?
This connects to the way Jesse and I use AI, too. For us, the technology doesn’t make anything faster, easier, or simpler. Far from it: AI makes our production slower, more difficult, more complex. We put up with it because the results are consistently surprising and evocative.
That’s one of the arguments embedded in this album: AI in art — in music, specifically — shouldn’t be about efficiency and automation. It should be (just like every other tool and technique) about making new operations possible, and producing sounds you’ve never heard before. (generative)
Playing Shakespeare was a miniseries first broadcast in, I think, 1982. The host is John Barton, a longtime director and teacher at the Royal Shakespeare Company; the setting is a stage, after hours, with Barton surrounded by a coterie of actors who are, at the time of this recording, not yet global superstars: Ian McKellen. Ben Kingsley. Judi Dench. Patrick Stewart!
The first episode is the one that hooked me. It’s about how Shakespeare’s elevated language interacts with the modern tradition of naturalistic acting. The discussion is brainy, humane, expansive, inviting
There’s a connection between this newsletter and the previous edition ((2023-03-08) Sloan How The Ring Got Good), its investigation into Tolkien’s revisions of The Lord of the Rings. They are both connected, in turn, to my new novel, currently being reviewed by my editor at MCD. The connection is worldbuilding, because I’ve done more work of this kind — with this feeling — for the new novel than for anything I’ve ever produced before.
mapmaking and terrain-shaping and, yes, even a bit of Tolkien-esque language invention. Before the book arrives, I’d like to produce some drawings, too.
If you’d asked me ten years ago, I would have said this kind of work was mostly procrastination. For the Robin of a decade ago, that was true. Now, with deeper confidence and expanded ambition, I can make time and space for these explorations without getting derailed.
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