AUDIO

Two Weeks

This is a standalone binaural exploration of isolation during the COVID-19 lockdown. It is a hallucinatory journey lined with interviews with doctors, slam poetry, and original music (as well as some very non-original music). It was part of Strange Times, a live-streamed concert put on by my RTD class members and our fearless leader, Jay Needham. 

The Answer

This piece means a lot to me. It is at once a trailer for my novel Under Procedure, but the audio is raw and pretty personal–a strange sort of intersection between myself and my role as an author exploring mental illness. 

Output Episode 3: 1985

A collaboration with my good friends from SIU-Carbondale. You should listen to it. It’s all 80s-ey. It’s really good.

Output Episode 2: Long Winter

A collaboration with my friends from SIU-Carbondale. I hope you like slightly-above-average Rod Serling impressions. 

Noise

Have you ever wondered why your life feels like one great, big, useless, never-ending, horrifying, droning, pit of noise that swallows all? Join Matt for a hypnovisualization session to find some answers. This is a binaural piece experimenting with the spectrogram functions on Reaper. For even more answers, go to procedurecorp.com.

I don’t want to make waves here, but maybe, just maybe, letting go feels so good because you were never meant to be here at all. Just a thought. Explore that and more with a yoga-assisted hypnovisualization session for redefinition of selfhood. It is also an exploration of homemade impulse responses. Find more out more at you know where. 

Let Go

Sleepytime Goodnight ASMR for kids

For all of the kiddy-diddies out there who can’t fall asleepy-weepy, try out Happy Harlow’s Sleepytime ASMR (for kids!) (NSFW). 

Thin Walls

This is a binaural soundscape of an apartment on a rainy day. As with everything I do, I hope there’s a semblance of story even in the simple collection of sounds. I recorded some sounds using an ambisonic microphone and some were free stock sounds. I arranged the piece on Reaper using the ATK ambisonic toolkit.