TL;DR:
Examining the 'official' wav file (the one I downloaded from Bleep) of "Uritual" in a text editor revealed some interesting micro-patterns in the raw data that, at the very least, I think connect to the "up-down" palindromic theme that exists within the album.
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A friend emailed me regarding sound glitches, and it led me to think about how raw sound data could be manipulated. I can't explain how, but this thought led me to consider the Tomorrow's Harvest tracks, and I think I might have found something pretty damn intriguing.
I'm not an expert on this, so I'd love to hear what other people think.
Anyway, here's what happened:
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1, First, I opened up "Semena Mertvykh.wav" (the official 44,100 16-bit wav from Bleep) in TextEdit, a basic text-editor for Macs.
2. I went to the bottom of the text file and immediately noticed the prevalence of "U" characters. Some characters had accents on top, like "Ú", "Û", "Ù", etc. These characters are quite prevalent throughout the end of the file. After noticing this, I checked other wav files that have no connection to BoC in any way. It seems the "U" character with various accents on it is quite common in wav files in general. Which leads to my first question:
What is it about bit-depth, sample rate, etc that causes these "U" characters to be so common in character-based isomorphisms of raw .wav audio data? Or was my sample size too small?
3. Anyway, this pattern of the "U" character and its variants naturally led me to think of "Uritual". I mean, a "U" repeating many times, while viewing a character-based isomorphism of raw sound data... sounds like a "Uritual" if I've ever encountered one.
4. So, I opened up "Uritual" in TextEdit, went to the bottom of the file again, and found a large number of micro-patterns in the raw data, all of which followed a very specific, palindromic pattern: low - higher - highest - lower - low.
I have also found this pattern in various other places on Tomorrow's Harvest, on broader levels. For one example, take [2:33] in Gemini: there is a sine wave that whose pitch moves up and then back down, creating a mental image of one single phase of a sine-wave. A connection to the idea of something collapsing: Up, and back down.
Also, as they mentioned in interviews, "Collapse" is the centerpiece of the album. One could imagine the album leading up to, and then drawing back from, "Collapse." People have also found that "Collapse" itself is, to a certain extent, palindromic. So we have an album whose middle song is reversed upon itself in the middle… quite the pattern.
Anyway, I'm going to list 30 examples of the types of patterns that I found when I viewed the 41,000 16 wav file of "Uritual" as character data. Even the largest samples of these would be less than 2/1000ths (!) of a second of time. I'm not an expert at all on this type of stuff, but I doubt the likelihood of all of these happening randomly without a single deviation. Yes, sinusoidal waves comprise music. Up, down. Got it. But this happening randomly over .002 seconds and not again, not repeating itself, will not create audible, musical, "waves" in the conventional sense.
And the likelihood of this many patterns manifesting itself into ascii data without a *single* error is quite unlikely!
I literally found all 30 of these without one instance where something didn't fit the pattern. I checked each string. There are many more in the file.
For those who'd like an ascii chart as reference to line up how these "raw data strings" all end up participating in the same up-down pattern, refer to this website:
http://www.aboutmyip.com/AboutMyXApp/AsciiChart.jsp
If you're not familiar with how text characters are represented in binary form (which is what connects them to samples of music), then you'll have to educate yourself.. Sorry!
Here's my tentative conclusion:
I might be completely wrong, but I'm led to hypothesize that BoC have altered the contents of their digital music in a text editor... on a micro-level of scale, in a way that's there, but not necessarily directly audible.
Here are 30 examples that I copied straight from my text editor, without a single string deviating from the up-down pattern, with respect to any character's ascii value:
(EDIT: sorry that there's emoticons in here; i'm too lazy to add escape characters, but rest assured there aren't smiley faces popping up in the plaintext, lol)
1.
1
4
6
9;=
? ABCDEFFFFF
FEE
DDCBA@?
=<<
<
< ;:98 7 5 3 1
2.
ADFJNQTUVWWVVTROMJHFDA
3.
ABCDEEFHILNOQRSTTTRQOLIFC
4.
BG J
MP
QSTTSSRRRRQQQ
PO
N
LIG
C
5.
0123455 6!6#7$8$8'8'8(9)9)9+9+9+9+9+:+9*8)8)7'6&5$3#2!0.,*(&#!
6.
!$'),.
0
235
7
:
<?ACFIKMOQRS
R RQPNLIGEB@=;
7.
&+169=@BDEFHHIJK
M
N
OPPQPPP
P
O
N MKHEA=83.
8.
)+.
1
4
6
9;=
? ABCDEFFFFF
FEE
DDCBA@?
=<<
<
<9>ADFJNQTUVWWVVTROMJHFDA@><8>ABD EGH
JKLNOPQRTTTSSRRQQQQQQQQQQQQ
POM
LIFC?:6
11. (this one goes up-down-up-down; an overall up-down effect. ends on the ascii 36 value)
?BDEFGEDB?=;865 4 3 456
8:<A>:50*$
12.
"%),
/
268:<A><9>
@BCCDDBA?<8>
@BCCDDBA?<84/*%
19.
"
'+/2579;<<8>
D
J
NS
X[_beilpsvy{}~}{xvtqmjfa]YTQMJGDB@><;987531/-*'$!
21.
"',058<?BEGHIIJIIHGFECA@=;:7641/-*&"
22. (very turbulent, but constantly up and down)
" (.
4:@GMRW\`cfijkllllkigedcba` `!_!^"]!\"Z"X!W"T P MHB<5-'
23.
!&,16<E>
<
:98887
7 7 766530-
24.
!"$%&' (
)
*,.
0358;=@CDEEEEDC@<7>CGKNPRTUUUVWVWWVWV!V"V$V%U&T&Q&N&J$E"> 70(
25.
$' +.259 <C>;9
530.+
26. (utilizes only the lowest characters that are represented with symbols rather than space)
!""""#######""!
27.
;@DHK N
PR
STTTSRQOMKIFEB@><962,'
28. (lots of up-downs, but clear pattern still)
$* 07
>CGKNPRTUUUVWVWWVWV!V"V$V%U&T&Q&N&J$E"> 70(
29. (including a funny quasi-emoticon ^___^ )
!"# &(
*-02479;=?@BDEGIKM PR TWY[\]^___^\ZYUR
PMKIH
30. (goes up almost entirely, but one letter goes back down)
!"##$&()*,--//
024
5 8:<>@BDEEEED
I made a few edits to make this more clear.

∴
