Ropeadope and Sirintip announce first bioplastic LP

Independent label Ropeadope has teamed up with Evolution Music UK to press one of the world’s first bioplastic LPs. Evovinyl bioplastic is a plant based high performance natural polymer that will have a profound impact on sustainability in the vinyl pressing process. The first pressing will be Sirintip’s carbon, a project that addresses climate change from a musical perspective, with sustainability built into the process. Carbon was recorded at Manifold Recording Studios, a carbon neutral solar-powered studio on 16 acres of rural land in North Carolina. 

As Sirintip is bringing climate change to the forefront through her music, it is natural that she would be one of the first to embrace this new, sustainable technology. Risk is inherent in creating change, and while the cost is not at parity with PVC, helping to pioneer and work through this change to help it move to the mainstream is a risk she and Ropeadope are willing to take. Fans who support the project will own one of the first of its kind bioplastic LPs, and will be a voice to further the perfection of the process. carbon will use 100% recycled chipboard for the outer jackets. 

‘Business as usual will not create the change we need to address the environmental issues facing humanity. This simply MUST be done. We call you to join us on the journey’ (Louis Marks, Ropeadope)

About Evolution Music UK

Evolution Music is bringing the music industry and other businesses together to accelerate the music industry’s shift to more sustainable, environmentally and socially responsible practices. Their initial flagship product is the bioplastic LP – available from the second half of 2022 – using circular economy principles to replace the harmful production and use of single use plastics and minimise waste in the music industry. We make it easy for labels and artists to make the change by producing bioplastic LPs (instead of PVC) using the record pressing plants’ existing machinery and production processes.

About Manifold Recording

Manifold Recording was built by Michael & Amy Tiemann to offer artists large-scale recording spaces built with advanced materials to support organic, acoustic-oriented production models. Set on 16 acres of rural land, the studio was organically designed from the center out, reflecting the process of nature. Carbon neutrality was planned from the start, as they helped build a solar double cropping system that not only generates 4x the power requirements of the studio, but which also supports agricultural production between and under the solar panels. Serendipitously, the hexagonal symmetries expressed throughout the studio resonated perfectly with the atomic number of carbon, 6.

About carbon

After three years of climate research and patient self-discovery, Bangkok-born singer, producer and multi-modal artist Sirintip issues her sophomore release, carbon. Weary from headlines that preach and scold, the internationally acclaimed composer of Thai Swedish descent sought a new method of engagement. carbon, released on October 14, 2022 via Ropeadope, presents thirteen tracks of original music as an invitational gesture, an appeal for a new kind of conversation around climate action.

Music heavily informed by research often features a mathematical expression as a vessel for artists to develop patterned ideas and improvise. But carbon presents a suite of music through which science elevates Sirintip’s lyrical musicianship. Her compositions breathe. With purpose, they intensify. Her ability to communicate through shifting mood chambers and crystalline soundscapes transports listeners to points of sensory and emotion, at once vast and intimate. 

“I didn’t want the project to be preaching, ‘You’re not good enough,’” says the Manhattan based artist. “That’s what the news does. So I thought, ‘What if I don’t put the message in the lyrics? What if I compose it into the music? Then maybe people — including me — might become more curious to learn new ways for us to interact with our planet.’”

carbon would emerge as ambitious and interdisciplinary, bonding visual art and moving image, as well as audio-visual installation. For the music video release of “plastic bird,” Sirintip received funding from New York Foundation for the Arts, in addition to project support she’s received from Swedish Arts Council, STIM, Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, and Sitka Center for Art and Ecology. (This will be premiered later this month through Huffington Post) Borrowing from the tradition of hip hop, the record features a number of found instruments, including plastic water jugs transformed into percussion, data sonification integrate statistics into blossoming, melodious gestures pulling NASA data from 1880 through 2012, processed recordings from backyard wildlife, even sand. “I’ve always been interested in nature and science,” says the 2015 Monk Competition finalist, who ultimately chose to pursue music over neurosurgery. “I think I’ve been working on this project subconsciously for a very long time.”

Additional information on sustainability

In addition to touring Carbon in what she hopes to be a sustainable, minimally harmful way, Sirintip will focus her next couple of years on large-scale installation pieces and narrative compositions that explore the carbon clock, and microorganisms, respectively, among other conceptual works; she hopes to continue collaborating with scientists directly, as she did on her research trip across the North Pacific. Over the next seven years, she plans to shift her entire creative process into a sustainable practice; this shift includes scheduling more solar-powered performances similar to her June 2022 appearance at Inwood Hill Park NYC, recording at solar-powered studios, printing bioplastic vinyls, and reducing her touring carbon footprint through efficient booking strategies. Sirintip hopes to engage more researchers on her artist path toward becoming more climate change-conscious: “I want to make sure I’m doing everything I can, through art, to make a change.” She’s currently endorsed by Geneverse (solar-powered batteries), Moog Synthesizers, Focusrite, Empire Ears, EarthQuaker Devices, TC Helicon, and Ableton. 

Sirintip

ACCLAIMED SINGER AND COMPOSER SIRINTIP RELEASES AMBITIOUS NEW PROJECT SERVING AS AN APPEAL FOR CLIMATE ACTION; CARBON TO BE RELEASED ON OCTOBER 14, 2022 (ROPEADOPE)

After three years of climate research and patient self-discovery, Bangkok-born singer, producer and multi-modal artist Sirintip issues her sophomore release, carbon. Weary from headlines that preach and scold, the internationally acclaimed composer of Thai Swedish descent sought a new method of engagement. carbon, to be released on October 14, 2022 via Ropeadope, presents thirteen tracks of original music as an invitational gesture, an appeal for a new kind of conversation around climate action.

“I didn’t want the project to be preaching, ‘You’re not good enough,’” says the Manhattan based artist. “That’s what the news does. So I thought, ‘What if I don’t put the message in the lyrics? What if I compose it into the music? Then maybe people — including me — might become more curious to learn new ways for us to interact with our planet.’”

carbon would emerge as ambitious and interdisciplinary, bonding visual art and moving image, as well as audio-visual installation. For the music video release of “plastic bird,” Sirintip received funding from New York Foundation for the Arts, in addition to project support she’s received from Swedish Arts Council, STIM, Lower Manhattan Cultural Council, and Sitka Center for Art and Ecology. Borrowing from the tradition of hip hop, the record features a number of found instruments, including plastic water jugs transformed into percussion, processed recordings from backyard wildlife, even sand. “I’ve always been interested in nature and science,” says the 2015 Monk Competition finalist, who ultimately chose to pursue music over neurosurgery. “I think I’ve been working on this project subconsciously for a very long time.”

Communicating urgent messaging in so subtle a way would require musical contributions from empathetic, visionary artists. Sirintip, who has toured with Snarky Puppy and performed with Benny Andersson of ABBA, assembled a band of fresh voices, including Michael League on bass; Chris McQueen (“aqi,” “hydrogen,” “i cannot escape,” “red eyes,” “unspoken gold”) and engineer and GRAMMY Award-winning producer Nic Hard (“hydrogen”) on guitar; Nolan Byrd on drums, plastic trash and programming; Daniel Migdal on violin and viola (“hostage); Alex Hahn on flute (“plastic bird”); Owen Broder on baritone saxophone (“unspoken gold”); and pianist Kengchakaj Kengkarnka who helped integrate elements of Sirintip’s Thai heritage into the music. “During the pandemic, he figured out how to incorporate traditional 14-tone Thai tuning into the Moog synthesizer,” she says.

The artists spent nine days at Manifold Recording Studios in North Carolina, taking full advantage of its carbon neutral solar-powered atmosphere and location. “I like when I can live in a studio,” says Sirintip. “At Manifold, we lived in a guest house and worked from 9 or 10am until 2 or 3 in the morning.” During that time, they repurposed a parmesan container as a kick drum and shaker, collected handfuls of sand from a neighboring construction site and fitted the studio’s backyard with recording devices to capture crickets at twilight. “You can turn anything into music. It doesn’t need to be a musical instrument for you to be able to make music with it.”

Music heavily informed by research often features a mathematical expression as a vessel for artists to develop patterned ideas and improvise. But carbon presents a suite of music through which science elevates Sirintip’s lyrical musicianship. Her compositions breathe. With purpose, they intensify. Her ability to communicate through shifting mood chambers and crystalline soundscapes transports listeners to points of sensory and emotion, at once vast and intimate.

Two of carbon’s data-driven songs, “1.5” and “aqi,” integrate statistics into blossoming, melodious gestures. Inspired by information from sonic data app Twotone, “1.5” expresses the planet’s steady ongoing rise in temperature, pulling NASA data from 1880 through 2012. “It felt too obvious to me to portray the temperature steadily increasing the way it looks on the diagram," says Sirintip. Instead of composing within the linear increase, she identified different years that felt significant to her, exploring what each “sounded like,” and anchored her composition around those selections. “aqi” engages an entirely different system for sonifying data: “I decided to look at the data from another perspective: the worse the air pollution, the more dissonant the interval; the better, the more harmonious.” The song feature’s Kengkarnka’s Thai scale-tuned Moog, as well as samples of traditional หมอลำ (Mor lam) singing. Ending in a cloud of “reverb fog,” the music pays tribute to many Thai women whom Sirintip considers circumscribed and desiring to break free from the norms society imposes on them. “It’s like they’re living their lives in the smog that hovers over the city,” she says. “They’re only able to see what those in power allow them to see; when you can’t see what else is out there, how can you break free from where you are?”

Across the album, figurative language serves moments of tension and contemplation. Sirintip’s vocals inhabit endangered tigers, artificial birds, even Mother Earth, giving urgent voice to biodiversity. “red eyes” incorporates Thai drums into distinct patterns and a commanding groove that engages Sirintip’s dynamic expression. Hahn’s flute soars over sections of “plastic bird,” which integrates recyclables as well as rhythms from the Black Sicklebill’s mating dance into the vocal loop out front. Featuring crickets chirping outside the studio, “hostage” spotlights Sirintip’s exposed vulnerability, and serves as a solemn plea for climate action. Composed for the dire consequences of drought, “oasis” includes iterations of percussive sand, while “unspoken gold” samples frogs singing after the rain in Sirintip’s childhood backyard in Bangkok.

Because she views carbon as a call to action for herself as much as her listeners, Sirintip centers self-disclosure throughout the recording. Lyrics for “it’s alright” emerged from text messages between the artist and her best friend who passed away tragically at 28. “The song’s connection to climate change is in the plastics instrumentation,” says Sirintip, “but the message is more universal: We don’t need to be perfect.”

This messaging, in part, is what the artist-composer hopes listeners will receive from engaging with carbon. “Climate change is something that affects everyone. It shouldn’t need to be ‘activist’ work,” says Sirintip, who seeks to release the project while creating as minimal impact as possible. She recently performed a solar powered concert this summer, and is currently researching strategies for touring more sustainably: “It’s hard to be perfect. We don’t currently have the infrastructure for all of us to live like Greta. But trying is so much better than giving up. Everything counts — understanding our personal carbon footprint so we can limit them, even something as simple as deleting 10 emails and off-loading the servers from powering information that we don’t need. That’s what I’m trying to remember every day, and what I’m hoping to inspire others to consider when they hear this recording.”


CARBON

Release Date: October 14, 2022

01 hydrogen
sirintip - vocals, vocal effects, synth bass programming
kengchakaj kengkarnka - buchla 200 series modular system, moog one, moog matriarch, piano
nic hard - electric guitar, drum programming
chris mcqueen - moollon guitar
nolan byrd - drums, synth bass programming

02 aqi
sirintip - vocals, vocal effects, vocoder, percussion programming
kengchakaj kengkarnka - moog one, moog matriarch, korg minilogue, rhodes, piano, hammond b-3 organ
chris mcqueen - moollon guitar
michael league - electric bass
nolan byrd - drums, marimba
mahasarakham university - thai electric guitar, morlam vocals, thai percussion

03 oasis
sirintip - vocals, vocal effects, sand
kengchakaj kengkarnka - moog one, piano
nolan byrd - drums, synth bass programming, thai percussion programming

04 hostage
sirintip - vocals, vocal effects, vocoder
kengchakaj kengkarnka - piano
nolan byrd - synth bass programming
nic hard - cube & drum programming
daniel migdal - violin i, violin ii, viola
north carolina crickets - ambient vocal performance
matthew peterson - string arrangement

05 red eyes
sirintip - vocals, vocal effects, thai guitar programming
kengchakaj kengkarnka - moog one, moog matriarch, piano
chris mcqueen -moollon guitar
nic hard - synth bass programming, drum programming
nolan byrd - drums, plastic water jugs, metal trash can, thai percussion programming

06 1.5
sirintip - vocals, vocal effects

07 unspoken gold
sirintip - vocals, vocal effects, drill, deforestation & industrial programming, marimba
owen broder - barytone saxophone
michael league - minimoog model d
bangkok frogs - ambient vocal performance
kengchakaj kengkarnka - buchla 200 series modular system, moog matriarch, piano, marimba
nolan byrd - drums
nic hard - deforestation & industrial programming

08 i cannot escape
sirintip - vocals, vocal effects
kengchakaj kengkarnka - moog one, piano, hammond b-3 organ
michael league - electric bass
nolan byrd - drums
chris mcqueen - moollon guitar

09 plastic bird
sirintip - vocals, vocal effects, vocoder, plastic trash percussion programming
alex hahn - flute
kengchakaj kengkarnka - moog one, piano
michael league - electric bass
nolan byrd - drums, plastic water jugs
nic hard - vocal scrubbing

10 stranger of the sea
sirintip - vocals, vocal effects, programming
nolan byrd - programming

11 earth moment
sirintip - vocals, vocal effects
kengchakaj kengkarnka - piano

12 it's alright
sirintip - vocals, vocal effects, plastic trash percussion programming
kengchakaj kengkarnka - moog one, piano, hammond b-3 organ
michael league - eletric bass
nolan byrd - drums, plastic trash percussion programming

13 siri
sirintip - vocals, vocal effects, programming
nolan byrd - programming
nic hard - drum programming

produced by: sirintip phasuk & nicolas hard
mixed by: nicolas hard
engineered by: nicolas hard
mastered by: g&j audio

assistant engineer: michael tiemann
additional engineers: sirintip phasuk, michael league, chris mcqueen, alex hahn, nolan byrd, daniel migdal, joakim hultqvist
production coordinator: chris davis
production assistant: arthur davis

vocal arrangements by: sirintip phasuk
strings arranged for "hostage" by: matthew peterson
recorded at: manifold recording, pittsboro, nc august 2021 (carbon neutral)
mixed at: rabbit hole studios, spain (solar powered)

Artwork:
photography by: ashira boonchoo
retouched by: richard saralertsophon
artwork by: nitcha tothong
make up by: deborah altizio
photographed at: yindee studio


hydrogen

Release Date: August 19, 2022

sirintip - vocals, vocal effects, synth bass programming
kengchakaj kengkarnka - buchla 200 series modular system, moog one, moog matriarch, piano
nic hard - electric guitar, drum programming
chris mcqueen - moollon guitar
nolan byrd - drums, synth bass programming