Author Archives: Chrissie Butler

Autumn 2025: Chrissie Butler – Audio Foundation Artist in Residence

I am just back from the Audio Foundation Autumn residency with 8 hours of ideas.

The residency was open in terms of output. No external pressure to “make a thing”, just a chance to nudge some ideas into the light. After a few days of pulling a random array of instruments out of cupboards and off shelves, I settled on working with 6 organs, a prepared piano, a glock, a selection of bowls and sound makers kindly lent by Chris O’Connor and two metal trolleys.

Jeff Henderson, AF director, generously mic’ed everything up, set me up with a recording session on Reaper, we set levels and he left me to it. It is rare that the gig room at AF is unscheduled for such a long period, but the clustering of stat holidays resulted in a gig void, some time off for the AF team and an empty room for me.

It was a new experience recording in a large space for days at a time alone. It took a while to drop into that mental space where the rest of the world fades and your focus narrows to only what you’re making. I value these times out of time so much.

I didn’t really have a plan. I knew I wanted to bring home a collection of tones and drones but beyond that I just played for hours, listened back, culled the dross and kept ideas I felt I could develop. Once I had a first cluster of ideas down from each instrument, I moved everything from AFs computer to my laptop and began overdubbing. This was a more familiar way of working, layering new sounds and ideas up in real time, playing along with myself.

When I’m working like this I often take and make videos. They help me see the sound as well as hear it. Below is an example.

Huge thanks to the Audio Foundation (especially Jeff and Sam) for the invitation and opportunity to spend 8 days researching and developing new work. Thanks for making me welcome and making it easy.

DSLB Driving Creek installation live

For the month of November in 2023, Kieran and I headed to the Coromandel to be Artists-in-Residence at Driving Creek Railway and Pottery. The fruit of those 4 weeks for me was the album Driving Creek, a multi-layered soundscape mapping dawn til dusk.

For the potters-in-residence, there is a provocation to leave a piece of work. As someone who works with sound, leaving an artefact took a bit more thinking. But now Driving Creek, the album, is “installed” in the Driving Creek, the location and community. A poster (see below) with a QR code takes listeners to the album. Tourists can listen whilst waiting for the train, residents and staff can listen whilst doing the dishes, laying rails, or throwing pots. Everyone can listen for free, and for a small fee, the album can be downloaded.

The poster has been up for a few days, and we can see from the stats that people are dipping in for a listen.

If you haven’t had a listen, we’d welcome your ears. The album has been warmly received, and I think it’s the best solo work I’ve made to date.

And here’s the poster with a photo of me recording the “Down Pour” track above, using all the discarded cups.

Many thanks to Kieran for the design of the poster, to Callum for the thumbs up and to Riccardo for herding cats and getting the posters up.

The Drawing Archive – a new skirted side-project

Screen shot of new website showing an image of Bill Wood and the details of the right hand menu bar.
Screenshot of Chrissie’s website, The Drawing Archive

NEW this week!!! We have launched a skirted side-project. The Drawing Archive is the new online home for Chrissie’s sketches in the dark at gigs, images from her work in inclusive design and snaps from her daily-ish 6-minute diary habit.

The Drawing Archive is also a home for a collation of drawing exercises by Chrissie’s fav image maker, Lynda Barry and odd muses on drawingness.

If you’re interested in receiving an image (like the one below) in your inbox, visit The Drawing Archive, subscribe and the gifts will arrive. Enjoy 🙂

Half-page Batman days, residency at Driving Creek Railway, Coromandel November 2023

The artists are in residence

Kieran sitting in new studio at Toi Pōneke

Today is a milestone. Kieran begins 3 months as the Creative New Zealand/NZSM/Toi Pōneke Sonic Artist-in-Residence 2024. You can guarantee that this funded watershed will result in a proliferation of work in sound, in music, and in painting and will foster a clutch of unexpected collaborations with makers in a myriad of disciplines.

The knock-on of Kieran’s relocation to Toi Pōneke, is I get to stretch into an empty house for 3 months. So I feel I have scored the inaugural Happy Valley/skirted Records Sonic Artist-in-Residence 2024. Who knows what this gift of time and space will generate?

We both aim is to keep you posted as we would if we were on tour. Subscribe if you’d like to follow along.

Pass-On-Ings: The New DSLB CD

It’s here. We have the very beautiful Pass-On-Ings in our hands and now you can have it too, available from our Bandcamp page.

Pass-On-Ings is a work in 4-parts that maps an arc of time: The last weeks, days, and hours shared with my mum. The “instrumentation” is a weave of found sounds, sounds that found me, field recordings and ancient keyboards. It’s a spacious, light-filled listen and I’m pretty proud of where it landed.

Pass-On-Ings was initially commissioned as a podcast for the Pyramid Club (thank you Johnny Marks). It has been exquisitely remixed and mastered by Stephen Cole from What Studio in Liverpool.

Huge thanks also to Kieran for taking my photos and making such classy artwork. And to Mobineko for awesome as ever production.

Pass-on-ings – DSLB

A new 4-part sound work from DSLB has gone live this week. It was made in response to a commission from the Pyramid Club for a podcast.

Between the commissioning of Pass-on-ings and its creation, my mum passed away. Making Pass-on-ings was a chance to process our last weeks together. It is a sketch in sound of moments in time that are etched in my head but for which I have no words. It is a gentle last post.

Huge thanks to the Pyramid Club for their support.