Math rock band SKULK submitted their newest album “Infinities of Perplexion” for peer review before releasing it to the public, sources report.
“It’s standard practice in our field to do this after wrapping up production,” said drummer Larry Kremer. “Peer review is absolutely necessary in math rock to ensure each work meets the standards of the genre and contributes to advanced knowledge for society on the whole. Can you imagine a world in which math rock bands could just unleash whatever crackpot pieces of music they want without them undergoing a rigorous review process? It would be chaos, and not in an enlightening, non-linear dynamical systems sense. Thankfully, we have institutions in place to ensure every album has been studied by experts before reaching the ears of consumers.”
Dave Hernandez, drummer for the band Integrals, peer reviewed SKULK’s new album before it was released. […]
I almost ate the onion here. I thought it’s the band who wrote the paper they submitted for peer review—and which they put into practice via their music.
Something like a polyrhythmic approximations to Pi where the music’s time signature started off as 3/1, then 22/7, and then 333/106 etc.
IDK, I’m neither a music nor a maths guy.
EDIT:
A word.