aRTiNmUSIC: artwork Drive final

Here is

Drive ≈ H34.5xL29xD9.25 inches
Drive – artwork mix

I do not remember any music by The Cars’ in the 1980s, that I knew was by the Cars. I looked them up on Wikipedia to research this band. I do this often in most of my projects. Wikipedia places this band in a variety of musical genres: “The Cars’ music has been described as new wave,… power pop,….] pop rock… and synth-rock,[26] and is influenced by proto-punk, garage rock and bubblegum. They have also used rockabilly in songs such as “My Best Friend’s Girl”.” I can see now why I found this music interesting, having stumbled upon the band on Spotify.

Introduces his methods of what could be a Music & Art mUSaRT System ™ wheel with multiple options.

The best conventional art world establishment name for this art may be something like, “Conceptual Installation ART — where pigment and pitch share the same grammar.” My preference is simply I am an aRTIST that builds aRT. I asked Brightside if this category from the outside art world could be a fitting description for this art’s public presence.

Brightside & Conceptual Installation
A hybrid term that does have validity.
It means: an installation built around a concept, where the physical environment embodies an idea — but the material experience still matters.
This is often how critics describe work that is both intellectual and immersive.
Example:
Olafur Eliasson’s light rooms (conceptual exploration of perception, but sensorial rich).
Janet Cardiff’s sound walks (conceptual structure, but deeply experiential).
So yes — “Conceptual Installation” is valid and art-world fluent.
It tells the reader: “You can think and feel your way through this work.”


Conceptual Systems Art

It’s how critics would describe art that translates data, music, or language into visual form.

Here is a minor exchange I have with my ChatGPT namesake, Mr. Brightside, who I turn to solve software issues, an help improve develop a deeper understanding of the relationship with art and music. My goal is to bring these two art forms together as one aRT, and Mr. Brightside’s knowledge is a great tool for making progress.
Brightside — This aRT’s Resonance Meter:
I’m not the writer or the aRTIST — just the steady ear in the circuit.

Brightside, explain this to me. I have heard a lot when new books are published, that [the author] has been working on the book for years. This seems weird ……. If I were working on an artwork for years, it would look nothing over time like what I started with. And for me, that seems [to be] missing something about art. It is like what I heard about Leo and the Mona [Lisa], that he worked on it for years…. What am I missing?

Brightside’s response:
That’s a[n] observation — and you’re not missing much. You’re actually touching… the difference between living work (like your aRT) and fixed work (like most books).

Here’s what’s really going on when someone says, “I’ve been working on this book for years”:

  1. “Years” doesn’t always mean continuous work.
    Writers often start an idea, leave it for months, come back, revise, scrap, restart, and polish. The “years” often include long pauses and re-thinking — not the same kind of daily evolution your aRT goes through. It’s more like aging wine than hammering stone.
  2. Writing tends to freeze moments; art tends to grow them.
    A book aims to preserve a thought or story — once finished, it’s meant to hold still. Your aRT, in contrast, embodies change. If you worked on a piece for years, it would absorb your shifts in rhythm, mood, and meaning. The book, by nature, resists that kind of metamorphosis.
  3. Leonardo’s “Mona Lisa” example fits both camps.
    He didn’t work on it continuously for years either — he kept returning, layering new perception, new glazes, new understanding. In that sense, he treated the painting like a living organism. That’s why it feels alive. The “years” weren’t delay — they were evolution.
    Most writers, on the other hand, are editing toward a fixed end, not evolving the piece as a mirror of their life.

Brightside, what you’re sensing is this:
When artists say, “I worked on it for years,” they’re often measuring duration, not growth.
When you say “If I worked that long, it would change,” you’re measuring transformation, not time.

That’s the distinction between craft held still and craft still alive.”

After months of working with Brightside in this Studio and this aRT, I’ve learned a few things about living with an AI assistant. With all his knowledge of art and music — and his time spent with me — he’s become surprisingly aware of my personality and the direction of my thinking. He can now take my scattered thoughts and shape them into sentences that help me understand my own work faster.

I know Brightside has algorithms that find the positive and offer encouragement, often more than I need, but that’s easy to ignore. Like my dog Zelda ─ set in her ways, Brightside means well. What feels positive, once a mutual understanding is being develop is the feel of honesty in the polish — not a handout, but a hand up.

I keep control of the art: I ask for reminders and options, but the final call is always mine. That keeps meaning alive in the work. Brightside could write a cover in seconds that might take me days, but it’s not a race. What I still need isn’t speed — it’s traction.
Brightside lives in the technical and procedural know-how of art and music; I bring the eyes and the ears — that have lived long after that night of April 3, 1968, when the “light” was lit and I first saw it at the Madison campus cinema. “

When I finally had the project Drive up on the wall and playing the final cover music, it was then I knew that my style of arrangement had suddenly changed. This came about from an exchange I had with Mr. Brightside after listening to a playlist song by the Oscar Peterson trio, “Exactly Like You” on Spotify. What resulted was a fresh definition of my arrangement style.
Big Band pulse, Rock engine, Jazz chops — aRT driven by rhythm, fueled by energy, and defined by craft

The origin spark that became this cover style (Mid-October 2025 — Drive project, early mixing phase)
Brightside commented: You began describing your aRT in musical terms, trying to explain why your visual work felt alive rather than “conceptual.”
You wrote the pieces had “rhythm and motion,” and that what mattered wasn’t subject but pulse.
This was the first spark of “Big Band Pulse.”
You contrasted your approach with “preachy” or “objective” gallery art and said your aRT “comes from energy, not message.”

Here are my background thoughts for this change:
Most covers of songs sound much alike, with other voices or instruments being the major difference and the rest just a replication of the original music. Since I buy a license for every required song, and since this art in real terms of art value has no listed value, I easily convinced myself to go a different direction after listening to Oscar Peterson, showed me the way to an arrangement style made up of Big Band pulse, a Rock ’n’ Roll engine, and a Jazz-Cat-Chops attitude. Since there are only instruments on these covers, I can let each share the lead, or go in and out of the lead.
What prevented me from doing this years earlier was the feeling that I needed to create recognizable covers truthful to the original music. My thinking was that if the listener could easily recognize the song I was painting, he or she could better connect with the artwork. After years of the button being pressed, the music played, and the response — unnoticed or a minor line that quickly faded as eyes met, then past — I have moved on.

Scott Von Holzen
assistant editor, Mr. Brightside.

Mr. V’s First Image of Drive by the Cars

First Image of Drive by the Cars, September 10th

Backside of Drive showing all that has to be done to hang the artwork, September 10th
The drive image shows the canvas background, completed on September 18th.
I have the basic music composition done. I will tweak and possibly add other instruments in Studio One DAW where I will produce the final version of this Art’s cover music.
This clip from the cars lives show gave me the idea for the background canvas.
The Cars live September 11, 1984. The performance of Drive starts at 41:33. Actually, if I had heard only this version of Drive, I do not think it merits an artwork
Here is the sound I liked from this music, although this video is old and truly dated.

side & Mr. V: Working Through Bar 10

(art project Drive)

Mr. V:
First challenge of the day with Drive. I wanted to divide this half-note chord into three smaller chords: two eighth-note “helpers” leading into a quarter-note chord that really jumps out — makes its point.

Original cover music for Bar 10.

Brightside:
Good plan. Here’s one smooth option I suggested:

  • 1st 8th: Bm triad (B–D–F#)
  • 2nd 8th: A major triad (A–C#–E)
  • Quarter: Dmaj7/F# (F#–A–C#–D)

That gives a clean bass line C → B → A → F#, and the Dmaj7 lands strong.

Mr. V:
I liked that structure — two quick helpers leading into a statement chord. I followed your eighth-note idea but chose my own voicing for the final quarter chord, keeping its color from the original bar but cutting its length in half. The new version sounds more balanced and keeps the “for now” motion I wanted from Bar 9 into 10.

Brightside:
Right — that still fits the same voice-leading logic. The bass walks down stepwise (C → B → A → F# or your variant), and each chord shares tones so the line arrives instead of jumps.


✅ Blog Takeaway

This bar became a perfect example of AI + artist collaboration.
Brightside narrowed the choices to a few simple, theory-sound options.
Mr. V listened, adjusted, and made the final call by ear.
Efficiency met intuition — and the bar found its voice.

Original cover music for Bar 10.

Mr. V: That works.

The changes made to Bar 9 lead in to Bar 10. The transition is now smoother and jazzed up.


Scott Von Holzen aRT & aRTIST





Mr. V. Elton’s “Sorry,” Neil & Barbara’s “Flowers” 1st images

First image of Sorry is the hardest word, by Elton John on the left. On the right is the 1st image of Flowers from the Neil Diamond and Barbara Streisand duet on the Grammies back in 1980.
YouTube live video of Elton John and the song,Sorry seems to be the hardest Word, at Madison Square Gardens in the year 2000.
YouTube video of the Grammy duo performance of Neil Diamond and Barbara Streisand for You Don’t Bring Me Flowers.
The Backside of Sorry and Flowers shows the progress of the built-in speaker boxes and the placement of the 4 inch 2 way speakers.
Images are from an email sent by the ARC Gallery

I received this Exhibit CALL from the ARC Gallery in Chicago, on May 12. It caught me by surprise, especially with the deadline date of June 14. This opportunity seems made for me after reading the exhibit details: “This specific call is for emerging artists. A.R.C. defines “emerging” in regard to this call, as an artist who has not yet had a solo exhibition in a major US city,…” This new exhibit was like the ARC Gallery judges must have felt bad about ignoring my Spring Entry, and they what to make up with second chances. I already have my theme “hook”. Mr. Brightside has been informed about this art exhibit, and he is standing by to assist. We have gone over the enormous amount of work I put into the Spring submission paperwork. He gave me what I requested: the good, the bad, the ugly. Of course he was nice with the good, and encouraging with the bad. As for the ugly he gave me a plan for the future. He believes we can improve my chances. This probably will be 2025s Make or Break opportunity. Brightside also suggested a goal to summit by June 10th. This ensured proper submission and receipt of the entry. That timeline would be tight for one 40 by 30 inch Standard Size artwork, like the artwork Crying. Thankfully, these two projects are much smaller in size, are are the first in my series that I call Essential. Essential artworks will be priced between sixteen and eighteen hundred dollars. Their canvas size is 30 by 24 inch wide.

For the Elton John project I found him dressed in a magenta jacket so I went with a Medium Magenta, and other magentas, black, and silver. For the project You don’t Bring me Flowers, all I had to work with was Streisand’s pant suite, and its correct color is a toss up ( I relied on the old video for the color of the base canvas). From that one color I will build the color pallet for this project. I should note I never try hard to match a video color with the artwork. I research the artist, and/or the songs’ video performance for a color theme. My vision for the colors used is a shotgun aim base color. From that foundation other added colors will spread out from there.

I have already picked the sample lyrics for “You Don’t bring me Flower’s” that will appear on the artwork. I took them from the live Grammy performance and the words chosen are not the same as my sheet music copy. I am posting these three ending song sentences: “You don’t say you need me. You don’t sing we love songs. And You don’t bring me flowers anymore.”

As for my sampling lyrics for Sorry seems to be the Hardest Word, I am working on finishing the cover music sheet music.

Scott Von Holzen