I think "continuum" is probably the clearest example of where extremely fast-moving sound turns into a haze.
(BTW I'm really enjoying Fennesz's "Venice" album at the moment. I love his way of using granular synthesis to create a hidden rapid movement inside otherwise slow-moving sounds - he's definitely a cut (!) above the other glitch musicians. He's not the first person ever to do granular stuff, but he's more musical, less geeky about it than most of them.)
Isn't the point about micro-polyphony that the cloud-like density of the writing means you can't make out the individual lines any more. Tallis's "Spem In Alium" - written half a millenium ago - also gives me that feeling. It's written for forty polyphonic lines (eight 5-part choirs), and by the time all forty are singing, you really can't make out the individual lines. It's a fantastic piece of music.
Laters
Guy
(BTW I'm really enjoying Fennesz's "Venice" album at the moment. I love his way of using granular synthesis to create a hidden rapid movement inside otherwise slow-moving sounds - he's definitely a cut (!) above the other glitch musicians. He's not the first person ever to do granular stuff, but he's more musical, less geeky about it than most of them.)
Isn't the point about micro-polyphony that the cloud-like density of the writing means you can't make out the individual lines any more. Tallis's "Spem In Alium" - written half a millenium ago - also gives me that feeling. It's written for forty polyphonic lines (eight 5-part choirs), and by the time all forty are singing, you really can't make out the individual lines. It's a fantastic piece of music.
Laters
Guy