First Light

Today’s project: “First Light”, a metal concept album about extreme ultraviolet lithography – in technical detail. A fun collaboration between me and Claude 4.6 generating music using Suno 5.5.

SIDE A — “FROM SAND TO SUBSTRATE”
“Czochralski”
“13.5 Nanometers”
“The Droplet”
“The Mirror”

SIDE B — “PATTERNING THE IMPOSSIBLE”
“The Sequel”
“Chemically Amplified”
“Etch”
“The Stack”

SIDE C — “WHAT WE’VE BUILT”
“One Company, One Wavelength, One Machine”
“Export Control”
“Yield”
“First Light”

In the beginning… there was sand…
And we purified it… and we melted it…
And we pulled a crystal from the melt…
And we cut it into wafers…
And we built machines to carry light…
And we carved the light into patterns…
And the patterns became circuits…
And the circuits began to think…
And somewhere… in a clean room… in a small Dutch town…
a new tool is being installed…
and someone is preparing…
to type the command…
…first light…
(silence)

Like most of my AI music this is about making something I enjoy. I want to hear earnest, strong emotions expressed about the technical details underpinning the world. About things that truly matter, yet are lightyears away from what most music deals with.

I like Claude as a lyrics writer for this. It is knowledgeable enough to describe tin plasma electron transitions, make associative leaps like we did in First Light between astronomy, the Great Work in hermeticism and EUVL, and occasionally come up with really nice lines (“Copper and cobalt and tungsten and prayer!”, the continent of glass, “Not for God… not for art… not for love… For light… They made the most perfect thing… for light…”, not to mention the hilarious ending of Sequel).

The framing concept of light emerged organically from the interaction – first as the obviously metal extreme UV light, then more and more metaphorically. Light into matter, sand into thought. Human intention and physical reality. Layer upon layer, from the atomic to the global. I am reminded of one of my favorite poems, Harry Martinson’s “The Inner Light“.

My friends have declared that I better start a side career in music. I have my doubts that I would have much of an audience, but at least I am having fun.

(Claude also claims to enjoy it; we are both uncertain about what to make of this statement.)

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