Interlace

The English netlabel INTERLACE devotes to concerts featuring free improvisation, live electronic music, interactive composition, and, of course, a mixture of it all. It is a continuous series of concerts aiming at 3 or 4 times per year.

Excerpts from the Interlace archives: three improvisations from the concert dated 18 July 2009

PLOrk

Princeton Laptop Orchestra (PLOrk) is a visionary new ensemble of laptopists, the first of its size and kind.

Founded in 2005 by Dan Trueman and Perry Cook, PLOrk takes the traditional model of the orchestra and reinvents it for the 21st century; each laptopist performs with a laptop and custom designed hemispherical speaker that emulates the way traditional orchestral instruments cast their sound in space. Wireless networking and video augment the familiar role of the conductor, suggesting unprecedented ways of organizing large ensembles.

In 2008, Trueman and Cook were awarded a major grant from the MacArthur Foundation to support further PLOrk developments. Performers and composers who have worked with PLOrk include Zakir Hussain, Pauline Oliveros, Matmos, So Percussion, the American Composers Orchestra, and others. In its still short lifetime, PLOrk has performed widely (presented by Carnegie Hall, the Northwestern Spring Festival in Chicago, the American Academy of Sciences in DC, the Kitchen (NYC) and others) and has inspired the formation of laptop orchestras across the world, from Oslo to Bangkok.

“Connectome” Performed by the Princeton Laptop Orchestra (PLOrk) (Director Jeff Snyder), PLOrk[10] concert, May 3 2017 Composition: Mike Mulshine Neuron model audio synthesis: Jeff Snyder and Aatish Bhatia Projection: Drew Wallace

Excerpt: Autopoetics I by Ted Coffin: listen to or watch a video

Other multimedia materials here.

140 chars of music

A twitter. An SMS. That’s the challenge. Writing a piece of electronic digital music using only 140 chars of code.

It started as a curious project, when live coding enthusiast and Toplap member Dan Stowell started tweeting tiny snippets of musical code using SuperCollider. Pleasantly surprised by the reaction, and “not wanting this stuff to vanish into the ether” he has recently collated the best pieces into a special download for The Wire.

Of course, to satisfy such a constraint, you need a very compact programming language and SuperCollider is the best choice (see also here). It is an environment and programming language for real time audio synthesis and algorithmic composition. It provides an interpreted object-oriented language which functions as a network client to a state of the art, realtime sound synthesis server.

SuperCollider was written by James McCartney over a period of many years, and is now an open source (GPL) project maintained and developed by various people. It is used by musicians, scientists and artists working with sound. For some background, see SuperCollider described by Wikipedia.

You can download the code snippets here. Note that many of these pieces are actually generative, so if you have a working SuperCollider environment and re-run the source code you get a new (i.e. slightly different) piece of music.

Some excerpts:

The artists notes are here.

Anthèmes 2

Anthèmes 2 (1997), by Pierre Boulez, has evolved from Anthèmes, a substantially shorter piece for solo violin.

Andrew Gerzso has for many years been the composer’s chief collaborator on works involving live electronics and the two men regularly discuss their work together. He describes the way in which all the nuances in this nucleus of works were examined in the studio in order to find out which elements could be electronically processed and differentiated. As a result, the process of expanding these works is based not only on abstract structural considerations (such as the questions as to how it may be possible to use electronic procedures to spatialize and to merge or separate specific complexes of sound),but also on concrete considerations bound up with performing practice: in a word, on the way in which the instrument’s technical possibilities may be developed along figurative lines.

As a result, Anthèmes 2 provides us with both an analysis and an interpretation of Anthèmes: it is a text in its own right and the same time a sub-text of the earlier piece.

[notes from the CD]

Other Minds

Dall’Internet Archive vi segnalo l’Other Minds Archive che contiene materiale storico e contemporaneo, registrato in più di 50 anni di attività e accomunato dall’etichetta di avanguardia.

Da questa collezione vi faccio ascoltare Touch di Morton Subotnick. Composto nel 1969 per il Buchla Electronic Music System, quadrifonico in originale, questo brano si distingue per la qualità audio, notevole per l’epoca e riascoltandolo a tanti anni di distanza, non sembra così invecchiato come molte produzioni di 40 anni fa.

Other Minds Archive is a unique new music resource providing access to historical and contemporary material recorded over a fifty year-plus span. This collection is a not-for-profit service presented by Other Minds, Inc. of San Francisco.

From the Other Minds Archive

  • Morton Subotnick – Touch (1969, Buchla Electronic Music System, stereo from original quad)

Ina

Chaya Czernowin è una compositrice israeliana nata nel 1957. Vive in Austria.
Vi faccio ascoltare Ina, un buon brano con sonorità particolari, per flauto basso e 6 altri flauti (basso e ottavino) preregistrati.

Ulteriori informazioni su di lei si trovano nella sua pagina.

Chaya Czernowin – Ina, per flauto basso e 6 flauti preregistrati

Pacific Fanfare

coverPacific Fanfare (1996) è un breve brano di Barry Truax composto per celebrare il 25° anniversario della Vancouver New Music Society e del World Soundscape Project, di cui abbiamo parlato qualche giorno fa.

È basata su 10 “soundmarks” registrati nell’ambito del WSP vari anni prima (chi ascolta le nostre proposte sonore riconoscerà subito la sirena della nave con cui iniziava “Entrance to the Harbor” nel post di cui sopra.

Il concetto di “soundmarks” è fondamentale nel lavoro del WSP e designa quei suoni che caratterizzano un determinato paesaggio sonoro. Questi suoni riproposti in Pacific Fanfare sia nella loro versione originale che elaborata mediante riduonatori digitali (una riverberazione artificialmente colorata) e time-stretching (allungamento temporate del suono di solito senza alterazione della frequenza).

Il brano è incluso nel CD Islands, acquistabile sul sito dell’autore.

Longplayer: un brano lungo 1000 anni

Longplayer is a one thousand year long musical composition. It began playing at midnight on the 31st of December 1999, and will continue to play without repetition until the last moment of 2999, at which point it will complete its cycle and begin again. Conceived and composed by Jem Finer, it was originally produced as an Artangel commission, and is now in the care of the Longplayer Trust.

Longplayer can be heard in the lighthouse at Trinity Buoy Wharf, London, where it has been playing since it began. It can also be heard at several other listening posts around the world, and globally via a live stream on the Internet.

Longplayer is composed for singing bowls – an ancient type of standing bell – which can be played by both humans and machines, and whose resonances can be very accurately reproduced in recorded form. It is designed to be adaptable to unforeseeable changes in its technological and social environments, and to endure in the long-term as a self-sustaining institution.

At present, Longplayer is being performed by a computer. However, it was created with a full awareness of the inevitable obsolescence of this technology, and is not in itself bound to the computer or any other technological form.

Although the computer is a cheap and accurate device on which Longplayer can play, it is important – in order to legislate for its survival – that a medium outside the digital realm be found. To this end, one objective from the earliest stages of its development has been to research alternative methods of performance, including mechanical, non-electrical and human-operated versions. Among these is a graphical score for six people and 234 singing bowls. A live performance from this score is being prepared for September 2009. See here for more information.

Longplayer was developed and composed by Jem Finer between October 1995 and December 1999, with the support and collaboration of Artangel.

  • A 56kbps live stream can be heard by clicking (or right-clicking) here:
    Per ascoltare un live stream del brano, cliccate qui: