900 resultados para live electronics
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commissioned by Ballet Rambert for 60th Anniversary season, choreographer Mary Evelyn, designer Liz Emmanuel. World premiere: Theatre Royal York 03/06/86
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This is the first in series of works that explores the edges of musical styles, in particular the musical language associated with the brass band traditions and the relationship between this performance genre and the work of experimental electronic composition.
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Superimposition is built on a live-scoring system. Computer animated graphics combined with computer generated algorithms produce the score in real time based on preferences input by the composer. Notably, this system introduces a methodology for eliciting complex and coordinated rhythms from instrumentalists through notation generated in real time. This work also incorporates a system for live electronics and live sampling and processing.
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As with Liminal Lines, this work explores the boundaries between distinct and contrasting musical genres. The use of live electronics within the brass band idiom is novel, particularly in relation to the use of sensors with brass band instruments.
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This output is a collection of compositions which explore issues of ensemble improvisation, ensemble management and orchestration, real-time and distributed scoring, multi-nodal inputs and outputs, and animated and graphic notation. Compositions include: Activities I; tutti, duet, trio, solo, quartet; Lewitt Notations I; Webwork I; and Sometimes I feel the space between people (voices) in terms of tempos. These compositions are presented in computer animated scores which are synchronized through the network and subject to real-time modification and control. They can be performed by ensembles distributed over large physical spaces connected by the network. The scores for these compositions include software which displays the animations to the performers, software to structure and disseminate score events, and triggering software that allows the control of a performance to be distributed. Scores can also include live electronics which are coordinated with graphic events.
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Merula is a thirty-minute work for bass flute and electronics, commissioned by Icelandic flautist Kolbeinn Bjarnason. The premiere took place in the Belfast Festival at Queen’s in November 2012. A recording will be made in 2014. Further performances in Iceland, Norway and Poland are anticipated in 2014-15. I have given a research seminar on this work at Queen’s and will deliver it again at the University of Oxford during 2013-14.
Research Goals
1) To develop an effective means of notating live electronics in a manner that would sustain the work's performance history beyond the current generation of software
2) To apply the techniques of transcription and spectralism used in my composition, Perseid, using birdsongs as source material
3) To explore the problem of sustaining large-scale form in music that is primarily fast
4) To facilitate the emergence of the solo bass flute as an important solo instrument through the completion of a new large-scale work
Methodology
• Methodologies employed in this project included sound recording, sound analysis and transcription, extensive precompositional sketching, electroacoustic techniques of sound manipulation, designing complex live processes of sound transformation and spatialisation
• A considerable part of this work was collaboration with the flautist, both in SARC and Iceland. Mr. Bjarnason was involved all stages of the work, frequently recording source materials and helping to ensure the idiomatic nature of the flute writing.
• Developing a means of notating the live electronics. Building on a model suggested by Pierre Boulez in Anthemes 2 (1998), the score of this work includes a technical manual that describes electronic processes in a manner that can be reprogrammed in subsequent generations of software. Combined with a system of notations employed in the full score, the technical manual will enable this composition to be performed by a wide range of performers and technical teams, with appropriately identical results.
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La version intégrale de ce mémoire est disponible uniquement pour consultation individuelle à la Bibliothèque de musique de l’Université de Montréal (http://www.bib.umontreal.ca/MU)
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La version intégrale de cette thèse est disponible uniquement pour consultation individuelle à la Bibliothèque de musique de l’Université de Montréal (www.bib.umontreal.ca/MU).
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Cette thèse est une exploration de mon processus compositionnel. En tentant de comprendre comment s’organise ma pensée créatrice, j’ai dégagé trois observations : l’organicisme du processus et des œuvres, la notion de mouvement et la relation récursive entre la matière et le compositeur. Ces thèmes m’ont amené à établir un lien épistémologique entre la composition musicale et l’étude des systèmes complexes. Dans ce cadre systémique, j’ai établi que les informations qui motivent mes prises de décision artistiques ont entre elles des ramifications opérationnelles et structurelles qui évoquent une arborescence rhizomatique plutôt qu’une hiérarchie linéaire. La transdisciplinarité propre à la systémique m’a également permis d’introduire des notions provenant d’autres champs de recherche. S’articulant d’emblée avec mon processus compositionnel, ces notions m’ont procuré une vision holistique de ma démarche artistique. Conséquemment, je considère l’acte de composer comme une interaction entre ma conscience et tout ce qui peut émaner de la matière sonore, les deux s’informant l’une et l’autre dans une boucle récursive que je nomme action⟳perception. L’œuvre ainsi produite n’est pas exclusivement tributaire de ma propre volition puisque, au fil du processus, mes décisions opératoires et artistiques sont en grande partie guidées par les propriétés invariantes et les propriétés morphogéniques inhérentes au matériau sonore. Cette approche dynamique n’est possible que si l’interaction avec le compositeur se fait en temps réel, ce que permet la lutherie numérique. Les résultats de mes recherches m’ont guidé dans la composition d’œuvres choisies, autant acousmatiques, mixtes, vidéomusicales que pluridisciplinaires.
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Pós-graduação em Música - IA