Skip to main content

Home/ Sound Research/ Group items tagged electronics

Rss Feed Group items tagged

john roach

Layered Memories - Searching For Sound With Yosi Horikawa (Trailer) - YouTube - 0 views

  •  
    "Layered Memories: Searching For Sound With Yosi Horikawa follows the 2011 Red Bull Music Academy grad as he does field recordings on the World Heritage island of Yakushima and, later, plays the resulting music on speakers he has built himself. It's a behind-the-scenes look at how one of electronic music's most exciting talents transforms the everyday into something extraordinary."
john roach

MASS MoCA | Museum of Contemporary Art presents: Christina Kubisch: Clocktower Project ... - 0 views

  •  
    "The comparison of a city's clock to a person's heart, though it has been made countless times, remains evocative. When Christina Kubisch first visited MASS MoCA in 1996, she was moved by the fact that the century-old factory clock had not kept time, nor had its bells rung, since 1986, when the Sprague Electric Company vacated the 13-acre site. This 19th-century clock, located in an eighty-foot tower with a 750-pound and a 1,000-pound bell, had set the rhythm of the workday in North Adams since 1895, ringing every quarter hour. Now those bells and beautiful brass clockworks share the tower with components of The Clocktower Project: solar panels, electronic sound system, and a computer with Kubisch's unique program on its flash disc. "
john roach

From Vinyl to Streaming, An Audio Expert Takes Us Through More Than 100 Years of Sound ... - 2 views

  •  
    "Until the arrival of the phonograph nearly 140 years ago, the only way to have music in the home was to perform it. Royals and the wealthy supported composers and performers to provide entertainment in their manor houses and castles; their residences often featured music rooms, where instrumentalists were presented front and center, like artwork on display. Other abodes placed the musicians in a separate room or loft, acoustically connected to grand halls to provide discreet accompaniment for banquets and events. Oddly enough, that dichotomy-show of the music, or hide it-still exists, even in our modern, electronic era. "
john roach

A Beginner's Guide To…Field Recording - FACT Magazine: Music News, New Music. - 1 views

  •  
    "The history of field recording is central to the development of electronic music, with artists - from Eno through Scanner to Burial - drawing on its theories and strategies to create distinctive soundworlds. Lawrence English - boss of the long-running Room40 imprint, and the man behind this year's exceptional Wilderness of Mirrors - presents this beginner's guide to the discipline, including a rundown of crucial recent releases. "
john roach

SOUNDIAL | New Music USA - 0 views

  •  
    "SOUNDIAL is the latest brainchild of sound installation team Jonathon Kirk and Lee Weisert (aka PAML; the Portable Acoustic Modification Laboratory). The installation aims to engage the public community with an arresting new manifestation of a public timepiece. Using ultrasonic, hyper-directional speakers, three rotating "beams" of newly-composed electronic music are transmitted in an outdoor public space. Due to the unique sound-transmitting mechanism of the ultrasonic speakers, these narrowly focused sound-beams are only audible to people directly in the path of the speaker."
john roach

Maxing Out on Science & Art - Resolume VJ Software & Media Server - 1 views

  •  
    "Max Cooper is not your average electronic producer. With a PHD in Computational Biology, Max is what we like to call an Audio-Visual Scientist. Through his work he tries to bridge the gap, or reinforce the deep-seeded relationship between science, art and music. A look through his work and you realize how successful he has been. "
john roach

Letter of Recommendation: The Recordings of Pauline Oliveros - The New York Times - 0 views

  •  
    "Artistic innovations spurred by curiosity rather than by intellectual principles arguably produce more compelling and enduring breakthroughs. And Pauline Oliveros was undeniably curious when it came to music. By the time she was 9, she picked up the accordion; soon, she learned to play the tuba and the French horn. She quickly proved to be a highly versatile and accomplished instrumentalist. The capacity that really shaped Oliveros's career as an experimental composer and electronic-music pioneer, however, was not her skill as a musician per se but her awareness of the broader sonic field that surrounded her as she played."
john roach

Sonic Ethnographer: An Interview with Ernst Karel | Institute of Contemporary Arts - 0 views

  •  
    " Ernst Karel is Lecturer on Anthropology, Assistant Director of the Film Study Center, and Lab Manager for the renowned Sensory Ethnography Lab at Harvard University. In his audio projects, he works with analog electronics and location recordings, sometimes separately, sometimes in combination, to create pieces that move between the abstract and the documentary. Karel collaborates with filmmakers as a sound recordist, mixer, and sound designer. Notably, Karel has worked on key films produced at the Sensory Ethnography Lab including Sweetgrass (2009) and Leviathan (2012), both of which were released in UK cinemas via Dogwoof."
john roach

Thessia Machado's Handmade Instruments Turn Ambience into Music - SURFACE - 0 views

  •  
    "Given light, space, electricity, and a stack of discarded electronics, Thessia Machado will make music. For more than a decade, the sound artist has been building her own instruments with found and modified parts-old speakers, circuit boards, fax machines-intent on broadening the dimensions of sound and sound-making. Unlike traditional instruments, Machado's creations and installations generate sounds triggered by atmospheric factors such as light, movement, and electromagnetic waves. They harness and marshal the ambience, audibly expressing their environments. "These sounds that [were] not there, are now there," she says. And sound, she adds, is "basically air that's organized.""
john roach

Acoustics based on volume: aluminum - TWMW - 1 views

  •  
    "Three geometric objects out of aluminium: a sphere, a cube and a tetrahedron, they all have the same volume. Together they form a new instrument which shows how form changes its acoustic characteristics by using its individual resonance. With the use of electronics the shapes can be used as instruments or acoustic (reverb) chambers. "
john roach

Quantum Sound | International Festival of Arts and Ideas - 0 views

  •  
    " Have you ever wondered what a single electron moving through the universe sounds like? With scientists Kyle Serniak and Luke Burkhart from the Yale Quantum Institute, sound artist and composer Spencer Topel presents the first-ever music created from the measurements of the dynamics inside superconducting quantum devices, the precursors to quantum computers."
john roach

PREPARED GUITAR: Kinetic Works by Stephen Cornford - 0 views

  •  
    Stephen Cornford (1979, London) is an installation artist and experimental musician who works by reconfiguring consumer electronics.
john roach

Our Time 1x5 / United Visual Artists - 0 views

  •  
    "Commissioned by The Store X The Vinyl Factory, this site-specific iteration of Our Time is one of three works in the Other Spaces show. With a new score by electronic musician Mira Calix, this atmospheric installation aims to manipulate our experience of time. As the kinetic sculptures swing in and out of phase, they project light and sound and transform the space they occupy."
john roach

Night Cubes: Revisiting UK Sound Art's Popular and Club Histories | | Flash Art - 0 views

  •  
    "For over a year now, London has been a simmering site of dormant musical gatherings and suspended physical proximities, prompting me to wonder what's happened to the visceral, tactile energies through which collective musical formations gain so much of their social and emotional force. As Ben Assiter points out, the migration of electronic dance music online during the pandemic accelerated currents that were already underway with the ubiquity of livestream platforms like Boiler Room. With physical assembly prohibited, the dematerialization of collective musical experience gave rise to a whole new level of face-to-screen "participation," as solitary DJs began broadcasting live from empty clubs to bedroom audiences, who in turn performed "ironic dance floor interaction[s]" in the chat boxes."
john roach

Pamela Z Manipulates Voices in a Virtual Tour of Times Square - The New York Times - 0 views

  •  
    ""Times3" is the latest work by a veteran composer, vocalist, multimedia artist and "wild virtuoso.""
john roach

The people who think they tune into dead voices - BBC News - 0 views

  •  
    "Advocates of Electronic Voice Projection (EVP) claim they can use radio equipment to communicate with the dead. But are they just hearing what they want to hear?"
john roach

Fermentophone on Vimeo - 0 views

  •  
    "Fermentophone is a multi-sensory installation in which an algorithmically generated musical composition is performed by living cultures of bacteria and yeast. The installation comprises a series of different vessels containing actively fermenting foodstuffs and beverages, which are wired with electronic sensors. Each colorful, odorous, and edible ferment has its own musical vocabulary which is expressed according to microbial activity.( The installation was presented at the Hacking Arts festival at the MIT Media Lab."
john roach

cornelius cardew's treatise (1963-67) - The Hum Blog - 1 views

  •  
    "Cornelius Cardew was a fascinating figure. Both in his life, and through his music, he posed questions with which I find myself in equal sympathy and conflict. He is undeniably one of the most important figures in the Post-War British avant-garde. Cardew, by all accounts, was a prodigy. During his early twenties he worked at the highest levels of performance. In 1958 (age 22) he won a scholarship to study at the Studio for Electronic Music in Cologne, and was promptly asked by Karlheinz Stockhausen to serve as his assistant. Stockhausen's recollections of Cardew are drenched in respect. He was one of the few people whom he allowed to work on his scores unsupervised. During the late 50's, influenced by John Cage and other members of his generation, Cardew abandoned Serialism and began to compose scores utilizing indeterminacy and experiment. It was this period of his work for which he is most remembered, and from which Treatise (our subject) comes. In 1967 he joined the iconic free-improvisation collective AMM with Lou Gare, Eddie Prévost, Keith Rowe and Christopher Hobbs, which advanced his sense of compositional possibility. The following year with Howard Skempton and Michael Parsons he formed the equally important Scratch Orchestra, which grew into a large ensemble, preforming over the following four years."
john roach

SYN-Phon ( Graphic notation) on Vimeo - 0 views

  •  
    Graphical notation and composition by Candas Sisman Barabás Lőrinc: Trumpet Ölveti Mátyás: Cello Candas Sisman: Electronics and Objects Budapest Art Factory (BAF) is pleased to present to you SYN-Phon; sound performance based on graphical notation by Candaş Şişman featuring Barabás Lőrinc & Ölveti Mátyás. Candaş Şişman resided at BAF for the month of June as part of its cross-cultural fertilization residency program. SYN-Phon will be exhibited to act, as a visual linguistic delivery through a cogitation segment followed by the sound performance on June 29th.
john roach

Golden Record: Sounds of Earth by NASA | Free Listening on SoundCloud - 0 views

  •  
    This is a sound that was electronically placed onboard the Voyager 1 and 2 spacecraft.
‹ Previous 21 - 40 of 59 Next ›
Showing 20 items per page