Kyma and the SumOfSines Disco Club

Kyma and the SumOfSines Disco Club
Author: Jeffrey Stolet
Publisher: Ingram
Total Pages: 285
Release: 2012-01-06
Genre: Computer music
ISBN: 9781257979271

Kyma and the SumOfSines Disco Club offers observations and discussions about the Kyma computer music language. Kyma and the SumOfSines Disco Club provides a comprehensive overview of the Kyma sound-specification language as well as a detailed technical description about how the language can be used for musical outcomes. Philosophical and metaphorical thought is interwoven throughout the text.

Teaching Electronic Music

Teaching Electronic Music
Author: Blake Stevens
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 229
Release: 2021-08-16
Genre: Music
ISBN: 1000417271

Teaching Electronic Music: Cultural, Creative, and Analytical Perspectives offers innovative and practical techniques for teaching electronic music in a wide range of classroom settings. Across a dozen essays, an array of contributors—including practitioners in musicology, art history, ethnomusicology, music theory, performance, and composition—reflect on the challenges of teaching electronic music, highlighting pedagogical strategies while addressing questions such as: What can instructors do to expand and diversify musical knowledge? Can the study of electronic music foster critical reflection on technology? What are the implications of a digital culture that allows so many to be producers of music? How can instructors engage students in creative experimentation with sound? Electronic music presents unique possibilities and challenges to instructors of music history courses, calling for careful attention to creative curricula, historiographies, repertoires, and practices. Teaching Electronic Music features practical models of instruction as well as paths for further inquiry, identifying untapped methodological directions with broad interest and wide applicability.

Designing Sound

Designing Sound
Author: Andy Farnell
Publisher: MIT Press
Total Pages: 689
Release: 2010-08-20
Genre: Computers
ISBN: 0262014416

A practitioner's guide to the basic principles of creating sound effects using easily accessed free software. Designing Sound teaches students and professional sound designers to understand and create sound effects starting from nothing. Its thesis is that any sound can be generated from first principles, guided by analysis and synthesis. The text takes a practitioner's perspective, exploring the basic principles of making ordinary, everyday sounds using an easily accessed free software. Readers use the Pure Data (Pd) language to construct sound objects, which are more flexible and useful than recordings. Sound is considered as a process, rather than as data—an approach sometimes known as “procedural audio.” Procedural sound is a living sound effect that can run as computer code and be changed in real time according to unpredictable events. Applications include video games, film, animation, and media in which sound is part of an interactive process. The book takes a practical, systematic approach to the subject, teaching by example and providing background information that offers a firm theoretical context for its pragmatic stance. [Many of the examples follow a pattern, beginning with a discussion of the nature and physics of a sound, proceeding through the development of models and the implementation of examples, to the final step of producing a Pure Data program for the desired sound. Different synthesis methods are discussed, analyzed, and refined throughout.] After mastering the techniques presented in Designing Sound, students will be able to build their own sound objects for use in interactive applications and other projects

Do

Do
Author: Jeffrey Stolet
Publisher:
Total Pages: 196
Release: 2021-05-19
Genre: Music
ISBN: 9781678044954

Do: Notes about Action in the Creation of Musical Performance with Data-driven Instruments is a work that examines aspects of real-time performance of electroacoustic music. While technical discussions are unavoidably necessary when examining a technology-centric topic such as musical performance with digital musical instruments, the uniqueness of this text derives from its commitment to presenting material and offering solutions from a musical perspective. To address the complex topic of musical performance with digital instruments, an all-encompassing activity that involves musical composition, musical performance, and instrument building, many sub-areas are examined. Some of these sub-areas relate to the data-driven instrument itself. In other cases, concentration is placed on topics that have been glossed over or omitted in previous examinations of the subject, topics that have been unnoticed or under-appreciated, or topics that have been fundamentally misrepresented or misunderstood. The text provides insight into the conceptualization and classification of performance interfaces, basic data mapping operations, and instrumental mutability. The text also includes discussions about sensor embodiment, the development of a complete performance space, and the role of the performer in this emerging type of musical expression. Additionally, the text presents discussions about practice, performance anxiety, and compositional transportability. Along the path the text examines and explains with greater preciseness and from a musical perspective tracking technologies and addresses often stated misconceptions about tracking as it functions in musical performance. Because musical audiences are, in fact, multi-modal in their understanding of matters related to how the visual dimension impacts the comprehension of the sonic domain, a concept of cinematics in musical performance is proffered. The text finds its completion with a consideration of the musical and cultural values of virtuosity.

Electric Sound

Electric Sound
Author: Joel Chadabe
Publisher: Pearson
Total Pages: 394
Release: 1997
Genre: Music
ISBN:

The author covers the development of the electronic musical instrument from Thaddeus Cahill's Telharmonium at the turn of the last century to the MIDI synthesizers of the 1990s. --book cover.

Enaction and Enactive Interfaces

Enaction and Enactive Interfaces
Author: Annie Luciani
Publisher:
Total Pages: 328
Release: 2007
Genre:
ISBN: 9782953085600

Enaction is a recent approach in psychology and in cognitive sciences and it remains not easy to understand and to situate. Its introduction in the field of Computer Technology and Multimodal Interfaces has been initiated explicitly in the FP6 Enactive Interfaces Network of Excellence. It is nothing less thon a conceptual revolution, an important paradigm shift.This leads ta necessary confrontations between several disciplines in order ta bridge gags, understand different ways of thinking, plunge within unfamiliar defnitions, rub up with different schools, and work to extend each domain by new concepts, methods and results. Enaction and Enacfive Interfaces: an handbook of Terms aims ut overcoming the interdisciplinary, gap inherent to this new paradigm. It has been designed as a Cool ta constitute a common vision on Enaction, Enactive Interaction, Enaction Knowledge and Enactive systems, allowing students and researchers ta reach, ut a glance, a suffcient interdisciplinary level, in order to tackle effiqiently the new question of « Enaction and Technology ». Through a wide panel of words, terms, expressions, presented in a synthetic form, shorter thon scientific papers or disciplinary books, it aims ut creating a global understanding of the Enactive paysage, and stimulating new researches ut the crosspoint of disciplines, and ultimately ut fostering a new generation of young researchers on Enaction and Enactive Systems.

Archaeologies of Vision

Archaeologies of Vision
Author: Gary Shapiro
Publisher: University of Chicago Press
Total Pages: 460
Release: 2003-04-15
Genre: Art
ISBN: 0226750477

While many acknowledge that Friedrich Nietzsche and Michel Foucault have redefined our notions of time and history, few recognize the crucial role that 'the infinite relation' between seeing and saying plays in their work. Shapiro reveals the full extent of Nietzsche and Foucault's concern with the visual.

Understanding Migrant Decisions

Understanding Migrant Decisions
Author: Belachew Gebrewold
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 298
Release: 2016-06-10
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1317004779

Examining how changing conditions in the Mediterranean Region have affected the decisions of those considering migrating from Sub-Saharan Africa to or through the Region, this book represents an important and overdue contribution to international policy-making and academic discourse. In current discussions relating to this migration phenomenon, the complexity of individual decision-making is often left unacknowledged, so that subsequent policy responses draw upon simplified models. In this volume, individual decision-making takes central stage by bringing together chapters that demonstrate very different types of decision-making frameworks. In this project, it is highlighted that people move for a variety of reasons such as being affected by conflict and insecurity, by economic pressures, and by desire for other forms of enrichment. Throughout, the book’s contributors find that events in the Mediterranean cannot be considered alone in understanding migration decision-making from Sub-Saharan Africa, but as part of an increasingly complicated global system not encompassed by one simplified theory or by looking at one regional context in isolation. Knowing why individual people are moving and how they decide upon which routes to take can help to ensure policy that promotes safer travel options, or makes genuine alternatives to migration available.

The Sounding Object

The Sounding Object
Author: Davide Rocchesso
Publisher: Mondo Estremo
Total Pages: 411
Release: 2003
Genre: Auditory perception
ISBN: 8890112603