Full Description
During the twentieth century, electronic technology enabled the explosive development of new tools for the production, performance, dissemination and conservation of music. The era of the mechanical reproduction of music has, rather ironically, opened up new perspectives, which have contributed to the revitalisation of the performer's role and the concept of music as performance. This book examines questions related to music that cannot be set in conventional notation, reporting and reflecting on current research and creative practice primarily in live electronic music. It studies compositions for which the musical text is problematic, that is, non-existent, incomplete, insufficiently precise or transmitted in a nontraditional format. Thus, at the core of this project is an absence. The objects of study lack a reliably precise graphical representation of the work as the composer or the composer/performer conceived or imagined it. How do we compose, perform and study music that cannot be set in conventional notation? The authors of this book examine this problem from the complementary perspectives of the composer, the performer, the musical assistant, the audio engineer, the computer scientist and the musicologist.
Contents
Introduction
Friedemann Sallis, Valentina Bertolani, Jan Burle and Laura Zattra
Part I: Composition
1. Dwelling in a field of sonic relationships: 'instrument' and 'listening' in an ecosystemic view of live electronics performance
Agostino Di Scipio
2. (The) speaking of characters, musically speaking
Chris Chafe
3. Collaborating on composition: the role of the musical assistant at IRCAM, CCRMA and CSC
Laura Zattra
Part II: Performance
4. Alvise Vidolin interviewed by Laura Zattra: the role of the computer music designers in composition and performance
Laura Zattra
5. Instrumentalists on solo works with live electronics: towards a contemporary form of chamber music?
François-Xavier Féron and Guillaume Boutard
6. Approaches to notation in music for piano and live electronics: the performer's perspective
Xenia Pestova
7. Encounterpoint: the ungainly instrument as co-performer
John Granzow
8. Robotic musicianship in live improvisation involving humans and machines
George Tzanetakis
Part III: Study
9. Authorship and performance tradition in the age of technology: (with examples from the performance history of works by Luigi Nono, Luciano Berio and Karlheinz Stockhausen)
Angela Ida De Benedictis
10. (Absent) authors, texts and technologies: ethnographic pathways and compositional practices
Nicola Scaldaferri
11. Computer-supported analysis of religious chant
Dániel Péter Biró and George Tzanetakis
12. Fixing the fu
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