Global Sonic Cultures Week 18

Musicking

The essence of music lies not in musical works but in taking part in performance, in social action. Music is thus not so much a noun as a verb, ‘to music’. To music is to take part in any capacity in a musical performance, and the meaning of musicking lies in the relationships that are established between the participants by the performance. Musicking is part of that iconic, gestural process of giving and receiving information about relationships which unites the living world, and it is in fact a ritual by means of which the participants not only learn about, but directly experience, their concepts of how they relate, and how they ought to relate, to other human beings and to the rest of the world. These ideal relationships are often extremely complex, too complex to be articulated in words, but they are articulated effortlessly by the musical performance, enabling the participants to explore, affirm and celebrate them. Musicking is thus as central in importance to our humanness as is taking part in speech acts, and all normally endowed human beings are born capable of taking part in it, not just of understanding the gestures but of making their own.

Global Sonic Cultures Week 17

With the release of two free programs that encourage experimentation with global tuning systems, the musician and researcher Khyam Allami is challenging the Western biases of music production software.

https://isartum.net/

“While every part of the world has its own distinct acoustic instruments, electronic producers around the globe must make do with a narrow range of production tools. Popular digital audio workstations like Ableton, FL Studio, Logic, and Cubase were built primarily to facilitate music-making in a Western mode, according to the principles of European classical music. If an artist wants to compose with the common features of music from Africa, Asia, or Latin America, they have to fight against the software and rely on complex workarounds.”

https://www.schoolofnoise.com/global-graphic-score-project/what-are-graphic-scores/

Creative Sound Projects : Week 20

Psychoacoustics is an interdisciplinary science focusing on the psychological perception of sound. It establishes relationships between objective physical parameters (sound pressure level, frequency, ear anatomy…) and subjective hearing impressions (pleasantness, pitch, perceived volume…).

Different psychoacoustic metrics such as loudness, sharpness, tonality and roughness provide a linear representation of human hearing perception. Each metric measure one specific sound parameter: level for roughness, amount of high-frequency components for sharpness, etc. However human auditory perception is global and takes into account all different parameters according to complex auditory phenomena. It is thus needed to combine the different metrics within a global sound quality estimation to get a good estimation of the human ear perception. It is done with hearing tests following rigorous protocols with a sufficient number of normal-hearing subjects.

Creative Sound Projects : Week 17

The voice is one of the most dynamic instruments that we have access to, our society is based on oral tradition and languages were spoken before written in a lot of my recent music i have been deconstructing how i use my voice in relation to the pieces i have made. I was experimenting with creating ambient drones and new instruments using various pitches of my voice and then running it through multiple FX such as reverb and a bit crusher to change it from a lead vocal into more ambient chords. In going through this process i realised how much my vocals can be manipulated to create almost anything.

Beginning in 1971, Oliveros began designing short programs for each meeting. This was out of necessity: the group had begun to experiment with nonverbal communication, as the scholar Martha Mockus describes in her book on Oliveros. The archived program for the sixth session, dated November 30, 1971, is typical:

  1. Mirror
  2. Kinetic Awareness—Make your last audible breath a sung tone
  3. Circle—Visualize your signature letter by letter slowly. Simultaneously hearing your name. Do this forward, then backwards. (Without sound) See your signature in a selected color. Do these with eyes closed and eyes open.
  4. Bowl Gong Meditation. If you lose track of the pitch or want to verify your memory hit the gong again.
  5. Walk once around the room as slowly as possible backwards
  6. Teach yourself to fly as long as possible

Several of these instructions would develop into the now recognizable text scores from the “Sonic Meditations.” At some point, however, distinctions between musical work and bodywork became blurry. Was Oliveros’s indication to walk “as slowly as possible backwards” an exercise in Kinetic Awareness? Or was it an early version of “Meditation” No. 5 (“Take a walk at night. Walk so silently that the bottoms of your feet become ears”)?

Creative Sound Projects Week : 21

Graphic Score:

In the 1950’s, composers began experimenting with new sounds and needed another way to write down their music. They developed a new way of visualising music known as graphic scores or graphic notation.

Graphic scores often look very different to traditional musical scores. Instead of lines and dots on a musical stave, graphic scores can use all sorts of different images and symbols to tell the performer what to play.

In lesson we ended up creating our own Graphic Scores and then picked a few and played them in groups of 3-4. It was interesting to see how no graphic score was the same and the sheet music being abstract it forced the players to communicate more and react to both what they’re hearing but feeling. My score ended up being played by the class and it was interesting for me to see that because i left out an index it stripped away any direction that the players could follow and they spent most of the time deciding what line to play for each instrument. Int the future i feel clear differentiation of each instrument as well as an index would make my next graphic scorer easier to follow.

Examples:

Clockwise Graphic Score

Futuristic Graphic Score:

  1. Graphical scores1. What is a graphic score? Unlike the more traditional five-lined musical stave, with each line and each space representing a different pitch, a graphic score is a different way of notating a piece of music.
  2. Graphic scores
  3. 2. Art and music togetherScores can blend conventional elements notation with the unconventional. The performer has to use the pictures to inspire his or her performance – it’s more like a guide, or a musical map.
  4. Graphic scores3. John Cage – AriaJohn Cage, the man behind so much groundbreaking music including the famously silent 4’33”, was a keen graphic score composer. It might look like random squiggles, but each line indicates a different style of singing, notated in wavy lines in ten different colors, and the black squares indicate non specified ‘non-musical’ sounds.
  5. Graphic scores4. Bergstrøm-Nielsen – Towards An Unbearable LightnessOne feature of many graphic scores is they can be played by any number of players, of any standard, on any instrument. No two performances sound the same, but all the players will be following the same instructions.
  6. Graphic scores5. Crumb – Twelve Fantasy-Pieces after the Zodiac for Amplified PianoWith so many notes, this score would be difficult for any pianist to read if it was laid out simply on the page. Luckily, this piece by Crumb also contains three detailed pages of instructions, with movements including Primeval Sounds, Crucifixus and Spiral Galaxy.
  7. Graphic scores6. Ligeti – ArtikulationLigeti wrote his electronic piece, Artikulation, in 1958. Although it existed as a recording, there was no score for musicians to ‘see’ the music. Rainer Wehinger studied the piece in the 1970s and created this colourful explanation of the music, with a vast key explaining all the colours and symbols.
  8. Graphic scores7. Cardew – TreatiseThis is just one fragment of the 193-page score for this lengthy work. Unlike many graphic scores, this piece has no instructions as to how it should be played, so every performer has to make up their own rules!
  9. Graphic scores8. McQueen – PicnicGraphic scores serve a dual purpose: as well as looking beautiful, they explain abstract ideas about how the music should be played. In this piece, written in 2006, each line represents a different instrument, with the colours and shapes informing how the music might sound.
  10. Graphic scores
  11. 9. Phillips – Golden Flower PieceGraphic scores first developed in the 1950s as an alternative way of showing how music could be played. But they’re not entirely straightforward for inexperienced players. This piece by Tom Phillips uses uppercase letters to show notes that should be played in the bass, and lowercase letters played in a higher register. You’re allowed to add flats and sharps as you please. And the dots around the notes are supposed to help with how loud to play the note, and how long to hold it for. He’s blocked off a few notes too (you’re not allowed to play a B flat at all).
  12. Graphic scores10. Berberian – StripsodyOne of the most famous (and most cartoonish!) graphic scores is by composer Cathy Berberian. Written in 1966, it uses lines just like a traditional musical stave, indicating an approximate pitch for the singer. The difference being, the singer doesn’t sing notes – she sings noises and words, with actions, including pretending to be a radio, roaring like Tarzan, and urging a kite to come down from a tree…
  13. Graphic scores11. Cage – Water MusicDon’t be fooled by the title: this work is nothing to do with Handel’s work of the same name. The number of seconds is written on the top, with instructions as to the props to be used, accompanied by a tape.
  14. Graphic scores12. Smith – Luminous AxisAny ideas how this one might sound? Because of the flexible nature of graphic scores, they can provide instructions for a live performance, or just give a graphical interpretation of an electronic piece of music. This is a score from a piece by Smith, which he describes as: “An Electronic Sonic Garden of Delights and Transformations, Events 1-15”
  15. Graphic scores13. Escot – Your Kindled Valors BendSometimes graphic scores aren’t just abstract images or drawings. Many include more traditional musical notation like key signatures or musical staves – just in an unexpected layout!
  16. Graphic scores14. Vitiello – First VerticalLuckily, there’s no need to work out how on earth to play this piece of music. It’s another graphic score interpreting music that’s already been recorded – a bit like listening to a piece and drawing what comes to mind.
  17. Graphic scores15. Nomura – Shogi CompositionEver played Consequences? This is the musical equivalent. Find a piece of paper and some friends, and each grab a coloured pen. Write a musical phrase or draw a picture that might inspire you, and pass it on to create your very own composition. The beauty of this piece is that any paper will do: this one’s written on the back of a Natural History Museum paper bag…
  18. Graphic scores16. Antosca – One Becomes TwoIt doesn’t look all that different from a traditional musical score… until you realise there are no barlines and there’s no stave. Still, the music gives an idea about rhythm and pitch, even with some of the traditional features missing.
  19. Graphic scores17. Loyato – Celestial Spheres Fantasy For ImprovisersWritten for 40 performers, this solar-system-inspired piece asks groups of performers including choirs, duos, trios and quartets to start playing in an orbit-style cycle.
  20. Graphic scores18. Kwi – Drawing the airThis nature-inspired score is a representation of an electronic piece by composer Slavek Kwi. He explained: “There is nothing to be understood, no comprehension required accessing this work… only intensive listening.”
  21. Graphic scores19. Schorn – NebulaComposer Brian Schorn is as much a visual artist and graphic designer as he is an expert in eletroacoustic music – that is, music using electronic sounds. Nebula is written for three instruments, with each player taking inspiration from one of the three interlinked dark clouds.
  22. Graphic scores20. Phillips – OrnamentikIt might look a bit like a load of unusual road signs, but Ornamentik is actually a piece for trombone. It was drawn at the request of an American player, Stuart Dempster, who asked for a piece that would provide various provocative challenges to corner him into inventing new sounds or techniques.
  23. Graphic scores21. Schnee – ChollobhatWhen it comes to imagining what this experimental jazz-inspired composition might sound like, your guess is as good as ours. Composed by abstract artist and musician, Daniel Schnee, the highly detailed symbols all inform how the music should be performed.

Index:

https://www.schoolofnoise.com/global-graphic-score-project/what-are-graphic-scores/