{"title":"社论:即兴创作中的声音和电子,第2部分","authors":"James Andean","doi":"10.1017/S1355771823000110","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"This is the second issue on the topic ‘The sonic and the electronic in improvisation’, the first – Organised Sound 26(1) – having appeared in April 2021. The articles in that first volume coalesced around some interesting themes, including networked communication in electroacoustic improvisation, the electroacoustic extension of acoustic instruments, the ‘performer plus’ paradigm, the instrument as co-performer, and the electronic ‘other’. Interestingly, there is a different set of threads running between the articles in this second issue, giving it a rather different flavour than its predecessor. Prime among the themes found here is the analysis of improvisation, which is explicitly tackled in Pierre Couprie’s article but also plays an important role in articles by Lauri Hyvärinen, Alex White, Drake Andersen and James Andean. Articles by Luigi Marino and Lauri Hyvärinen examine and compare different improvisation communities, displaced and/or connected both geographically and aesthetically. While practitioner perspectives were included in the first issue, most clearly in Alistair MacDonald’s article on ‘Co-estrangement in live electroacoustic improvisation’, this thread is taken up again in this second issue in articles by John Richards and Tim Shaw, Matthew James Noone, Luigi Marino and James Andean. All of this, I think, gives the two issues rather different ‘flavours’: where issue one covered a variety of substantially different contexts for improvisation, in terms of both technical approaches and philosophy, issue two is a bit more musicological and, to some extent, more explicitly people centred. The first article, my own contribution ‘Group Performance Paradigms in Free Improvisation’, discusses differences in performer perspective in smallensemble free improvisation, and groups these into four key paradigms, followed by analysis of key examples drawn from the broader field of sonic and electroacoustic improvisation. This is followed by Pierre Couprie’s ‘Analytical Approaches to Electroacoustic Music Improvisation’, which proposes techniques for using visualisation tools for the analysis of free improvisation, within the broader context of electroacoustic analysis. Couprie constructs a framework based on three pillars: acoustic analysis, music analysis and the design of graphic representations. This framework is demonstrated by applying it to extracts of electroacoustic improvisations performed by Les Phonogénistes, of which Couprie is himself a member. In ‘New Technologies, Old Behaviours: Electronic media and electronic music improvisors in Europe at the turn of the millennium’, Luigi Marino compares and contrasts two key geographic centres of the European scene: Echtzeitmusik in Berlin and the New London Silence in London. Marino includes detailed interview material with key improvisors in each of these scenes to illuminate their approaches to electronics, and the possible relationship(s) between these and their broader performance styles and aesthetics. In their article ‘Improvisation through Performanceinstallation’, John Richards and Tim Shaw present their idea of ‘performance-installation’ as an art form, and relationships to improvisation (among other things). The article demonstrates these ideas in action with a fascinating tour through a series of conceptual and situated performances by the authors, some in collaboration with Japanese performance artist Tetsuya Umeda. (There are some interesting links here with several articles in the previous issue on this theme, including articles by Jonathan Higgins – ideas of ‘failure’ in performance; Paul Stapleton and Tom Davis – including shared links with ecological psychology; AdamPultzMelbye’s ‘agents and environments’; and possibly also with Jimmy Eadie’s ideas on ‘attendance’.) Like Luigi Marino’s article, Lauri Hyvärinen’s ‘Gesture and Texture in the Electroacoustic Improvised Music of Jin Sangtae, Hong Chulki and Tetuzi Akiyama’ also examines the music of two improvisation scenes: Seoul’s ‘Dotolim’ scene and Tokyo’s onkyô scene. Hyvärinen, however, offers an analysis-based approach, focusing specifically on the performers’ uses of gesture and texture, and their use of these materials to ‘bridge’ the two approaches. The article expands on this to propose gesture and texture as the keys to understanding improvised performance. This is followed by Drake Andersen’s ‘Spaces for People: Technology, improvisation, and social interaction in the music of Pauline Oliveros’. Andersen delves into Oliveros’s work through its focus on ‘social interaction and community-building’, drawing attention to the role that technology can play in ‘facilitating social","PeriodicalId":45145,"journal":{"name":"Organised Sound","volume":"27 1","pages":"103 - 105"},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2022-08-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Editorial: The sonic and the electronic in improvisation, part 2\",\"authors\":\"James Andean\",\"doi\":\"10.1017/S1355771823000110\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"This is the second issue on the topic ‘The sonic and the electronic in improvisation’, the first – Organised Sound 26(1) – having appeared in April 2021. The articles in that first volume coalesced around some interesting themes, including networked communication in electroacoustic improvisation, the electroacoustic extension of acoustic instruments, the ‘performer plus’ paradigm, the instrument as co-performer, and the electronic ‘other’. Interestingly, there is a different set of threads running between the articles in this second issue, giving it a rather different flavour than its predecessor. Prime among the themes found here is the analysis of improvisation, which is explicitly tackled in Pierre Couprie’s article but also plays an important role in articles by Lauri Hyvärinen, Alex White, Drake Andersen and James Andean. Articles by Luigi Marino and Lauri Hyvärinen examine and compare different improvisation communities, displaced and/or connected both geographically and aesthetically. While practitioner perspectives were included in the first issue, most clearly in Alistair MacDonald’s article on ‘Co-estrangement in live electroacoustic improvisation’, this thread is taken up again in this second issue in articles by John Richards and Tim Shaw, Matthew James Noone, Luigi Marino and James Andean. All of this, I think, gives the two issues rather different ‘flavours’: where issue one covered a variety of substantially different contexts for improvisation, in terms of both technical approaches and philosophy, issue two is a bit more musicological and, to some extent, more explicitly people centred. The first article, my own contribution ‘Group Performance Paradigms in Free Improvisation’, discusses differences in performer perspective in smallensemble free improvisation, and groups these into four key paradigms, followed by analysis of key examples drawn from the broader field of sonic and electroacoustic improvisation. This is followed by Pierre Couprie’s ‘Analytical Approaches to Electroacoustic Music Improvisation’, which proposes techniques for using visualisation tools for the analysis of free improvisation, within the broader context of electroacoustic analysis. Couprie constructs a framework based on three pillars: acoustic analysis, music analysis and the design of graphic representations. This framework is demonstrated by applying it to extracts of electroacoustic improvisations performed by Les Phonogénistes, of which Couprie is himself a member. In ‘New Technologies, Old Behaviours: Electronic media and electronic music improvisors in Europe at the turn of the millennium’, Luigi Marino compares and contrasts two key geographic centres of the European scene: Echtzeitmusik in Berlin and the New London Silence in London. 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(There are some interesting links here with several articles in the previous issue on this theme, including articles by Jonathan Higgins – ideas of ‘failure’ in performance; Paul Stapleton and Tom Davis – including shared links with ecological psychology; AdamPultzMelbye’s ‘agents and environments’; and possibly also with Jimmy Eadie’s ideas on ‘attendance’.) Like Luigi Marino’s article, Lauri Hyvärinen’s ‘Gesture and Texture in the Electroacoustic Improvised Music of Jin Sangtae, Hong Chulki and Tetuzi Akiyama’ also examines the music of two improvisation scenes: Seoul’s ‘Dotolim’ scene and Tokyo’s onkyô scene. Hyvärinen, however, offers an analysis-based approach, focusing specifically on the performers’ uses of gesture and texture, and their use of these materials to ‘bridge’ the two approaches. The article expands on this to propose gesture and texture as the keys to understanding improvised performance. This is followed by Drake Andersen’s ‘Spaces for People: Technology, improvisation, and social interaction in the music of Pauline Oliveros’. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
这是关于“即兴创作中的声音和电子”主题的第二期,第一期《有组织的声音》26(1)于2021年4月出版。第一卷中的文章围绕着一些有趣的主题,包括电声即兴创作中的网络交流,原声乐器的电声延伸,“表演者加”范式,乐器作为合作表演者,以及电子“他者”。有趣的是,在第二期的文章之间运行了一组不同的线程,使其具有与前一期相当不同的风味。本书的主要主题是对即兴创作的分析,这在皮埃尔·库普里的文章中得到了明确的论述,但在劳里Hyvärinen、亚历克斯·怀特、德雷克·安德森和詹姆斯·安第斯的文章中也发挥了重要作用。Luigi Marino和Lauri Hyvärinen的文章研究和比较了不同的即兴创作社区,这些社区在地理和美学上都是相互迁移和/或联系在一起的。虽然实践者的观点包含在第一期中,最明显的是在Alistair MacDonald关于“现场电声即兴创作中的共同隔阂”的文章中,但在第二期中,约翰·理查兹和蒂姆·肖、马修·詹姆斯·诺恩、路易吉·马里诺和詹姆斯·安第斯的文章中再次提出了这个问题。所有这些,我认为,给了这两个问题相当不同的“味道”:第一个问题涵盖了即兴创作的各种本质上不同的背景,在技术方法和哲学方面,第二个问题更多的是音乐学上的,在某种程度上,更明确地以人为中心。第一篇文章,我自己的贡献“自由即兴中的团体表演范式”,讨论了小型合奏自由即兴中表演者视角的差异,并将其分为四个关键范式,然后分析了从更广泛的声音和电声即兴领域中抽取的关键例子。接下来是Pierre Couprie的“电声音乐即兴的分析方法”,在更广泛的电声分析背景下,提出了使用可视化工具分析自由即兴的技术。Couprie构建了一个基于三个支柱的框架:声学分析、音乐分析和图形表现设计。这一框架通过将其应用于Les phonogsamnistes演奏的电声即兴演奏的摘录来证明,Couprie本人就是其中的一员。在《新技术,旧行为:千禧年之际欧洲的电子媒体和电子音乐即兴者》中,Luigi Marino比较和对比了欧洲场景的两个关键地理中心:柏林的Echtzeitmusik和伦敦的New London Silence。马里诺在这些场景中包括了对关键即兴演员的详细采访材料,以阐明他们对电子产品的处理方法,以及这些方法与他们更广泛的表演风格和美学之间可能存在的关系。约翰·理查兹和蒂姆·肖在他们的文章《通过表演装置进行即兴创作》中提出了他们将“表演装置”作为一种艺术形式的想法,以及与即兴创作(以及其他事物)的关系。这篇文章通过作者的一系列概念性和情境性的表演来展示这些想法,其中一些是与日本行为艺术家Tetsuya Umeda合作的。(这里有一些有趣的链接,与上一期关于这个主题的几篇文章有关,包括乔纳森·希金斯的文章——表现“失败”的想法;保罗·斯台普顿和汤姆·戴维斯——包括与生态心理学的共同联系;AdamPultzMelbye的“代理和环境”;可能还有吉米·伊迪关于“出勤率”的想法。)与Luigi Marino的文章一样,Lauri Hyvärinen的“Jin Sangtae, Hong Chulki和Tetuzi Akiyama的电声即兴音乐中的手势和纹理”也研究了两个即兴场景的音乐:首尔的“Dotolim”场景和东京的onkyô场景。然而,Hyvärinen提供了一种基于分析的方法,特别关注表演者对手势和纹理的使用,以及他们使用这些材料来“连接”这两种方法。本文在此基础上提出手势和织体是理解即兴表演的关键。其次是Drake Andersen的“人的空间:Pauline Oliveros音乐中的技术、即兴创作和社会互动”。Andersen通过对“社会互动和社区建设”的关注,深入研究了Oliveros的作品,引起了人们对技术在“促进社会”中所起作用的关注
Editorial: The sonic and the electronic in improvisation, part 2
This is the second issue on the topic ‘The sonic and the electronic in improvisation’, the first – Organised Sound 26(1) – having appeared in April 2021. The articles in that first volume coalesced around some interesting themes, including networked communication in electroacoustic improvisation, the electroacoustic extension of acoustic instruments, the ‘performer plus’ paradigm, the instrument as co-performer, and the electronic ‘other’. Interestingly, there is a different set of threads running between the articles in this second issue, giving it a rather different flavour than its predecessor. Prime among the themes found here is the analysis of improvisation, which is explicitly tackled in Pierre Couprie’s article but also plays an important role in articles by Lauri Hyvärinen, Alex White, Drake Andersen and James Andean. Articles by Luigi Marino and Lauri Hyvärinen examine and compare different improvisation communities, displaced and/or connected both geographically and aesthetically. While practitioner perspectives were included in the first issue, most clearly in Alistair MacDonald’s article on ‘Co-estrangement in live electroacoustic improvisation’, this thread is taken up again in this second issue in articles by John Richards and Tim Shaw, Matthew James Noone, Luigi Marino and James Andean. All of this, I think, gives the two issues rather different ‘flavours’: where issue one covered a variety of substantially different contexts for improvisation, in terms of both technical approaches and philosophy, issue two is a bit more musicological and, to some extent, more explicitly people centred. The first article, my own contribution ‘Group Performance Paradigms in Free Improvisation’, discusses differences in performer perspective in smallensemble free improvisation, and groups these into four key paradigms, followed by analysis of key examples drawn from the broader field of sonic and electroacoustic improvisation. This is followed by Pierre Couprie’s ‘Analytical Approaches to Electroacoustic Music Improvisation’, which proposes techniques for using visualisation tools for the analysis of free improvisation, within the broader context of electroacoustic analysis. Couprie constructs a framework based on three pillars: acoustic analysis, music analysis and the design of graphic representations. This framework is demonstrated by applying it to extracts of electroacoustic improvisations performed by Les Phonogénistes, of which Couprie is himself a member. In ‘New Technologies, Old Behaviours: Electronic media and electronic music improvisors in Europe at the turn of the millennium’, Luigi Marino compares and contrasts two key geographic centres of the European scene: Echtzeitmusik in Berlin and the New London Silence in London. Marino includes detailed interview material with key improvisors in each of these scenes to illuminate their approaches to electronics, and the possible relationship(s) between these and their broader performance styles and aesthetics. In their article ‘Improvisation through Performanceinstallation’, John Richards and Tim Shaw present their idea of ‘performance-installation’ as an art form, and relationships to improvisation (among other things). The article demonstrates these ideas in action with a fascinating tour through a series of conceptual and situated performances by the authors, some in collaboration with Japanese performance artist Tetsuya Umeda. (There are some interesting links here with several articles in the previous issue on this theme, including articles by Jonathan Higgins – ideas of ‘failure’ in performance; Paul Stapleton and Tom Davis – including shared links with ecological psychology; AdamPultzMelbye’s ‘agents and environments’; and possibly also with Jimmy Eadie’s ideas on ‘attendance’.) Like Luigi Marino’s article, Lauri Hyvärinen’s ‘Gesture and Texture in the Electroacoustic Improvised Music of Jin Sangtae, Hong Chulki and Tetuzi Akiyama’ also examines the music of two improvisation scenes: Seoul’s ‘Dotolim’ scene and Tokyo’s onkyô scene. Hyvärinen, however, offers an analysis-based approach, focusing specifically on the performers’ uses of gesture and texture, and their use of these materials to ‘bridge’ the two approaches. The article expands on this to propose gesture and texture as the keys to understanding improvised performance. This is followed by Drake Andersen’s ‘Spaces for People: Technology, improvisation, and social interaction in the music of Pauline Oliveros’. Andersen delves into Oliveros’s work through its focus on ‘social interaction and community-building’, drawing attention to the role that technology can play in ‘facilitating social