{"title":"Leo Magnien: clareres","authors":"Seth Rozanoff","doi":"10.1162/comj_r_00618","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"that conceptual space of materiality, virtual place, and virtual place as apparatus, and in a spiritual space where preexisting material features become part of virtual image (credit to virtual image scholar and professor Lisa Zaher). The concert’s final piece, “Moksha Black” by King Britt featuring Roba El-Essawy, disseminates sonospatial models that can be transduced (based on registered aspects) into one’s metaphysical space (which is cognitively and psychoacoustically entangled). For example, the initial voices are farther and larger in metaphysical space than physical space; then, a square-like tone cuts through in metaphysical space; and later, voice is physically still while circling and stuttering in metaphysical space. Towards the end, voices are vertical poles (in allocentric space) from which frequency spectra fall like glitter and sparks. “Sun Ra’s gift was understanding the passage of humankind through large swaths of time. . . . The sound of those insects. That continuity. Who’s to say that that sound . . . can’t be interpreted as a meaningful sequence of something like language abiding to something like a grammar?” (Thomas Stanley, in conversation with the reviewer). In his keynote address “You Haven’t Met the Captain of the Spaceship. . . Yet,” Thomas Stanley presented extensive info about interfacing with and interpreting Sun Ra’s teachings, including myth as tech—specifically, Alter Destiny, a leap into a zone of justice that is now possible because the original myth of dominion has gradually become unstable. It involves solving the many crises (e.g., racism, intergroup conflict, “extractive capitalism and the filth that goes along with this way of life,” potential mutually assured destruction, capitalist labor, an American empire whose populace is largely “distracted, paid off, sedated by . . . the fruits of oppression that happen in other peoples’ country”) predicated on that myth, simultaneously. This seems impossible, but the resolve “to be that broad in our attempts to ameliorate the situation is the starting point” (Stanley, in conversation with the reviewer). Sun Ra’s music contains messages that can help us question our fundamental beliefs rooted in that myth. The Sounds In Focus II concert begins with “The Shaman Ascending” by Barry Truax: a constantly circling vocal not circling in metaphysical space, through which spectral processes sculpt a spider-shaped cavern around me in allocentric and metaphysical space. In “Abwesenheit,” John Young clinically and playfully makes audible the air currents and stases in the room. Lidia Zielinska’s “Backstage Pass” treats idiomatic piano moments as seeds nourished with playful curiosity and passion, presented with spatial polymatic frequency poiesis in a room-sized piano bed. To start the Sounds Cubed II concert, centripetal whispers in “śūnyatā” by Chris Coleman construct connective tissue to the Cube’s center. In “Toys” by Orestis Karamanlis, flutters of sonic pulses along the perimeters form spatially balanced (with stable centers) patterns articulating shapes that map intuitively to one’s body. Remarkably, it’s easy to imagine one’s bodily sensors located on the pattern. The pattern articulates and secretes space in a manner similar to point clouds (and incidentally, it’s easy to imagine mirrors of the pattern in real time), but also requires particular speeds and temporal arrangements of pulses, inspiring further studies of virtual bodies and spatial sense. The Listening Lounge in the Cube presented Eric Lyon’s spatialization of Sun Ra’s mind-altering album Space Is The Place, in which spatial orientation and arrangement of interweaving lines of instruments construct a gigantic floating head, directional flashes of fire propelling a negative-sound rocket, a metaphysical hypercube, and spherical radiation of life from each sound source if in a denser medium. The audience was intensely focused, and the spatialization allowed many to hear new sounds in the album. This was a fitting closing to Cube Fest 2022, which was not only continually awe-inspiring but also a tremendous historical event prompting countless future experiments. I look forward to the next one.","PeriodicalId":50639,"journal":{"name":"Computer Music Journal","volume":"45 3","pages":"83-85"},"PeriodicalIF":0.4000,"publicationDate":"2021-09-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Leo Magnien: Clarières\",\"authors\":\"Seth Rozanoff\",\"doi\":\"10.1162/comj_r_00618\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"that conceptual space of materiality, virtual place, and virtual place as apparatus, and in a spiritual space where preexisting material features become part of virtual image (credit to virtual image scholar and professor Lisa Zaher). The concert’s final piece, “Moksha Black” by King Britt featuring Roba El-Essawy, disseminates sonospatial models that can be transduced (based on registered aspects) into one’s metaphysical space (which is cognitively and psychoacoustically entangled). For example, the initial voices are farther and larger in metaphysical space than physical space; then, a square-like tone cuts through in metaphysical space; and later, voice is physically still while circling and stuttering in metaphysical space. Towards the end, voices are vertical poles (in allocentric space) from which frequency spectra fall like glitter and sparks. “Sun Ra’s gift was understanding the passage of humankind through large swaths of time. . . . The sound of those insects. That continuity. Who’s to say that that sound . . . can’t be interpreted as a meaningful sequence of something like language abiding to something like a grammar?” (Thomas Stanley, in conversation with the reviewer). In his keynote address “You Haven’t Met the Captain of the Spaceship. . . Yet,” Thomas Stanley presented extensive info about interfacing with and interpreting Sun Ra’s teachings, including myth as tech—specifically, Alter Destiny, a leap into a zone of justice that is now possible because the original myth of dominion has gradually become unstable. It involves solving the many crises (e.g., racism, intergroup conflict, “extractive capitalism and the filth that goes along with this way of life,” potential mutually assured destruction, capitalist labor, an American empire whose populace is largely “distracted, paid off, sedated by . . . the fruits of oppression that happen in other peoples’ country”) predicated on that myth, simultaneously. This seems impossible, but the resolve “to be that broad in our attempts to ameliorate the situation is the starting point” (Stanley, in conversation with the reviewer). Sun Ra’s music contains messages that can help us question our fundamental beliefs rooted in that myth. The Sounds In Focus II concert begins with “The Shaman Ascending” by Barry Truax: a constantly circling vocal not circling in metaphysical space, through which spectral processes sculpt a spider-shaped cavern around me in allocentric and metaphysical space. In “Abwesenheit,” John Young clinically and playfully makes audible the air currents and stases in the room. Lidia Zielinska’s “Backstage Pass” treats idiomatic piano moments as seeds nourished with playful curiosity and passion, presented with spatial polymatic frequency poiesis in a room-sized piano bed. To start the Sounds Cubed II concert, centripetal whispers in “śūnyatā” by Chris Coleman construct connective tissue to the Cube’s center. In “Toys” by Orestis Karamanlis, flutters of sonic pulses along the perimeters form spatially balanced (with stable centers) patterns articulating shapes that map intuitively to one’s body. Remarkably, it’s easy to imagine one’s bodily sensors located on the pattern. The pattern articulates and secretes space in a manner similar to point clouds (and incidentally, it’s easy to imagine mirrors of the pattern in real time), but also requires particular speeds and temporal arrangements of pulses, inspiring further studies of virtual bodies and spatial sense. The Listening Lounge in the Cube presented Eric Lyon’s spatialization of Sun Ra’s mind-altering album Space Is The Place, in which spatial orientation and arrangement of interweaving lines of instruments construct a gigantic floating head, directional flashes of fire propelling a negative-sound rocket, a metaphysical hypercube, and spherical radiation of life from each sound source if in a denser medium. The audience was intensely focused, and the spatialization allowed many to hear new sounds in the album. This was a fitting closing to Cube Fest 2022, which was not only continually awe-inspiring but also a tremendous historical event prompting countless future experiments. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
这是物质性的概念空间,虚拟空间,以及作为工具的虚拟空间,在一个精神空间中,先前存在的物质特征成为虚拟图像的一部分(归功于虚拟图像学者和教授Lisa Zaher)。音乐会的最后一件作品是由金·布里特(King Britt)创作的《黑色的莫克沙》(Moksha Black),由罗巴·埃尔-埃萨维(Roba El-Essawy)创作,它传播的声空间模型可以(基于注册的方面)转导到一个人的形而上学空间(这是认知和心理声学纠缠的)。例如,最初的声音在形而上空间中比在物理空间中更远更大;然后,一个方形的音调在形而上的空间中切入;后来,声音在形而上的空间中盘旋和结巴时,在物理上是静止的。最后,声音是垂直的极点(在非中心空间中),频谱从那里像闪光和火花一样下降。孙拉的天赋是理解人类在漫长的时间里的历程. . . .那些昆虫的声音。连续性。谁说那声音…难道不能被解释为语言之类的东西遵循语法之类的有意义的序列吗?(托马斯·斯坦利(Thomas Stanley)在与评论家的谈话中说道)。在他的主题演讲“你还没见过宇宙飞船的船长……”然而,“托马斯·斯坦利提供了大量的信息,关于如何与孙拉的教义进行交互和解释,包括作为技术的神话,具体来说,改变命运,一个跨入正义区域的飞跃,现在是可能的,因为最初的统治神话逐渐变得不稳定。它涉及到解决许多危机(例如,种族主义、群体间冲突、“掠夺性资本主义和伴随这种生活方式而来的肮脏”、潜在的相互毁灭、资本主义劳动、一个民众基本上“被分散注意力、被收买、被麻醉”的美利坚帝国)。压迫的果实发生在其他民族的国家”)同时基于这个神话。这似乎是不可能的,但决心“在我们试图改善这种情况时做到如此广泛是起点”(斯坦利,在与评论家的谈话中)。孙拉的音乐包含的信息可以帮助我们质疑根植于神话中的基本信念。《Sounds In Focus II》音乐会以Barry Truax的《The Shaman Ascending》开始:一个不断旋转的声音,而不是在形而上学的空间中旋转,通过它,光谱过程在我周围的异心和形而上学的空间中雕刻了一个蜘蛛形的洞穴。在《阿威森海》(Abwesenheit)中,约翰·杨(John Young)冷静而顽皮地让房间里的气流和气流都能听到。Lidia Zielinska的“后台通行证”将惯有的钢琴时刻视为充满好奇和激情的种子,在一个房间大小的钢琴床上以空间多频波呈现。在“声音立方体II”音乐会开始时,克里斯·科尔曼(Chris Coleman)在“śūnyatā”中向心低语,构建了与立方体中心的结缔组织。在oretis Karamanlis的《玩具》(Toys)中,声波脉冲沿圆周振荡形成空间平衡(中心稳定)的图案,清晰地勾勒出直观地映射到人的身体的形状。值得注意的是,很容易想象一个人的身体传感器位于图案上。这种模式以一种类似于点云的方式表达和分泌空间(顺便说一下,很容易想象出这种模式的实时镜像),但也需要特定的速度和脉冲的时间安排,这激发了对虚拟身体和空间感的进一步研究。立方体中的聆听大厅展示了Eric Lyon对Sun Ra改变思维的专辑《Space Is The Place》的空间化,其中乐器的空间方向和交织线的排列构成了一个巨大的浮动头部,定向火焰推进负声火箭,形象化的超立方体,以及在更密集的介质中每个声源的球形生命辐射。观众非常专注,这种空间化让许多人听到了专辑中的新声音。这是2022年Cube Fest的完美收官之作,它不仅令人惊叹不已,而且是一个巨大的历史事件,激发了无数未来的实验。我期待着下一个。
that conceptual space of materiality, virtual place, and virtual place as apparatus, and in a spiritual space where preexisting material features become part of virtual image (credit to virtual image scholar and professor Lisa Zaher). The concert’s final piece, “Moksha Black” by King Britt featuring Roba El-Essawy, disseminates sonospatial models that can be transduced (based on registered aspects) into one’s metaphysical space (which is cognitively and psychoacoustically entangled). For example, the initial voices are farther and larger in metaphysical space than physical space; then, a square-like tone cuts through in metaphysical space; and later, voice is physically still while circling and stuttering in metaphysical space. Towards the end, voices are vertical poles (in allocentric space) from which frequency spectra fall like glitter and sparks. “Sun Ra’s gift was understanding the passage of humankind through large swaths of time. . . . The sound of those insects. That continuity. Who’s to say that that sound . . . can’t be interpreted as a meaningful sequence of something like language abiding to something like a grammar?” (Thomas Stanley, in conversation with the reviewer). In his keynote address “You Haven’t Met the Captain of the Spaceship. . . Yet,” Thomas Stanley presented extensive info about interfacing with and interpreting Sun Ra’s teachings, including myth as tech—specifically, Alter Destiny, a leap into a zone of justice that is now possible because the original myth of dominion has gradually become unstable. It involves solving the many crises (e.g., racism, intergroup conflict, “extractive capitalism and the filth that goes along with this way of life,” potential mutually assured destruction, capitalist labor, an American empire whose populace is largely “distracted, paid off, sedated by . . . the fruits of oppression that happen in other peoples’ country”) predicated on that myth, simultaneously. This seems impossible, but the resolve “to be that broad in our attempts to ameliorate the situation is the starting point” (Stanley, in conversation with the reviewer). Sun Ra’s music contains messages that can help us question our fundamental beliefs rooted in that myth. The Sounds In Focus II concert begins with “The Shaman Ascending” by Barry Truax: a constantly circling vocal not circling in metaphysical space, through which spectral processes sculpt a spider-shaped cavern around me in allocentric and metaphysical space. In “Abwesenheit,” John Young clinically and playfully makes audible the air currents and stases in the room. Lidia Zielinska’s “Backstage Pass” treats idiomatic piano moments as seeds nourished with playful curiosity and passion, presented with spatial polymatic frequency poiesis in a room-sized piano bed. To start the Sounds Cubed II concert, centripetal whispers in “śūnyatā” by Chris Coleman construct connective tissue to the Cube’s center. In “Toys” by Orestis Karamanlis, flutters of sonic pulses along the perimeters form spatially balanced (with stable centers) patterns articulating shapes that map intuitively to one’s body. Remarkably, it’s easy to imagine one’s bodily sensors located on the pattern. The pattern articulates and secretes space in a manner similar to point clouds (and incidentally, it’s easy to imagine mirrors of the pattern in real time), but also requires particular speeds and temporal arrangements of pulses, inspiring further studies of virtual bodies and spatial sense. The Listening Lounge in the Cube presented Eric Lyon’s spatialization of Sun Ra’s mind-altering album Space Is The Place, in which spatial orientation and arrangement of interweaving lines of instruments construct a gigantic floating head, directional flashes of fire propelling a negative-sound rocket, a metaphysical hypercube, and spherical radiation of life from each sound source if in a denser medium. The audience was intensely focused, and the spatialization allowed many to hear new sounds in the album. This was a fitting closing to Cube Fest 2022, which was not only continually awe-inspiring but also a tremendous historical event prompting countless future experiments. I look forward to the next one.
期刊介绍:
Computer Music Journal is published quarterly with an annual sound and video anthology containing curated music¹. For four decades, it has been the leading publication about computer music, concentrating fully on digital sound technology and all musical applications of computers. This makes it an essential resource for musicians, composers, scientists, engineers, computer enthusiasts, and anyone exploring the wonders of computer-generated sound.
Edited by experts in the field and featuring an international advisory board of eminent computer musicians, issues typically include:
In-depth articles on cutting-edge research and developments in technology, methods, and aesthetics of computer music
Reports on products of interest, such as new audio and MIDI software and hardware
Interviews with leading composers of computer music
Announcements of and reports on conferences and courses in the United States and abroad
Publication, event, and recording reviews
Tutorials, letters, and editorials
Numerous graphics, photographs, scores, algorithms, and other illustrations.