STEIM on Wed, 8 Jun 2005 21:06:15 +0200 (CEST) |
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[Nettime-nl] [ STEIM ] Summerschool 2005 program |
STEIM summerschool 2005 program This is the full program for the STEIM summerschool 2005, held from June 13 to June 24. All activities take place at STEIM, Achtergracht 19, Amsterdam. First the summary, then the details. workshops Super Collider and LiSa workshops on every weekday. Registration can be done only through the STEIM website: www.steim.nl. lectures Florian Grote, Andreas Otto (Pingipung, Germany) - Developing a live interaction model for cello and computer (Pure Data) Wednesday june 15 at 20:00h (also open to non-workshop-participants - entrance Utrechtsedwarsstraat 134) STEIM history and instrumental electronics by Michel Waisvisz Friday june 17 from 16:00h to 18:00h LiSa expert afternoon with Frank Baldé & Daniel Schorno Wednesday june 22 from 14:00h to 18:00h concerts (also open to non-workshop-participants - entrance Utrechtsedwarsstraat 134) Local Stop concert with Tim Perkis & Scot Gresham-Lancaster (mini- hub) and Roddy Schrock & Robert van Heumen Thursday june 23 at 20:30h Performance by workshop participants Friday june 24 at 19:00h __________________________________ workshops The Super Collider workshop will cover most of the aspects of this audio design software. It will go from simply generating a sine tone and playing back samples in different ways to creating a complex user interface for a complete software-instrument. The teacher is San Francisco resident composer and musician Roddy Schrock (http:// www.fundamentallysound.org/). The workshop will be held during the summerschool on every weekday from 9h to 13h, divided into different levels: * June 13 through 16 - beginners symposia, very open-arms approach, focusing on basic concepts; basic knowledge about midi and digital audio is required * June 17, 20 & 21 - intermediate symposia, focusing on more advanced concepts, real life applications, GUI development, and live performance use with MIDI controllers * June 22 & 23 - network symposia, for intermediate and advanced users, culminating in a piece for realtime performance * June 24 - performance day and last minute questions The LiSa X workshop will cover most features of STEIM's live sampling software. It is ment for beginners as well as more advanced users, for composers and musicians as well as installation makers and visual artists. The teacher is electronic musician and composer Robert van Heumen (http://hardhatarea.com). The workshop will be held every weekday from 14h to 18h. The different levels are: * June 13 & 14 – beginners; basic knowledge about midi and digital audio is required * June 15, 16, 17, 20, 21 - advanced LiSa – looking more closely into patterns, modulators, realtime effects * June 22 & 23 – expert features – two afternoons with expert users showing their setups and some historic background on LiSa * June 24 – performance day and last minute questions Registration can be done only through the STEIM website: www.steim.nl. lectures Florian Grote, Andreas Otto (Pingipung, Germany) - Developing a live interaction model for cello and computer (Pure Data) Wednesday june 15 at 20:00h (also open to non-workshop-participants - entrance Utrechtsedwarsstraat 13) Florian Grote and Andreas Otto from the German Pingipung label have been working at STEIM to develop a software instrument which is solely controlled by the sound of a cello. The tool, constructed in Pure Data, 'listens' to what the cellist plays and converts the rich amount of timbral and dynamic information to control data utilizing methods of pitch detection, volume-, and time-analysis. In this manner a duet of the mechanical and the digital instrument is evolving, capable of a variety of expressions; generating sounds that reach from a bleepy unisono voice to ambient pads and stumbling feedback-cascades. The digital instrument turns the cellist into a listener as well, thus human and computer logic as musical means control one another. Working with Pure Data as an upcoming open source utility, the lecture of the two musicians will be discussing the programming methods transparently, including a multichannel live demonstration. The target of the project is to use the instrument for different kinds of compositions and to make it available to other musicians, on practically all instruments, on all platforms. STEIM history and instrumental electronics by Michel Waisvisz Friday june 17 from 16:00h to 18:00h Michel will talk about the history of STEIM, which is very much connected with the history of live electronic music, and the development of LiSa, junXion and STEIM's sensor interfaces. LiSa expert afternoon with Frank Baldé & Daniel Schorno Wednesday june 22 from 14:00h to 18:00h Frank and Daniel will show expert features of LiSa and junXion, from the perspective of the programmer and the performer. concerts (also open to non-workshop-participants - entrance Utrechtsedwarsstraat 13) Performance by workshop participants Friday june 24 at 19:00h Local Stop concert with Tim Perkis & Scot Gresham-Lancaster (mini-hub) Roddy Schrock & Robert van Heumen (the duo) Thursday june 23 at 20:30h Tim Perkis & Scot Gresham-Lancaster are both part of the Hub. They will visit STEIM as a break in the Hub's activities in Berlin. 'The League of Automatic Music Composers and The Hub were two of the first ensembles to investigate the unique potentials of computer networks as a medium for musical composition and performance. Both groups came about as associations of computer music composers who were also designers and builders of their own hardware and software instruments. Their approach to the computer music medium was strongly do-it-yourself, a characteristic common both to the electronic technology community of the San Francisco Bay Area, and the experimental instrument-building tradition of Harry Partch, John Cage, and David Tudor. They approached the computer network as a large, interactive musical instrument in which the data-flow architecture linked independently programmed automatic music machines, producing a music that was noisy, surprising, often unpredictable, and was definitely more than the sum of its parts.' More info: http://hct.ece.ubc.ca/nime/2005/concerts.html http://crossfade.walkerart.org/brownbischoff/ Workshop teachers Robert van Heumen and Roddy Schrock will show some of the possibilities of Super Collider and LiSa in a short performance. Ranging from sonic bursts to gregorian chants, from melodic melancholy to funny voices, from the abstract to the concrete. Roddy Schrock is a composer who digitally mines the sounds of the everyday for the profound, and the glitzy, rough edges of pop music for its articulate immediacy. He has lived and worked in Tokyo, The Hague, New York, and San Francisco, with performances in the Czech Republic, Holland, Japan, and North America. In his live performances Schrock finds the underlying essence of music by first hacking found sound to microscopic bleeps, next rearranging the shards, then fusing them into a new inorganic whole and finally realigning the synthetic and the natural. Robert van Heumen is a musician and composer of electronic music, who is very active in the Amsterdam improv scene. Being part of the N Collective he played with OfficeR (an electro-acoustic sextet searching for structures in improvised music) in Berlin, Norway, Amsterdam, and recently he did a tour with SKIF (an all-electronic set with Jeff Carey) in New York City. Both his composed and live music can be described as a mixture of toys, environmental sounds, voices and melancholic melodies, all blended with a certain kind of crackle and burst.
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