PerfTech students presented new compositions for live electronics with a 3D surround sound system in TAMU’s Fallout Theatre. The concert featured a performance by the TAMU Laptet, TAMU’s freshman laptop ensemble, one by guest artist Ivica Ico Bukvic (Virginia Tech). Continue reading
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PopMusing: On Evil
Third Prize in Music/Architecture Competition
Research Embodied, a site-specific intermedia performance created for the Lyndon B. Johnson Presidential Library with designer Autum Casey was selected as a finalist from 70 international submissions, performed on October 19, 2011, and awarded third prize in the Music in Architecture—Architecture in Music symposium in Austin, Texas.
TAMU Faculty Recital with Mariana Gariazzo: Afterimages Premiere
PerfTech Presents: Electroacoustic Masterworks 2011
PerfTech Presents: InterMEDIA Performance 2011
PerfTech students presented intermedia performances in TAMU’s Fallout Theatre.
Professor Morris led his students in devising a performance titled Soccer Mom, which played on giallo horror film, using everyday experiences to generate a chilling musical score and sound effects. Students made sounds by preparing dinner (spaghetti and a cocktail for dad), using a power drill, and a Nintendo Wii Remote embedded in a soccer ball. Offstage performers controlled the processing of the video footage and chose pitches to be played each time our “boy” on stage hit the soccer ball. Other students contributed by preparing the vintage lo-fi looking projections.
Another notable performance was Black Hole for audio and video feedback. One student’s instrument was a microphone running through guitar effects pedals and a guitar amp, and the other student performed with a video camera focused on the projected image from its output, in addition to various light sources. The result was a surprisingly rich and organic performance.
PerfTech Presents: Live Electronics 2011
Folding: Imitative Counterpoint in Improvisation through Live Sampling
Folding is a study in using live sampling as an extension of the classic technique of imitative counterpoint. The title refers to the molecular folding of proteins and other molecules: atoms link together at angles and fold over themselves as they form the molecule, and the resulting shape affects the function of the chemical. Similarly, the voice of an improvising soloist is folded onto itself live to build a musical form.
The work is a hybrid between composition and instrument. The software is equipped to make decisions at a small level on its own, in order to maintain interest without requiring constant intervention by the performer, but it relies on the performer to initiate changes from one state to another. The software uses delay lines and pitch shifters to turn the soloist into a quintet.
The six states of the software’s behavior dictate the approximate delay settings for each voice:
- Now (acting as a harmonizer, or in homophony),
- Near (within the last few seconds, an echo or stretto ),
- Then (recalling a previous timepoint specified during the performance),
- Same (recalling a randomly-chosen timepoint from earlier in the performance),
- Different (each of the four delay lines go to different points in the delay line, exploring and recombining moments from the past, which may be used as a developmental or transitional section), and
- Early (recalling the first material played in the performance, or a recapitulation).
The solo instrumental performer is able to choose the behavior of the software (as one of these states) and how to play in relation to them, for example he or she may play the same material, so all recapitulate the opening material or may play a new countermelody to it. In some performances, performers have enjoyed having me or another computer attendant direct the software as they respond to their past selves, recontextualized in performance through the software.
Performance with Jayson Beaster-Jones, tenor saxophone (MP3)
Performance with Eric km Clark, violin
This work also has a distinct voice when used in a feedback system, when it hears only its own output. Compare this with “Tappatappatappa.” “Folding” with feedback:
To run the software:
- Download and install the free Max runtime for your operating system (Mac OS or Windows): click here
- Download the performance software (ZIP), unzip it, and open it with the Max runtime.
For solo performance, I can adapt the controls to your MIDI or USB controller. Contact me to let me know what device you’d like to use in performance!
Bellingham Electronic Arts Festival
Tappatappatappa is an improvised performance using custom software created by the artist and a cone microphone to amplify small sounds and room resonances. This performance was on the opening gala concert of the Bellingham Electronic Arts Festival at the American Museum of Radio and Electricity, November 2006.
Flash for trombone choir at the Bonk Festival in the Dalí Museum!
flash portrays a single instant in detail, stretched out across time. (Note: it starts very quietly.)
Bonk Festival of New Music 2004 (3/14/2004, Salvador Dalí Museum, Tampa Bay, Florida)—performed in honor of Dalí’s centenary. The Bonk Festival of New Music is produced with the support of the State of Florida, Department of State, Division of Cultural Affairs, The Florida Arts Council, and the National Endowment for the Arts.