积极的想象力阅读……和听力

IF 0.2 4区 艺术学 Q2 Arts and Humanities LEONARDO MUSIC JOURNAL Pub Date : 2020-12-01 DOI:10.1162/lmj_a_01085
David Rosenboom
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Notably, Forcucci’s process includes allowing time for nature to absorb human presence in its midst before recording and invokes deep listening as a fundamental skill. In addition to hearing these captured soundscapes, imagine if we could develop the listening skills of the animals making those sounds while they adapt to the changing forces in their environments. Might this help us understand our own environments better and address the sound pollution surrounding us that dampens our hearing? From this perspective, Forcucci also heightens our awareness of how presentation spaces interact with music creation. The universe of gesture, wherein the origins of language might lie, and where music and dance are undifferentiated and inseparable, is brought to light in Daniel Portelli’s investigations of gestural line and shape in multimodal compositional practice. Portelli explores the transformation of these shapes and how to record and present them as means for generating meaning in multimodal scores. Marco Buongiorno Nardelli’s work on generalized networks is one from which the imagination can spring. This article provides an excellent tutorial on network theory, using commonly understood musical materials. The topic of networks and networking is one of enormous breadth and importance today. It is easy to imagine how a huge range of differentiated entities in perception and conception can be placed at the nodes of such networks in generalized spaces. The tools that may emerge from this realm of music theory can be generalized and applied to endlessly expanding arrays of artistic interactions and human understandings. Though the connections may not be overtly explicit, I am intrigued to speculate on subjects emerging in three papers that involve the dichotomous meanings of subjective and objective, endogenous and exogenous, conceptual and perceptual, sensory and cognitive, continuous and discrete, and in-time versus outside-time. Nora Engebretsen’s paper brings a new approach to timbre in musical analysis that acknowledges both its perceptual and acoustical bases as fundamental. Engebretsen doesn’t directly address the idea of semantics in music but does discuss the conveyance of musical meaning through timbre. This work brings new insights to ways of thinking about timbre and how we internalize its values, beyond scalable acoustic parameters. The notion of perceptual scaling is also forefront in Evelyn Ficarra’s work on time scaling. Through the use of time-lapse techniques—common in visual media, less common in composition, somewhat more known in sound art—they investigate large-scale manipulations of temporal material and how they may be perceived and experienced. A third article by Mark Reybrouck suggests putting all this under a lens of musical experience in a process of ongoing knowledge construction. Several articles concentrate on offering useful new tools. One is a low-cost beat-making, loop-sequencing instrument built with an easy-to-use form factor developed by Andrew R. Brown and John R. Ferguson. (I had the pleasure of trying out this device recently.) Michael Rhoades’s work on holography and holophony brings new techniques to the rapidly evolving field of multidimensional sound diffusion, resonant holophons in multimedia spaces. Rita Torres offers new approaches to composing with resonant guitar multiphonics. Claudio Panariello’s adaptive sound arrays that can react to environmental perturbations, Michael McKnight’s highly developed Extended Reality (XR) techniques for telling stories to multiple listeners and Taylor Brook’s software for cocomposing all add to our collective toolkit, enhancing the agency of now all-important developments in collaborative music and multi-arts realizations. Finally, Neal Spowage’s engaging, sound-making totems remind us about the importance of what I will refer to as organic corporeality in electronic music performance. Spowage also emphasizes the importance of ritual. More soundscape investigations can be found in this LMJ’s special section. Here, they are arranged so as to stimulate reimagining the role of sound as evidence in moral acts that expose the status quo in our environments. 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As we confront the multilayered forces of change in our current environments, open imaginative reading and listening become important sources of hope and guidance for actions directed at positive evolution. We can imagine ourselves taking on the listening roles of Amazon creatures in Luca Forcucci’s field recordings. Notably, Forcucci’s process includes allowing time for nature to absorb human presence in its midst before recording and invokes deep listening as a fundamental skill. In addition to hearing these captured soundscapes, imagine if we could develop the listening skills of the animals making those sounds while they adapt to the changing forces in their environments. Might this help us understand our own environments better and address the sound pollution surrounding us that dampens our hearing? From this perspective, Forcucci also heightens our awareness of how presentation spaces interact with music creation. The universe of gesture, wherein the origins of language might lie, and where music and dance are undifferentiated and inseparable, is brought to light in Daniel Portelli’s investigations of gestural line and shape in multimodal compositional practice. Portelli explores the transformation of these shapes and how to record and present them as means for generating meaning in multimodal scores. Marco Buongiorno Nardelli’s work on generalized networks is one from which the imagination can spring. This article provides an excellent tutorial on network theory, using commonly understood musical materials. The topic of networks and networking is one of enormous breadth and importance today. It is easy to imagine how a huge range of differentiated entities in perception and conception can be placed at the nodes of such networks in generalized spaces. The tools that may emerge from this realm of music theory can be generalized and applied to endlessly expanding arrays of artistic interactions and human understandings. Though the connections may not be overtly explicit, I am intrigued to speculate on subjects emerging in three papers that involve the dichotomous meanings of subjective and objective, endogenous and exogenous, conceptual and perceptual, sensory and cognitive, continuous and discrete, and in-time versus outside-time. Nora Engebretsen’s paper brings a new approach to timbre in musical analysis that acknowledges both its perceptual and acoustical bases as fundamental. Engebretsen doesn’t directly address the idea of semantics in music but does discuss the conveyance of musical meaning through timbre. This work brings new insights to ways of thinking about timbre and how we internalize its values, beyond scalable acoustic parameters. The notion of perceptual scaling is also forefront in Evelyn Ficarra’s work on time scaling. Through the use of time-lapse techniques—common in visual media, less common in composition, somewhat more known in sound art—they investigate large-scale manipulations of temporal material and how they may be perceived and experienced. A third article by Mark Reybrouck suggests putting all this under a lens of musical experience in a process of ongoing knowledge construction. Several articles concentrate on offering useful new tools. One is a low-cost beat-making, loop-sequencing instrument built with an easy-to-use form factor developed by Andrew R. Brown and John R. Ferguson. (I had the pleasure of trying out this device recently.) Michael Rhoades’s work on holography and holophony brings new techniques to the rapidly evolving field of multidimensional sound diffusion, resonant holophons in multimedia spaces. Rita Torres offers new approaches to composing with resonant guitar multiphonics. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

活跃的想象力:在此过程中,我们合成多维的、内生的环境,在这些环境中,记忆痕迹形成并被铭刻,用历史、现在和未来创造个人时间。丰富的探索邀请等待着这一期LMJ的读者。而且,深刻地说,这个挑战我们认真倾听——倾听声音,是的,也倾听具有挑战性的想法和观点。当我们面对当前环境中多层次的变化力量时,开放的、富有想象力的阅读和倾听成为希望的重要来源,并指导我们朝着积极发展的方向采取行动。我们可以想象自己在卢卡·福库奇的野外录音中扮演亚马逊生物的倾听角色。值得注意的是,福库奇的过程包括在录音之前让大自然有时间吸收人类的存在,并将深度倾听作为一项基本技能。除了听到这些捕捉到的音景,想象一下,如果我们能培养动物在适应环境中不断变化的力量时发出这些声音的听力技能。这是否可以帮助我们更好地了解我们自己的环境,并解决我们周围的声音污染,抑制我们的听力?从这个角度来看,福库奇也提高了我们对呈现空间如何与音乐创作相互作用的认识。在丹尼尔·波特利对多模态作曲实践中手势线条和形状的研究中,语言的起源可能存在于手势的宇宙中,音乐和舞蹈是不可区分和不可分割的。Portelli探讨了这些形状的转换,以及如何记录和呈现它们作为在多模态分数中产生意义的手段。马尔科·布翁焦尔诺·纳德利(Marco Buongiorno Nardelli)关于广义网络的研究是想象力的源泉之一。这篇文章提供了一个很好的网络理论教程,使用一般理解的音乐材料。网络和联网的主题是一个非常广泛和重要的今天。很容易想象,在广义空间中,如何将感知和概念上的大量不同实体放置在这种网络的节点上。从这个音乐理论领域可能出现的工具可以普遍化,并应用于不断扩展的艺术互动和人类理解。虽然这种联系可能不是很明显,但我很想对三篇论文中出现的主题进行推测,这些主题涉及主观和客观、内生和外生、概念和知觉、感觉和认知、连续和离散、时间内与时间外的双重含义。诺拉恩格布雷森的论文带来了一种新的方法来音色的音乐分析,承认它的感性和声学基础是基本的。Engebretsen并没有直接讨论音乐中的语义学,但他确实讨论了通过音色来传达音乐意义。这项工作为思考音色的方式以及我们如何内化其价值带来了新的见解,超出了可扩展的声学参数。感知尺度的概念也是Evelyn Ficarra关于时间尺度的研究的前沿。通过使用延时技术——在视觉媒体中很常见,在构图中不太常见,在声音艺术中更广为人知——他们研究了对时间材料的大规模操纵,以及它们是如何被感知和体验的。Mark Reybrouck的第三篇文章建议将所有这些放在音乐经验的镜头下,在一个持续的知识构建过程中。有几篇文章专注于提供有用的新工具。一种是低成本的节拍制造,循环测序仪器,由安德鲁·r·布朗和约翰·r·弗格森开发的易于使用的外形因素。(我最近有幸试用了这款设备。)Michael Rhoades在全息术和全息音方面的工作为快速发展的多维声音扩散、多媒体空间中的共振全息声子领域带来了新技术。丽塔·托雷斯提供了用共振吉他多声道作曲的新方法。Claudio Panariello的自适应声音阵列可以对环境扰动做出反应,Michael McKnight高度发达的扩展现实(XR)技术可以向多个听众讲述故事,Taylor Brook的软件可以共同作曲,这些都增加了我们的集体工具包,增强了协作音乐和多艺术实现中所有重要发展的代理。最后,Neal Spowage的引人入胜的声音制造图腾提醒我们电子音乐表演中我所说的有机肉体的重要性。Spowage还强调仪式的重要性。更多的音景调查可以在这个LMJ的特别部分找到。在这里,它们的安排是为了激发人们重新想象声音作为道德行为证据的作用,这些行为暴露了我们环境中的现状。Morten介绍
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Active Imaginative Reading . . . and Listening
active imaginative one during which we synthesize multidimensional, endogenous environments in which memory tracings form and are inscribed, making personal times with histories, nows and futures. Plentiful invitations for rich explorations await the reader of this LMJ issue. And, profoundly so, this one challenges us to listen hard—listen to sounds, yes, and also listen to challenging ideas and points of view. As we confront the multilayered forces of change in our current environments, open imaginative reading and listening become important sources of hope and guidance for actions directed at positive evolution. We can imagine ourselves taking on the listening roles of Amazon creatures in Luca Forcucci’s field recordings. Notably, Forcucci’s process includes allowing time for nature to absorb human presence in its midst before recording and invokes deep listening as a fundamental skill. In addition to hearing these captured soundscapes, imagine if we could develop the listening skills of the animals making those sounds while they adapt to the changing forces in their environments. Might this help us understand our own environments better and address the sound pollution surrounding us that dampens our hearing? From this perspective, Forcucci also heightens our awareness of how presentation spaces interact with music creation. The universe of gesture, wherein the origins of language might lie, and where music and dance are undifferentiated and inseparable, is brought to light in Daniel Portelli’s investigations of gestural line and shape in multimodal compositional practice. Portelli explores the transformation of these shapes and how to record and present them as means for generating meaning in multimodal scores. Marco Buongiorno Nardelli’s work on generalized networks is one from which the imagination can spring. This article provides an excellent tutorial on network theory, using commonly understood musical materials. The topic of networks and networking is one of enormous breadth and importance today. It is easy to imagine how a huge range of differentiated entities in perception and conception can be placed at the nodes of such networks in generalized spaces. The tools that may emerge from this realm of music theory can be generalized and applied to endlessly expanding arrays of artistic interactions and human understandings. Though the connections may not be overtly explicit, I am intrigued to speculate on subjects emerging in three papers that involve the dichotomous meanings of subjective and objective, endogenous and exogenous, conceptual and perceptual, sensory and cognitive, continuous and discrete, and in-time versus outside-time. Nora Engebretsen’s paper brings a new approach to timbre in musical analysis that acknowledges both its perceptual and acoustical bases as fundamental. Engebretsen doesn’t directly address the idea of semantics in music but does discuss the conveyance of musical meaning through timbre. This work brings new insights to ways of thinking about timbre and how we internalize its values, beyond scalable acoustic parameters. The notion of perceptual scaling is also forefront in Evelyn Ficarra’s work on time scaling. Through the use of time-lapse techniques—common in visual media, less common in composition, somewhat more known in sound art—they investigate large-scale manipulations of temporal material and how they may be perceived and experienced. A third article by Mark Reybrouck suggests putting all this under a lens of musical experience in a process of ongoing knowledge construction. Several articles concentrate on offering useful new tools. One is a low-cost beat-making, loop-sequencing instrument built with an easy-to-use form factor developed by Andrew R. Brown and John R. Ferguson. (I had the pleasure of trying out this device recently.) Michael Rhoades’s work on holography and holophony brings new techniques to the rapidly evolving field of multidimensional sound diffusion, resonant holophons in multimedia spaces. Rita Torres offers new approaches to composing with resonant guitar multiphonics. Claudio Panariello’s adaptive sound arrays that can react to environmental perturbations, Michael McKnight’s highly developed Extended Reality (XR) techniques for telling stories to multiple listeners and Taylor Brook’s software for cocomposing all add to our collective toolkit, enhancing the agency of now all-important developments in collaborative music and multi-arts realizations. Finally, Neal Spowage’s engaging, sound-making totems remind us about the importance of what I will refer to as organic corporeality in electronic music performance. Spowage also emphasizes the importance of ritual. More soundscape investigations can be found in this LMJ’s special section. Here, they are arranged so as to stimulate reimagining the role of sound as evidence in moral acts that expose the status quo in our environments. Morten introduction
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期刊介绍: Leonardo Music Journal (LMJ), is the companion annual journal to Leonardo. LMJ is devoted to aesthetic and technical issues in contemporary music and the sonic arts. Each thematic issue features artists/writers from around the world, representing a wide range of stylistic viewpoints. Each volume includes the latest offering from the LMJ CD series—an exciting sampling of works chosen by a guest curator and accompanied by notes from the composers and performers. Institutional subscribers to Leonardo receive LMJ as part of a yearly subscription.
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Now I'm Digital, Where Is My Ritual?: Exploring Postdigital Performance Objects as Totems for Agency and Ritual Deep Listening to the Amazon Rainforest through Sonic Architectures 30 Years of Leonardo Music Journal Transductive Wind Music: Sharing the Danish Landscape with Wind Turbines Minding the Gap: Conceptualizing “Perceptualized” Timbre in Music Analysis
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