Categories
Music

live_set_Wench_August18

Live video of set from Wench, Edinburgh – August 18

Categories
Music

live_set_Not_Waiting_July18

Rough video of a live set for the Inaugural Not Waiting Gig

Categories
Music

live_set_Not_Waiting_October19

Rough video of a solo live set for Not Waiting Series

Categories
Music

yctr_jingle

You Call That Radio started when lockdown began and my old bandmate Mark McGhee.
260+ live shows and counting. It’s really amazing what he’s built, and kept a thriving community together during a tough time for music. Here’s a jingle I made for it:

Categories
Writing

breaking_boundaries

Article: Breaking Boundaries of Role and Hierarchy in Collaborative Music-Making

Published in March 2017 in a Contemporary Music Review special issue “Collaboration in Contemporary Music”

Abstract: This paper explores the collaborative relationship between Jess Aslan and Emma Lloyd in the context of two projects: a set of three pieces for violin and computer and an electro-instrumental duo album under the band name KUBOV. Beginning with discrete roles as composer and performer, our working relationship progressed naturally into one of equal authorship, and equal performative contribution. In exploring this creative relationship, we will examine the effects of working primarily with sound, over notation.

We look at how building and extending our instruments affected the hybridity of our sound and contributed to the development of our musical language. We will analyse the importance of improvisation to our development as a duo, in the generation of ideas and the discovery of new sounds and potential in our instruments. This allowed us to retain a certain freedom when we returned to a loosely composed format to record our album.

Over the course of this paper, we will examine the terms of our collaboration, with reference to other relevant work. We contextualise this collaboration with theoretical analysis and we reflect on the practicalities of our joint musical development and the growth of our musical partnership. The initial classically informed hierarchy of the composer/performer duo dissolved as we each took on a balanced creative and performative role.

Categories
Writing

pair_of_ears

Article for premiere of Daniel Ross’ Maderna Remix for Classical Remix

Algorithmic composition is an elusive practice to define. Far from being a neatly pigeonholed genre or style, algorithmic refers to the employment of some sort of process or function, which in this case results in sound. A numerical recipe for music. The processes can be achieved with or without the help of a computer, indeed the often pen-and-paper calculations of Serialism is a definitive example of rule-based composition.

Machine listening is a similarly nebulous field. Broadly speaking, it describes the analysis and subsequent categorisation of sound entering a computer via a microphone. The computer might be listening for pitches, or a sequence of pitches, which when recognised will be categorised. These analyses might then prompt a musical response or instruction encoded in the machine. The computer becomes a pair of ears designed with a specific way of classifying and reacting to sound.

Employing algorithmic and machine listening processes is not simply a technology-led practice.  What these terms really indicate is the synthesis of different ideas formed through the choices and circumstances of a composer’s tools and environment. The algorithms contain, engage with and emphasise existing human relationships and behaviours. In the case of a classical remix we hear a blend of numerous voices in a novel and unique configuration.

So what happens when you use algorithms and machine listening to remix work as fiercely embodied as Bruno Maderna’s? Daniel James Ross can tell us.  Working both with non-realtime (studio) and realtime (live) software, Ross draws together a set of tightly curated algorithmic tools across his compositions. Many of these tools are of his own design for composition and performance, and all are bespoke. The algorithms Ross employs are ones that he has developed and refined over years, collaborating with software designers and musicians to define his own sound in code. This extended development-time means that the code that Ross has designed is an expression of his own energetic musical style, which also audibly preserves the essence of Maderna’s own processes and aesthetic. 

The employment of algorithmic and machine listening processes in the search of new hybrid voices is an integral part of the story. But it’s the musical content lying at their heart that really makes them sing.

Article can also be found on the Classical Remix Website