terry – Terry Pender https://sites.music.dev-columbia.net/mando music technology & mandolin Tue, 29 Aug 2017 22:02:27 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.8.1 Record Sound 2014 https://sites.music.dev-columbia.net/mando/record-sound-2014/ Thu, 16 Jan 2014 20:52:43 +0000 http://music.columbia.edu/~mando/WP/?p=142 Recorded Sound 2014

Recorded Sound

  • Individual Projects In Computer Music – Terry Pender
  • G6630, call # 97748
  • email: [email protected]
  • 3 Credits
  • Mondays 1 to 4
  • Room 317, Prentis Hall
  • Office Hours: Tuesday 1 to 3.

Course Description

As music moves into the next millennium, we are continually confronted by the pervasive use of new music technologies. The world of music is changing rapidly as these technologies open and close doorways of possibility. An appreciation of this shifting technological environment is necessary for active listeners seeking a profound understanding of how music functions in our society. Furthermore, understanding how these technologies function is now almost essential for contemporary composers and theorists working to build an intellectual context for the creation of new musical art. This class will make use of the Columbia University Digital Recording Facility for all of the course work.

Class attendance is mandatory – you must attend class; there will be no make up sessions if you miss a day. Missing three classes will lower your final grade by one grade level.  Assignments will be due when noted in this syllabus. Late assignments will be lowered by one grade. Lecture notes will be available on the Web.

You will be responsible for one final project due on 05/12/14.

TENTATIVE SYLLABUS

Week 1 – 01/27/14 – Introduction to the studio, signing up for studio time online, backing up files.  Introduction to recording, digital sound fundamentals. The early days of recording – Thomas Edison, Bill Putnam, Les Paul and the art of innovation.  Dynamic Microphones.

Discussion: Final Projects.

Aural historical references:

Early Cylinder Recordings:

  • Phonographic Letter – A. H. Mendenhall
  • I  Pagliacci (1907) – Enrico Caruso – 1st million selling record
  • Early Electric Recordings:
  • Dippermouth Blues (1923) – Sidney Bechet –early disc-to-disc overdubbing
  • Trickaufnahme (1930) – Paul Hindemith – records and “live” instruments
  • Peg ‘O My Heart (1947) ­– Bill Putnam – The Harmonicats – 1st artistic use of reverb
  • Lover (1948), How High The Moon (1951/52) – Les Paul – creating and imaginary soundfield

Assignment 1:

Download the free Audacity Audio Editor: http://audacity.sourceforge.net/

Watch the following Youtube videos:

Week 2 ­– 02/03/14- Early studio manipulation techniques.

Formal Principles: Recording audio.  Reverse, pitch shift, time stretch, layering techniques, looping, overdubbing. Basic mixing automation – volume and panorama. Audio editing using Audacity and Logic. Exploring Musique Concrète.  Condenser Microphones.

Aural/Historical References:

  • Dippermouth Blues (1923) – Joe “King” Oliver – first known disc-to-disc overdubbing
  • Trickaufnahme (1930) – Paul Hindmith- instruments with records
  • King Kong (1933) – early special effects by sound designer Murray Spivak.
  • I Confess (1947) – Patti Page – disc-to-disc overdubbing of two vocal tracks
  • Étude aux chemins de fer (Study of the Railroads) (1948) – Pierre Schaeffer – one of first examples Musique Concrète
  • Timbres-Durées (1952)  – Olivier Messiaen
  • Sonic Contours (1952) – Vladimir Ussachevsky – early tape manipulation
  • Low Speed (1952) – Otto Luening – octave transpositions, using tape as an accompaniment
  • Poème électronique (1958) – Edgard Varèse – early sound collage
  • Jazz Et Jazz (1960) – Andre Hodeir – tape techniques plus jazz band
  • Collage #1 – “Blue Suede” (1961) – James Tenney – early sound art collage/Remix
  • Porte et Soupir 5, 6, & 8 (1963) – Pierre Henri (Door and a Sigh) Ballet

Assignment 2 due 02/10/14.  Follow the instructions exactly.

  1. Record several audio samples using an interesting sound source from around your apartment or the studio.
  2. Edit the samples, create fade-ins and fade-outs.
  3. Assemble the samples in Logic using it as a canvas for your sonic painting. The mix should be mono.
  4. Apply basic audio volume automation in Logic.
  5. Create a two-minute Musique Concrète study.
  6. No MIDI, no pre-recorded samples, no musical instruments allowed.

Week 3 – 02/10/14 – Signal Processing part 1

Formal Principles:  Panorama, ambience, reverb. Defining an aural sense of space and creating a virtual sonic world. Ribbon Microphones.

Aural/Historical References:

  • My Blue Heaven (1927) – Gene Austin
  • Peg O’ My Heart (1948) – The Harmonicats (Bill Putnam) – first artistic use of reverb.
  • Juke (1952) – Bill Putnam and Little Walter – the birth of rock and roll
  • Telstar (1962) – The Tornados – Joe Meek’s strange new sounds,
  • Be My Baby (1964) – The Ronettes (Phil Spector, Gold Star Studio – 2 Echo chambers).
  • Running Scared (1961) – Roy Orbison (EMT 140 Plate Reverb)
  • Are You Experienced? & Third Stone From The Sun (1967)– Jimi Hendrix – innovative panning, backwards tracks, flanging.
  • Baby Love – The Supremes – Attic reverb
  • I Got You – James Brown – Spring Reverb
  • Baby I Love You So Dub – King Tubby – Spring Reverb
  • The Boxer (1968) – Simon and Garfunkel – using reverb & volume to help define structure.
  • Snatch It Back and Hold It (1973) – Junior Wells – interesting panning.

Assignment 3 due 2/24/14.

  1. Record and edit a new set of samples.  You may now record instruments. No MIDI. This mix should be stereo.
  2. Process samples with various levels and types of reverb.
  3. Create a composition that incorporates a creative use of panorama and then uses reverb and ambience to articulate structure and form.
  4. The composition should be 2 minutes and 30 seconds long.
  5. Analyze your composition.  What kinds of problems arise from layering multiple iterations of the same sounds, and what tools could you use to correct them?

Week 4 02/17/14 – Applying Equalization, using comb filters.

Formal Principles: Types of EQs and how they’re used, determining the frequency content of a signal, common EQ settings, frequency charts. The ear, psychoacoustics and equalization – creating a sense of depth and motion with EQ. Multiband EQs, and comb filtering.

Aural/Historical References:

  • Imagine (1971) – John Lennon – creating a smooth transition between sounds recorded in radically different places
  • Wish You Were Here (1975) – Pink Floyd – extreme EQ on acoustic guitar introduction
  • A Plateaux of Mirrors (1980) – Brian Eno and Harold Budd – creative multiband EQ
  • There’s More To Life Than This (1993) – Björk – creating a narrative with EQ
  • Around The World (1997) – Daft Punk – extreme EQ on introduction
  • Halo – Porcupine Tree

Assignment 3 – Proposal for Final Project – Proposal due on 02/24/14.

Week 5 – 02/24/14 – Basic mixing techniques. Using Logic’s Ultrabeat drum machine and Drummer plug-in. Drum machine tricks and tips.

Formal Principles:  Recording the voice and the guitar.  Should I record in mono or stereo? X/Y crossed pair and Blumlein Technique for stereo recording.

Discussion – How to strike a realistic balance between your recorded tracks and sampled instruments and loops.

Aural/Historical References:

  • It’s A Family Affair (1971) – first “hit” with a drum machine – Sly & The Family Stone
  • Sexual Healing (1982) – 1st Pop hit with the 808 drum machine
  • Looking For The Perfect Beat (1982) – Afrika Bambaataa (Mini Moog, drum machine, early use of turntables)
  • Kiss (1986) ­ Price – Drum machine and effects
  • Man In The Mirror (1988) – Bruce Swedien and Michael Jackson – gorgeous choral vocals using Blumlein technique

Assignment 3 due 3/24/14.

  1. Record or import a single instrument composition (such as a work for solo piano or acoustic guitar);
  2. Create three loops of differing lengths edited out of your recording, one on each track;
  3. Duplicate each of the three loops on 3 additional tracks each;
  4. Equalize each of the duplicates so that one has only the upper frequencies (using a high pass filter), the second with only the low frequencies (using a low pass filter), the third should contain just the middle frequencies of the sound (band pass filter). As the composition progresses use volume automation to mix between the three tracks so the timbre varies over time based on your selection;
  5. For the fourth duplicate track of each loop use a band pass filter with a narrow width or “Q” and automate the center frequency so it moves over time;
  6. Automate this band pass filter on the fourth copy of each loop in different ways and let the automation progress slowly over the entire length of the composition. An example would be to start one at the upper register and have it slowly move to the lower register and do the reverse on the second loop.  For the third loop create a more varied automation that moves up and down several times over the length of the piece;
  7. The goal is to create a sense of subtle variations of the timbre within the rather fixed frequency range of your source sound.  The shifts in timbre can gradually be made more abrupt and could occur at points where the loops sync up to create a formal contrast with previous sections, using the changes of equalization to help delineate the form of your composition;
  8. Experiment with adding reverb to help fuse the tracks together.  The reverb processing could be on auxiliary sends or on the main output bus. Remember to equalize your reverb;
  9. As a final step, use a frequency chart and determine the lowest frequency of the lowest note of your source material.  Add a single band, high pass equalizer to the main output bus and set the cut off frequency slightly below the frequency of the instruments lowest note.  This will help reduce any unnecessary low frequencies.  This same strategy can be used on every individual track if needed.

Week 6 – 03/03/14 – Microphone technique.

Formal Principles:  Different types of microphones, pickup patterns, microphone placement, finding the “sweet” spot, transients, proximity effect. Understanding your room and equipment, learning to get a variety of sounds from your setup.

Exercise

  1. Record yourself or your instrument through as many different microphones as possible and analyze the results. Record the same piece of music using the same setup, distance from mic, same room, same position, etc. Decide which mics make you sound best and how you can use each microphone to best effect.
  2. With your favorite microphone, record yourself varying the distance from the mic, from extremely close – 1 to 2 inches, then 6 inches, 12 inches, 3 feet, and finally 6 feet away.  Adjust the recording level appropriately each time you move the microphone further from the sound source.  Examine the various timbres you get from your “room.”  Now you can decide if you want more or less “room” sound in your recording.
  3. Extend this experiment to the room where you record.  Record in different places around the room, in the middle, in the corner facing the wall, etc.  Listen carefully to the results and decide where in the room various instruments sound best.

Use this exercise to record source material for the assignment due on 3/31/14.

Week 7 – 03/17/14 No Class – Winter Break

Week 8 – 03/24/14 – This lecture will focus on double tracking and half speed recording.

Formal Principles:

  • Discussion of double tracking
    • Creating a fuller sound through double tracking
    • Creating stereo width by panning double tracks
    • Applying additional effects to doubled tracks for variety
  • Discussion of George Martin and The Beatles and how double tracking became a feature of their production style
    • Double tracking for fullness
    • Half-speed recording to change the timbre of a sound
    • Half-speed recording to make recording difficult passages easier
    • Automatic double tracking
  •  Delaying double tracks to create a signature sound
    • Ken Scott and Elton John – Elderberry Wine (1973)
    • Ken Scott and David Bowie – Quicksand (1971)
  • Ideas for equalizing and panning double tracks
  • First look at chorus and phase shifting

Aural/Historical References:

  • Mystery Train (1955) – Elvis Presley – slap-back echo.
  • Great Balls of Fire – Jerry Lee Lewis – slap-back echo.
  • The Big Hurt (1959) – Miss Toni Fisher – early flanging.
  • She Loves You (1963) – The Beatles – 1st Beatles vocal doubling
  • Tomorrow Never Knows (1966) – The Beatles – flanging and pitch shifted tape loops, backwards guitar solo, lead vocal sung through the rotating speaker of a Hammond organ’s Leslie Cabinet, heavily compressed drums.
  • Itchycoo Park (1967) – The Small Faces  – flanging.
  • A Day In The Life – The Beatles – using tape echo on lead vocal
  • One Of These Days – Pink Floyd (1971) – echo builds and re-enforces the rhythm.
  • He Loved Him Madly – Miles Davis (1972) – interesting panned echo supports development and structure – early ambient jazz.
  • She’s Not There – Santana (1977) – modern panned, slap back echo on guitar solo.
  • Superstition – Stevie Wonder – 8 tracks of Clavinet
  • Queen – Bohemian Rhapsody – extreme doubling/overdubbing

Assignment 4 due 04/07/14

  1. Record a piece for voice and acoustic guitar;
  2. Record five exact duplications of both the guitar and the vocal track;
  3. Start your arrangement with a single tracked voice and guitar;
  4. With each new section (verse or chorus), add one of the doubled tracks, slowly building up the texture until all of the doubled tracks are playing;
  5. Make sure to pan each new double track to a new position slowly increasing the stereo width of the track;
  6. If the track starts to get too muddy, equalize the lower end of each new double track with a low shelf EQ, gradually EQ-ing out more and more of the low end on each newly added double track;
  7. Experiment with processing the doubles with some light reverb, chorusing or phase shifting to create modulations within the sound;
  8. Experiment with withdrawing all of the doubles at some point to create a sudden change of density and texture;
  9. Use these shifts in density and texture to help delineate the formal aspects of the composition.

Week 9 – 03/31/14 – Introduction to synthesizers

Formal Principles: Common types of synthesis, AM, FM, additive, subtractive, Wavetable, and Granular.  Automating synthesizer parameters.

Aural/Historical References:

  • Occasional Variations – RCA MkII, Milton Babbitt
  • Brandenburg Concerto – Wendy Carlos – Moog
  • Kolyosa (1970) – Pril Smiley (Buchla Synthesizer)
  • Stria (1977) – John Chowning (FM)
  • Riverrun (1986) – Barry Truax (Granular)
  • Looking For The Perfect Beat (1982) – Afrika Bambaataa (Mini Moog, drum machine, early use of turntables)
  • Blue Monday (1983) – New Order – Mini Moog Bass Line.
  • Supreme Balloon – Matmos
  • Altibzz – Autechre
  • That’s It For The Other One – Grateful Dead – ring Modulation
  • On The Way Home – Mahavishnu Orchestra – ring modulation

Assignment 5 due 04/14/14

  1.  Create a slow ambient composition that uses four synthesizer tracks.
  2. Design four motifs, one for each track.  Each motif should have a different, odd number of beats so that when looped their loop points are out of sync with each other but are otherwise playing in the same tempo.
  3. Setup and automate some filter effects so that they change very slowly over the course of the composition.
  4. Pan, process and set your four loops in motion to create an interesting generative composition.

Week 10 – 04/07/14 – Creating Movie Soundtracks

Formal Principles: Importing movies into Logic, using Logic to compose music, mix foley, dialogue, special effects and music together. Important criteria for composing background music for movies, radio, or TV. This week will focus on creating movement within the stereo field.  It will explore how the previously covered techniques for reverb, equalization and panning can be used together to create stereo width, depth of field and movement within that field based on psychoacoustics.

  • Stereo width – panorama
  • Depth of field using equalization
    • Making sounds move forward and backwards with equalization
    • Emphasizing high frequencies to make a sound seem closer to the listener
    • Emphasizing the lower frequencies to make a sound seem further away from the listener
    • Reverb – creating depth with reverb
      • Altering the volume and equalization of the reverb to create movement and a sense of distance

Visual/ Historical References:

  • M (1931) – Fritz Lang – How sound is integral to the storyline in this early sound film.
  • The Conversation – Francis Ford Coppola (1974), Walter Murch sound design.
  • The videos of Stan Brackhage, Robert Breer, and The Open Ended Group.
  • 77 Million Paintings – Brian Eno

Assignment 6 due – 04/28/14.

  1. Create a new one-minute film score/composition that is all background music, foley (natural everyday sounds), and special effects, but don’t use a movie.  The sound will have to fully convey the action of this imaginary film.  Pay particular attention to simple volume, panning, and EQ for movement and depth. How much auditory information can you include in the soundtrack to portray a sense of place, time, season, historical epoch, mood, temperament, etc.
  2. Be creative and apply effects processing to some foley sounds as well as transposing and layering them. For example record the wind, transpose it up a third and a fifth and layer them together to create a major chord of harmonized wind.
  3. Open the composition with a natural repetitive rhythm like a faucet dripping or a clock ticking and have it slowly evolve into the rhythm of the background music.  Try to find a natural element that can become a musical element so the foreground and background meld together momentarily.

Week 11 – 04/21/14 – This chapter will focus on audio compression, gating and limiting.

  • Discussion of how a compressor works
  • Types of compression and general uses
    • Optical (Teletronix LA-2A)
    • FET (Urei 1176)
    • Vari-mu (Fairchild 670)
    • VCA style (SSL G-series and API 2500)
  • Understanding modern compression controls
    • Threshold
    • Compression ratio
    • Attack and release time
    • Make-up gain
    • Knee settings
  • Discussion of limiting and gating
  • Using a sidechain with compressors and gates
  • Using a sidechained gate to create a tight groove between the bass and drums
  • Using a sidechain compressor to “pump” an entire mix or section

Listening:

  • New Orleans (1960) and Quarter To Three (1961) – Gary U.S. Bonds – early double-tracked vocals with heavy vocal compression, and one of the first heavily compressed lead vocals
  • Tomorrow Never Knows (1966) – The Beatles – first heavily compressed drums on a Beatles record – kick drum deadened with a sweater inside of it and microphone moved much closer to both kick and snare and a more aggressive use of compression to create a unique drum sound
  • Heroes (1977) – David Bowie – multi-latched gates on three vocal microphones that were 9 inches, 20 feet and 50 feet from the singer, Eventide Harmonizer effects on drums
  • Intruder (1980) – Peter Gabriel – gated reverb on drums
  • In The Air Tonight (1981) – Phil Collins – gated reverb on drums
  • You’re Not Alone (1996) – Olive – gated synthesizer pads
  • One More Time (2000) – Daft Punk – side-chain compression pumping the entire mix
  • Ready, Steady Go (2002) and Faster Kill Pussycat (2006) – Oakenfield – gated synthesizer pads

Exercise 1: Create a sidechained bass using a gate.

  • Create a drum pattern on track one;
  • Using MIDI, draw in a bass line of long sustained notes with a synthesized bass sound.  These notes should be the root notes of the chords you are implying;
  • Put a gate on the bass track and use the drum track as a sidechain to the gate;
  • Experiment with the threshold setting on the gate, lowering it until the bass only plays when the kick drum is sounding.  This creates a very tight groove between the bass and drums and is an effective way to create bass parts.
  • Once you’ve established that groove, go back and refine the bass part by adding or changing the sustained notes to create more movement in the bass line.

Exercise 2: Use sidechain compression to rhythmically pump an entire mix in the manner of Daft Punk.

  1.  Start with a multi-track composition that you have already mixed.  Bounce the mixed track to a new sound file and use it in a new project.  You will also need to copy the kick drum track to use as the sidechain input;
  2. Place the stereo Master on track one and the kick drum track on track two;
  3. Instantiate a compressor on track one and select the kick drum as a sidechain input;
  4. Use a high compression ratio and set the attack time to be very fast.  Adjust the release time much slower and work with the timing of the release so that the compressor reinforces the rhythm of the track by pulling the volume down on the beat.  Let it gradually come back to a non-compressed state before the next kick drum attack.  The timing of the release is the important aspect of this technique.  The volume should pump up and down from beat to beat, re-enforcing and animating it so that you can actually feel the volume pumping in time to the rhythm of the track.

Week 12 – 04/28/14 – Overview of distortion techniques and vocoding

Formal Principles:  Distortion

  • Discussion of the history of distortion
  • Common types of distortion
    • Over driving guitar amps
    • Over driving the mixing console
    • Distortion pedals
    • Tape saturation
    • Bit crushing
  • Using distortion to add upper partials to a dull sound
  • Amplifier simulators

Aural/Historical References:

  • Rocket 88 (1951) – Jackie Brenston and His Delta Cats – early guitar distortion
  • Moanin’ At Midnight (1951) – Howling Wolf – early tape saturated distortion recorded at Sun and released by Chess
  • Down Home Special (1956) – Bo Diddley
  • Don’t Worry (1960) – Marty Robbins/Grady Martin – first fuzz tone created by a faulty channel on the mixing console
  • Satisfaction (1965) – Rolling Stones – Maestro Fuzz Tone
  • Yer Blues (1968) – The Beatles – mixing desk distortion
  • 21st Century Schizoid Man (1969) – King Crimson – evil distortion

Formal Principles:  Vocoding

  • Discussion of the history of the vocoder (voice encoder)
    • Channel vocoder invented by Homer Dudley in the 1930s
    • Vocoders were used to encrypt secret messages in WWII
  • Using modern vocoding software
    • Vocoding is an analysis/synthesis technique using multiband filters
  • Ideas for using vocoding on voices and drums

Listening:

  • The Robots (1977) – Kraftwerk
  • Mr. Blue Sky (1977) – Electric Light Orchestra
  • O Superman (1981) – Laurie Anderson
  • I Believe – Cher
  • Hide and Seek (2005) – Imogen Heap
  • Get Lucky (2013) – Daft Punk

Assignment 7 due 05/05/14: Create a vocoded vocal sound.

  1. Record a vocal on one track;
  2. Place a vocoder instrument on track two;
  3. On the vocoder, use the sidechain input and select the vocal patch.  The amplitude envelope of the vocal will be used to trigger the synthesizer patch in the vocoder;
  4. On the vocoder, choose a synthesis patch that the voice will “trigger.” Some timbres will work better than others and experimentation will be required to find an appropriate match to the vocal.  Vocoding is a three-step process.  The voice supplies the amplitude envelope, the vocoder supplies the timbre based on the patch you choose.  The harmonic content will be based on whatever notes or chords are played on the vocoder track;
  5. Blend in a bit of the straight vocal track from a copy of the vocal to increase the intelligibility of the text, if desired, although this technique can also be used with instruments or other sound sources;
  6. Use doubling techniques, echo, pan and reverb to create more interest and to refine your vocoded sound;
  7. When working with resonant-frequencies, it’s always a good idea to compress the sound as described in the next chapter.

Week 13 – 05/05/14 – This chapter will focus on transforming sounds through spectral manipulation.

  • Using FFT’s to determine the strongest harmonic partials and how they evolve over the course of a sound
  • Synthesizing new sounds using additive synthesis, based on the partial tracking analysis
  • Discussion of “frequential” or spectral composition
  • Discussion of how to use the analysis data to create harmonic structures
  • Discussion of how to create transformations between two sets of spectral data
  • Embedding the spectral data in other compositional parameters
  • Converting the spectral data to standard music notation for use in orchestration
  • Strategies for working with microtonal frequencies

Listening:

  • Les espaces acoustiques – V – TransitoiresGérard Grisey – for large orchestra (1980)
  • Désintégrations (1982-83) – Tristan Murail
  • Mortuos Plango, Vivos Voco – Jonathan Harvey
  • Winter Fragments (2000) – Tristan Murail

Download the SPEAR spectral editor, created by Michael Klingbeil:

http://www.klingbeil.com/spear/downloads/

Exercise: Use spectral data to create “tuned” chords from a noise-based source like a tam-tam, white noise or wind.

  1. Choose a sound with a wide-frequency content, like a tam-tam;
  2. Record the tam-tam (you only need one hit);
  3. Using your spectral editor, create an FFT of the tam-tam sound and analyze the frequency content;
  4. Using a chart of the frequencies of musical notes and the analysis data, choose a set of three- or four-note chords you could extract from the tam-tam spectrum (limit yourself to two or three chords);
  5. Using the spectral editor, erase all of the frequencies not related to your chord and re-synthesize the sound with the new spectrum.
  6. Create a few versions of the chords, one with several iterations of the notes you need in different octaves to create very open chord voicing and a second with just four or five frequencies relating to the notes of your chord;
  7. In your sequencer, create four tracks – one for the tam-tam sample, the second the third for the re-synthesized chords you created in the spectral editor, and the fourth for a sampler or synthesizer;
  8. Begin with the tam-tam sound.  About halfway through it, place your re-synthesized chord on track two and slowly raise the volume so that the tam-tam sound gradually transforms into the chordal texture.  Create a few passages like this with your different chords;
  9. On the fourth track, improvise a melodic passage based on the chords you have synthesized;

Experiment with having the chords emerge from the tam-tam sound and the reverse, where the chord cross-fades into the tam-tam sound.  This is a very basic exercise exploring just the surface of spectral music.  For a more detailed explanation of spectral or frequential techniques, I suggest reading “Contemporary Compositional Techniques and Openmusic” by Rozalie Hirs and Bob Gilmore, which provides an in-depth exploration of the music of Tristan Murail.

Final Exam – 05/21/14 – Final projects due. We will listen to all final projects in class.

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Terry’s 2013/14 Computer Music Syllabi https://sites.music.dev-columbia.net/mando/electronic-music-1/ https://sites.music.dev-columbia.net/mando/electronic-music-1/#comments Sun, 16 Sep 2012 01:47:38 +0000 http://music.columbia.edu/~mando/WP/?p=55 Recorded Sound 2014

Individual Projects In Computer Music – Terry Pender
G6630, call # 97748
email: [email protected]
3 Credits
Mondays 1 to 4
Room 317, Prentis Hall
Office Hours: Tuesday 1 to 3.

Course Description

As music moves into the next millennium, we are continually confronted by the pervasive use of new music technologies. The world of music is changing rapidly as these technologies open and close doorways of possibility. An appreciation of this shifting technological environment is necessary for active listeners seeking a profound understanding of how music functions in our society. Furthermore, understanding how these technologies function is now almost essential for contemporary composers and theorists working to build an intellectual context for the creation of new musical art. This class will make use of the Columbia University Digital Recording Facility for all of the course work.

Class attendance is mandatory – you must attend class; there will be no make up sessions if you miss a day. Missing three classes will lower your final grade by one grade level. Assignments will be due when noted in this syllabus. Late assignments will be lowered by one grade. Lecture notes will be available on the Web.

You will be responsible for one final project due on 05/12/14.

TENTATIVE SYLLABUS

Week 1 – 01/27/14 – Introduction to the studio, signing up for studio time online, backing up files. Introduction to recording, digital sound fundamentals. The early days of recording – Thomas Edison, Bill Putnam, Les Paul and the art of innovation. Dynamic Microphones.

Discussion: Final Projects.

Aural historical references:

Early Cylinder Recordings:

Phonographic Letter – A. H. Mendenhall
I Pagliacci (1907) – Enrico Caruso – 1st million selling record
Early Electric Recordings:
Dippermouth Blues (1923) – Sidney Bechet –early disc-to-disc overdubbing
Trickaufnahme (1930) – Paul Hindemith – records and “live” instruments
Peg ‘O My Heart (1947) ­– Bill Putnam – The Harmonicats – 1st artistic use of reverb
Lover (1948), How High The Moon (1951/52) – Les Paul – creating and imaginary soundfield

Assignment 1:

Download the free Audacity Audio Editor: http://audacity.sourceforge.net/

Watch the following Youtube videos:

Watch Record Making with Duke Ellington and his Orchestra (1937)

RCA Victor Presents: Making Vinyl Records – The Sound and The Story (1956)

Vinyl Record Manufacturing
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ua7Cn2f6I9E
Record Manufacturing “Command Performance” (1942)

Week 2 ­– 02/03/14- Early studio manipulation techniques.

Formal Principles: Recording audio. Reverse, pitch shift, time stretch, layering techniques, looping, overdubbing. Basic mixing automation – volume and panorama. Audio editing using Audacity and Logic. Exploring Musique Concrète. Condenser Microphones.

Aural/Historical References:

Dippermouth Blues (1923) – Joe “King” Oliver – first known disc-to-disc overdubbing
Trickaufnahme (1930) – Paul Hindmith- instruments with records
King Kong (1933) – early special effects by sound designer Murray Spivak.
I Confess (1947) – Patti Page – disc-to-disc overdubbing of two vocal tracks
Étude aux chemins de fer (Study of the Railroads) (1948) – Pierre Schaeffer – one of first examples Musique Concrète
Timbres-Durées (1952) – Olivier Messiaen
Sonic Contours (1952) – Vladimir Ussachevsky – early tape manipulation
Low Speed (1952) – Otto Luening – octave transpositions, using tape as an accompaniment
Poème électronique (1958) – Edgard Varèse – early sound collage
Jazz Et Jazz (1960) – Andre Hodeir – tape techniques plus jazz band
Collage #1 – “Blue Suede” (1961) – James Tenney – early sound art collage/Remix
Porte et Soupir 5, 6, & 8 (1963) – Pierre Henri (Door and a Sigh) Ballet

Assignment 2 due 02/10/14. Follow the instructions exactly.

Record several audio samples using an interesting sound source from around your apartment or the studio.
Edit the samples, create fade-ins and fade-outs.
Assemble the samples in Logic using it as a canvas for your sonic painting. The mix should be mono.
Apply basic audio volume automation in Logic.
Create a two-minute Musique Concrète study.
No MIDI, no pre-recorded samples, no musical instruments allowed.

Week 3 – 02/10/14 – Signal Processing part 1

Formal Principles: Panorama, ambience, reverb. Defining an aural sense of space and creating a virtual sonic world. Ribbon Microphones.

Aural/Historical References:

My Blue Heaven (1927) – Gene Austin
Peg O’ My Heart (1948) – The Harmonicats (Bill Putnam) – first artistic use of reverb.
Juke (1952) – Bill Putnam and Little Walter – the birth of rock and roll
Telstar (1962) – The Tornados – Joe Meek’s strange new sounds,
Be My Baby (1964) – The Ronettes (Phil Spector, Gold Star Studio – 2 Echo chambers).
Running Scared (1961) – Roy Orbison (EMT 140 Plate Reverb)
Are You Experienced? & Third Stone From The Sun (1967)– Jimi Hendrix – innovative panning, backwards tracks, flanging.
Baby Love – The Supremes – Attic reverb
I Got You – James Brown – Spring Reverb
Baby I Love You So Dub – King Tubby – Spring Reverb
The Boxer (1968) – Simon and Garfunkel – using reverb & volume to help define structure.
Snatch It Back and Hold It (1973) – Junior Wells – interesting panning.

Assignment 3 due 2/24/14.

Record and edit a new set of samples. You may now record instruments. No MIDI. This mix should be stereo.
Process samples with various levels and types of reverb.
Create a composition that incorporates a creative use of panorama and then uses reverb and ambience to articulate structure and form.
The composition should be 2 minutes and 30 seconds long.
Analyze your composition. What kinds of problems arise from layering multiple iterations of the same sounds, and what tools could you use to correct them?

Week 4 – 02/17/14 – Applying Equalization, using comb filters.

Formal Principles: Types of EQs and how they’re used, determining the frequency content of a signal, common EQ settings, frequency charts. The ear, psychoacoustics and equalization – creating a sense of depth and motion with EQ. Multiband EQs, and comb filtering.

Aural/Historical References:

Imagine (1971) – John Lennon – creating a smooth transition between sounds recorded in radically different places
Wish You Were Here (1975) – Pink Floyd – extreme EQ on acoustic guitar introduction
A Plateaux of Mirrors (1980) – Brian Eno and Harold Budd – creative multiband EQ
There’s More To Life Than This (1993) – Björk – creating a narrative with EQ
Around The World (1997) – Daft Punk – extreme EQ on introduction
Halo – Porcupine Tree

Assignment 3 – Proposal for Final Project – Proposal due on 02/24/14.

Week 5 – 02/24/14 – Basic mixing techniques. Using Logic’s Ultrabeat drum machine and Drummer plug-in. Drum machine tricks and tips.

Formal Principles: Recording the voice and the guitar. Should I record in mono or stereo? X/Y crossed pair and Blumlein Technique for stereo recording.

Discussion – How to strike a realistic balance between your recorded tracks and sampled instruments and loops.

Aural/Historical References:

It’s A Family Affair (1971) – first “hit” with a drum machine – Sly & The Family Stone
Sexual Healing (1982) – 1st Pop hit with the 808 drum machine
Looking For The Perfect Beat (1982) – Afrika Bambaataa (Mini Moog, drum machine, early use of turntables)
Kiss (1986) ­ Price – Drum machine and effects
Man In The Mirror (1988) – Bruce Swedien and Michael Jackson – gorgeous choral vocals using Blumlein technique

Assignment 3 due 3/24/14.

Record or import a single instrument composition (such as a work for solo piano or acoustic guitar);
Create three loops of differing lengths edited out of your recording, one on each track;
Duplicate each of the three loops on 3 additional tracks each;
Equalize each of the duplicates so that one has only the upper frequencies (using a high pass filter), the second with only the low frequencies (using a low pass filter), the third should contain just the middle frequencies of the sound (band pass filter). As the composition progresses use volume automation to mix between the three tracks so the timbre varies over time based on your selection;
For the fourth duplicate track of each loop use a band pass filter with a narrow width or “Q” and automate the center frequency so it moves over time;
Automate this band pass filter on the fourth copy of each loop in different ways and let the automation progress slowly over the entire length of the composition. An example would be to start one at the upper register and have it slowly move to the lower register and do the reverse on the second loop. For the third loop create a more varied automation that moves up and down several times over the length of the piece;
The goal is to create a sense of subtle variations of the timbre within the rather fixed frequency range of your source sound. The shifts in timbre can gradually be made more abrupt and could occur at points where the loops sync up to create a formal contrast with previous sections, using the changes of equalization to help delineate the form of your composition;
Experiment with adding reverb to help fuse the tracks together. The reverb processing could be on auxiliary sends or on the main output bus. Remember to equalize your reverb;
As a final step, use a frequency chart and determine the lowest frequency of the lowest note of your source material. Add a single band, high pass equalizer to the main output bus and set the cut off frequency slightly below the frequency of the instruments lowest note. This will help reduce any unnecessary low frequencies. This same strategy can be used on every individual track if needed.

Week 6 – 03/03/14 – Microphone technique.

Formal Principles: Different types of microphones, pickup patterns, microphone placement, finding the “sweet” spot, transients, proximity effect. Understanding your room and equipment, learning to get a variety of sounds from your setup.

Exercise

Record yourself or your instrument through as many different microphones as possible and analyze the results. Record the same piece of music using the same setup, distance from mic, same room, same position, etc. Decide which mics make you sound best and how you can use each microphone to best effect.
With your favorite microphone, record yourself varying the distance from the mic, from extremely close – 1 to 2 inches, then 6 inches, 12 inches, 3 feet, and finally 6 feet away. Adjust the recording level appropriately each time you move the microphone further from the sound source. Examine the various timbres you get from your “room.” Now you can decide if you want more or less “room” sound in your recording.
Extend this experiment to the room where you record. Record in different places around the room, in the middle, in the corner facing the wall, etc. Listen carefully to the results and decide where in the room various instruments sound best.

Use this exercise to record source material for the assignment due on 3/31/14.

Week 7 – 03/17/14 No Class – Winter Break

Week 8 – 03/24/14 – This lecture will focus on double tracking and half speed recording.

Formal Principles:

Discussion of double tracking
Creating a fuller sound through double tracking
Creating stereo width by panning double tracks
Applying additional effects to doubled tracks for variety
Discussion of George Martin and The Beatles and how double tracking became a feature of their production style
Double tracking for fullness
Half-speed recording to change the timbre of a sound
Half-speed recording to make recording difficult passages easier
Automatic double tracking
Delaying double tracks to create a signature sound
Ken Scott and Elton John – Elderberry Wine (1973)
Ken Scott and David Bowie – Quicksand (1971)
Ideas for equalizing and panning double tracks
First look at chorus and phase shifting

Aural/Historical References:

Mystery Train (1955) – Elvis Presley – slap-back echo.
Great Balls of Fire – Jerry Lee Lewis – slap-back echo.
The Big Hurt (1959) – Miss Toni Fisher – early flanging.
She Loves You (1963) – The Beatles – 1st Beatles vocal doubling
Tomorrow Never Knows (1966) – The Beatles – flanging and pitch shifted tape loops, backwards guitar solo, lead vocal sung through the rotating speaker of a Hammond organ’s Leslie Cabinet, heavily compressed drums.
Itchycoo Park (1967) – The Small Faces – flanging.
A Day In The Life – The Beatles – using tape echo on lead vocal
One Of These Days – Pink Floyd (1971) – echo builds and re-enforces the rhythm.
He Loved Him Madly – Miles Davis (1972) – interesting panned echo supports development and structure – early ambient jazz.
She’s Not There – Santana (1977) – modern panned, slap back echo on guitar solo.
Superstition – Stevie Wonder – 8 tracks of Clavinet
Queen – Bohemian Rhapsody – extreme doubling/overdubbing

Assignment 4 due 04/07/14

Record a piece for voice and acoustic guitar;
Record five exact duplications of both the guitar and the vocal track;
Start your arrangement with a single tracked voice and guitar;
With each new section (verse or chorus), add one of the doubled tracks, slowly building up the texture until all of the doubled tracks are playing;
Make sure to pan each new double track to a new position slowly increasing the stereo width of the track;
If the track starts to get too muddy, equalize the lower end of each new double track with a low shelf EQ, gradually EQ-ing out more and more of the low end on each newly added double track;
Experiment with processing the doubles with some light reverb, chorusing or phase shifting to create modulations within the sound;
Experiment with withdrawing all of the doubles at some point to create a sudden change of density and texture;
Use these shifts in density and texture to help delineate the formal aspects of the composition.

Week 9 – 03/31/14 – Introduction to synthesizers

Formal Principles: Common types of synthesis, AM, FM, additive, subtractive, Wavetable, and Granular. Automating synthesizer parameters.

Aural/Historical References:

Occasional Variations – RCA MkII, Milton Babbitt
Brandenburg Concerto – Wendy Carlos – Moog
Kolyosa (1970) – Pril Smiley (Buchla Synthesizer)
Stria (1977) – John Chowning (FM)
Riverrun (1986) – Barry Truax (Granular)
Looking For The Perfect Beat (1982) – Afrika Bambaataa (Mini Moog, drum machine, early use of turntables)
Blue Monday (1983) – New Order – Mini Moog Bass Line.
Supreme Balloon – Matmos
Altibzz – Autechre
That’s It For The Other One – Grateful Dead – ring Modulation
On The Way Home – Mahavishnu Orchestra – ring modulation

Assignment 5 due 04/14/14

Create a slow ambient composition that uses four synthesizer tracks.
Design four motifs, one for each track. Each motif should have a different, odd number of beats so that when looped their loop points are out of sync with each other but are otherwise playing in the same tempo.
Setup and automate some filter effects so that they change very slowly over the course of the composition.
Pan, process and set your four loops in motion to create an interesting generative composition.

Week 10 – 04/07/14 – Creating Movie Soundtracks

Formal Principles: Importing movies into Logic, using Logic to compose music, mix foley, dialogue, special effects and music together. Important criteria for composing background music for movies, radio, or TV. This week will focus on creating movement within the stereo field. It will explore how the previously covered techniques for reverb, equalization and panning can be used together to create stereo width, depth of field and movement within that field based on psychoacoustics.

Stereo width – panorama
Depth of field using equalization
Making sounds move forward and backwards with equalization
Emphasizing high frequencies to make a sound seem closer to the listener
Emphasizing the lower frequencies to make a sound seem further away from the listener
Reverb – creating depth with reverb
Altering the volume and equalization of the reverb to create movement and a sense of distance

Visual/ Historical References:

M (1931) – Fritz Lang – How sound is integral to the storyline in this early sound film.
The Conversation – Francis Ford Coppola (1974), Walter Murch sound design.
The videos of Stan Brackhage, Robert Breer, and The Open Ended Group.
77 Million Paintings – Brian Eno

Assignment 6 due – 04/28/14.

Create a new one-minute film score/composition that is all background music, foley (natural everyday sounds), and special effects, but don’t use a movie. The sound will have to fully convey the action of this imaginary film. Pay particular attention to simple volume, panning, and EQ for movement and depth. How much auditory information can you include in the soundtrack to portray a sense of place, time, season, historical epoch, mood, temperament, etc.
Be creative and apply effects processing to some foley sounds as well as transposing and layering them. For example record the wind, transpose it up a third and a fifth and layer them together to create a major chord of harmonized wind.
Open the composition with a natural repetitive rhythm like a faucet dripping or a clock ticking and have it slowly evolve into the rhythm of the background music. Try to find a natural element that can become a musical element so the foreground and background meld together momentarily.

Week 11 – 04/21/14 – This chapter will focus on audio compression, gating and limiting.

Discussion of how a compressor works
Types of compression and general uses
Optical (Teletronix LA-2A)
FET (Urei 1176)
Vari-mu (Fairchild 670)
VCA style (SSL G-series and API 2500)
Understanding modern compression controls
Threshold
Compression ratio
Attack and release time
Make-up gain
Knee settings
Discussion of limiting and gating
Using a sidechain with compressors and gates
Using a sidechained gate to create a tight groove between the bass and drums
Using a sidechain compressor to “pump” an entire mix or section

Listening:

New Orleans (1960) and Quarter To Three (1961) – Gary U.S. Bonds – early double-tracked vocals with heavy vocal compression, and one of the first heavily compressed lead vocals
Tomorrow Never Knows (1966) – The Beatles – first heavily compressed drums on a Beatles record – kick drum deadened with a sweater inside of it and microphone moved much closer to both kick and snare and a more aggressive use of compression to create a unique drum sound
Heroes (1977) – David Bowie – multi-latched gates on three vocal microphones that were 9 inches, 20 feet and 50 feet from the singer, Eventide Harmonizer effects on drums
Intruder (1980) – Peter Gabriel – gated reverb on drums
In The Air Tonight (1981) – Phil Collins – gated reverb on drums
You’re Not Alone (1996) – Olive – gated synthesizer pads
One More Time (2000) – Daft Punk – side-chain compression pumping the entire mix
Ready, Steady Go (2002) and Faster Kill Pussycat (2006) – Oakenfield – gated synthesizer pads

Exercise 1: Create a sidechained bass using a gate.

Create a drum pattern on track one;
Using MIDI, draw in a bass line of long sustained notes with a synthesized bass sound. These notes should be the root notes of the chords you are implying;
Put a gate on the bass track and use the drum track as a sidechain to the gate;
Experiment with the threshold setting on the gate, lowering it until the bass only plays when the kick drum is sounding. This creates a very tight groove between the bass and drums and is an effective way to create bass parts.
Once you’ve established that groove, go back and refine the bass part by adding or changing the sustained notes to create more movement in the bass line.

Exercise 2: Use sidechain compression to rhythmically pump an entire mix in the manner of Daft Punk.

Start with a multi-track composition that you have already mixed. Bounce the mixed track to a new sound file and use it in a new project. You will also need to copy the kick drum track to use as the sidechain input;
Place the stereo Master on track one and the kick drum track on track two;
Instantiate a compressor on track one and select the kick drum as a sidechain input;
Use a high compression ratio and set the attack time to be very fast. Adjust the release time much slower and work with the timing of the release so that the compressor reinforces the rhythm of the track by pulling the volume down on the beat. Let it gradually come back to a non-compressed state before the next kick drum attack. The timing of the release is the important aspect of this technique. The volume should pump up and down from beat to beat, re-enforcing and animating it so that you can actually feel the volume pumping in time to the rhythm of the track.

Week 12 – 04/28/14 – Overview of distortion techniques and vocoding

Formal Principles: Distortion

Discussion of the history of distortion
Common types of distortion
Over driving guitar amps
Over driving the mixing console
Distortion pedals
Tape saturation
Bit crushing
Using distortion to add upper partials to a dull sound
Amplifier simulators

Aural/Historical References:

Rocket 88 (1951) – Jackie Brenston and His Delta Cats – early guitar distortion
Moanin’ At Midnight (1951) – Howling Wolf – early tape saturated distortion recorded at Sun and released by Chess
Down Home Special (1956) – Bo Diddley
Don’t Worry (1960) – Marty Robbins/Grady Martin – first fuzz tone created by a faulty channel on the mixing console
Satisfaction (1965) – Rolling Stones – Maestro Fuzz Tone
Yer Blues (1968) – The Beatles – mixing desk distortion
21st Century Schizoid Man (1969) – King Crimson – evil distortion

Formal Principles: Vocoding

Discussion of the history of the vocoder (voice encoder)
Channel vocoder invented by Homer Dudley in the 1930s
Vocoders were used to encrypt secret messages in WWII
Using modern vocoding software
Vocoding is an analysis/synthesis technique using multiband filters
Ideas for using vocoding on voices and drums

Listening:

The Robots (1977) – Kraftwerk
Mr. Blue Sky (1977) – Electric Light Orchestra
O Superman (1981) – Laurie Anderson
I Believe – Cher
Hide and Seek (2005) – Imogen Heap
Get Lucky (2013) – Daft Punk

Assignment 7 due 05/05/14: Create a vocoded vocal sound.

Record a vocal on one track;
Place a vocoder instrument on track two;
On the vocoder, use the sidechain input and select the vocal patch. The amplitude envelope of the vocal will be used to trigger the synthesizer patch in the vocoder;
On the vocoder, choose a synthesis patch that the voice will “trigger.” Some timbres will work better than others and experimentation will be required to find an appropriate match to the vocal. Vocoding is a three-step process. The voice supplies the amplitude envelope, the vocoder supplies the timbre based on the patch you choose. The harmonic content will be based on whatever notes or chords are played on the vocoder track;
Blend in a bit of the straight vocal track from a copy of the vocal to increase the intelligibility of the text, if desired, although this technique can also be used with instruments or other sound sources;
Use doubling techniques, echo, pan and reverb to create more interest and to refine your vocoded sound;
When working with resonant-frequencies, it’s always a good idea to compress the sound as described in the next chapter.

Week 13 – 05/05/14 – This chapter will focus on transforming sounds through spectral manipulation.

Using FFT’s to determine the strongest harmonic partials and how they evolve over the course of a sound
Synthesizing new sounds using additive synthesis, based on the partial tracking analysis
Discussion of “frequential” or spectral composition
Discussion of how to use the analysis data to create harmonic structures
Discussion of how to create transformations between two sets of spectral data
Embedding the spectral data in other compositional parameters
Converting the spectral data to standard music notation for use in orchestration
Strategies for working with microtonal frequencies

Listening:

Les espaces acoustiques – V – Transitoires – Gérard Grisey – for large orchestra (1980)
Désintégrations (1982-83) – Tristan Murail
Mortuos Plango, Vivos Voco – Jonathan Harvey
Winter Fragments (2000) – Tristan Murail

Download the SPEAR spectral editor, created by Michael Klingbeil:

http://www.klingbeil.com/spear/downloads/

Exercise: Use spectral data to create “tuned” chords from a noise-based source like a tam-tam, white noise or wind.

Choose a sound with a wide-frequency content, like a tam-tam;
Record the tam-tam (you only need one hit);
Using your spectral editor, create an FFT of the tam-tam sound and analyze the frequency content;
Using a chart of the frequencies of musical notes and the analysis data, choose a set of three- or four-note chords you could extract from the tam-tam spectrum (limit yourself to two or three chords);
Using the spectral editor, erase all of the frequencies not related to your chord and re-synthesize the sound with the new spectrum.
Create a few versions of the chords, one with several iterations of the notes you need in different octaves to create very open chord voicing and a second with just four or five frequencies relating to the notes of your chord;
In your sequencer, create four tracks – one for the tam-tam sample, the second the third for the re-synthesized chords you created in the spectral editor, and the fourth for a sampler or synthesizer;
Begin with the tam-tam sound. About halfway through it, place your re-synthesized chord on track two and slowly raise the volume so that the tam-tam sound gradually transforms into the chordal texture. Create a few passages like this with your different chords;
On the fourth track, improvise a melodic passage based on the chords you have synthesized;

Experiment with having the chords emerge from the tam-tam sound and the reverse, where the chord cross-fades into the tam-tam sound. This is a very basic exercise exploring just the surface of spectral music. For a more detailed explanation of spectral or frequential techniques, I suggest reading “Contemporary Compositional Techniques and Openmusic” by Rozalie Hirs and Bob Gilmore, which provides an in-depth exploration of the music of Tristan Murail.

Final Exam – 05/21/14 – Final projects due. We will listen to all final projects in class.

  • Electronic Music I 2013                                                           
  • Terry Pender
  • [email protected]

This class will focus on three aspects of contemporary art: the combination of sound and image, interactive performance and modern compositional techniques and styles.  This is a “tools” class where we will explore and use many software applications and will focus particularly on Cycling 74s MAX/MSP and Jitter software as well as Apple’s Logic Pro, Reason, Ableton Live and the Audacity audio editor.  We will cover the basics of all of the software needed to create these works.

In general we will be working with MAX/MSP for interactivity, Jitter for video work, Logic and Reason for sequencing, sampling and synthesis.  We will use Audacity as an audio editor and either Quicktime Pro, iMovie, or Final Cut Pro for video editing.

Classes will meet in the Computer Music Center’s main classroom, room 320H as well as the Recording Studio in room 317 Prentis Hall.  Class meets once a week on Tuesdays from 3:10 to 5:00.

Tentative Schedule

09/06/2013         How to create a simple collage/movie.  Sources for public domain content.  Using Quicktime Pro or image2movie to put together a stream of images and determine the frame rate.  This first silent, short movie, less than a minute in length, will be due and shown in class on 09/20/2013.

09/13/2013            Basic video manipulation using Jitter, control playback speed, and how to alter brightness, contrast and saturation.  Using a controller to manipulate movie playback.  Introduction to MIDI in MAX.  Using Line~ for envelopes.  Generating different waveforms in MSP.

09/20/2013          Using the matrix object.  Playing and recording MIDI sequences. Creating a simple drum machine or sample player.  Using the Disklavier to create an interactive piano duet similar Jean-Claude Risset’s Duets for One Pianist.  Using camera data to manipulate sound.  Understanding MIDI control messages.  Using a MIDI keyboard.

09/27/2013            More visual patches using the camera, camera data and recording the output. A look at different methods of synthesis – FM, Additive, Subtractive and Granular. Using camera data with sound.  Working with re-wire to play a device in Logic instead of the built in AU DLS Synth 1.  Animations by Robert Breer and Stria by John Chowning.

Create a Jitter patch to play one of your own movies.  Process your movie using Jitter, create a soundtrack in Logic or MAX and show the movie in class on 10/04/2012.

10/04/2013           The psychology of sound, how to use psycho-acoustics to create movement in sound.  Using Filters in MAX/MSP.  Understanding Equalization and filter types. Using Delay, Pipe, Physical Models and VST plugins.  A simple step sequencer. A look at the video work of Stan Brackhage.

10/11/2013            Using visual data to create a soundtrack through data mapping.  Algorithmic control of music and data.  Filtering data to create useful numbers. Using Coll files in MAX.   Create a non-narrative movie where the visual images create the soundtrack using Jitter to show in class on 10/25/2012.

10/18/2013            Creating color space – How to create evolving re-creations of Josef Alber’s Color Studies in Jitter.  Create a moving color study to present in class on 10/25/2012 and add an audio component. Working with controllers – DIEM dance suit, Wacom tablets, arduino, touch OSC, slider boxes, etc.

10/25/2013            Creating moving text and signage ala Jenny Holzer.  Creating Text in Jitter using the LCD object.  Noa Noa by Kaija Saariaho.  Multi-channel playback.

11/01/2013           Campus Holiday – no class

11/08/2013           Creating works that have more than one screen.  Superimposing and moving images in Jitter.  Video delay and feedback. Lumakey, chromakey, compositing and recording video output in video.

11/15/2013             Creating simple 3D primitives.  Mapping movies as textures to 3D objects.  Introduction to the Fast Fourier Transform, various FFT patches in MSP.  Using Spear – a free spectral editor written by Michael Klingbeil.

11/22/2013            Presence and motion detection.  Color tracking. Background subtraction. Using AUVI processing effects.

11/29/2013           Creating a simple group compositions/improvisations for laptop orchestra using Maxhole, Networked MIDI, and OSC.

12/06/2013           Final Project due.  An interactive audio-visual work of your own design that you can perform or present in class.  This should be a longer more complete work of art.

Class resources:
The website for Cycling’74, makers of Max, MSP, and Jitter.
The website for Processing.

Some helpful texts:

  • Auditory Scene Analysis – Albert S. Bregman
  • Computer Music  – Charles Dodge and Thomas Jerse
  • Computer Music Tutorial – Curtis Rhoads
  • Music, Cognition, and Computerized Sound – Perry Cook
  • Elements of Computer Music – Dick Moore
  • Capturing Sound, How Technology Has Changed Music – Mark Katz
  • Mastering Audio – Bob Katz
  • Notes From the Underground – Heinrich Taube
  • Master Handbook of Acoustics – F. Alton Everest
  • Audio-Vision  – Michel Chion
  • In The Blink of an Eye – Walter Murch
  • Point and Line to Plane­ – Wassily Kandinsky
  • Interaction of Color – Josef Albers
  • Mixing Engineer’s Handbook – Bobby Owsinski
  • Good Vibrations, A History of Record Production – Mark Cunningham
  • TapeOp, The Book About Creative Music Recording – Larry Crane
  • Old Masters and Young Geniuses – David W. Galenson
  • Conceptual Revolutions in Twentieth-century Art – David Galenson
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PGT’s latest recordings available on stasisfield. https://sites.music.dev-columbia.net/mando/pgts-latest-recordings-available-on-staisfield/ https://sites.music.dev-columbia.net/mando/pgts-latest-recordings-available-on-staisfield/#comments Sat, 15 Sep 2012 21:26:04 +0000 http://music.columbia.edu/~mando/WP/?p=23

The latest PGT digital download is on stasisfield.com.  Stasisfieldis a site that specializes in experimental audio and visual art. The free mp3 download is availible at:

http://stasisfield.com/releases/year09/sf-9004.html

The only double latop/acoustic mandolin ensemble in the world, PGT includes members Terence M. Pender, Brad Garton, and Gregory Taylor. The trio ocasionally convene for improv sessions, the entirety of which are recorded and then trawled for prize catches. The three tracks here certainly fit that description, recorded in a living room on a sunny morning. A sense of sun-dappled optimism pervades, with tiny specks of acoustic events captured, spliced, siphoned and sprinkled over reflecting pools of slow-moving ambient textures.

 

http://stasisfield.com/images/releases_09/SF-9004-pgt/cover_800.jpg

design, layout, and photography © John Kannenberg 2011.

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Gregory Taylor’s Wood Lake liner notes https://sites.music.dev-columbia.net/mando/gregory-taylors-wood-lake-liner-notes/ https://sites.music.dev-columbia.net/mando/gregory-taylors-wood-lake-liner-notes/#comments Sat, 15 Sep 2012 21:23:33 +0000 http://music.columbia.edu/~mando/WP/?p=20 I am pretty certain that PGT is the only double laptop/acoustic mandolin ensemble in the world. The reason for the lineup is simple: those are the instruments we play. Our ethos is simple: we’ve enjoyed making music with each other since the first time we tried it in the Columbia Computer Music center studios (I was on my way through town, and Brad and Terry had some time to kill and stuff to “try out”) a number of years ago, and we continue to do so. Our personal interests as composers and performing musicians has guaranteed a steady stream of new influences when we’re together, and the fact that I’m halfway across the country means that there’s a kind of punctuated equilibrium to our performing life.
During those interim periods, things change: software is rewritten, new instruments appear (virtual ones in the case of Brad and I, physical ones in the case of our multi-instrumentalist colleague Terry), and that complex muddle of habits and predispositions we wind up defining as “style” twists and folds out of sight of an audience – even if that audience is defined so narrowly as the three of us.
Another consequence of our separation is that we never rehearse – we get together, hang out, and play. The only instructions are “start” and “stop,” and we strive to get them in the right order and distribute them over time in a proper way. For some dimly remembered practical reasons, we made it a habit to record everything we do. That simple idea has borne all kinds of strange fruit – we have a complete record of every moment (good and bad) we’ve been together musically regardless of where we were. In addition to being able to track changes in the software and performance practice over time, another feature has emerged – a kind of alchemy of time and circumstance that bears only the vaguest resemblance to the pragmatic impulse to check levels and see “what might
fly” at some later point.
We tend to name our recordings with a name that has to do with where we were. These recordings were made not in a hotel room or on a stage, but in the living room of Brad Garton’s childhood home in Columbus, Indiana on a sunny morning. The small lake just out back and down the hill (past the tall trees that are the origin of the “windy trees” sound Brad has fine-tuned audio algorithms to produce since I’ve known him) gives these three pieces their name.
We’d gone down to do some playing in Bloomington, Indiana at the invitation of our friend John Gibson, and stayed in nearby Columbus, where Brad grew up. These record- ings were the first music we’d made together in a while, and we all had the usual batch of “new” things to bring to try out – the result varies each time we meet again and sit down for the first time together to get reacquainted.
Listening to these recordings now, there’s some- thing about them that is more reminiscent of a catalog of small local ecosystems than anything we’d done before (or since). For us, they’re linked with that specific place and time as surely as any- thing that moves or rests on the earth.
The act of playing and listening at the same time will often refocus one’s consciousness to entirely favor the short focus of mindfulness rather than the longer arc of time that marks a whole piece of performance. A happy consequence of our early decision to record everything we do is that we occasionally discover some performances where dialog and interplay disguises itself as something we could only generally and optimistically have intended. These three recordings are some of our best examples of that, and we hope that they’ll repay the investment of your time and attention. Thanks for listening.
Gregory Taylor

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