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GENERATIVE MUSIC Conceptual Background GENERATIVE MUSIC DEFINED • Key phrases from 4 unsatisfactory definitions found on Wikipedia: • composed from analytic theories so explicit as to generate structurally coherent material • generated by a system component with no inputs • generated by processes that are designed and/or initiated by the composer • non-deterministic — cannot be repeated GENERATIVE MUSIC DEFINED • My working definition: • indeterminate music played through interaction between one or more persons and a more or less predetermined system, such that the player(s) control some — but not all — performance parameters GENERATIVE MUSIC DEFINED • indeterminate • played through interaction • between • and • such • but music one or more persons a (more or less) predetermined system, that the player(s) control some — not all — • performance parameters GENERATIVE MUSIC DEFINED • planting a seed, not engineering a tree — Brian Eno PRECEDENTS • Pauline Oliveros — Tuning Meditation • Steve Reich — early tape phase pieces • Alvin Lucier — I Am Sitting in a Room • Brian Eno — Discreet Music PAULINE OLIVEROS:TUNING MEDITATION • Take a deep breath and let it all the way out with air sound. Listen with your mind's ear for a tone. • On the next breath using any vowel sound, sing the tone that you have silently perceived on one comfortable breath. • Listen to the whole field of sound the group is making. Select a voice distant from you and tune as exactly as possible to the tone you are hearing from that voice. • Listen again to the whole field of sound the group is making. Contribute by singing a new tone that no one else is singing. • Continue by listening then singing a tone of your own or tuning to the tone of another voice alternately. Commentary: • Always keep the same tone for any single breath. Change to a new tone on another breath. • Listen for distant partners for tuning. • Sound your new tone so that it may be heard distantly. • Communicate with as many different voices as possible. • Sing warmly! STEVE REICH: COME OUT • I am interested in perceptible processes. I want to be able to hear the process happening throughout the sounding music. • To facilitate closely detailed listening a musical process should happen extremely gradually. • Performing and listening to a gradual musical process resembles: • pulling back a swing, releasing it, and observing it gradually come to rest; • turning over an hour glass and watching the sand slowly run through the bottom; • placing your feet in the sand by the ocean's edge and watching, feeling, and listening to the waves gradually bury them. • Though I may have the pleasure of discovering musical processes and composing the musical material to run through them, once the process is set up and loaded it runs by itself. • As to whether a musical process is realized through live human performance or through some electro-mechanical means is not finally the main issue. — from “Music as a Gradual Process” ALVIN LUCIER: I AM SITTING IN A ROOM (for voice and electromagnetic tape, 1969) Necessary Equipment: One microphone, two tape recorders, amplifier, and one loudspeaker. Choose a room the musical qualities of which you would like to evoke. Attach the microphone to the input of tape recorder #1. To the output of tape recorder #2 attach the amplifier and loudspeaker. Use the following text or any other text of any length: “I am sitting in a room different from the one you are in now.....” Record your voice on tape through the microphone attached to tape recording #1. Rewind the tape to its beginning, transfer it to tape recorder #2, play it back into the room through the loudspeaker and record a second generation of the original recorder statement through the microphone attached to tape recorder #1. Rewind the second generation to its beginning and splice it onto the end of the original recorder statement on tape recorder #2. Play the second generation only back into the room through the loudspeaker and record a third generation of the original recorded statement through the microphone attached to the tape recorder #1. Continue this process through many generations. All the generations spliced together in chronological order make a tape composition the length of which is determined by the length of the original statement and the number of generations recorded. Make versions in which one recorded statement is recycled trough many rooms. Make versions using one or more speakers of different languages in different rooms. Make versions in which, for each generation, the microphone is moved to different parts of the room or rooms. Make versions that can be performed in real time. BRIAN ENO: DISCREET MUSIC Since I have always preferred making plans to executing them, I have gravitated towards situations and systems that, once set into operation, could create music with little or no intervention on my part.That is to say, I tend towards the roles of the planner and programmer, and then become an audience to the results. "Discreet Music" is a technological approach to the problem. If there is any score for the piece, it must be the operational diagram of the particular apparatus I used for its production.The key configuration here is the long delay echo system.... Having set up this apparatus, my degree of participation in what it subsequently did was limited to (a) providing an input (in this case, two simple and mutually compatible melodic lines of different duration stored on a digital recall system) and (b) occasionally altering the timbre of the synthesizer's output by means of a graphic equalizer. It is a point of discipline to accept this passive role, and for once, to ignore the tendency to play the artist by dabbling and interfering. In this case, I was aided by the idea that what I was making was simply a background for my friend Robert Fripp to play over in a series of concerts we had planned.This notion of its future utility, coupled with my own pleasure in "gradual processes" prevented me from attempting to create surprises and less than predictable changes in the piece. I was trying to make a piece that could be listened to and yet could be ignored... perhaps in the spirit of Satie who wanted to make music that could "mingle with the sound of the knives and forks at dinner." — from liner notes to Discreet Music, 1973. METHODS • repetition with difference • microtemporal variance (frequency, pitch) • macrotemporal variance (rhythm, tempo) • chaotic variance • reflexive variance (evolution) THANK YOU John Priestley Doctoral Student Media Art & Text VCU johnpriestley.net