[spectre] New Thursday Club on 2nd November at Goldsmiths,
London SE14
maria x
drp01mc at gold.ac.uk
Fri Oct 27 16:51:15 CEST 2006
**NEW CLUB NIGHT** on Thursday 2nd NOVEMBER with **BRIAN KAVANAGH**
Thursday November 2nd, 6-8pm in the Seminar Rooms, Ben Pimlott Building,
Goldsmiths, University of London, New Corss, SE14 6NW
FREE, ALL ARE WELCOME
**SONIC SENSORIUM**
This talk will explore issues related to human perception of sound.
Sound, in its essence, works in the same way that it has always worked
throughout time. Simply defined, sound is vibrations transmitted through
an elastic solid or a liquid or gas. What has changed is that, over
time, new sounds have been introduced to our soundscape, which in turn
affect our perception of sound. During the industrial revolution, for
example, people were introduced to all kinds of new machine-like sound
and more recently the sound of the mobile phone has become a ubiquitous
sound in our soundscape.
The introduction recording machines had a profound impact not only on
the listener but also on composers and musicians alike. How novel it
must have been for people to hear the sound of their own voices when the
tape machine was made commercially available in the late 1940s. And what
of Steve Reich’s use of the tape machine as musical instrument in his
work ‘It’s Gonna Rain’ in 1965.
The limited nature of neural science makes it impossible to fully
understand how perception works. What we can do is speculate on various
topics relevant to this subject matter. For example, the conversion of
analogue sound to digital sound, the liberation of music from the
concert hall as a result of technological developments and the potential
to use technology, within this code culture, to create new forms of
interactive sound art. Of especial interest is ‘acousmatic sound’ or
sound that does not require any visual representation.
This evenings presentation will include the showing of a short extract
from my film ‘6 Swords at the Crossroads’, which broadly speaking pays
homage to craft and the importance of craft in the creation of art.
Brian is an established artist, musician and filmmaker who has performed
around the world and has received several awards for his work. He also
is a PhD candidate at the Goldsmiths Centre for Cultural Studies.
--
The rest of the Autumn term's Club nights are:
on 16 NOVEMBER with TIM HOPKINS
*ELEPHANT AND CASTLE: A PRESENTATION OF WORK-IN-PROGRESS ON A LYRIC
THEATRE PIECE*
Tim is an opera and multimedia lyric theatre director, and a NESTA Fellow.
--
on 30 NOVEMBER with MARK D'INVERNO
*CELL: AN INTERDISCIPLINARY PROJECT LOOKING AT NEW THEORIES OF STEM CELL
BEHAVIOUR*
Mark is Professor of Computing at Goldsmiths with a research interest in
intelligent agents and multi-agent systems.
--
on 14 DECEMBER with CHRIS BRAUER
HIT SONG SCIENCE
Chris is a PhD candidate in Sociology and Computing at Goldsmiths
College, Visiting Lecturer at City University, as well as owner and
principal consultant of Smoothmedia http://www.smoothmedia.com/
For more information on the Thursday Club check
http://www.goldsmiths.ac.uk/cccc/thursday-club.php or email maria x:
drp01mc at gold.ac.uk
--
Maria Chatzichristodoulou [aka maria x] PhD Art & Computational
Technologies http://www.cybertheater.org
More information about the SPECTRE
mailing list