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Composing & Performing Interactive Music October 18-23, 2004 Faculty of Music McGill University Bruce Pennycook, DMA Dept. of Composition, School of Music Dept. of Radio Television Film, College of Communication University of Texas at Austin Introduction Schedule & Topics
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Composing & PerformingInteractive Music October 18-23, 2004 Faculty of Music McGill University Bruce Pennycook, DMA Dept. of Composition, School of Music Dept. of Radio Television Film, College of Communication University of Texas at Austin
Introduction pennycook/mcgill
Schedule & Topics Monday 3-6 Principals and Aesthetics of Interactive Music Tuesday 9-12 Impact of interactive music on performance practice and on compositional methods Wed 9-12 Systems Design (composer/performer perspective) Thur 9-12 New directions and possibilities Friday 9-12 Music and Audio Visualization - interactive, real-time video-music pennycook/mcgill
Objectives of the Seminars • Present an overview of the history of interactive composition and performance • Provide in depth resources and materials for graduate level study and research • Propose new areas of creativity and research from emerging aesthetics, styles and technologies including visualization systems pennycook/mcgill
Seminar Format • Presentations by B. Pennycook • Examples and demonstrations • Daily contributions by students • Short paper (due October 31, 2004) pennycook/mcgill
Resources • Read - Rowe, Winkler • CMJ articles • Recordings • Max, Max/MSP; SuperCollider 2, 3 pennycook/mcgill
Seminar #1Principals and Aesthetics of Interactive Music (who will turn the knobs when I die) Monday, October 18, 2004 3:00 pm - 6:00 pm Room LSR#3 pennycook/mcgill
Principals and Aesthetics of Interactive Music • What is “interactivity” ? (he says/she says) • Are there pre-computer examples ? • What about “live electronic music” ? • Why are these early pieces different from our current thinking on this topic? That is, what role does the computer play in this? • What separates computational control from machine control? pennycook/mcgill
Principals and Aesthetics of Interactive Music • What is the essential attraction of interactive music? Why do composers (and for that matter, performers) want to create/play it? • How has the software community influenced music making and vice-versa? • What connection exists (or should exist) with other forms of interactive art? pennycook/mcgill
Principals and Aesthetics of Interactive Music • Tape + instruments/voices • Instrumental karaoke (music minus “n”) • Free the player from the tyranny of the clock (tape, cd) • Like asking an actor to perform to video or film • Eliminates the normal elasticity of gestures especially on the large scale (local elasticity is possible - like Chopin LH/RH); rubato has to be “built in” to the score • No error tolerance - clock keeps ticking no matter what pennycook/mcgill
Principals and Aesthetics of Interactive Music • BUT - (Music - “n”) works! • Many very important pieces (Berio, Davidovsky, Risset, Lanza, Morrill, Parmagiani, ) that remain performed • Low-stress rehearsal environment • Easily replicated performance after performance • Players can memorize aural events very precisely • Players can emulate “interaction” convincingly • Sonic domain can be managed easily • Low gear, setup, help environment pennycook/mcgill
Principals and Aesthetics of Interactive Music • Principals of interactive music • Establish a dialogue between man and machine • Permit modes and levels of adaptation • Seek new performance results - from slightly interpretive to full improvisation • Seek new or at least dynamic compositional results • Explore relationship between man and machine to some degree • Explore machine autonomy to some extent pennycook/mcgill
Principals and Aesthetics of Interactive Music • Temporal Control • What are the key “interpretive issues”? • What degree of flexibility is required? • What are the macro/micro level of temporal controls that would have direct and audible impact on the listener? • Why not just fake it? • How can this be managed with minimal impact on the player or ensemble? pennycook/mcgill
Principals and Aesthetics of Interactive Music • Computer assisted composition. • Grab/alter/play metaphor is very seductive given the inherent compositional cohesion that ensues. But despite some clever efforts (Risset,Rowe, Pennycook, Pinkston, Hamel, Chafe, others) - these have not been embraced into the “repertoire”) • Is this a MIDI thing? Is MIDI dead? • If yes, why? What problems exist with this method of work that prohibits it from finding a solid niche in the overall ea or chamber music genre? pennycook/mcgill
Principals and Aesthetics of Interactive Music • Guided Improvisation • http://smc04.ircam.fr/ProgWorkshop.html • Workshop on computer improvisation, Oct 20 IRCAM • What is “guided improvisation” • In what sense does a player actually “improvise” • In what sense can a computer “improvise” • One-way, two-way, n-way improvisation • Stylistic norms and boundaries help manage conditional environment pennycook/mcgill
Principals and Aesthetics of Interactive Music • Guided Improvisation • Essential criterion for improvisation is the ability to “listen” • Application of analytic/generative processes to the incoming musical information • Segmentation, feature extraction and pattern matching • Modular compositional automaton • Other factors such as parallel process management, multi-computer audio, midi and data interfaces pennycook/mcgill
Principals and Aesthetics of Interactive Music • Audio Processing Compositions • Modes of operation • “outboard rack” approach • New audio from previous audio (lag issues) • Stored files • Stored audio altered on the fly as per incoming data • Real-time pitch tracking, segmenting, pattern matching (huge topic to be returned to later in the week) • Computational demands much higher than MIDI hence must be worth it pennycook/mcgill
Principals and Aesthetics of Interactive Music • General Properties - Summary • Modes of performance • Active - triggers, footswitch, etc.; initiated by operator and/or performer(s) • Passive - system detects appropriate flags from processes such as beat detection, pitch detection, silence/pause detection, motion capture, time-code (clock) etc. • Granularity • Section, event, note, clock time, • Governed by compositional style and process compexity pennycook/mcgill
Principals and Aesthetics of Interactive Music • General Properties - Summary • Input and Sources • MIDI - seems passé now but why? • Audio - transducer properties, analytical, processing and generative algorithms • Motion/Image - use of gesture may be critical to effective interaction; secondary channel? • Output • MIDI? - this is really dead • Audio - channels, mixing, loudspeaker management • Video/Image - supporting pennycook/mcgill
Principals and Aesthetics of Interactive Music • General Properties - Summary • Longevity (who will turn the knobs) • Very few pieces are playable without the composer or trained operator present • Players largely disenfranchised due to tech-gap • No obvious solution to hardware/software obsolescence • Many components defy notation or even adequate description • Teachers will never (?) undertake this repertoire thus the cycle of master-apprentice is essentially broken beyond repair • Many acoustic composers consider this little more than gear-tinkering • No systematic reviewing process • Vast arena of techno-pop has totally overshadowed the genre pennycook/mcgill
Seminar #1Principals and Aesthetics of Interactive Music END Monday, October 18, 2004 3:00 pm - 6:00 pm pennycook/mcgill
Seminar #2Composition and Performance of Interactive Music (the chamber music tradition) Tuesday, October 19, 2004 9:00 am - 12:00 pm Room LSR #1 pennycook/mcgill
Interactive Compositions • Early adoptors (MIDI): • Roger Dannenburg, Chris Chafe, Joel Chadabe, Dexter Morrill, Keith Hamel, Russell Pinkston, Jean-Claude Risset, Morton Subotnick…. • Early adopters (Audio/DSP) • Cort Lippe, Zack Settel, Tod Machover, Russell Pinkston, …. • Reference - Joel Chadabe “….” pennycook/mcgill
Interactive Compositions • Pennycook “PRAESCIO series” • First public performance - Buffalo, April 1987 - Praescio I pennycook/mcgill
Praescio - I • Soprano saxophone • Original version constructed with Dannenburg software “cmidi” (?) on PC-AT/286. • Setup included: • PC/at with MIDI IN, IVL Pitchrider • Sax data processed with delays, harmonizations, etc. • PC/at with midi version of score-11 developed by BP and CS grads at Queen’s University, called M-SCORE • Files were “hand triggered” on a section-by-section basis • Extreme underflow occurred during performance causing bursts and cascades pennycook/mcgill
Selected Compositions Praescio-I Rec. 1991, McGill pennycook/mcgill
Praescio - I • Versions II, III • Reconstructed using MIDI-LIVE software developed at McGill (Pennycook, Fujinaga, Hillborn, Quesnel) • Current version - Max • (more on this tomorrow) pennycook/mcgill
Tornado (McGill EMS) Praescio-II: amnesia pennycook/mcgill
Praescio - II: amnesia • Commissioned by Geoffrey Wright for 25th anniversary of Peabody Conservatory EMS • With Morton Subotnick “Jacob’s Room” • Instrumentation, System • Soprano, flute, vln, vcello, dx7, system • First version of MIDI-LIVE software (Low-latency MIDI composition system for real-time performance) • Soprano and flute were close mic’d and provided pitch data to software via 2 IVL Pitchriders • Stored sequences were triggered (by operator) • MIDI Channel management was the crucial component pennycook/mcgill
MIDI-LIVE 0.8 • Designed to permit fluent interchange of live data with stored data • Premise was that MIDI files could be played like “pieces of tape” • Transformations included: • Assign out channel(s) • Assign tempo, velocity (volume) on a per-track basis • Specifiy harmonization, transposition • Gather inmcoming note-ons, strip temporal info, resend in various ways • Any number of tracks could be active at a time all under their own local metronome • Scripting language + playback interface for live performance that showed channel activity • Read/process standard midi files produced from sequencer, M-SCORE (score11/midi) OR recorded and stored internally pennycook/mcgill
PRAESCIO-III The desert speaks Vivien Spiteri, Harpsichord 1989 pennycook/mcgill
Praescio-III: the desert speaks • MIDI-LIVE 1.0 - program, much more stable, more processing capabilities, better user interface for scripting • Praescio-III: harpsichord and midilive • Challenge as the harpsichord - first interface was developed with Eric Johnstone at McGill using “organ retrofit” midi package with a complete set of switches for upper manual • Small control unit attached to harpsichord to permit the player to reset, advance, etc. and manage fswitch and vol pedal (critical for the performance) pennycook/mcgill
Praescio-III: the desert speaks • Version 2 of the interface was built for concert in Europe - original interface stolen out of a van (very high $ return for sure!) • New version entirely optical - individual LED/Receptor pairs per note on upper manual • Worked OK but susceptible to sudden lighting changes! • Never truly debugged, hard to regulate (but better than the mechanical one) pennycook/mcgill
Praescio-III: the desert speaks • 3 movement format • I - colorize • II - record/strip/process/play • III - triggered sequences, colorize pennycook/mcgill
PRAESCIO-IV Jean-Guy Boisvert, Clarinet 1991 pennycook/mcgill
Praescio-IV • Commission for the 1991 International Clarinet Conference by Jean-Guy Boisvert • Challenge was to provide clarinetist with maximum freedom of control over temporal components • Non-improvisatory • Cheap MIDI tone generators to facilitate travel (but that may have been a bad idea) pennycook/mcgill
Praescio-IV • Unique “harness” for the clarinet designed and built by BP and Eric Johnstone • Provided attachment (DIN) for: • Contact mic on reed to improve IVL tracking • 3 ultra-light keys placed by LH thumb and RH little-finger to permit cross-fingered sustain and trigger • Volume pedal on floor was unavoidable then, perhaps with gesture tracking this too could be eliminated • Images in CMJ • Performed successfully by many different players - learning curve very short using the device and score cues pennycook/mcgill
Praescio-V • Praescio-V - a kind of “joint performance piece” for Dexter Morrill and myself • 1990 “MIDI-LIVE” road tour in Europe/Eastern Europe • Trumpet, sax and small rack of midi tone generators + Yamaha DMP-11 midi controlled mixer for processing audio (software controlled) • No longer extant but lots of fun to play. • Note that Dexter Morrill made numerous compositions using MIDI-LIVE and even shipped a system around to performers. A version was made for the Yamaha laptop that supported MIDI (not the CX5). pennycook/mcgill
Praescio-VI • Praescio-VI commissioned by Christine Little, Toronto flautist • Several performances by different players - Montreal, Toronto, Ottawa, ICMC-San Jose, Mexico City… • Fairly stable; short learning curve • 4 innovations for this piece • Max version of MIDI LIVE under development • MIDI Time Clip (remote signaling device to be described tomorrow) • Use of audio-on-CD as part of the controlled environment, “more than MIDI” output • Digidesign Sample-Cell hence entirely internal to the Mac • But, some serious level issues, hard to control in real-time pennycook/mcgill
Praescio-VII (piano and them some..) alcides lanza, piano pennycook/mcgill
Praescio-VII • Praescio-VII (piano and then some…) commissioned by ACREQ for alcides lanza to perform • many performances by different players plus tours in Europe, South America by lanza • MIDI Time Clip crucial for both the conception of the piece and the performance - very difficult to perform without feedback from computer->player pennycook/mcgill
Praescio-VII • Most complex of the Praescio series • Midi data generated from Common Music/LISP programs written by BP --> SMF’s • Full max implementation of MIDI-LIVE 2.x (Stammen) • Several specialized Max objects written by Dale Stammen • MIDI in from triggers (no piano data) • Feedback to player with MIDI Time Clip, complete Time Clip software package (Pennycook/Stammen) pennycook/mcgill
Praescio-VII • Large array of “piano tone modules” for midi out • Dual CD under complex Max control to permit overlap • 8 audio outs and 8 loudspeakers with real-time placement using MIDI-controlled MIXER (simple unity gain device - no EQ) • Full integration of prerecorded audio tracks and prepared MIDI sequences • Temporal management of triggers only - no improvisation • More than 60 events pennycook/mcgill
Other mixed pieces • The Black Page Tropes (1995) • Drums, percussion, midi out + audio • One section of triggered improvisation using loops derived from Pyhrite external in Max • Long complex work primarily for the players - audio/MIDI more supportive and commentary • The Yonge Street Variations (1998) • Cello, MIDI (drum head), audio, DSP • Less notes, more processing and sound • Much greater reliance on stored audio files triggered by player • Based on very early work for viola and percussion (recorded) pennycook/mcgill
Summary • Much was learned from the development of all these works • End of the MIDI era (almost) • 8 audio outs and 8 loudspeakers with real-time placement using MIDI-controlled MIXER (simple unity gain device - no EQ) • Full integration of prerecorded audio tracks and prepared MIDI sequences • Temporal management of triggers only - no improvisation • More than 60 events pennycook/mcgill
Seminar #3Interactive System Design Wednesday, October 20, 2004 9:00 am - 12:00 pm Room 806 pennycook/mcgill
Design issues • What is the definition of Tod Machover’s interactive solo cello piece for Yo-Yo Ma, Begin again and again pennycook/mcgill
Design issues • 1 cellist, 6 technicians + 2 18-wheeler’s (1991 view) pennycook/mcgill
Risset - Duet for one piano Jaffe/Schloss - Wildlife Wessel - phrase recorder Lippe - Music for Clarinet and ISPW Dannenberg - CMU Midi Toolkit Rowe - Cypher Pennycook - MidiLive/Max, T-MAX, Listener Project (with Hillborn, Stammen, Quesnel…) Brief History pennycook/mcgill
Looking backwards • Development of interactive, live-perf systems • Max Software (version 2) 1990/91 • This program was written for 68k Mac. • PlaySMF (Dale Stammen - superb Midilive implementation for MAX) • Led to more ambitious implementations especially T-MAX, a version of Rowe’s Cypher running across a Mac IIfx and 4 Inmos T805 Transputers • Listener project - Stammen/Pennycook (see Rowe) pennycook/mcgill