Hello all – I don’t know whether you’ve seen this.

Please pass it on to those potentially interested.

Apologies for doubles.

 

Cheers,

David

 

---

Prof David Worrall, PhD

Audio Arts and Acoustics

Columbia College Chicago

33 E Congress Pkwy Room 601N

Chicago, ILLINOIS, USA 60605

Tel: (1)312.369.8821 Fax: (1)312.369.8427

Wikipedia: David Worrall

Personal research/creative practice website: avatar.com.au

President, International Community for Auditory Display icad.org

 

 

 

 

Organised Sound: An International Journal of Music and Technology

 

Call for submissions

 

Volume 25, Number 1

 

Issue thematic title: Computation in the sonic arts

Date of Publication: April 2020

Publishers: Cambridge University Press

 

Issue co-ordinators: David Worrall (worr...@avatar.com.au) 

 

Deadline for submission: 15 May 2019

 

There are many ways to generate and organise the sounds of a composition. 
Notwithstanding the early precedents in musical dice games and the rules for 
contrapuntal voice leading, the use of formal procedures to make musical 
artifacts without direct human intervention became practicably realisable with 
the availability of digital computers. This occurred in the second half of the 
twentieth century at the same time as artificial intelligence researchers were 
dreaming of a model of the human personage in which bodies and minds were more 
like machines than self-generating organisms. Some composers took the 
opportunity to develop algorithmic procedures to model works of the past, 
others to explore the representation of mathematically defined, natural and 
abstract processes that have no immediate musical connection to music such as 
set and group theory, probability distributions, Markovian stochastics, 
self-similarity, iterated function systems, adaptive networks and other 
combinatorial techniques. More recently, attention has also turned to the 
representation of messy collected data, scraped from the internet, or gathered 
by monitoring human, natural, environmental and other activities.

 

Early collaborations with computational systems were met with some hostility by 
the musical establishment. Arguments ranged from whether or not, in replacing 
parts of the creative process with an automated system, we were dehumanising 
the resultant artifact. Were we cheating by letting the tools do the work? Was 
is it even possible to produce tools which can adequately challenge the 
intensely human “creative” process? Did reason alone have any place in musical 
composition in a domain of human activity which should be driven by feelings, 
intuition, and other non-algorithmic considerations?

 

This issue of Organised Sound seeks articles which go beyond the description of 
how specific compositional procedures are used in individual compositions in 
order to address the social and musicological dimensions of computation, 
specifically focusing on the sonic arts.

 

Suggested themes include but are not restricted to:

·         What styles of computational sonic arts exist today? How are they 
defined? 

·         What is social context in which they exist?

·         Do or should listeners listen differently to music in which computers 
are involved in the creative decision-making?

·         In what ways are the computers involve being creative or imitating 
creative processes? Is there a difference?

·         Both in creation and performance, how does such work fulfill composer 
and listener needs for artifact formation and artistic communication? 

·         What is the role of the ego when composing computationally?

·         In socio-cultural environments in which AI research is currently 
faced with difficult conceptual and definitional issues such as embodiment, has 
this affected how computational creativity is considered? 

·         In performances where computational algorithms are freely used in 
improvisation, what does it mean for a composition to be well formed? Does it 
matter?

·         Is there a role for computational processes in music education?

·         Are the compositional situations in which you would not consider 
using procedural approaches? Why?

 

As always, submissions related to the theme are encouraged; however, those that 
fall outside the scope of this theme are always welcome.

 

SUBMISSION DEADLINE: 15 May 2019

 

SUBMISSION FORMAT: 

 

Notes for Contributors and further details can be obtained from the inside back 
cover of published issues of Organised Sound or at the following url:

 

http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayMoreInfo?jid=OSO&type=ifc (and 
download the pdf)

 

Properly formatted email submissions and general queries should be sent to: 
o...@dmu.ac.uk, not to the guest editors.

 

Hard copy of articles and images and other material (e.g., sound and 
audio-visual files, etc. – normally max. 15’ sound files or 8’ movie files), 
both only when requested, should be submitted to:

 

            Prof. Leigh Landy

            Organised Sound

            Clephan Building

            De Montfort University

            Leicester LE1 9BH, UK.

 

Accepted articles will be published online via FirstView after copy editing 
prior to the paper version of the journal’s publication. 

 

Editor: Leigh Landy

Associate Editors: Ross Kirk and Richard Orton†

Regional Editors: Ricardo Dal Farra, Jøran Rudi, Margaret Schedel, Barry Truax, 
Ian Whalley, David Worrall, Lonce Wyse

International Editorial Board: Marc Battier, Manuella Blackburn, Joel Chadabe, 
Alessandro Cipriani, Simon Emmerson, Kenneth Fields, Rajmil Fischman, Eduardo 
Miranda, Rosemary Mountain, Tony Myatt, Garth Paine, Mary Simoni, Martin 
Supper, Daniel Teruggi

 

=====

 

____________________________________________________ Acma-l Mailing List 
https://list.waikato.ac.nz/mailman/listinfo/acma-l ACMA Web site 
http://www.acma.asn.au/ 

____________________________________________________ Acma-l Mailing List 
https://list.waikato.ac.nz/mailman/listinfo/acma-l ACMA Web site 
http://www.acma.asn.au/ 

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