Sonic Intermedia BEAST 

29. - 30. 10. 2012


BEAST - Birmingham ElectroAcoustic Sound Theatre
The Electroacoustic Music Studios at the University of Birmingham, UK

Gäste: Jonty Harrison, Scott Wilson, Chris Tarren und Tim Moyers
University of Birmingham BEAST
intermediales Konzert
im DeepSpace des Ars Electronica Centers, Linz
29.10.2012, 19.30 Uhr
 
AEC
Vortrag "Rethinking the BEAST"
Jonty Harrison & Scott Wilson

im kleinen Saal der Anton-Bruckner-Privatuniversität, Linz, 
30.10.2012, 10.00 Uhr
im Rahmen der Vortrags-Serie der CMS invited lectures
ABPU CMS
das Konzert wird live übertragen im DorfTV, terrestisch im Raum Linz und im Internet

die Dokumentation ist ist hier zu sehen: http://www.dorftv.at/videos/dorf-tv-link/5602?page=7
dorf tv
links: Sonic Intermedia
BEAST University of Birmingham
YouTube
invited lecture series
Atelier Avant Austria
Flyer SIM12
FB Fotos
VIDEO DOCU MOMENTUM BEAST

DT
Sonic Intermedia
ist eine Konzertreihe initiert von den KomponistInnen und MedienkünstlerInnen Andreas Weixler und Se-Lien Chuang  mit dem künstlerischen Leiter des AEC Gerfried Stocker um zeitgenössischer intermedialer Computermusik ein Präsentationsformat in Linz zu geben, das Einblick gibt in die Arbeit von 
hochkarätigen KomponistInnen, ForscherInnen, MedienkünstlerInnen und MusikerInnen. Die Gäste bei SonicIntermedia 2012 sind BEAST - Birmingham ElectroAcoustic Sound Theatre, der performative Flügel der Electroacoustic Music Studios an der University of Birmingham. Jonty Harrison, Prix ars electronica Preisträger 1997, lässt gemeinsam mit Scott Wilson, Chris Tarren, Matteo Malavasi und Tim Moyers ein spannendes Konzert experimenteller Computermusik und intermedialer Komposition erwarten.

(Andreas Weixler)

EN
The
Electroacoustic Music Studios at the University of Birmingham
were established in 1978 and have been directed by Jonty Harrison since 1980. Many leading UK and international composers have worked there, either as visitors or as postgraduate students, and some 70 prizewinning works produced there. BEAST (Birmingham ElectroAcoustic Sound Theatre), founded by Jonty Harrison in 1982, is the performing wing of the Studios; it has performed all over the UK and in many parts of mainland Europe, including MultiMediale II (Karlsruhe), The Royal Dutch Conservatory (The Hague), The Acousmatic Experience (Amsterdam), Aspekte (Salzburg), Inventionen (Berlin; twice), Echt-Zeit (Basel), Aix en Musique (Aix en Provence) Sound Around Festival (Copenhagen).

Rethinking the BEAST
This talk will outline some recent developments in multichannel composition at the Electroacoustic Music Studios at the University of Birmingham and its performance wing, BEAST (Birmingham ElectroAcoustic Sound Theatre). In addition to a historical overview, the discussion will cover software and techniques developed and adapted for use with BEAST, new and pragmatic approaches to composing for large-scale multichannel systems, such as n-channel composition and composing in ‘stems’, and issues arising from a resulting blurring between composition and performance practices.

(Jonty Harrison) 

     

Programm

Sonic Intermedia BEAST - intermediales Konzert
im DeepSpace des Ars Electronica Centers, Linz 29.10.2012, 19.30 Uhr

AEC


BEASTory
Jonty Harrison

Jade f.o.o.t

video, electroacoustic composition and sound diffusion
Andreas Weixler / Se-Lien Chuang

False Awakening
electroacoustic composition in 5.1
Chris Tarren

Polystyrene
video
Tim Moyers

Böse
n-channel electroacoustic work
Scott Wilson

Disgregation of the body (dream)
  a digital audiovisual composition
Matteo Malavasi

Momentum BEAST
audiovisual interactive performance, DeepSpace projection
Andreas Weixler & Se-Lien Chuang in cooperation with BEER


BEAST

BEAST (Birmingham ElectroAcoustic Sound Theatre) is the concert sound system of the University of Birmingham’s Electroacoustic Music Studios. It was founded by Studio Director Jonty Harrison in 1982 to showcase electroacoustic music produced in the Studios and around the world. In the past 25 years, over 50 postgraduate composers based in the Birmingham Studios have been members of BEAST. As well as winning international competitions and receiving performances, broadcasts and commissions, many of these composers have gone on to teach in universities all over the world. In 2002, BEAST became part of the newly formed Centre for Composition and Associated Studies (COMPASS) in the Department of Music at the University of Birmingham and has, for many years, enjoyed a close working relationship with the Birmingham Contemporary Music Group.

BEAST has performed extensively in the UK and other parts of Europe, including at Londons South Bank Centre (often as part of Sonic Arts Network promotions), the Edinburgh and Huddersfield Festivals, the Henry Wood Hall in Glasgow, the Adrian Boult Hall in Birmingham, MultiMediale II in Karlsruhe, The Royal Dutch Conservatory in The Hague, The Acousmatic Experience in Amsterdam, the Aspekte Festival in Salzburg, the Inventionen Festival in Berlin (twice), the Echt-Zeit Festival in Basel, Aix en Musique in Aix en Provence and the Sound Around Festival in Copenhagen. It received very high acclaim as the concert sound system at the 1990 International Computer Music Conference in Glasgow and was an important contributor to both Sounds Like BirminghamUK City of Music 1992, and Birminghams Towards the Millennium Festival during the 1990s. BEASTs own promotions in its home town have included ten years of the Barber Festival of Contemporary Music, several years of rumours and related events at the Midlands Arts Centre, murmurs at the Crescent Theatre and, for the past few years, it has been a regular part of The Series at the CBSO Centre.

The BEAST diffusion system uses multiple channels of loudspeakers, whose differing characteristics make them appropriate for a particular position or function. The system includes arrays of tweeters (high frequency speakers which can be suspended over the audience), sub-woofers (low frequency speakers) and full-range speakers of varying characteristics. The performer is able to create a variety of sound images, and to 'sculpt' the spatial, dynamic and dramatic implications of the music in a particular performance environment in order to interpret and realise the composer's intentions. Thanks to investment in new equipment, following a major award under the SRIF-2 (Science Research Investment Fund) scheme, BEAST is able to install systems of around 100 loudspeakers and, since the arrival in the Department of Dr Scott Wilson, who led a research project funded by the Arts and Humanities Research Council, has been engaged in ongoing research into the development of new hardware controllers and software interfaces/environments for the performance of acousmatic and electroacoustic music.

For almost thirty years, BEAST has been committed to performing acousmatic and electroacoustic music to the highest possible standards. The composers associated with the system display a variety of styles and aesthetics, but are united by a desire to explore the unique creative potential of the electroacoustic medium.

For more information on BEAST and the Electroacoustic Music Studios, please visit: http://www.birmingham.ac.uk/facilities/BEAST/index.aspx





BEASTory (2010) 8:10 Jonty Harrison

to Scott Wilson

Based on the sounds of the BEAST system when it is not actually performing (i.e. when it is being stored, transported, set up or taken down), this short piece is an initial attempt to explore the fuzzy boundary between composition and performance made available by a large loudspeaker system (BEAST), controlled by flexible and sophisticated software (BEASTmulchlargely written by my colleague and friend, Scott Wilson). The recordings were made on BEAST gigs and, with the assistance of Julien Guillamat, in theBEAST store(hence the awful titlesorry!).

BEASTory (2010) by Jonty Harrison (PRS) is reproduced on DVD by courtesy of empreintes DIGITALes, Montréal.


BEAST University of Birmingham


Jonty
Harrison
born
1952, studied with Bernard Rands, David Blake and Elisabeth Lutyens at the University of York, UK, gaining his DPhil in Composition in 1980 and discovering the electroacoustic music studio along the way. Between 1976 and 1980 he lived in London, preparing electroacoustic material for a number of productions at the National Theatre and teaching studio techniques at City University. In 1980 he joined the Music Department of the University of Birmingham, where he is now Professor of Composition and Electroacoustic Music and Director of the Electroacoustic Music Studios and BEAST (Birmingham ElectroAcoustic Sound Theatre). Over the past 30 years he has taught a number of graduate composers from the UK and overseas, many of whom are now themselves leading figures in the composition and teaching of electroacoustic music around the world. He has made several conducting appearances with the Birmingham Contemporary Music Group (most notably performing Stockhausen's Momente), the University New Music Ensemble and the University Orchestra. He was a Board member of Sonic Arts Network for many years.
As a composer he has won several awards (Bourges International Electroacoustic Awards; Prix Ars Electronica, Linz; Musica Nova, Prague; the Lloyds Bank National Composers' Award; the PRS Prize; an Arts Council Composition Bursary; a Leverhulme Research Grant and AHRB/AHRC Research Grants), and received commissions from leading institutions and performers (Ina-GRM; GMEB, Bourges; the International Computer Music Association; MAFILM/Magyar Rádió; Electroacoustic Wales/University of Bangor, IRCAM/Ensemble InterContemporain; BBC; Sonorities Festival, Belfast; Birmingham Contemporary Music Group; Fine Arts Brass Ensemble; Singcircle; Thürmchen Ensemble; John Harle; Harry Sparnaay; and Jos Zwaanenburg).
His music is performed and broadcast worldwide, and several works are available on two 'solo' CDs (Articles indéfinis and Évidence matérielle) and a DVD-Audio (Environs) on the empreintes DIGITALes label (Montréal), and on compilation CDs from NMC (London), Mnémosyne Musique Média (Bourges, France), CDCM/Centaur (San Francisco), Asphodel (New York), EMF (New York) and Collins (London).
http://www.electrocd.com/en/bio/harrison_jo/









Jade f.o.o.t
(1996/2012)
video, electroacoustic composition and sound diffusion
Andreas Weixler / Se-Lien Chuang
duration 5:40


Jade f.o.o.t - for orchestra on tape, is an electroacoustic piece created  by Andreas Weixler at Birmingham University Studios and UEA Studios during a joint artists residency in 1996.
The Video to Jade f.o.o.t. was created 2012 by Se-Lien Chuang at Atelier Avant Austria especially for the DeepSpace.







Foto © Se-Lien Chuang





Chris Tarren studied as an undergraduate at Birmingham, and is now continuing his studies in composition with Jonty Harrison. Primarily an electroacoustic composer, many of his works experiment with the synthesis of abstract and more recognisable material, seeking to shape the listener’s musical experience through varying levels of focus and perception. Chris frequently performs with BEAST and his works have been played in the UK and abroad.
www.chris-tarren.co.uk

False Awakening (2012) Chris Tarren
electroacoustic composition in 5.1
duration: 15 min


As the listener descends into sleep, they become more lucid as the environment around them comes into focus. Periodically our descent is broken by a jolt back into a seeming reality, only to find that where we have actually arrived is another dream – a false awakening into a distorted reality, with an unsettling undercurrent which takes us deeper into the subconscious...
False Awakening is in many ways a trip down memory lane, exploring sounds and environments which conjure up fond memories of childhood experiences. Recent trips to parts of North Yorkshire have renewed my appreciation for the natural beauty of these places, whilst also filling me with a sense of apprehension, that with the ever increasing rate of inflation and need for space their beauty will not remain untouched for long. Much of the sound material revolves around recordings made in the North Yorkshire Moors and those made at a steel yard in Thirsk, and the listener is pulled between these two sound-worlds in a disturbing reverie, where vast, untouched landscape are encroached upon by the sounds of modern life.
Chris Tarren studied as an undergraduate at Birmingham, and is now continuing his studies in composition with Jonty Harrison. Primarily an electroacoustic composer, many of his works experiment with the synthesis of abstract and more recognisable material, seeking to shape the listener’s musical experience through varying levels of focus and perception. Chris frequently performs with BEAST and his works have been played in the UK and abroad.




Polystyrene - Tim Moyers
video
10 mins 50 sec


Tim Moyers
Tim is currently perusing his PhD in composition at the University of Birmingham.  He received his MM in Computer Music and New Media Technology from Northern Illinois University. He also received a BA in Jazz performance as well as a BA in Philosophy from North Central College.

© Tim Moyers



Böse (2010) - Scott Wilson
n-channel electroacoustic work
9 mins 1 second

This work makes use of recordings of a number of pianos, including two extended range Bösendorfers, one in the UK, one in Montreal, as well as a disintegrating Blüthner of somewhat questionable provenance. It uses a number of specialised techniques for 'n-channel' composition and large scale multichannel spatialisation. Böse was premiered at the 2010 Inventionen Festival in Berlin.

Scott Wilson
Born Vancouver, Canada; lived Middletown, Connecticut, Karlsruhe, Toronto, brief stints elsewhere. Studies (one form or another) with Barry Truax, Christos Hatzis, Gary Kulesha, Ron Kuivila, Wolfgang Rihm, David Gordon Duke, Owen Underhill, and others. Works for orchestra, electroacoustics, chamber, installations, multimedia, interactive, inter-inactive, usw. Performances in Canada, the U.S., Germany, the U.K., Ireland, France, Belgium, the Netherlands, Japan, New Zealand, Switzerland, including Huddersfield Festival, Trash Festival, Esprit Orchestra's Next Wave Festival, Open Ears, Canada's National Arts Centre, and other august settings. Recent projects with Darragh Morgan, rarescale, Xenia Pestova. Recordings with 326music and Continuum Contemporary Music. Lives now in Birmingham, UK (teaching at the University, working with BEAST) where life, generally speaking, is good.

Photo Veronika von Volkova


 

Disgregation of the body (dream)
A digital audiovisual composition (2010/2011)
Matteo Malavasi

Video format: synchronized multi-projection installation.
Audio format: multi-channel concrete sounds
Performing version: single screen video reduction, stereo audiotrack reduction
Length: 11'21"


The awareness of getting free from a body which has been disgregating slowly over time. The comprehension of objective essence which is only possible with the clear and full understanding of nature. Something which is always deceived by simple needs of an uncomfortable body and mainly by insane ambitions of human beings. I've been waiting for a dream or, perhaps I've been working in order to move slowly towards my dream, where my own essence rises without compromises.
I'm looking for a parallel abstract world where thoughts are subjects and essence is the environment where those thoughts live.
A dream of landscapes transformed into ideas; a long process of disgregation which dissolves the landscape, conserving it only as perception.




 

Matteo Malavasi


I am an artist who is exploring different areas of expression because I feel the necessity to express my ideas through different kinds of ‘media’. I believe that nowadays, with new technologies, we are able to create multimedia projects which explore different languages with a common focus. There isn’t a restriction of subject or development, so we have the responsibility for choice of a technical language to create works which are very close to the original ideas. Experience and attention to detail is very important for the result.
I collaborated with some important centres of Production and music research for the realization of some multimedia projects, I also received commissions from important cultural associations, ensembles and orchestras. I collaborated with international soloists, ensembles and orchestras like Diego Masson, Miroslaw Jacek Blaszezyk, Renato Rivolta, Sandro Gorli, Marco Angius, Barrie Webb, Guido Boselli, Sébastien Schiesser, Mdi Ensemble, Divertimento Ensemble, Ensemble of National Symphonic Orchestra of Rai, Milano Classica Orchestra, BCMG in Birmingham.
My music was performed during some festivals like XIV CIM festival in Florence, Rai Nuova Musica festival (Turin), CreaMi festival (Milan), Elettrosensi Festival, at Huddersfield University, in Zurig during the Generator #8 – Labor für elektroakustische Musik und Neue Medien, at REC Festival of Reggio Emilia, at URTIcanti contemporary music Festival of Bari, in US at Crowden School in San Francisco, at Festival ‘Musica in Etruria’, Antidogma Festival, at BEAST in Birmingham.
I attended masterclasses, meetings and lessons with Helmut Lachenmann, Jonathan Harvey, Hugues Dufourt, Giovanni Verrando, Marco Stroppa, Toshio Hosokawa and others.
My compositions are produced by the composer.

web: www.matteomalavasi.com



Momentum BEAST (2012)
audiovisual interactive performance
Andreas Weixler & Se-Lien Chuang
in cooperation with BEER
7 channels, DeepSpace projection
duration: 12 min

pict 2.
                      Andreas Weixler und Se-Lien Chuang im DeepSpace
Momentum UEA                                                                                   Momentum SARC

all-star performer:
Jonty Harrison, sample triggering
Scott Wilson, live coding
Chris Tarren, laptop improvisation
Tim Moyers,
live coding
Andreas Weixler, multichannel audio realtime processing
Se-Lien Chuang, interactive visuals, bass recorder

VIDEO DOCU MOMENTUM BEAST




BEER

The Birmingham Ensemble for Electroacoustic Research (BEER) was founded in 2011 as a research project to explore aspects of realtime electroacoustic music making. Particular interests include networked music performance and live coding. In keeping with post-free jazz developments in improvisation (e.g. Zorn, Braxton), we create structures and intervention mechanisms that impose limitations and formal articulations on the musical flow (taking advantage of networked computer systems as the intervention mechanism par excellence). Musical influences run the gamut from Xenakis to Journey.

http://soundcloud.com/beer-ensemble

Andreas Weixler

geboren 1963 in Graz, ist zeitgenössischer Komponist mit einer Spezialisierung in Computermusik.
Er studierte Komposition an der Musikhochschule/Kunstuniversität Graz bei Andrej Dobrowolski, Younghi Pagh-Paan und diplomierte bei Beat Furrer.
Seine vielbeachteten Konzepte führten zu einer regen Konzerttätigkeit in Europa, Asien, Nord- und Südamerika, Einladungen zu internationalen Symposien sowie internationaler Lehr- und Forschungstätigkeit in Österreich, Deutschland, England, Nordirland, USA, Kanada, Japan, Singapur, Süd-Korea und Taiwan. 2011 habilitert Andreas Weixler im Fach elektroakustische Komposition/Computermusik zum Ao.Univ. Prof. an der an der Anton-Bruckner-Privatuniversität in Linz, wo er seit 1997 an der Abteilung für Komposition und am Institut für Jazz und Improvisierte Musik unterrichtet, seit 2004 ist er auch Lektor bei InterfaceCulture an der Kunstuniversität Linz für audiovisuelle interaktive Projekte.
Derzeit spezialisierte Andreas Weixler sich in interaktive und multimediale Konzerte zeitgenössischer Musik.
http://avant.mur.at

Se-Lien Chuang
composer, pianist and media artist, 1965 born in Taiwan, since 1991 residence in Austria.
The artistic and compositional emphases range from contemporary instrumental composition/improvisation, computer music to audiovisual interactivity.
Studies in composition (Beat Furrer), music and media technology (Karlheinz Essl), piano/recorder, electro-acoustic music in Austria.
International productions, research stays and lectures as well as numerous representations of compositions in Europe, Asia, North- and South America: Salzburger Festspiele, ICMC Huddersfield/NYC/Belfast/Copenhagen, SICMF Seoul, NIME New York, ISEA Singapore/Nagoya, IAMAS Japan, Ars Electronica Linz, SONORITIES Festival Belfast, Electronic Music Festival Basel, Ultraschall Festival für Neue Musik Berlin, Wien Modern, Sumida Triphony Hall Tokio, National Theater Concert Hall Taipeh, Computermusik Festival Montreal, European Electroacoustic Music Brussels, NICE Amsterdam, SIBGRAPI Video Festival Gramado-RS,  among others.
Since 1996 jointly with Andreas Weixler running Atelier Avant Austria, of which the key aspects are in the developments of audiovisual interactive systems and audio/visual realtime/non-realtime processing, computer music and algorithmic composition.
http://avant.mur.at/chuang


Initiative: Andreas Weixler & Se-Lien Chuang

AEC  ABPU CMS
     University of BirminghamBEAST 
dorf tv


weitere Termine im Anschluss:

  30.10.2012 20:00
Konzert von Jonty Harrison und Scott Wilson
Open CUBE
Kunstuniversität Graz/IEM
Inffeldgasse 10
8010 Graz
http://iem.kug.ac.at

31.10.2012 11:45-13:15
Gastseminar von Jonty Harrison und Scott Wilson
Universität für Musik und darstellende Kunst Wien
ELAK/Seminarsaal 3. Stock
Rienößlgasse 12
1040 Wien
http://www.elakwien.at

links: Sonic Intermedia
BEAST University of Birmingham
YouTube
invited lecture series
Atelier Avant Austria


Initiative:
Ao.Univ. Prof. Andreas Weixler (ABPU)
Mag.a. Se-Lien Chuang (Atelier Avant Austria)
Gerfried Stocker (AEC)

DeepSpace Koordination:
Maria Seidl (AEC)

Tontechnik: 
Martin Edtmayr (Fa. Hannes Zauner, Veranstaltungstechnik GmbH, Wels)

Veranstaltungsbüro:
Angelika Grabner (ABPU)

AEC Technik:
Florian Wanninger (AEC)

EDV:
Jörg Lehner (ABPU)

Doku:
Studierende des CMS - Computer Music Studios (ABPU)
Daniel Rikker (ab 9.30), Emily Stewart, Stefan Bleier, Zanjirani Farahani Hassan (ab 18.30),

DorfTV: Ufuk Serbesta, Gabi Kepplinger           







Tech Specs

set up AUDIO plan PDF
set up VIDEO plan PDF
rehersal plan
Ablauf Plan

BEASTory (2010) 8:10 Jonty Harrison

audio
False Awakening (2012) Chris Tarren
electroacoustic composition in 5.1
fixed electroacoustic work in 5.1, with the 6 channels arranged as per the ITU spec (L, R, C, Sub, L rear, R rear).
I would like to have control over the output levels on all speakers and subs, as well as the ability to crossfade between the high and low L-R pair.
Momentum BEAST
audiovisual interactive performance
concept: Andreas Weixler & Se-Lien Chuang
7 channels, DeepSpace projection
7 ch audio out of RME, phone plugs balanced
VGA out for data projection on wall and ground

up to 8 channel Aux send of sound sources to sound card, alternatively stereo aux mix in
Polystyrene - Tim Moyers
video
10 mins 50 sec

Böse (2010) - Scott Wilson
n-channel electroacoustic work
9 mins 1 second

Disgregation of the body (dream)
A digital audiovisual composition (2010/2011).
Director & producer: Matteo Malavasi
Video & music: Matteo Malavasi
Length: 11'21"


Performing version: single screen video reduction, stereo audiotrack reduction
Audio format: multi-channel concrete sounds



Jade f.o.o.t (1996/2012)
video, electroacoustic composition and sound diffusion
Andreas Weixler / Se-Lien Chuang
duration 5:40
video out VGA
audio stereo out to be distributed on 7.1 in a realtime performance