Tuesday, July 09, 2019
Vector Synthesis: a Media Archaeological Investigation into Sound-Modulated Light
You might remember some of Derek Holzer's aka macumbista's vector oscilloscope videos, including a couple from Hainbach featuring the Vextrex, previously posted here.
Derek wrote in to let us know he has a new book coming out, currently seeking funding on Kickstarter here. Click through for additional details and demos.
"Vector Synthesis: a Media Archaeological Investigation into Sound-Modulated Light is a computational art project inspired by theories of media archaeology, by the history of computer and video art, and by the use of discarded and obsolete technologies such as the Cathode Ray Tube monitor. This text explores the military and techno-scientific legacies at the birth of modern computing, and charts attempts by artists of the subsequent two decades to decouple these tools from their destructive origins. Using this history as a basis, I then describe a media archaeological, real time performance system using audio synthesis and vector graphics techniques to investigate direct relationships between sound and image using analog CRT displays. Key to this system is a didactic, open source approach which encourages reuse and modification by other artists. The conclusion of the book reflects on how the project and the research surrounding it has contributed to the larger experimental audiovisual arts community through events such as the Vector Hack Festival.
Example videos from the project can be viewed here: https://vimeo.com/macumbista
Artists discussed include Mary Ellen Bute, Ben Laposky, Lyn Lye, Norman McLaren, Desmond Paul Henry, James Whitney, John Whitney Sr., Dan Sandin, Steina Vasulka, Woody Vasulka, Larry Cuba, Bill Etra, Mitchell Waite, Rosa Menkman, Cracked Ray Tube, Andrew Duff, Benton C. Bainbridge, Philip Baljeu, Jonas Bers, Robin Fox, Robert Henke, Ivan Marušić Klif, Jerobeam Fenderson, Hansi Raber, Ted Davis, Roland Lioni, Bernhard Rasinger, and the Kikimore group.
I wrote this book over the period of 2017-2019 as part of my MA thesis in Sound in New Media at Aalto University in Helsinki. It is 122 pages long, has 21 illustrations, links to several video examples online, and was fabulously designed by Claire Matthews.
I'm launching this Kickstarter because so many of you expressed interest in having a printed copy of this work. The proceeds of this Kickstarter (after covering the printing costs) will be used to get copies of this to people who have assisted in its creation, and just as importantly to organizations who deserve one -- places like Signal Culture in Owego NY; Cirkulacija 2, Ljudmila, and Project Atol in Ljubljana; the Radio Belgrade Electronic Studio in Serbia; the Media Arts and Technology Department at the University of California Santa Barbara CA; or the Media Archaeology Lab in Boulder CO, who either have directly contributed to the development of this project over the years, or whose missions correspond strongly with my own. My aim is to print and distribute 100 copies, or more if there is additional interest. Your support of this publishing project will help make that possible.
REVIEW
'The aesthetics of the Vector Synthesis project are timely and capturing: when our world has become as politically and environmentally problematic as it is, with the whole Enlightenment project under threat, art somehow has to express this, and Holzer does this by applying the aesthetics of the glitch, the broken, the old and dirty, but with the belief that there within we find meaningful contemporary expression. This is an aesthetic that questions the techno-progressive ideology, the perfect technological society of the future, and admits that our universalising narratives of simulation, control, truth and identity have become problematic.' Thor Magnusson, Senior Lecturer in Music, University of Sussex, UK, author of "Sonic Writing: Technologies of Material, Symbolic, and Signal Inscriptions" (2019, Bloomsbury)."
On Kickstarter here.
Tonus Model 2002 Predecessor to ARP 2500
Thomas Dimuzio & Buchla Modular [Episode 157]
Published on Jul 9, 2019 CatSynth TV
"While filming the rehearsal Polly Moller Springhorn's Tomography Fortunae, we had a chance to talk with Thomas Dimuzio about the Buchla modular synthesizer he will be using in the performance. His system is based around modules from the Buchla 200e system (including 259e and 258e oscillators and an FM radio tuner) along with clones by Mark Verbos and Mike Peak.
Tomography Fortunae will be premiered at the Outsound New Music Summit on July 26, 2019, at the Community Music Center, 544 Capp Street, San Francisco. (Pre-concert talk at 7:30PM, show at 8PM.)
From thomasdimuzio.com:
'omposer, collaborator, experimental electronic musician, multi-instrumentalist, improvisor, sound designer and mastering engineer - Dimuzio has been busy doing his thing(s) since the late 1980's, but is still only known to a small circle of electronic music enthusiasts. A true sonic alchemist who can seemingly create music events out of almost anything, Dimuzio's listed sound sources on his various releases include everything from "modified 10 speed bicycle" and "resonating water pipe" to short-wave radios, field recordings, loops, samplers and even normal instruments such as clarinet and trumpet. And while his wide range of musical interests make it impossible to pin a label on him, Dimuzio clearly has an insider's knowledge of older experimental musical forms such as musique concrete and electroacoustic, as well as more current dark ambient, noise and post-techno styles.'
For more synthesizer tours and experimental music, please subscribe to this channel and visit www.catsynth.com.
Background music by Amanda Chaudhary, using the FM tuner on the KOMA Field Kit, Arturia Buchla Easel V software synthesizer, and EastWest concrete tank reverb."
New Loops Summer Sale!
via supporting member, New Loops:
"New Loops Summer Sale - Up to 65% off
The NewLoops.com Summer Sale is now on with up to 65% off synth sound banks, audio construction kits, and audio sample packs. Every pack is included in the sale.
Some highlight offers include:
65% off Massive Presets
35% off Reasons Monotone Presets
35% off Thorn Presets
60% off Omnisphere Explorer (Omnisphere Presets)
50% off Empyrean Zebra Presets
45% off Diva, and Repro sound banks
40% off U-he Hive Wavetable Presets
30% off 115 Dune 3 Presets
30% off Ableton Wavetable Presets and Racks
Plus, many more discounts. Visit newloops.com and download some free demo packs. Sale ends 31.08.19"
The Moog One is Too Big
Hey Moog! How do you transport this big , phat beauty??😂😂😋@moogmusicinc pic.twitter.com/KGyy5gms9w— Kenny Larkin (@kennylark) July 8, 2019
Synth Rorschach #65: Bunker Modules!
Another one in via bÖsch
"@matrixsynth mixing room with plugins on the wall"
Indeed. My first thought was giant 500 format modules. Then I thought eurorack or DIY modules of course. The top sections which I'm guessing are vents, look like labels for the modules. The bottom look like patch sockets. The first three "modules" remind me of complex oscillators, followed by a mixer, followed by filters or modulators. The desk section reminds me of a control section with additional patch points, sliders, knobs, and various controls. How cool is that. This one takes the cake.
Synth Rorschach #64: Moon Rocks
Where does NASA keep the Moon Rocks? - Smarter Every Day 220 Published on Jul 9, 2019 SmarterEveryDay
The source of Formant knobs. Moon rocks!
OK, this one is a bit of stretch, but when I saw the small thumbnail for this video on YouTube, my first thought was, "did SmarterEveryDay do a video on modular synths?!". For a split second I thought that was a Formant modular in the background. In the larger still above it now reminds me of square Mattson Mini Modular panels with Formant knobs.
Koala Sampler | iPhone Pocket Operator? - haQ attaQ
Published on Jul 9, 2019 Jakob Haq
"Elf Audio's Koala Sampler for iPhone and iPad, is a sampler app that in many ways resembles a Pocket Operator. Koala Sampler has a sleek looking interface that is straightforward and easy to work with. Apart from the basic sampling features, it also adds some very nice no-hassle resampling options. And on top of that it also comes with global effects including stutter, rhythmic gating, reverb and tempo delay to name a few, stuff one wants to have access to when performing live. Check this out!"
iTunes: Koala Sampler - Marek Bereza
Posts: Koala Sampler
KORG WAVESTATION Vector Synthesizer (1990) *EXHALE* soundtrack
Published on Jul 9, 2019 RetroSound
"(c) 2019 vintage synthesizer demo by RetroSound
all synthesizer sounds: #KORG #Wavestation #Synthesizer (1990),
played with the Oberheim Xk masterkeyboard controller (1986)
field recording
recording: multi-track, played by hand
All pictures made by me."
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© Matrixsynth - All posts are presented here for informative, historical and educative purposes as applicable within fair use.
MATRIXSYNTH is supported by affiliate links that use cookies to track clickthroughs and sales. See the privacy policy for details.
MATRIXSYNTH - EVERYTHING SYNTH