DEGEM News – FWD – [ak-discourse] WG: CFP – Live Sound Studies

Von: Lepa, Steffen via ak discourse
Datum: Wed, 22 Oct 2025
Betreff: [ak-discourse] WG: CFP – Live Sound Studies

 

Dear colleagues,

This recently announced CFP on Live Sound Studies might be of interest to some of you.
Best,

Sergio

Special issue on Live Sound and Live Sound Studies
Journal of the Audio Engineering (JAES)

Research in live sound and sound reinforcement typically takes place with specific
cultural contexts in mind. For instance, research not only focuses on system
optimization in terms of efficiency, but also in improving the audience experience,
while reducing hearing health risks, and limiting community noise pollution, while
promoting healthier and more sustainable stakeholder relationships. With this
constellation of disciplines in mind, this SI on Live Sound seeks to bring together
work in audio engineering with studies into the cultural context of live music and
events.

The CFP seeks typical sound reinforcement topics (such as those found at AES
conferences on Sound Reinforcement) as well as papers on historical and cultural
perspectives. Regarding the latter, a key topic is the ongoing gender disparity across
the industry, on the floor as well as in research. Some improvements have been
made, but more can certainly be done to highlight the work of a growing cohort of
engineers, educators and researchers that don’t identify as male. This SI in Live
Sound should celebrate these improvements and share best practices and what
should be done to grow towards a more inclusive work force.

Another important topic is history. To understand where we are and where we need
to go as an industry, we need to know our origins. By way of example, to support
safe listening environments at modern day concerts, we need to understand how
sound reinforcement technology and practice, including measurement and
monitoring, developed over the past century. In the same space, how can audio
research help support safe listening? For instance, for many venues improvement to
sound systems and room acoustics are unaffordable; how can R&D across
academia and industry develop and facilitate more accessible solutions?

Find the Call for Papers here.
Submission date: Monday 26 February 2026

For more information get in touch with the SI guest editors:
Jos Mulder (The Australian National University, Australia)
jos.mulder@anu.edu.au
Annie Jamieson (National Science and Media Museum, UK)

annie.jamieson@scienceandmediamuseum.org.uk
Adam Hill (Derby University, UK)

a.hill@derby.ac.uk

 

DEGEM News – FWD – [ak-discourse] Schallimmissionsprognose

An: steffen.lepa via ak discourse
Datum: Mon, 20 Oct 2025
Betreff: [ak-discourse] Schallimmissionsprognose

 

From: ak-students-bounces@lists.tu-berlin.de <ak-students-bounces@lists.tu-berlin.de> on behalf of Lepa, Steffen <steffen.lepa@tu-berlin.de>
Sent: Monday, October 20, 2025 1:00:16 PM
To: AK-Staff <ak-staff@lists.tu-berlin.de>
Cc: AK-Studenten (ak-students@lists.tu-berlin.de) <ak-students@lists.tu-berlin.de>; ak discourse Liste <ak-discourse@lists.tu-berlin.de>
Subject: [Ak-students] Einladung zum Forschungskolloquium am 21.10.2025 / 18:00 Uhr

 

Liebe Freunde der Audiokommunikation,

 

am kommenden Dienstag den 21.10.2025, um 18:00 Uhr im Raum EN 324 präsentiert Constantin von Estorff seine Masterarbeit zum Thema:

 

„Ein klassenbasiertes Verfahren zur Schallimmissionsprognose fur kleinformatige Open-Air-Musikveranstaltungen“

 

Dazu möchten wir Sie herzlich einladen. Die Kurzzusammenfassung finden Sie am Ende dieser E-Mail.

 

Der Zoom-Link für unsere auswärtigen Gäste lautet:

 

https://tu-berlin.zoom.us/j/65356423211?pwd=33q4fHr0fhhV2WCxYDNL2LM4S2hVe2.1

 

Meeting-ID: 653 5642 3211

Kenncode: 141962

 

Mit herzlichen Grüßen

 

Steffen Lepa & Stefan Weinzierl

 

 

Constantin von Estorff: Ein klassenbasiertes Verfahren zur Schallimmissionsprognose fur kleinformatige Open-Air-Musikveranstaltungen

 

Kleine Open-Air-Musikveranstaltungen mit weniger als 400 Besucher:innen benötigen eine verlässliche Möglichkeit, die Schallimmission ihrer Beschallungsanlagen (SRS) an nahegelegenen Immissionsorten ohne akustisches Spezialwissen abzuschätzen. In der Praxis werden Lärmprognosen für diese Formate selten angewandt, und SRS-Designentscheidungen (z. B. Lautsprechermodell, Geometrie, Aufhängehöhe, Subwoofer-Anordnung) variieren stark. Die meisten Prognoseverfahren (und Softwarelösungen) erwarten detaillierte, projektspezifische Quelldaten, die Veranstalter:innen nicht ohne Weiteres bereitstellen können. Die Arbeit schließt diese Lücke, indem sie klassenbasierte Fernfeldcharakteristiken für SRS ableitet und als Quellterme in eine standardkonforme Lärmprognose (ISO 9613-2) integriert. Hierfür wurde eine Befragung Berliner Veranstalter:innen zu etablierten lärmmindernden Praktiken durchgeführt; darauf aufbauend lieferte eine Latent-Class-Analyse (LCA) eine empirisch fundierte Klassifikation von SRS-Konfigurationen. Für jede Klasse wird ein repräsentatives SRS-Layout abgeleitet, mit komplexen Direktivitätsquellen modelliert und zu einem klassenbasierten Fernfeld-Direktivitätsmuster verdichtet, das als gerichteter Quellterm in den Prognosen dient. Die Validierung bei realen Veranstaltungen zeigt, dass diese Muster die richtungsabhängige Dämpfung der SRS mit einer Genauigkeit reproduzieren, die für frühe Planung und Genehmigung ausreicht, ohne dass eine systemspezifische Simulation erforderlich ist. Aufbauend auf diesem Verfahren skizziert die Arbeit einen Workflow für eine vereinfachte verwaltungsseitige Bearbeitung von Lärmschutzanforderungen: Veranstalter:innen spezifizieren die geplante SRS-Konfiguration, diese wird einer SRS-Klasse zugeordnet, Betriebsfenster und Zielspektrum werden festgelegt und eine standardkonforme Prognose erzeugt – als praktische Grundlage für eine verschlankte Anmeldung kleiner Open-Air-Veranstaltungen.

 

 

 

Mit freundlichen Grüßen

 

Steffen Lepa

 

 

Pronomen: er/sein oder es/sein

***

Dr. Steffen Lepa

Postdoc Researcher & Lecturer

Fachgebiet Audiokommunikation (Sekr. EN-8)

 

Technische Universität Berlin

Einsteinufer 17c

10587 Berlin

Germany

 

Raum  H 2001 E

FON:  +49 (0)30 – 314 – 29313

FAX:  +49 (0)30 – 314 – 12329313

MAIL: steffen.lepa@tu-berlin.de

WWW:  https://www.tu.berlin/ak/ueber-uns/team/dr-steffen-lepa

 

SKYPE: steffenlepa

Handy/Messenger: +491794562244

***

 

DEGEM News – FWD – [ak-discourse] Einladung zum Forschungskolloquium am 21.10.2025 / 18:00 Uhr

Von: Lepa, Steffen via ak discourse
Datum: Mon, 20 Oct 2025
Betreff: [ak-discourse] Einladung zum Forschungskolloquium am 21.10.2025 / 18:00 Uhr

Liebe Freunde der Audiokommunikation,

am kommenden Dienstag den 21.10.2025, um 18:00 Uhr im Raum EN 324 präsentiert Constantin von Estorff seine Masterarbeit zum Thema:

„Ein klassenbasiertes Verfahren zur Schallimmissionsprognose fur kleinformatige Open-Air-Musikveranstaltungen“

Dazu möchten wir Sie herzlich einladen. Die Kurzzusammenfassung finden Sie am Ende dieser E-Mail.

Der Zoom-Link für unsere auswärtigen Gäste lautet:

https://tu-berlin.zoom.us/j/65356423211?pwd=33q4fHr0fhhV2WCxYDNL2LM4S2hVe2.1

Meeting-ID: 653 5642 3211
Kenncode: 141962

Mit herzlichen Grüßen

Steffen Lepa & Stefan Weinzierl

Constantin von Estorff: Ein klassenbasiertes Verfahren zur Schallimmissionsprognose fur kleinformatige Open-Air-Musikveranstaltungen

Kleine Open-Air-Musikveranstaltungen mit weniger als 400 Besucher:innen benötigen eine verlässliche Möglichkeit, die Schallimmission ihrer Beschallungsanlagen (SRS) an nahegelegenen Immissionsorten ohne akustisches Spezialwissen abzuschätzen. In der Praxis werden Lärmprognosen für diese Formate selten angewandt, und SRS-Designentscheidungen (z. B. Lautsprechermodell, Geometrie, Aufhängehöhe, Subwoofer-Anordnung) variieren stark. Die meisten Prognoseverfahren (und Softwarelösungen) erwarten detaillierte, projektspezifische Quelldaten, die Veranstalter:innen nicht ohne Weiteres bereitstellen können. Die Arbeit schließt diese Lücke, indem sie klassenbasierte Fernfeldcharakteristiken für SRS ableitet und als Quellterme in eine standardkonforme Lärmprognose (ISO 9613-2) integriert. Hierfür wurde eine Befragung Berliner Veranstalter:innen zu etablierten lärmmindernden Praktiken durchgeführt; darauf aufbauend lieferte eine Latent-Class-Analyse (LCA) eine empirisch fundierte Klassifikation von SRS-Konfigurationen. Für jede Klasse wird ein repräsentatives SRS-Layout abgeleitet, mit komplexen Direktivitätsquellen modelliert und zu einem klassenbasierten Fernfeld-Direktivitätsmuster verdichtet, das als gerichteter Quellterm in den Prognosen dient. Die Validierung bei realen Veranstaltungen zeigt, dass diese Muster die richtungsabhängige Dämpfung der SRS mit einer Genauigkeit reproduzieren, die für frühe Planung und Genehmigung ausreicht, ohne dass eine systemspezifische Simulation erforderlich ist. Aufbauend auf diesem Verfahren skizziert die Arbeit einen Workflow für eine vereinfachte verwaltungsseitige Bearbeitung von Lärmschutzanforderungen: Veranstalter:innen spezifizieren die geplante SRS-Konfiguration, diese wird einer SRS-Klasse zugeordnet, Betriebsfenster und Zielspektrum werden festgelegt und eine standardkonforme Prognose erzeugt – als praktische Grundlage für eine verschlankte Anmeldung kleiner Open-Air-Veranstaltungen.

Mit freundlichen Grüßen

Steffen Lepa

Pronomen: er/sein oder es/sein

***

Dr. Steffen Lepa

Postdoc Researcher & Lecturer

Fachgebiet Audiokommunikation (Sekr. EN-8)

Technische Universität Berlin

Einsteinufer 17c

10587 Berlin

Germany

Raum H 2001 E
FON: +49 (0)30 – 314 – 29313
FAX: +49 (0)30 – 314 – 12329313
MAIL: steffen.lepa@tu-berlin.de
WWW: https://www.tu.berlin/ak/ueber-uns/team/dr-steffen-lepa
SKYPE: steffenlepa

Handy/Messenger: +491794562244

***

DEGEM News – FWD – [ak-discourse] WG: II Seminar on Performative Research: “Sound, Interactivity and Immersion”

Von: Lepa, Steffen via ak discourse
Datum: Fri, 17 Oct 2025
Betreff: [ak-discourse] WG: II Seminar on Performative Research: “Sound, Interactivity and Immersion”

II Seminar on Performative Research: “Sound, Interactivity and Immersion”

Date: 20 January 2026
Venue: Casa de Convalescència, Autonomous University of Barcelona (UAB)

Address: Sant Pau Art Nouveau Site. C/Sant Antoni Maria Claret, 171, Barcelona, Spain

In recent years, artistic and cultural practices have increasingly embraced methodologies that foreground action, experience and human interaction with artistic objects. Performative research situates itself within this evolving landscape, emphasising the forms of knowledge that emerge from creative practice itself, and the modes of learning that arise through experimentation. This second edition of the Seminar on Performative Research seeks to explore the interconnections between sound, interactivity and immersion. It encompasses a broad field rich in synergies—from the study of music and voice to new forms of expression emerging in digital and multimedia contexts. Disciplines such as theatre, dance, cinema, video games, and audiovisual arts share the challenge of engaging audiences (or players) in immersive processes that transform the traditional relationship between artwork and spectator.

Organised by the Campus de les Arts in collaboration with the Autonomous University of Barcelona (UAB), the seminar provides a meeting point for researchers, professionals and students to open new pathways for reflection and practice in performative research.

Keynote Speakers:

Dr. Michiel Kamp (Utrecht University)
Dr. James Cook (University of Edinburgh)

Thematic strands include:

Video games and interactive experiences
Performing practices and immersion
Design, environments, and creative sound technologies.
Audiovisual, video, and sound
Sound and digital communication

Researchers are invited to submit proposals for presentations including the title of the paper, a 250-word abstract, and a short biographical note. Proposals may be submitted in English, Catalan, or Spanish. The deadline for abstract submissions is 15 November 2025, and notification of acceptance will be communicated by 30 November 2025.

Please send your proposals to: campusdelesarts@ub.edu. For any queries or further information, please contact Lidia.Lopez@uab.cat

Participation in the seminar is free and open, though prior registration is required.
A registration form for attendees will be available on the Campus de les Arts website.

DEGEM News – FWD – Organised Sound Issue 32/2 Call for Submissions: Sonic Art and the Future of Education – Cross-disciplinary perspectives

Von: Martin Supper
Datum: Mon, 6 Oct 2025
Betreff: Organised Sound Issue 32/2 Call for Submissions: Sonic Art and the Future of Education – Cross-disciplinary perspectives

ORGANISED SOUND

Call for Submissions – Volume 32, Number 2

Thematic Issue Title: Sonic Art and the Future of Education: Cross-disciplinary perspectives

Date of Publication: August 2027

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Issue co-ordinators: David Holland (d.w.holland@ucl.ac.uk) and Ross Purves (r.purves@ucl.ac.uk)

Deadline for submission: 15 September 2026

Sonic Art and the Future of Education: Cross-disciplinary perspectives

Since the 1960s there has been an ongoing relationship between the sonic arts and education. This is evident in the work of educators and composers such as R. Murray Schafer in Canada and Trevor Wishart in the UK, who were influential as community artists working on community-based music initiatives in and outside schools. More recently in the UK, there has been important research at De Montfort University around introducing sound-based music into schools. As also evidenced by a recent issue on radical education in electronic music (issue 29/2), such projects often involve innovative technology and approaches to teaching that influence practice in formal educational contexts while also highlighting social, economic and cultural issues related to inclusion (or lack thereof) in conventional music education.

This thematic issue seeks to explore how partnerships and relationships between sonic artists and educators (in both formal and informal contexts) are currently developing and asks: what contribution could sonic arts practices make, or what role could they play, in education in the future?  As lines between disciplines become more blurred, what could sonic arts practices offer and contribute to a variety of future curricula? The skills that are needed for being a sonic artist can be applied across multiple disciplines, for example as a foley artist or as a sound designer for computer games; these creative areas do not necessarily fit or align with the music curriculum currently, but could these sonic skills cross curriculum boundaries and broaden the sense of what it means to be a 21st century musician or sonic artist and the subject’s potential societal impact?

This issue seeks to explore how skills, innovation and creativity in the field of sonic arts can influence or enhance the future of education, not just in music but across a broad horizon of subject areas. Furthermore, in a field that has traditionally been dominated by white, male, middle class composers, can sonic arts education offer a more inclusive and democratic alternative to traditional approaches to music education? One of the areas that is likely to become more important and more contested in education as AI develops will be creativity. Many of the past projects run by sonic artists in education have emphasised creativity, but in the future will the creative skills that are central to composing sonic art become redundant or will they flourish? Additionally, with a resurgence in interest in analogue tools, could this sort of approach offer a welcome relief from the increasingly dominant and homogenous world of digital music making? Or what could a synthesis of digital and analogue approaches offer across a curriculum that emphasises STEM? Could this help the curriculum develop more towards a STEAM approach? Despite subject divisions that are reinforced by current political support for a knowledge-based curriculum, there is much discussion around the blurring of these divisions through cross-disciplinary partnerships. This reflects the future need for an education that fosters creativity and making across the curriculum. This could be a curriculum that understands the need for creative scientists, as well as for artists who understand the possibilities and the opportunities afforded by new technologies.

Potential topics:

Submissions may engage with, but are not limited to, the following topics in relation to sonic arts and education:

  • Collaboration
  • Community-based initiatives involving the sonic arts that point to future directions in music education
  • Innovative approaches to pedagogy using sonic art
  • Sonic creativity and its role in education
  • Acoustic ecology and the future of education
  • Cross-disciplinary partnerships involving sonic arts in educational contexts
  • Sonic arts and the STEAM curriculum
  • Teacher education involving sonic arts projects
  • Gender in sound and/or music education
  • Democracy and inclusion in sound and/or music education
  • The evolution of assessment in sound and/or music education
  • Ownership and authenticity in sound and/or music education
  • Extended reality (VR/AR/MR) in sound and/or music education

Furthermore, as always, submissions unrelated to the theme but relevant to the journal’s focus areas are always welcome.

Please note that Organised Sound seeks issue-driven submissions relevant to the journal’s readership. It does not seek artists’ statements or work/project descriptions without an underlying central question and broad contextualisation.

SUBMISSION DEADLINE: 15 September 2026

SUBMISSION FORMAT:

Notes for Contributors including how to submit on Scholar One and further details can be obtained from the inside back cover of published issues of Organised Sound or at the following url: https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/organised-sound/information/author-instructions/preparing-your-materials.

General queries should be sent to: os@dmu.ac.uk, not to the guest editor.

Accepted articles will be published online via FirstView after copy editing prior to the full issue’s publication.

Editor: Leigh Landy; Associate Editor: James Andean

Founding Editors: Ross Kirk, Tony Myatt and Richard Orton†

Regional Editors: Liu Yen-Ling (Annie), Dugal McKinnon, Raúl Minsburg, Jøran Rudi, Margaret Schedel, Barry Truax

International Editorial Board: Miriam Akkermann, Marc Battier, Manuella Blackburn, Brian Bridges, Alessandro Cipriani, Ricardo Dal Farra, Simon Emmerson, Kenneth Fields, Rajmil Fischman, Kerry Hagan, Eduardo Miranda, Garth Paine, Mary Simoni, Martin Supper, Daniel Teruggi, Ian Whalley, David Worrall, Lonce Wyse

DEGEM News- FWD – [ak-discourse] Postdoc (Interactive Media) @ MTU Cork School of Music

Von: Lepa, Steffen via ak discourse
Datum: Wed, 15 Oct 2025
Betreff: [ak-discourse] Postdoc (Interactive Media) @ MTU Cork School of Music

This Postdoc role involves hands-on immersive application development using Unity or Unreal with advanced audio integration for immersive design. Based in MTU’s state-of-the-art creative digital media and spatial audio labs, concert halls, XR facilities, and visual arts and music spaces, the postdoc will apply game engine expertise to create next-generation cultural heritage experiences. We welcome applicants with PhDs from across disciplines — including Game Design, Creative Digital Media, Music Technology, User Experience, Computing and Engineering etc. — who can demonstrate strong immersive media and user-centred development skills.

Based in the newly formed Faculty of Creative and Performing Arts & Media (CPAM) the successful applicant will lead activities, including the technical development of a 3D immersive application for cultural heritage sites and ensuring technological sustainability of any developed solution. The successful applicant will also be a key contributor in dissemination activities, future funding proposals and stakeholders. Building on existing research at MTU, the project will explore the potential of audio to enhance interactive and immersive experiences and explore how sound can be used to create inclusive, engaging and immersive experiences in a variety of contexts, from museum installations to public spaces and virtual worlds. The project aims to push the boundaries of digital storytelling and immersive design, fostering new ways of experiencing historical and cultural environments through cutting-edge technology.

 

https://www.irishjobs.ie/job/post-doctoral-researcher/munster-technological-university-job105953721

 

 

DEGEM News – FWD – [ak-discourse] Post-Doc position [MIR / Soundscape / Digital Humanities] at University of Bamberg, Germany

Von: Lepa, Steffen via ak discourse
Datum: Wed, 15 Oct 2025
Betreff: [ak-discourse] Post-Doc position [MIR / Soundscape / Digital Humanities] at University of Bamberg, Germany

Dear list.

To establish my research group at the University of Bamberg, I am looking for a postdoctoral researcher with relevant experience in research and teaching in the fields of music information retrieval or digital humanities. The successful candidate will have a strong background in audio and music processing, as well as machine learning and deep learning. The position is available immediately (application deadline 15 November).

Very good German and English skills (C1 level) are required to facilitate intensive exchange with students and other disciplines (e.g. humanities and social sciences) in Bamberg.

The full job posting (in German only) can be found here (PDF).

Please reach out if you have any questions.

Best regards,
Jakob

 


Prof. Dr. Jakob Abeßer
Professur für Computational Humanities
Otto-Friedrich-Universität Bamberg
Fakultät Wirtschaftsinformatik und Angewandte Informatik
WE5/04.113, An der Weberei 5, 96047 Bamberg
Tel.:   +49 (0) 951 863-3114
E-Mail: jakob.abesser@uni-bamberg.de

Web: https://www.uni-bamberg.de/ch/

 

DEGEM News – RADIO – Hörtipp im Oktober [Gerhardt Müller-Goldboom]

Von: Gerhardt Mueller-Goldboom
Datum: Fri, 10 Oct 2025
Betreff: Hörtipp im Oktober

12. Oktober 2025, Radio UNAM, Mexiko, um 22.00 MEZ im Live stream: http://www.radio.unam.mx

Julian Carrillo: Sinfonia 1ma Colombia (1926)

Ksenija Lukić, Mezzosopran
Gerhardt Müller-Goldboom, Dirigent
Rundfunk-Sinfonieorchester Berlin
Produktion: Deutschlandradio 2001 zur Uraufführung des Werks
Anlässlich des 150. Geburtstags und 60. Todestags des Komponisten 
Einleitend ein Gespräch zwischen Dulce Huet und dem Dirigenten
 
in der Reihe
Urein Experiencia
13Sesionesdeescucha
delCreadordelSonido13
Domingos
14h•FM
18h•AM
Hastael30denoviembre
culturaUNAM

DEGEM News – STELLENAUSSCHREIBUNG – Neue Stellenausschreibung im E-Studio der AdK

Von: Giesen, Malte
Datum: Fri, 10 Oct 2025
Betreff: Neue Stellenausschreibung im E-Studio der AdK

 

Malte Giesen
Leiter des Studios für Elektroakustische Musik
Akademie der Künste
Hanseatenweg 10
10557 Berlin
T +49(0)30  200 57-15 70
giesen@adk.de

www.adk.de

 

 

zur Wochenmitte möchten wir Sie auf unsere neue Stellenausschreibung aufmerksam machen

 

Wir suchen:

eine*n Toningenieur*in –  https://www.interamt.de/koop/app/stelle?id=1367824 – Fristende: 07.11.2025

Weitersagen ist ausdrücklich erwünscht.

 

 

 

 

DEGEM News – FWD – [ak-discourse] Freier Spatial-Audio-Online-Kurs (und bitte um Feedback)

Von: Jens Ahrens via ak discourse
Datum: Thu, 9 Oct 2025
Betreff: [ak-discourse] Freier Spatial-Audio-Online-Kurs (und bitte um Feedback)

Liebe Liste,

ich bin Teil eines kleinen Konsortiums, dass einen freien Online-Kurs zum Thema Spatial Audio erstellt hat: https://spatial-audio.acoucou.org/course/contents Es fehlen noch ein paar Case Studies, aber 90 % des Kurses sind schon online. Der Rest kommt in wenigen Wochen.

Wir hoffen, dass der Kurs sowohl für Lernende also auf Lehrende nützlich sein wird.

Alle, die sich den Kurs ansehen, bitte ich um Folgendes:

Der Qualitätssicherungsmechanismus des Kurses beinhaltet einen “Review”-Prozess, der vorsieht, dass wir über diesen Fragebogen Feedback zum Kurs einholen. Das Förderprogramm der EU, dass die Erstellung des Kurses finanziert hat, erfordert, dass wir Feedback im Umfang von 90 Antworten auf den Fragebogen einholen. Das gesamte Team und ich wären Euch unglaublich dankbar, wenn Ihr hierzu beitragen könntet!!!

Idealerweise geschieht dies bis zum 25. Oktober. Dann müssen wir nämlich die Zahlen an die EU übermitteln.

Vielen lieben Dank und mit noch lieberen Grüßen aus Göteborg
Jens


Jens Ahrens
Professor
Division of Applied Acoustics
Chalmers University of Technology
412 58 Gothenburg
Sweden
+46 (0)31 772 2210

Jens Ahrens

DEGEM News – FWD – Info für den Newsletter [Thomas Gerwin]

Von: Thomas Gerwin
Datum: Wed, 8 Oct 2025
Betreff: Info für den Newsletter

Liebe Kolleg*innen,

hier eine Info zu meiner Musik.

Herzliche Grüße, Thomas Gerwin

Sa 18. Oktober „QUEENS Tape Music Festival – world of tomorrow“ at Our House Queens, 23-71, 31th Street, Astoria, New York – Konzert #5 17 Uhr u.a. mit Thomas Gerwin „Moments musicaux mondiales“ (2025) UA www.worldoftomorrow.nyc

-- 
::
T h o m a s . G e r w i n
Komponist und Klangkünstler
www.thomasgerwin.de

DEGEM News – BERLIN – DO:Audiovisionen – Bella Wakame = Andi Haberl (The Notwist) + Florian Zimmer (Driftmachine)

Von: Hannes Teichmann
Datum: Tue, 7 Oct 2025
Betreff: DO:Audiovisionen – Bella Wakame = Andi Haberl (The Notwist) + Florian Zimmer (Driftmachine)

Ihr Lieben / Dear lovely people,

ich freue mich sehr, Euch zur kommenden Audiovisionen in den Kulturraum Zwingli-Kirche einzuladen, wo Andi Haberl (von The Notwist) und Florian Zimmer (von Driftmachine) mit erweiterten Drums und modularen Synthesizern, als Bella Wakame, spielen werden.

i am delighted to invite you to the upcoming Audiovisions at the ZwingliKirche cultural centre, when Andi Haberl (from The Notwist) and Florian Zimmer (from Driftmachine) will perform live with extended Drums and Modular Synths as Bella Wakame.

Herzlich / warmly,

Hannes Teichmann
Audiovisionen Gebrüder Teichmann / Kulturraum Zwingli-Kirche

Audiovisionen @ Kulturraum Zwingli-Kirche e.V.
Danneckerstrasse Ecke Rudolfstrasse, 10245 Berlin
Einlass 20 Uhr / Beginn 20.20 Uhr

09.10.2025 – Audiovisionen: Bella Wakame
https://www.kulturraum-zwinglikirche.de/audiovisionen-wakame.html
https://www.facebook.com/events/1488845555873457

Andi Haberl (von The Notwist) und Florian Zimmer (von Driftmachine) sind Bella Wakame.
Basierend auf dem impulsiven, treibenden Zusammenspiel von Drums/Sensory Percussion und Modularsynthesizer führen die rasenden, frei geformten Improvisationen in völlig neue Dimensionen – Klangwelten, die so gar nicht nach ihren anderen musikalischen Outputs klingen:
https://bellawakame.bandcamp.com/album/bella-wakame

Videos:
Shades of Nambei: https://youtu.be/bk-HTXsLtuQ
Manga Bois: https://youtu.be/X5ATb1wdSuo

Perkussionsinstrumente treffen auf modulare Synthesizer – was auf dem Papier nach monochromen Klangwelten klingt, erweist sich beim Debütalbum des Berliner Duos Bella Wakame als ziemliche Wundertüte. Ihre 2023 erschienene Debütsingle »Toutpartout PT2« hatte noch eine eher repetitive Anmutung – ein blubberndes Kräuseln, unter dem man nie so recht wusste, was an der Oberfläche lauert. Ihr selbstbetiteltes Debütalbum (Umor-Rex 2025) hingegen steckt voller soghafter Melodien und wunderbar elektroakustischer Texturen, die immer wieder unbekümmert zerlegt werden.
Fürs Schlagzeug und die sensorische Perkussion ist Andi Haberl zuständig – bekannt als Drummer von The Notwist, zuletzt auch mit seinem wunderbar warmen, luftigen Soloalbum als SUN in Erscheinung getreten. Florian Zimmer bringt sein Händchen für modulare Synthesizer unter anderem in das groovende Trio Saroos ein. Mit Andreas Gerth entwirft er als Driftmachine raumgreifende Soundscapes. Bei Bella Wakame kommen all diese Qualitäten zusammen – und verschmelzen zu etwas sehr Eigenem.
Man hört zarte Einflüsse von Neu!, Can oder dem Nippon-Projekt World Standard, doch wie dann alles zusammenfließt, das ist einzigartig unverbraucht. Pulsierend, locker und kraftvoll, auch kleine experimentelle Klangflächen blitzen auf, um letztlich in schwingenden Songstrukturen aufzugehen

upcoming:

13.11.2025 – Audiovisionen: Marja Burchard + Gebrüder Teichmann
https://www.kulturraum-zwinglikirche.de/audiovisionen-burchard.html
https://www.facebook.com/events/1322490572550004

Drei Geschwister im Geiste, zeitgleich aufgewachsen in ähnlichen Kosmen, geprägt von Ihren Musiker-Vätern und der freien Münchner Musikszene der 68er Jahre.
Die Multi-Instrumentalistin Marja Burchhard (Embryo) und die Elektronik-Musiker Andi und Hannes Teichmann (Gebrüder Teichmann) lieben es gemeinsam zu improvisieren und die Grenzen zwischen akustischen und elektronischen Klängen, zwischen Aktion und Reaktion, zu bereisen.

 

DEGEM News – FWD – [ak-discourse] WG: Call for chapters to a book on the platformization of music production

Von: Lepa, Steffen via ak discourse
Datum: Tue, 27 May 2025
Betreff: [ak-discourse] WG: Call for chapters to a book on the platformization of music production

 

Call for chapters to a book on the platformization of music production

 

We hereby invite contributions to a volume on how contemporary platforms of music production are developed and what their significance is for music making. The initiative is inspired by the presentations and discussions at the Symposium on the platformization of music production that we hosted at the University of Oslo in May 2025.

 

We invite chapter contributions that explore platformization in terms of the technological platforms as well as implications for “platformized” creative practice. We are currently in dialogue with a renowned university press, aiming to complete the book in 2026.

 

A starting point for exploring platforms of music is the definition of “platform” as a “raised level surface on which people or things can stand” (Oxford English Dictionary). The term has been associated with networked services that are able to accommodate a growing range of users and somehow transform the relationship between them (e.g. Gillespie, 2010). The notion of a platformization of music making has perhaps primarily been associated with distribution services, such as Spotify, and the way songwriting is influenced by recommendation systems and mood-based playlists that promotes listening (e.g. Morris 2020, Kiberg 2023). Recent research, however, has also engaged with the platformization of production resources, including online services offering automated mastering (Landr; see Sterne and Razlogova 2020) or royalty-free samples (Splice; see Arrieta 2021).

 

Digital audio workstations (DAWs), such as Apple’s Logic Pro or Ableton’s Live, increasingly resemble what Foxman (2019) calls “platform tools,” which are “integral to the entire production process” and able to “act as an intermediary between industries and platforms.” These technologies increasingly offer opportunities of online production and real-time collaboration while also providing networked distribution facilities (e.g. Kjus 2024). Social media platforms, such as TikTok, are also integrating creative and distributive activities in new ways, while AI-based platforms offer new opportunities (and challenges) for music producers as well as consumers of music.

 

For this volume, we encourage multiple approaches to the platformization of music production, including the “intricate interplay” between platforms and users, and its cultural, social and economic aspects (see Nieborg and Poell 2018). Platforms have the appeal of being able to support a growing range of people and practices and to somehow transform the relationship between them, for instance within the field of do-it-yourself musicking. Research has, however, increasingly engaged with who and what platforms actually support and how interactions and practices might be organized to the benefit of certain interests over others. We want to inspire further research by drawing attention to the rise of music platforms as platforms of production and to the evolving range of digital and networked tools and services that in various ways facilitate and restrict contemporary music making and creative audio work.

 

We invite theoretical, empirical, analytical, critical and conceptual contributions on topics including, but not restricted to:

  • The development of contemporary technologies and platforms of production, including digital audio workstations, plugins, AI tools, sample libraries, etc.
  • Relations between production and distribution platforms, and their joint influence on music making.
  • The platformization of creative practices and changing competency requirements, for instance for songwriters and producers.
  • The extension of platforms across sectors and markets of music. What kinds of labor relations and roles do platforms of production invite?
  • The collection and use of data through platforms, including potential implications for creative practice (including ethical and legal issues).
  • The use of artificial intelligence in existing and emerging platforms.
  • Emerging complimentary platforms and services, from specialized AI mastering tools (e.g. Landr) to aggregate services (e.g. Splice). Do we see the contours of a platform ecosystem of music making?
  • The significance of platforms of production for music making and sound design in audiovisual media (including interactive video games).
  • The influence of platforms of production on the economy and business of music making.
  • The influence of platforms of production on musical expression and aesthetics.
  • Platformization and challenges to established notions of creativity, ownership and copyright.
  • Sociopolitical implications of the use of different kinds of platforms, including diversity in music production culture and practice.

 

We plan on organizing the book around the following aspects of the platformization of music production: 1) Production for distribution platforms (e.g. music production for streaming), 2) Social media music production (e.g. music making on TikTok, YouTube, etc.), 3) The use music production software (e.g. creative use of DAWs and other tools), and 4) The development of platforms for music production (e.g. development, design and marketing of DAWs, plug-ins, sample libraries, AI tools, etc.).

 

Abstract submission: Please send extended abstracts to emil.kraugerud@imv.uio.no by Wednesday June 25. The abstracts should be up to 1000 words, and should include:

  • Chapter title
  • Specification of topic and research question
  • Methods and theoretical approach
  • How you see your chapter contributing to the study of the platformization of music production
  • Your full name and current affiliation

 

Responses to the abstracts will be given by the end of August. We will then also provide a more detailed description of the requirements and timeline of the book.

 

Best regards,

 

Yngvar Kjus, Professor of Music and Contemporary Media at the Dept. of Musicology, University of Oslo

Emil Kraugerud, Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Dept. of Musicology, University of Oslo

 

This initiative is part of the PLATFORM project, funded by the Research Council of Norway.

 

DEGEM News – FWD – Recommended concerts in June | 1 week until Kiezsalon Opening Weekend

Von: Kiezsalon by Digital in Berlin
Datum: Fri, 23 May 2025
Betreff: Recommended concerts in June | 1 week until Kiezsalon Opening Weekend