Von: Peter Wiessenthaner
Datum: Sun, 23 Mar 2025
Betreff: Internationaler Tag des offenen Hackspace 2025 – Spiel mit meinem Instrument
Click for more info:
https://degemnewsplus.blogspot.com/2025/03/fwd-internationaler-tag-des-offenen.html
Von: Peter Wiessenthaner
Datum: Sun, 23 Mar 2025
Betreff: Internationaler Tag des offenen Hackspace 2025 – Spiel mit meinem Instrument
Click for more info:
https://degemnewsplus.blogspot.com/2025/03/fwd-internationaler-tag-des-offenen.html
Von: Marc Voigt
Datum: Fri, 21 Mar 2025
Betreff: [ak-discourse] Einladung zum Forschungskolloquium am 25.03.2025 / 17:00 Uhr
Liebe Freunde der Audiokommunikation,
am kommenden Dienstag, den 25.03.2025, um 17:00 Uhr im Raum EN 324 präsentieren Marcel Klein und Kristof Konya ihre Masterarbeiten zum Thema:
„Einflussfaktoren für die wahrgenommene Halligkeit von Räumen“ und „The design and development of an analog tunable TR-808 kick drum“
Dazu möchten wir Sie herzlich einladen. Die Kurzzusammenfassungen finden Sie am Ende dieser E-Mail.
Der Zoom-Link für unsere auswärtigen Gäste lautet:
tu-berlin.zoom.us/j/65356423211
Meeting-ID: 653 5642 3211
Kenncode: 141962
Mit herzlichen Grüßen
Marc Voigt & Stefan Weinzierl
—
Marcel Klein: Einflussfaktoren für die wahrgenommene Halligkeit von Räumen
Die Nachhallzeit T30 gilt im Allgemeinen als guter Prädiktor für die wahrgenommene Halligkeit von Räumen. Die hohe Korrelation der beiden Größen wurde jedoch nur in Räumen mit ähnlichem Volumen und Nachhallzeit nachgewiesen. Außerdem ist bekannt, dass unterschiedlich große Räume trotz gleicher Nachhallzeit verschiedene Halligkeitsempfindungen erzeugen und der Zusammenhang zwischen der Wahrnehmung und der Nachhallzeit nicht linear ist. In dieser Arbeit wird der Einfluss raumakustischer und architektonischer Parameter auf die wahrgenommene Halligkeit von Räumen untersucht. Hierfür wurde mit existierenden, nachhallfreien Produktionen von Musik und Sprache und der raumakustischen Simulation von binauralen Impulsantworten eine Datenbank von Räumen mit großer Varianz erzeugt. Durch einen Hörversuch mit dynamischer Binauralsynthese und einem eigens entwickelten User Interface wurden anschließend Daten erhoben, auf deren Grundlage sich sowohl lineare als auch nichtlineare Abhängigkeiten der wahrgenommenen Halligkeit von den maßgeblichen Einflussgrößen ermitteln ließen. Die Ergebnisse bestätigen, dass der Zusammenhang mit der Nachhallzeit stark nichtlinear ist und dass sich die Vorhersagekraft der Modelle durch die Hinzunahme des Raumvolumens als Prädiktor deutlich verbessern lässt.
Kristof Konya: The design and development of an analog tunable TR-808 kick drum
This paper examines the Roland TR-808 bass drum, a staple in electronic music genres like Hip Hop and Techno. While the original instrument from 1980 had no control over the bass drums pitch, various music genres are presented that use the TR-808 bass drum in a tonal matter and thus showcase a need for tunability. Several electrical approaches are discussed to realize this behavior in the analog circuit domain. A novel approach is showcased based on an integrated circuit in a feedback control loop. The implementation of this approach is compared to a state of the art product with analytical frequency detection techniques. The novel electrical circuitry is then embedded in a music instrument that enables the 808 to be tunable and furthermore extends the original instrument’s sonic possibilities to the needs of modern music production. The design and implementation of the instrument were approached within the perspective of holistic instrument design.
—
Marc Voigt
IT-Administration
Technische Universität Berlin
Fakultät I – Geistes- und Bildungswissenschaften
Institut für Sprache und Kommunikation
Fachgebiet Audiokommunikation
Faculty I – Humanities and Educational Sciences
Institute of Speech and Communication
Audio Communication Group
Einsteinufer 17c, 10587 Berlin
GERMANY
Telefon: +49 (0)30 314-25557
Telefax: +49 (0)30 314-21143
marc.voigt@tu-berlin.de
www.tu.berlin/ak
Von: Presse Monheim Triennale
Datum: Thu, 20 Mar 2025
Betreff: Monheim Triennale gibt Programm bekannt / Film-Trailer / Tagestickets
Click for more info:
https://degemnewsplus.blogspot.com/2025/03/fwd-monheim-triennale-gibt-programm.html
Von: Hein, Nicola Leonard
Datum: Thu, 20 Mar 2025
Betreff: Technische Leitung Sound Arts & Creative Music Technology – Musikhochschule Lübeck – 31.03.2025
Click for more info:
https://degemnewsplus.blogspot.com/2025/03/stellenausschreibung-technische-leitung.html
Von: Hanns Holger Rutz
Datum: Wed, 19 Mar 2025
Betreff: JOB – Universitätsassistenz Klang und Intermedia, GMPU Klagenfurt
Liebe DEGEM,
bei uns in Klagenfurt gibt es wieder einmal eine interessante Mittelbaustelle im Bereich Klang(kunst) und Intermedia, mit Fokus auf künstlerischer Forschung: https://gmpu.ac.at/uploads/jobs/Ausschreibung_wkP_UnivAss-KIM-mit-AR.pdf – Bewerbungsfrist 27.04.2025. Gerne an potentielle Interessent*innen weiterleiten.
Beste Grüße
Hanns Holger Rutz
—
Univ.-Prof. Dr. Hanns Holger Rutz (he/him)
Artistic Research
Gustav Mahler Privatuniversität für Musik (GMPU)
Mießtaler Straße 8, 9020 Klagenfurt, AT
E hanns-holger.rutz@gmpu.ac.at
T +43 50536 16576
Simultaneous Arrivals (FWF AR 714-G)
https://simularr.net
Von: HELLERAU – Europäisches Zentrum der Künste
Datum: Sat, 15 Mar 2025
Betreff: Musik, Tanz und große Vorfreude
Click for more info:
https://degemnewsplus.blogspot.com/2025/03/fwd-musik-tanz-und-groe-vorfreude.html
Von: Presse Monheim Triennale
Datum: Thu, 13 Mar 2025
Betreff: Projekt 2035 / Reminder Pressegespräch / From the Vault
Click for more info:
https://degemnewsplus.blogspot.com/2025/03/fwd-projekt-2035-reminder.html
Von: weekly ausland newsletter
Datum: Mon, 10 Mar 2025
Betreff: [ausland depesche] Minute/Year | All The Rivers Dance Residencies | Kapustin revisited
Hello / Hallo!
die kommenden Veranstaltugen im Ausland:
coming soon in Ausland:
—
Wednesday, 01 January, 2025 – 00:01
Minute/Year
Minute/Year is an automated, process-based, durational work, in which sound is played, recorded, and layered, in a resonant space, for one minute each day. This process has been ongoing, daily, since 2016. For the whole of 2025, the work is installed in ausland.
https://ausland.berlin/de/event/minute-year
—
—
Friday, 21 March, 2025 – 10:00
All The Rivers Dance Residencies Open Call
Das ausland bietet Residenzen für Gruppen von 3 bis 5 Personen an. Ihr bekommt Proben- und Produktionszeit, ein Stipendium von 2000 € pro Person und künstlerische und technische Unterstützung bei der Recherche und Umsetzung Eures Projekts.
The link to the call in DGS and in easy german can be found here:
https://ausland.berlin/de/event/all-the-rivers-dance-residencies-open-call
—
Saturday, 29 March, 2025 – 19:30
“Kapustin revisited“ Roman Rofalski & Paulina Sofie Kissnew /Chasys
Door 19:00 / Concerts 19:30 / Tickets (Only at door) 10 – 15 euro
Roman Rofalski // Paulina Sofie Kiss Kapustin revisited “Kapustin revisited” is a duo project remixing the music of Ukrainian composer Nikolai Kapustin, who – in Sovjet days – developed a unique and compositional approach to American jazz. His music is dense journey into a jazz idiom abandoning all improvisational aspects for rhythmic and harmonical complexity. Berlin-based pianist Roman Rofalski has been dealing with Kapustin’s music intensively. In 2018, he recorded “the Kapustin project” (Sony Classical) with a focus on pieces of the 1980s, putting them aside own compositions and contemporaries. Now, together with Paulina Sofie Kiss on modularsynth, the two musicians try capturing the essence of Kapustin’s works, chunks of melodic and harmonic content, slowing it down to show its beauty, re-arranging everything into a state of live-electronic improvisation, spicing it up with drones, samples, glitches and post-contemporary beats. https://www.instagram.com/romanrofalski/ http://www.romanrofalski.com/ http://paulinasofiekiss.de/ https://romanrofalski.bandcamp.com/ Chasys is Ariel Schlichter’s ambient, electronic & experimental project. Each release focuses on different techniques and concepts, which range from the fully ambient, field-recording and found sounds based ‘Tunnel Mountain’ to the generative sequenced ‘Decomposition Method’ through the story-driven soundtrack-inspired ‘Neo CABA 2’, the modular experiment ‘Digital Voltage’ and the live-recorded releases ‘Abajo’ & ‘Resume Game’. Chasys’ live set incorporates elements from several of these experiences through a system that allows for a constant stream of improvisation and loop manipulation that feedbacks upon itself for a constant, un-repeating soundscape exploration, at times fully ambient, at others verging on techno or on hypnotic sequences. Computers, cassette tapes, custom MIDI controllers and FX pedals all intersect to create an ever changing experience.
https://ausland.berlin/de/event/kapustin-revisited-roman-rofalski-paulina-sofie-kissnew-chasys
—
And remember, our aim is to support artists in producing and developing their work. Our space is available for rehearsals, recordings and meetings. We host workshops and residencies, produce podcasts and music videos and previously produced a monthly radio show. The space is small (70 sqm / 5 m high), with wooden flooring, concrete walls, and windows, the room is soundproof.
We have professional sound, lighting and video equipment.
ausland
Lychener Str. 60
10437 Berlin
S + U Bahn Schoenhauser Allee
Tram 12 Raumer Strasse
N 52 Eberswalder Str
+49 (0)30 44 77 008
___
ausland *depesche* https://ausland.berlin
…
Von: Ute Wassermann
Datum: Fri, 14 Mar 2025
Betreff: Newsletter 01/25
Click for more info:
https://degemnewsplus.blogspot.com/2025/03/fwd-newsletter-0125-ute-wassermann.html
Von: Lepa, Steffen via ak discourse
Datum: Wed, 12 Mar 2025
Betreff: [ak-discourse] CfP „Hands On Sonic Skills“
Dear Colleagues,
please consider the following call for our international conference in upcoming December 2025:
Hands on Sonic Skills
Practical experiential approaches to sound, music, and media in musicological education
Conference on December 11 & 12, 2025
Martin-Luther-University Halle-Wittenberg, Department of Musicology
Keynotes: Andreas Fickers and Joanna Szczepańska-Antosik
Call for Papers / Abstract
Media and technologies for synthesis, recording, processing, and distribution of sound have become important subjects of music research. Examples include the history of sound recording (Sterne 2003, Katz 2010, Horning 2013, Bennett 2019), the significance of technical devices in music scenes (Theberge 1997, Butler 2014, Herbst/Menze 2021), or musical analysis oriented toward sound and music production processes (Zagorsky-Thomas 2016, Hepworth-Sawyer et al. 2019).
Across the intersection of musicology, media studies, sound studies, and other disciplines, new disciplinary branches such as Music Production Research (Bennett & Bates 2019; Bourbon & Zagorski 2020) have emerged, which have developed their own theoretical approaches and methods for researching recorded and technically mediated music. Today, knowledge of audio-technical processes and a sensory sensitivity for the design of sound are no longer regarded merely as engineering expertise, but as part of cultural practices that shape musical activity from the ground up and must therefore also be part of musicological questions and knowledge.
Such knowledge is often implicit, ‚tacit knowledge‘ and therefore observable as practice or musical action. Therefore, ethnographic, praxeological, and artistic research methods are particularly frequently applied in this field, for example in the form of field research (Bürkner 2013; Bates 2017; Huschner 2016), reenactments (Fickers/van den Oever 2022; Meynell 2017), and media experiments in artistic research (Badura et al 2015, van der Heijden/Kolkowski 2023). These approaches suggest that in many cases observations informed by one’s own experiential practical approaches aid in gaining a deeper understanding of media-cultural-musicological phenomena.
This shift is also taking root in musicological teaching, for instance in new chairs, module regulations, and degree programs. At locations such as Bonn, Oldenburg, Berlin (HU), Lüneburg, Hildesheim, and Halle (Saale), as well as in London, Agder, Huddersfield, or Concordia, recording studio technology, synthesizers, DIY electronics, and Digital Audio Workstations are becoming essential elements of musicological education. The practical engagement with sound and its production contexts ranges from the history of the tape recorder to introductory courses in miking and mixing techniques to listening sessions that focus on the sonic design of ›produced music.‹ This engagement often takes place in university-owned recording studios. These ›toolscapes‹ of music production prove to be particularly suitable places for practice-oriented learning. (King & Hemonides 2016).
The conference brings together a cross-section of materially and practically oriented research and teaching and offers space for discussions on how current scientific and didactic approaches can benefit from each other.
This raises the following questions:
(1) Which basic practical sound knowledge should be part of a musicological education? What is the relationship between scientific (musical acoustics) and music-psychological approaches (sound perception, auditory physiology) and research centered on cultural aspects such as sound studies or pop musical analysis? What forms of implicit or ›embodied‹ knowledge, what practical abilities in handling analog and digital audio technology, and what systematic training of technical hearing or critical listening skills are required for sound and music analysis today?
(2) How can these contents be integrated into the framework of academic education in a contemporary and didactically meaningful way without becoming too superficial or too specialized? What role does the relationship between in-person teaching and digital learning offerings play? What methods and ideas for seminar or semester structures exist? We will present our own procedures and learning formats in the beta version of our hybrid teaching platform METRONOM, on which, in addition to a module for technical ear training for musicologists, we provide material and instructions for the experiential-practical teaching of sound (technologies) and music media works in classroom teaching, especially in forms of re-enactment.
(3) How relevant are sound and media technologies as aspects of musical design not only for contemporary musicological education but also for practice-oriented professional fields? What knowledge is required in journalistic fields such as radio, press, and online media, in curatorial and museal contexts, in concert and theater, archives, publishing, and music management?
(4) How should the recording studio be set up as a learning space for musicology? How can it help students gain a deeper understanding of production processes in the context of sound technologies without overloading the learning process? Which ‚toolscapes‘ offer inspiring environments for sound-related project work? What didactic as well as practical-technical challenges should be considered in this special learning environment?
We invite you to submit proposals for individual presentations, panels, workshops, and posters related, but not restricted to, the following topics:
· Technical ear training / Critical listening skills
· Musical applications of recording technology
· Handling of time- and style-specific devices and production environments (Multitrack, MPCs, Push, etc.)
· Elaboration and performance of electroacoustic and experimental music in teaching
· Experiential/practical approaches in sound studies
· Artistic research in music and sound art
· Modular synthesizers in teaching
· Sound description and language in music analysis
· Use of digital tools in musicological sound and music analysis (Sonic Visualizer, etc.)
· Realization/production of recordings as student research in the studio
· Hybrid formats and use of digital learning platforms
· Higher education didactic methods related to audio technology
· Historically and culturally comparative perspectives on the above questions
We explicitly understand ›Hands on Sonic Skills‹ as a learning, working, and workshop conference. Therefore, we ask you to consider organizing workshops (60-90 min) focusing on special teaching methods or topics, in addition to classical presentations (20 min + 10 min discussion) and joint panels (90 min). A poster session will provide the opportunity to exchange ideas about methods, didactics, and individual student projects. Smaller technical experiments and setups are explicitly encouraged.
The conference is organized as part of the educational research project METRONOM – Media Transformation of Musical Knowledge (2024-2026). Funding is provided by FREIRAUM financed by the BMBF and administered by the Foundation for Innovation in Higher Education (STIL). The conference is organized at the research section Music and Media, headed by Prof. Dr. Golo Föllmer. Team: Alan van Keeken, Sebastian Schwesinger, Lukas Iden, and Katja Lux.
Conference languages are German and English. Participation is free of charge.
Please send your abstract (max. 400 words) and CV (max. 100 words) by April 30, 2025, indicating your preferred format, to alan.van-keeken@musikwiss.uni-halle.de
Literatur/e:
Badura, Jens et al (2015): Künstlerische Forschung. Ein Handbuch, Zürich/Berlin.
Bates, Eliot (2016), Digital tradition: Arrangement and labor in Istanbul’s recording studio culture, New York.
Bennett, Samantha and Bates, Eliot (2018), ‘The Production of Music and Sound: A Multidisciplinary Critique’, in Bennett and Bates (eds), Critical Approaches to the Production of Music and Sound, New York, pp. 1–22.
Bennett, Samantha (2019), Modern Records, Maverick Methods: Technology and Process in Popular Music Record Production 1978-2000, New York.
Bourbon, Andrew and Zagorski-Thomas, Simon (eds) (2020), The Bloomsbury Handbook of Music Production., New York.
Bürkner, Hans-Joachim (2013): Trackproduktion als Trial and Error? in: Bürkner et al (eds): Akustisches Kapital. Wertschöpfung in der Musikwirtschaft, Bielefeld, pp. 45-98.
Butler, Mark J. (2014), Playing with something that runs: Technology, improvisation, and composition in DJ and laptop performance, Oxford.
Fickers, Andreas and van der Oever, Annie (2022), Doing Experimental Media Archaeology, Berlin/Boston.
Herbst, Jan Peter and Menze, Jonas (2021), Gear Aquisition Syndrome: Consumption of Instruments and Technology in Popular Music, Huddersfield.
Hepworth-Sawyer, Russ, Hodgson, Jay and Marrington, Mark (eds) (2019), Producing music. Perspectives on music production series, New York.
Huschner, Roland (2016), „[…] if it would be me producing the song…“: Eine Studie zu den Prozessen in Tonstudios der populären Musikproduktion, Humboldt-Universität Berlin.
Katz, Mark (2010), Capturing Sound: How Technology Has Changed Music, London.
King, Andrew and Himonides, Evangelos (eds) (2016), Music, Technology, and Education: Critical Perspectives, London and New York.
Meynell, Anthony (2017), How Recording Studios Used Technology to Invoke the Psychedelic Experience: The difference in staging techniques in British and American recordings in the late 1960s, London.
Rosati, Tommaso and Hsu, Timothy (2025), Play with Sound: Manual for Electronic Musicians and Other Sound Explorers, London.
Schmidt-Horning, Susan (2013), Chasing Sound: Technology, Culture and the Art of Recording from Edison to the L.P, Baltimore.
Sterne, Jonathan (2003), The Audible Past: Cultural Origins of Sound Reproduction., Durham.
Théberge, Paul (1997), Any Sound you can imagine: Making Music/Consuming Technology, Hanover.
van der Heijden, Tim and Kolkowski, Alexander (2023), Doing Experimental Media Archeology, Berlin/Boston.
Zagorski-Thomas, Simon (2016), ‘An Analysis of Space, Gesture and Interaction in Kings of Leon’s Sex on Fire’, in Moore, von Appen and Doehring (eds), Song Interpretation in 21st-Century Pop Music, London, pp. 115–33.
You may leave the IASPM mailing list at any time by sending a blank email to: IASPMLIST-signoff-request@LISTSERV.LIV.AC.UK.
Von: Lepa, Steffen
Datum: Mon, 10 Mar 2025
Betreff: [ak-discourse] Conference Call: Society for Music Production Research 2nd Annual Conference (Sep 2025)
Society for Music Production Research 2nd Annual Conference
Date: September 11-13, 2025
Location: University of Victoria, Sŋéqə ʔéʔləŋ (Sngequ House), Victoria, BC V8P 5C2, Canada
Deadline for proposals: midnight (UTC) March 14, 2025
Take Two: Expanding the Field of Music Production Research
Building on the success of the inaugural SMPR conference, we now turn our focus to Canada’s west coast, a region where the extraordinary natural environment inspires us to push boundaries and explore new ideas. It’s time for take two!
Using Victoria’s ecological diversity and soaring landscape as a metaphor, we have chosen three themes to map out research directions for Music Production Research (MPR): equity, diversity and inclusion; social responsibility; and innovation. We want to explore these themes both from within the MPR community, and also by turning our collective creativity outwards. At this conference, we aim to test the limits of conventional thought by fostering discussions about how music production and research can, broadly speaking, make a positive social impact.
Paper Submissions:
We encourage proposals from both researchers and practitioners that respond to our themes of equity, diversity and inclusion; social responsibility, and innovation, as well as, those that cover the length and breadth of music production, its research and practice. Possible topics for proposals may include but are not limited to:
Conference Panels and Workshop:
To address our main themes, we have curated three panels and one workshop. These events will spotlight leading voices from the academic, industry and nonprofit sectors, and illuminate the following areas:
Moderated and presented by academic leaders and emerging stars from within the field of music production research: Allison Sokil (MacEwan University)1, Nyssim Lefford (Luleå University of Technology)2, Timothy Anne Burnside (Smithsonian Institute)3 , and Philippe Pasquier (Simon Fraser University)4; these events will look towards the future, challenge expectations regarding contemporary music production, and we hope, inspire new research directions and collaborations.
Speculative Solutions Challenge:
By this point it should be obvious that we seek to shake things up, and we recognize that bold exploration demands a kind of inventiveness that does not always rest comfortably in a traditional peer-review process. We want to make this conference a safe place to speculate – yes, really, speculate – about how music production can help build a more equitable, socially responsible and innovative world.
To make room for breaking new ground, in addition to standard, peer-reviewed paper submissions, we are offering a Speculative Solutions challenge based on the conference’s main themes. This is an opportunity to go a bit wild (like the Victoria landscape), present a vision for the future, and get feedback on the ideas from interested and knowledgeable colleagues. Speculations might involve new business models, (music production) technology solutions, organised actions, etc. Regardless, contextualise the proposed solution in a critical framework. In keeping with the spirit of speculation, submissions will be evaluated by domain experts who appreciate the goals of the challenge.
We want to make it easy to speculate. Submissions should take the form of an extended abstract, no more than 300 words, that explains the following:
The abstract may be accompanied by images or diagrams.
Three submissions from each category (DEI, Sustainability or Innovation) will be chosen for presentation at the SMPR conference in Victoria. Presentation at the conference will consist of a poster session (a poster should be created for the conference) and an opportunity to make a 10-minute oral presentation about the idea. The poster may be accompanied by audio or video. However, presenters should be prepared to play this media off their own laptops as a/v equipment may not be available for the poster sessions. All submitted speculations will be evaluated by topic area experts who are participants in the conference’s panels or workshop. These experts will choose the top three for their respective themes.
Please submit proposals via this link by midnight (UTC) March 14, 2025.
Submission types:
About SMPR:
The Society for Music Production Research is dedicated to building knowledge and dialogue among practitioners and scholars related to all aspects of music production. SMPR promotes research, publication, and networking among scholars and practitioners in the domains of creation, technologies, historical and industry contexts, aesthetics, and reception. The field is broad and includes all aspects of music production.
SMPR encourages multidisciplinary and intersectional engagement between its members, the music production industry, researchers, and related organizations and seeks to reinforce how research in music production impacts educators and students, while providing and encouraging a supportive space where members can contribute genuinely and sincerely by actively working to negate practices that perpetuate systems of oppression and exclusivity.
About the University of Victoria:
The University of Victoria Campus is located on the traditional lands of the Lǝḱwǝŋǝn peoples, and the Songhees, Esquimalt and WSÁNEĆ peoples whose historical relationships with the land continue to this day. We are privileged to do our work in a way that is inspired by their history, customs, and culture.
Located on the southern tip of Vancouver Island in beautiful British Columbia, Canada, the University of Victoria is one of Canada’s top-tier research-intensive universities. As an internationally renowned hub for teaching and research, we tackle essential issues that matter to people, places, and the planet. Our location within the Pacific Rim fosters a passion for exploration, and this extraordinary environment inspires us to defy boundaries, discover, and innovate in exciting ways. We live, learn, work, and explore at the edge of what’s next.
The UVic School of Music is dedicated to experiential learning and training for musicians and music scholars, turning passion into profession. The School is home to 45 performers, composers, educators, theorists, musicologists, and professional staff, as well as 190 undergraduate majors and 40 graduate students. We offer Bachelor of Music degrees in composition, music education, performance, musicology and sound studies, and musical arts along with a combined degree in Music and Computer Science and a Bachelor of Arts in Music. The School offers graduate degrees in composition, performance, musicology and sound studies, and music technology. We are strongly committed to inclusive excellence and equity and to increasing the diversity of approaches and perspectives in teaching, research, and creative output. In 2021 the school hosted AUDIO+: A Research Forum to Transform our Traditions.
Conference Venue: Sŋéqə ʔéʔləŋ (Sngequ House), built to Passive House and Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) V4 Gold certifications.
Please note:
All conference presenters must be SMPR members by the time they register for the conference. For membership information visit: SMPR Membership.
Please spread this CfC widely throughout your own personal networks: https://bit.ly/SMPR2025CfC
Conference committee:
Source and more information: https://musicproductionresearch.org/victoria-2025
Von: Akademie der Künste
Datum: Thu, 6 Mar 2025
Betreff: 26.-29.6.: KONTAKTE 2025 – Festival für Elektroakustische Musik und Klangkunst
Click for more info:
https://degemnewsplus.blogspot.com/2025/03/berlin-26-296-kontakte-2025-festival.html
Von: Presse Monheim Triennale
Datum: Thu, 6 Mar 2025
Betreff: Monheim Papers / Hotel Angebot / Restplätze für Hauskonzert
Click for more info:
https://degemnewsplus.blogspot.com/2025/03/fwd-monheim-papers-hotel-angebot.html
Von: Lepa, Steffen via ak discourse
Datum: Thu, 27 Feb 2025
Betreff: [ak-discourse] Organised Sound – Call for papers: Embedding Algorithms in Music and Sound Art (2nd call)
…
(apologies for cross-posting, please circulate)
Here is the second call for papers for the thematic issue of Organised Sound on the topic of Embedding Algorithms in Music and Sound Art.
Please find the full call below and on the journal’s website:
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/organised-sound/announcements/call-for-papers/call-embedding-algorithms-in-music-and-sound-art
Feel free to share it with others who might be interested in contributing.
We look forward to receiving your submissions!
Best regards,
Federico Visi
Intelligent Instruments Lab – University of Iceland
GEMM))) Gesture Embodiment and Machines in Music – Luleå University of Technology
Wearable Computing – Universität der Künste Berlin
www.federicovisi.com
Call for Submissions – Volume 31, Number 2
Issue thematic title: Embedding Algorithms in Music and Sound Art
Date of Publication: August 2026
Publishers: Cambridge University Press
Issue co-ordinators: Federico Visi (mail@federicovisi.com), Thor Magnusson (thormagnusson@hi.is)
Deadline for submission: 15 September 2025
Embedding Algorithms in Music and Sound Art
Embedding algorithms into physical objects has long been part of sound art and electroacoustic music practice, with sound artists and researchers creating tools and instruments that incorporate some algorithmic process that is central to their function or behaviour. Such practice has evolved profoundly over the years, touching many aspects of sound generation, electroacoustic composition, and music performance.
Whilst closely linked to technology, the practice of embedding algorithms into tools for sound making also transcends it. Different forms and concepts emerge in domains that can be analogue, digital, pertaining to recent or ancient technologies, tailored around the practice of a single individual or encompassing the behaviours of multiple players, even non-human ones.
The processes and rules that can be inscribed into instruments may include assumptions about sound and music, influencing how these are understood, conceptualised, and created. Algorithms can encode complex behaviours that may make the instrument adapt to the way it is being played or give it a degree of autonomy and agency. These aspects can have profound effects on the aesthetics and creative processes of sound art and electroacoustic music, as artists are given the possibility of delegating some of the decisions to their tools.
In the practice of embedding algorithms, knowledge and technology from other disciplines are appropriated and repurposed by sound artists in many ways. Sensors and algorithms developed in other research fields are used for making instruments. Similarly, digital data describing various phenomena – from environmental processes to the global economy – have been harnessed by practitioners for defining the behaviour of their sound tools, resulting in data-driven sound practices such as sonification.
More recently, advances in artificial intelligence have made it possible to embed machine learning models into instruments, introducing new aesthetics and practices in which curating a dataset and training a model are part of the artistic process. These trends in music and sound art have sparked a broad discourse addressing notions of agency, autonomy, authenticity, authorship, creativity and originality. There are aesthetic, epistemological, and ethical implications arising from the practice of building sound-making instruments that incorporate algorithmic processes. How do intelligent instruments affect our musical practice?
This demands an interdisciplinary critical enquiry. For this special issue of Organised Sound we seek articles that address the aesthetic and cultural implications that designing and embedding algorithms has on electroacoustic music practice and sound art. We are interested in the role of this new technological context on musical practice.
Please note that we do not seek submissions that describe a project or a composition without a broad contextualisation and an underlying central question. We instead welcome submissions that aim at addressing one or more specific issues of relevance to the call and to the journal’s readership which may include works or projects as examples.
Topics of interest include:
Aesthetics in performance of instruments with embedded algorithms
Phenomenology of electroacoustic performance with algorithmic instruments
Agency, autonomy, intentionality, and “otherness” of algorithmic instruments
Co-creation and authorship in creative processes involving humans and algorithmic instruments
Dynamics of feedback, adaptivity, resistance, and entanglement in player-instrument-algorithm assemblages
Human-machine electroacoustic improvisation
Critical reflections on the role of algorithms in the creation of sound tools and instruments and their impact on electroacoustic music practice
Meaning making, symbolic representations, and assumptions on music and sound embedded within instruments and sound tools
Knowledge through instruments: epistemic and hermeneutic relations in algorithmic instruments
Appropriation, repurposing, and “de-scripting” of hardware, algorithms, and data by sound artists
Exploration of individual and collective memory through algorithmic instrumental sound practice
Roles and understandings of the machine learning model as a tool in instrumental music practice
Use of algorithmic instruments in contexts informed by historical and/or non-Western traditions
Ethics, sociopolitics, and ideology in the design of algorithmic tools for electroacoustic music
Legibility and negotiability of algorithmic processes in electroacoustic music practice
Non-digital approaches: embedding algorithms in non-digital instruments
Postdigital and speculative approaches in electroacoustic music practice with algorithmic instruments
Data as instrument in electroacoustic music practice: curating and embedding data into instruments
Aesthetics and idiosyncrasies of networked, site-specific, and distributed instruments and performance environments
Entanglement, inter-subjectivity, and relational posthumanist paradigms in designing and composing with algorithmic instruments
More-than-human, inter-species, and ecological approaches in algorithmic instrumental practice
Furthermore, as always, submissions unrelated to the theme but relevant to the journal’s areas of focus are always welcome.
SUBMISSION DEADLINE: 15 September 2025
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 editors.
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
Best,
Federico
Von: Annesley Black
Datum: Wed, 5 Mar 2025
Betreff: KUNSTUNIVERSITÄT GRAZ – Ausschreibung Universitätsprofessur für Performance Practice in Contemporary Music (PPCM) – Live Electronics and Performance
Liebe Kolleg*innen und Kollegen,
Es wäre wichtig für die KUG und für das Fach, zahlreiche und diverse Bewerbungen für diese Stelle zu bekommen. (bitte an allen möglich interessierten Kandidat*innen weiterleiten!)
Ende der Bewerbungsfrist ist der 19.03.2025.
Die Ausschreibungstext ist unten als Text im Email.
Danke, mit herzlichen Grüßen,
Annesley Black
University of Music and Performing Arts Graz
Insitut 1 – Composition, Music theory, Music history and Conducting
Professor for composition
Brandhofgasse 21, 8010 Graz, Austria
E annesley.black@kug.ac.at
Von: Akademie der Künste
Datum: Tue, 4 Mar 2025
Betreff: Newsletter März | Akademie der Künste
Click for more info:
https://degemnewsplus.blogspot.com/2025/03/fwd-newsletter-marz-akademie-der-kunste.html
Von: Markus Müller
Datum: Sun, 02 Mar 2025
Betreff: Musik Installationen Nürnberg Save The Date: 23.5. – 1.6.2025
Click for more info:
https://degemnewsplus.blogspot.com/2025/03/fwd-musik-installationen-nurnberg-save.html
Von: Guido Kramann
Datum: Sa, 01 Mar 2025
Betreff: UbiMus 2025 an der TH-Brandenburg
DE: Das diesjährige Symposium zu Ubiquitous Music (UbiMus 2025) findet vom 15. bis 17. September an der Technischen Hochschule Brandenburg in Brandenburg an der Havel statt. Über vielfältige Beiträge zur Präsentation vor Ort, aber auch online würden wir uns sehr freuen. Nähere Informationen finden Sie hier:
https://technik.th-brandenburg.de/forschung-und-kooperation/projekte/ubimus/
EN: This year’s symposium on Ubiquitous Music (UbiMus 2025) will take place from September 15 to 17 at the Brandenburg University of Applied Sciences in Brandenburg an der Havel. We would be very pleased to receive a wide range of contributions for presentation on site, but also online. You can find more information here:
https://technik.th-brandenburg.de/forschung-und-kooperation/projekte/ubimus/
Von: Lepa, Steffen via ak discourse
Datum: Fri, 28 Feb 2025
Betreff: [ak-discourse] WG: Call for participants: ICME2025 Audio Encoder Challenge
The IEEE International Conference on Multimedia & Expo (ICME) 2025 Audio Encoder Capability Challenge
Overview
The ICME 2025 Audio Encoder Capability Challenge, hosted by Xiaomi, University of Surrey, and Dataocean AI, aims to rigorously evaluate audio encoders in real-world downstream tasks.
This challenge imposes NO restrictions on model size or the scale of training data, and training based on existing pre-trained models is allowed.
Participants are invited to submit pre-trained encoders that convert raw audio waveforms into continuous embeddings. These encoders will undergo comprehensive testing across diverse tasks spanning speech, environmental sounds, and music. The evaluation will emphasize real-world usability and leverage an open-source evaluation system.
Participants are welcome to independently test and optimize their models. However, the final rankings will be determined based on evaluations conducted by the organizers.
Registration
To participate, registration is required. Please complete the registration form before April 1, 2025. Note that this does not means the challenge starts on April 1, 2025. The challenge begins on February 7, 2025.
For any other information about registration, please send Email to: 2025icme-aecc@dataoceanai.com
Submission
The pre-trained model weights can either be included in the ZIP file or downloaded automatically from external sources (e.g., Hugging Face) during runtime. If choosing the latter approach, please implement the automatic downloading mechanism in your encoder implementation.
While there are no strict limitations on model size, submitted models must be able to be run successfully in a Google Colab T4 environment, where the runtime is equipped with a 16 GB NVIDIA Tesla T4 GPU, 12GB RAM.
More details can be found from the following webpage:
https://dataoceanai.github.io/ICME2025-Audio-Encoder-Challenge/
Thanks for your attention. Sorry for cross-posting.
Best wishes,
Wenwu
—
Wenwu Wang
Professor of Signal Processing and Machine Learning,
Centre for Vision Speech and Signal Processing (CVSSP)
Associate Head of External Engagement,
School of Computer Science and Electronic Engineering
AI Fellow,
Surrey Institute for People Centred AI
University of Surrey
Guildford, GU2 7XH
United Kingdom
Phone: +44 (0) 1483 686039
Fax: +44 (0) 1483 686031
Email: w.wang@surrey.ac.uk
https://personalpages.surrey.ac.uk/w.wang/
Von: Marcus Beuter
Datum: Fri, 28 Feb 2025
Betreff: Newsletter März – Marcus Beuter
Liebe Freunde der Klangkunst,
im März lade ich zu folgenden Veranstaltungen ein:
Jour fixe
Jour Fixe: Die Kunst des Hörens als Grundlage im kreativen Schaffensprozess – Instant Composing mit dem Ensemble Freie Musik.
Seit ca. 30 Jahren beschäftigt sich das EFM mit dem Instant Composing, d. h. dem Erschaffen von Musikstücken aus dem Moment heraus, ohne vorgefertigte Konzepte, ohne vorherige Absprachen. Die so entstehenden Stücke und Performances sind nicht nur einmalig und unwiederholbar, sie sind auch immer eine Reflexion der Begleitumstände: Die Besetzung der Gruppe, das Publikum und nicht zuletzt der Raum, in dem das Konzert stattfindet.
Mit den personellen Veränderungen, die in all den Jahren stattgefunden haben, ist das EFM ein gewachsener, lebendiger Organismus, der sich heute mit Musikern aus verschiedenen Generationen präsentiert, die mit ihren individuellen Biographien zum Facettenreichtum der Gruppe und damit der Musik beitragen. In Verbindung mit dem spontanen Ansatz der Musiker ist somit ein spannendes Hörerlebnis zu erwarten.
Montag, 03.03.2025, 20 Uhr, Capella hospitalis, Teutoburger Str. 50, 33604 Bielefeld
Eintritt frei, um Spende wird gebeten
Konzert
Seit ca. 30 Jahren beschäftigt sich das EFM mit dem Instant Composing, d. h. dem Erschaffen von Musikstücken aus dem Moment heraus, ohne vorgefertigte Konzepte, ohne vorherige Absprachen.
Werner Schermeier – Klavier
Hans Wilhelm Specht – Saxophon, Marimba, Percussion
Lutz Wagner – Violine, Effekte
Eric Pfennig – Bassgitarre, Effekte
Marcus Beuter – field recordings
Peter Schwieger – Analog Synthesizer
Frank Ay – Saxophone, Bassklarinette
Freitag, 21.03.2025, 20 Uhr, Städtische Galerie Alte Lederfabrik, Alleestr. 64-66, 33790 Halle/Westf.
Eintritt frei, um Spende wird gebeten
Workshop
TRE® – Tension Releasing Exercises – ist eine Körper basierte Methode, um Stress abzubauen.
Donnerstag, 13.03., 19.30 Uhr, Capella hospitalis, Teutoburger Str. 50, 33604 Bielefeld
Herzliche Grüße,
Marcus Beuter
Und dann:
03.05. Geplante Obsoleszenz, Artists Unlimited, Bielefeld
04.05. Cooperativa Ensemble, Artists Unlimited, Bielefeld
01.06. Cooperativa Ensemble, Finale im Park, Bielefeld
12.-21.09. Verwandelte Räume, Bielefeld
Oben angeführter Link:
Capella hospitalis – http://www.capella-hospitalis.de/
Online hören und schauen:
https://vimeo.com/marcusbeuter
https://marcusbeuter.bandcamp.com/
www.soundcloud.com/marcus-beuter