Ways of Reading. Visual Music Course Development at OCADU
Ways of Reading. A course at OCAD University conceived and taught by Robert Appleton using sound, text and image.
Cognition and Segmentation in Collective Free Improvisation
Co-authored with Nicolas B. Garnier.
Proceedings International Conference on Music Perception and Cognition 2012.
Focal Points in Collective Free Improvisation
To be published in Perspectives of New Music
Draft only
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Seen by:A Model for Collective Free Improvisation
Co-authored with Nicolas B. Garnier
Published in the Proceedings of Mathematics,Computation and Music Conference (2011).
Jazz and Emergence--Part One: From Calculus to Cage, and from Charlie Parker to Ornette Coleman: Complexity and the Aesthetics and Politics of Emergent Form in Jazz
Published December, 2010, in _Inflexions: A Journal of Research-Creation_ Vol. 4, pp 183-277 http://www.senselab.ca/inflexions/volume_4/n4_rosenberghtml.html
(html and pdf.)
This two-part essay inquires into the history of jazz from Be-Bop composing practices of the 1940’s, to the... more
This two-part essay inquires into the history of jazz from Be-Bop composing practices of the 1940’s, to the development of Free Jazz in the 1960’s, in terms of the concepts of “complexity” and “emergence” in physics and cognitive science. Thus, it continues my past attempts at cross-disciplinary investigations, which drift from the relationship between complex systems and art into the realm of philosophy, by addressing the transgressive and yet inevitably complicitous nature of avant-garde art and its posture towards dominant cultural formations.
Much of my early work on the avant-garde demonstrates how Deleuze and Guattari ground the concepts of nomadology and micro-political aesthetics to a great extent in the discourses of complex systems in physics and cognitive science, as those discourses have evolved throughout this century, but especially since the 1960’s. Since the late 1980’s, I have argued, along with Manuel Delanda, that many other concepts such as the refrain, multiplicities, territorialization and de-territorialization, difference and repetition—recently discussed by Deleuzean scholars with reference to music--also share these grounds. We need to justify this venture into the careful forging of alliances among scientific disciplines, the philosophy of science and contemporary aesthetic philosophy, in order to reflect on the following five main lines of inquiry (or what Deleuze and Guattari would call “lines of [conceptual] flight”) traversing the realms of science, philosophy and jazz aesthetics:
How do assumptions about duration or time shape the very different creative processes in classical and jazz music? I refer specifically to the western tendency to spatialize time since the 17th Century when both calculus, and standard music notation with even temperament and bars and time signatures, emerged.
How dependent are John Cage’s compositions, by foregrounding the interdependence of music and noise, upon a carefully considered deconstruction (in the Derridean sense) of the calculus of music notation dominant since those 17th Century innovations in contrapuntal composition. We will then notice how he adopts models of music notation that look uncannily similar to phase space diagrams of such complex irreversible processes as attractor states in thermodynamics.
How did the Be-Bop composing practices of Charlie Parker and others engage directly in the calculated yet spontaneous deconstruction of spatialized time, in order for new, hybrid processes of musical expression to emerge? Reminiscent of Bergson’s stages of “creative evolution,” these processes, enable song structures, as the vehicles for improvisation, as well as the conceptual/linguistic musical content (harmony, melody and rhythm) of those songs, to evolve into increasingly subtle and abstract forms at breath-taking speed.
How may we identify processes of de-territorialization and re-territorialization, and the iterative, emergent or self-organizing nature of the refrain (and of harmonic rhythm generally), as central to an understanding of the micro-political motivations of an aesthetic? We will also see how a shift from the model of calculus to the model of phase space in conceptualizing the nature of duration enables us to theorize, and visualize, the crucial role of systemic bifurcations: in both complex processes from physics (and cognitive science in Part Two), and in jazz.
How one might define Ornette Coleman's theorization of “Free Jazz,” in terms of a distributed form of musical expression (called "Harmelodics"), as an evolutionary extension of the line of conceptual flight opened up by Be-Bop composing practices. Other artists also embraced the distributed nature of jazz performances, involving the maximum freedom in juxtaposing independent and sometimes contrasting melodic, harmonic and rhythmic materials, to reach for a full realization of performative freedom.
"LISTENING AND REMEMBERING": NETWORKED OFF-LINE IMPROVISATION FOR FOUR COMMUTERS
Published in CITAR Journal of Science and Technology of the Arts
Revista de Ciência e Tecnologias das Artes, Portuguese Catholic University Porto
This paper analyses the experience of the networked off-line improvisation 'Listening and Remembering', a performance... more This paper analyses the experience of the networked off-line improvisation 'Listening and Remembering', a performance for four commuters using voices and sounds from the Mexico City and Paris metros. It addresses the question: how can an act of collective remembering, inspired by listening to metro soundscapes, lead to the creation of networked voice- and sound-based narratives about the urban commuting experience? The networked experience is seen here from the structural perspective (telematic setting), the sonic underground context, the ethnographic process that led to the performance, the narratives that are created in the electro-acoustic setting, the shared acoustic environments that those creations suggest, and the technical features and participants' responses that prevent or facilitate interaction. Emphasis is placed on the participants' status as non-performers, and on their familiarity with the sonic environment, as a context that allows the participation of non-musicians in the making of music through telematically shared interfaces, using soundscape and real-time voice. Participants re-enact their routine experience through a dialogical relation- ship with the sounds, the other participants, themselves, and the experience of sharing: a collective memory.
Towards a Practical Philosophy of Improvised Space
PSN International Conference, CMPCP, Cambridge 14-17 July 2011
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Seen by:Creative Process in Free Improvisation
by José Menezes
This research investigates the creative and communicational processes used by improvisers in free improvised... more This research investigates the creative and communicational processes used by improvisers in free improvised performance and the ideologies behind those processes. Two studies were conducted: In Study 1 quantitative data was extracted from a recorded performance with Music Information Retrieval (M.I.R) software with special focus on moments consensually considered by the musicians as “best”. Study 2 analysed qualitative data extracted from interviews with improvisers and retrospective verbal protocol regarding the whole performance with special focus on “best moments”. The results of Study 1 reveal the use of alterations of musical features such as energy, note density and spectral changes in order to create points of qualitative change in improvised music. Creative strategies revealed by Study 2 include reiteration, the use of error as a motor for generation of music materials, real-time use of processes of musical composition and automatic playing. Improved conditions of separation of recorded instruments are advised in future research on this subject.
96 views
Seen by: and 7 morePiano+: An Approach towards a Performance System Used within Free Improvisation
This article explores the author’s strategy for developing a computer performance system designed for free... more This article explores the author’s strategy for developing a computer performance system designed for free improvisation with acoustic instruments following a non- idiomatic approach. Philosophical considerations on potentiality and personal and social space and research into the psychology of motivation and behavior have inspired and enabled a different approach to integrating technology with improvisation. The technical realization of a parameter space, in particular utilizing contingent behavior emerging from the convergent mapping of a mixture of controller types, has proven effective for the spontaneous creative decision making required to extend the sonic potential of an acoustic piano while minimizing direct computer operation, as applied regularly in practice by the author.
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Seen by:Dislocated Sound: A Survey of Improvisation in Networked Audio Platforms
by Roger Mills
Published in the Proceedings of NIME2010, June 15-18, 2010, Sydney, Australia.
The evolution of networked audio technologies has created unprecedented opportunities for musicians to improvise with... more
The evolution of networked audio technologies has created unprecedented opportunities for musicians to improvise with instrumentalists from a diverse range of cultures and disciplines. As network speeds increase and latency is consigned to history, tele-musical collaboration, and in particular improvisation will be shaped by new methodologies that respond to this potential. While networked technologies eliminate distance in physical space, for the remote improviser, this creates a liminality of experience through which their performance is mediated. As a first step in understanding the conditions arising from collaboration in networked audio platforms, this paper will examine selected case studies of improvisation in a variety of networked interfaces. The author will examine how platform characteristics and network conditions influence the process of collective improvisation and the methodologies musicians are employing to negotiate their networked experiences.
Keywords
Happiness as a Subversive Activity: An Interview with Ivan Szendro on Commedia Dell'Arte as Healing & Resistance in Communist Hungary
This is a recent interview conducted on the theme of "polis as Muse" for an academic journal.
This interview with Hungarian actor and shaman Ivan Szendro examines the role of folk theatre performance art in the... more
This interview with Hungarian actor and shaman Ivan Szendro examines the role of folk theatre performance art in the tradition of commedia dell'arte as a vital form of creative self-healing and political resistance in Hungary during the Soviet Occupation.
Searching for the Center of a Sound: Bill Dixon's Webern, the Unaccompanied Solo, and Compositional Ontology in Post-Songform Jazz
Published in Jazz Perspectives (2010) Vol. 4, No. 1, April 2010, pp. 59–87.


