**THURSDAY 25 JANUARY with MICHAEL YOUNG** Supported by the Goldsmiths DIGITAL STUDIOS and the Goldsmiths GRADUATE SCHOOL 25 JANUARY, 6-8PM, BEN PIMLOTT BUILDING, GOLDSMITHS, UNIVERSITY OF LONDON, NEW CROSS, SE14 6NW. Seminar Rooms, Ground Floor, Right. FREE, ALL ARE WELCOME *AUR(O)RA: EXPLORING ATTRIBUTES OF A LIVE ALGORITHM* This presentation proposes attributes of 'living computer music', the product of live algorithmic behaviours. The improvisation system "aur(o)ra", in development, illustrates how these can inform creative design. A live algorithm (LA) is the function of an ideal autonomous system able to engage in performance with abilities analogous (if not identical) to a human musician. An LA is distinct from established AI which generates music from a rule-base, and is most relevant where structure and character are emergent properties, products of interaction with the heterarchical group. Living computer music diffeers from traditional live electronics and fixed-media work by avoiding performer control or explicit a priori knowledge (compositional design, notation). Instead, a number of other properties are desirable... Dr Michael Young is Lecturer at Goldsmiths, University of London and composer. Michael completed a PhD in composition in 1995. He has lectured at the University of Wales, Bangor and Oxford Brookes University. His music has drawn upon a range of live and electroacoustic resources; more recent work has focused on interactive and generative music systems. An undercurrent in his output is collaborative and interdisciplinary practice; he has worked with jazz musicians and improvisers in the role of pianist, laptop musician and/or composer, and has been commissioned to provide electroacoustic music for performance in theatre and gallery exhibitions. He is co-director, with Tim Blackwell, of the Live Algorithms for Music Research Network, creaetd with funding from EPSRC. For more information on the Thursday Club check http://www.goldsmiths.ac.uk/gds/events.php or email maria x at drp01mc@gold.ac.uk
Month: January 2007
New Thursday Club Season
Supported by the Goldsmiths DIGITAL STUDIOS and the Goldsmiths GRADUATE SCHOOL
6pm until 8pm, Ben Pimlott Building, Goldsmiths, University of London, New Cross, SE14 6NW
FREE, ALL ARE WELCOME
11 JANUARY with CHARLOTTE FROST
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NEW FUTURES IN NET ART
Charlotte is the editor of Furthertext as well as a net art critic and PhD candidate at Birkbeck. Visit http://www.charlottefrost.info/
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25 JANUARY with MICHAEL YOUNG
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LIVING COMPUTER MUSIC? Recent Compositions and Explorations with Max
Michael is Lecturer at the Music Department at Goldsmiths. His music explores a variety of live and electroacoustic resources, and has reflected his interests in jazz and collaborative/interdisciplinary practice. His current research interests focus on interactive live electronics and improvisation. Michael is co-investigator with Tim Blackwell, Department of Computing, for the Live Algorithms for Music research network.
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15 FEBRUARY with JON MEYER
Jon is a digital artist who specializes in computer graphics, animation, and user interfaces, and has worked as a Program Manager at Microsoft and as a Research Scientist at New York University’s Media Research Laboratory. Jon has taught multimedia classes at NYU and at the Surrey Institute of Art and Design. He is currently doing an MFA in Fine Art at Goldsmiths. Visit www.cybergrain.com
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22 FEBRUARY with BILL GAVER
Bill is Professor of Design at Goldsmiths College. He has pursued research on innovative technologies for over 15 years, his work spanning auditory interfaces, theories of perception and action, and interaction design. Currently he focuses on design-led methodologies and innovative technologies for everyday life.
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8 MARCH with SUE BROADHURST
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DIGITAL PRACTICES
Sue is Subject Leader, Reader in Drama and Technologies at the School of Art, Brunel University of West London. Sue is also a writer and practitioner in the creative arts. Her new book /Performance and Technology: Practices of Virtual Embodiment and Interactivity/ has just been published by Palgrave. She is co-editor of the /Body, Space and Technology /online journal and is currently working on a series of collaborative practice based research projects entitled “Intelligence, Interaction, Reaction and Performance”.
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22 MARCH with IGLOO
International and award winning artists Igloo create intermedia artworks, led by Ruth Gibson & Bruno Martelli. “In the mid-sixties, Fluxus artists began using the term ‘intermedia’ to describe work that was ….composed of multiple media. The term highlights the intersection of artistic genres and has gradually emphasized performative work and projects that employ new technologies.” Marisa Olson – Rhizome.org
Igloo projects are created with teams of highly skilled practitioners drawn primarily from performance, music, design, architecture, costume, computer science and technology backgrounds. Their work combines film, video, motion capture technology, music and performance with digital technology. The work is developed in a variety of formats and made for distribution across a range of platforms, including gallery installation, internet sites, large and small scale performance and Cd Rom.
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THE THURSDAY CLUB is an open forum discussion group for anyone interested in the theories and practices of cross-disciplinarity, interactivity, technologies and philosophies of the state-of-the-art in today’s (and tomorrow’s) cultural landscape(s).
For more information check http://www.goldsmiths.ac.uk/gds/events.php or email maria x at drp01mc@gold.ac.uk