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Posts Tagged ‘LCC’

Loop:Recycle

June 19th, 2009 No comments
Loop:recycle ~ 2009

Loop:recycle ~ 2009

In the UK, we produce 434 million tonnes of solid waste every year. As a nation, we only recycle 17.7% of it – one of the worst rates in Europe. Due to the aggressive marketing of new technology and a throw away lifestyle, the amount of electrical waste we throw away is increasing by around 5% each year, making it the fastest growing waste stream in the UK. The UK produces 3 million tonnes of plastic waste each year. Approximately 85% is landfilled, 8% incinerated and 7% recycled. Over 75% of waste electrical goods end up in landfill, where lead and other toxins contained in the electrical goods can cause soil and water contamination.

These loudspeakers were collected over the last 2 months from locations across London.

Using freecycle.org, a site designed to allow any useful item to be collected and re-used for free, and a civic amenity site that sorts re-usable goods, I visited these various locations and recorded my journeys… announcements on the underground, birdsong alongside rail platforms, my own musings and comments on newspaper articles or things I have seen along the way, visits to the dump and freecyclers’ houses.

The collection of 192 sound files is played back randomly through 50 of the collected loudspeaker drivers which are arranged in 8 channels/clusters of varying sizes.

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Unknown Devices performance: London Musician’s Collective Exhibition

May 3rd, 2009 No comments
Unknown Devices in the Atrium, LCC

Unknown Devices in the Atrium, LCC

“LMC was one of the major forces in the development of improvised music and sonic arts. LMC history is particularly richly textured, not only because it contains important evidence (audible, visual and textual) of early improvised music and sonic arts activity in the UK, but also because it intersects with other initiatives of self-determination, collective politics and critical art practice in the 1970s, such as radical publishing, feminism, structural film, dance, performance art, and sonic ecology, along with organisations like Music for Socialism and the post-punk explosion of independent record companies and promoters.” – David Toop

Unknown Devices: the Laptop Orchestra with David Toop. 10 min film excerpt from 30 min performance at CRISAP, LCC London in May 2009. Performed for the opening of Sound Traces, an exhibition of the London Musicians’ Collective legacy. Filmed and edited by Mika Kioussis

Watch out for me punishing my guitar about halfway through the video!

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Symphonic Fantasie for Found Vinyl

April 19th, 2009 No comments
Symphonic Fantasie for Found Vinyl

Symphonic Fantasie for Found Vinyl

Duration: 10 minutes (excerpt / remix)
Format: 4.1 channel (stereo, wide stereo, low frequency)

Programme Note (1 or 2 sentences about the piece which will be on the programme given to the audience):

A composition taken from old (found) vinyl. Classical music records were treated with both analog and digital signal processing, in sessions which were edited, sliced, grouped and placed across 4 channels. The sounds are both an exploration of the textural and physical nature of old records (crackle, hiss) and of the content; re-contextualized, remodelled, re-positioned in space – retaining the drama and emotion of large orchestral recordings, hinting at both the past and the future..

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“Book ov Convolucions” (DVD)

March 25th, 2009 1 comment
Book ov Convolucions (DVD)

Book ov Convolucions (DVD)

con·vo·lu·tion (k?n’v?-l??’sh?n)
n.

  1. A form or part that is folded or coiled.
  2. One of the convex folds of the surface of the brain.

In mathematics and, in particular, functional analysis, convolution is a mathematical operation on two functions f and g, producing a third function that is typically viewed as a modified version of one of the original functions. Convolution is similar to cross-correlation. It has applications that include statistics, computer vision, image and signal processing, electrical engineering, and differential equations.

In linear acoustics, an echo is the convolution of the original sound with a function representing the various objects that are reflecting it.

In artificial reverberation (digital signal processing, pro audio), convolution is used to map the impulse response of a real room on a digital audio signal. Common ways of generating this impulse include bursting a balloon and firing a starting pistol, though more accurate results can be achieved by recording playback of a sine sweep, which is then ‘deconvolved’.

These short films together form a ‘book of convolutions’, documents and processes that seek to uncover the secrets of familiar spaces. Many of the sounds in this piece are made from site-specific recordings which have been convolved with the captured reverberations of these spaces, ambience convolved with itself, everyday sounds take on the shape of a handrail, a creaking door, other voices. I am standing in a room, similar to the one you are in now..

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Recording a convolution reverb

March 19th, 2009 No comments
Capturing a spaces reverb using convolution

Capturing a space's reverb using convolution

In audio signal processing, convolution reverb is a process for digitally simulating the reverberation of a physical or virtual space. It is based on the mathematical convolution operation, and uses a pre-recorded audio sample of the impulse response of the space being modelled. To apply the reverberation effect, the impulse-response recording is first stored in a digital signal-processing system. This is then convolved with the incoming audio signal to be processed.

The primary goal of a convolution reverb is to sample real spaces, in order to simulate the acoustics of the sampled space.

Using a small Genelec monitor I played a sine sweep (12 sec, 30 sec, 60 sec) in the 6-storey stairwell that is used as a fire escape at London College of Communication. The tall enclosed nature of this space combined with hard concrete surfaces and lots of stairs create a unique and spacious reverb. 2 Fostex digital recorders were used, one to play back the sine sweep and one to record in both mono and stereo.

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Field Recording with the Sony ECM-MS957 Stereo Microphone

November 5th, 2008 No comments
Sony ECM-MS957 Stereo Microphone

Sony ECM-MS957 Stereo Microphone

As part of a field recording exercise for my Sound Arts course at LCC, I recorded some ambience at the Walworth Road market. This was the day after Barack Obama was announced as the next President of the United States (and also my birthday), so there was quite an atmosphere of optimism amongst the traders and market-goers.

Although a relatively cheap mic, the ECM-MS957 delivers quite natural-sounding dynamic stereo recordings. It also features rotating Mid/Side (MS) capsules with switchable pick-up angle. The midcapsule picks up monophonic sound while the side capsule picks up left/right-difference sound. Subtracting and adding the two capsule signals yields separate left and right channels, and permits electronic adjustment of the pickup angle. The mid/side switch also selects the pickup angle between the left and right channels, either 90 or 120 degrees. The recordings were made with a Marantz PMD-660.

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