In: News
29 Nov 2009
- Laconicism – is a collection of procedural and interactive sound compositions.
The pieces are not finalized onto a static medium.
Instead, the collection is distributed as a computer software so that the works can be experienced in their intended multidimensional forms.
Click here for more info about my motivations, and the underlying mechanism.
Mac OS X: Download from here (4.2MB). Download and run, tested on Leopard and Snow Leopard. Should also work on Tiger (and on older PPC machines, though not tested).
Other platforms: Download SuperCollider source files from here. Unfortunately, Laconicism isn’t available as a standalone application for other platforms. See the ReadMe file inside the source archive for instructions on how to install and run. Some of the pieces do not work as intended on Windows yet, hopefully these will be fixed as SuperCollider matures further on the Windows platform.
This collection of sound entities are presented to you with a simple idea in mind: “Organized Sound”, once realized by its creator for distribution, does not necessarily have to be locked to definite micro or macro event sequences in time domain. This apparent rigidity of distributed sound is in fact, a “transmission loss” between the composer and listener; and is primarily caused by the limitations of our soon to be obsolete old and static sound distribution mediums.
The works presented in this software are compositions and/or designs of “sound processes”, which provide a recipe for computers to generate sounds utilizing various sound synthesis techniques on the fly. These are not designs of “exactness and perfection”, instead, I merely define limits for a sound-event space.
The listener is not only free to experience the process compositions presented by the composer, but can also participate. Each piece has different number of controls (embedded into the synthesis graphs in a “circuit-bending” fashion), whose functions are not really obvious until you start to play with them. The listener is free to observe other dimensions of the event space by altering the values of these controls, relying on listening and intuition (a feedback loop). The aforementioned transformation loss disappears, and another form of communication emerges between the composer, listener and the piece.
(c) Batuhan Bozkurt – 2009
This work (music) is distributed under CC BY-NC-SA 3 license:
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/
Hello there, I'm Batuhan Bozkurt, a sound artist, computer programmer and performer from Istanbul - Turkey. This is my personal hub site where I regularly try to blog and share my projects and interesting things I stumble upon. For more info about me please click here.
5 Responses to New Music Release: Laconicism
Juan
November 29th, 2009 at 10:03 pm
This is great! I’ve been thinking for years that the ‘Album’ as a medium is totally old too fixed… I like this kind of works where you know a little bit how does it sounds but you can change and play with it… better than streaming of generative music, it would be also fixed in a way (you can’t change it). It’s a great work and I’m gonna look at the source for inspiration (more, the video gave me already some)
uberVU - social comments
November 30th, 2009 at 12:37 am
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This post was mentioned on Twitter by Batuhan Bozkurt: New music release: Laconicism – A collection of procedural and interactive sound compositions. http://bit.ly/74cB8l…
JamesMcN
November 30th, 2009 at 2:44 am
This is how generative music should be distributed. It will take some time to fully explore, but I like what I see.
One thing to watch out for – SuperCollider won’t launch if the input and output sampling frequency on your audio interface don’t match. This is typically a problem when you are running optical (S/PDIF) data in to your mac.
reaktorplayer
January 24th, 2010 at 7:35 pm
Thank you for all this great blog! As a non-programmer most of this information is beyond me but when I can download an application such as Laconicism and use it in an instant, it’s a lot of help. Thanks again for the wonderful information.
Supercollider Meets Guitar Effects Boxes « Binary Heap
February 2nd, 2010 at 4:12 pm
[...] it custom to my needs. I found this great little, ready to run, Supercollider application called Laconicism. I ran the audio output from Laconicism through a Vox Satchurator distortion pedal and a Digitech [...]