The domain of this thesis is electroacoustic computer-based music and sound art. It investigates
a facet of composition which is often neglected or ill-defined: the process of composing itself
and its embedding in time. Previous research mostly focused on instrumental composition or,
when electronic music was included, the computer was treated as a tool which would eventually
be subtracted from the equation. The aim was either to explain a resultant piece of music by
reconstructing the intention of the composer, or to explain human creativity by building a model
of the mind.
Our aim instead is to understand composition as an irreducible unfolding of material traces which
takes place in its own temporality. This understanding is formalised as a software framework
that traces creation time as a version graph of transactions. The instantiation and manipulation
of any musical structure implemented within this framework is thereby automatically stored
in a database. Not only can it be queried ex post by an external researcher—providing a new
quality for the empirical analysis of the activity of composing—but it is an integral part of
the composition environment. Therefore it can recursively become a source for the ongoing
composition and introduce new ways of aesthetic expression. The framework aims to unify
creation and performance time, fixed and generative composition, human and algorithmic
“writing”, a writing that includes indeterminate elements which condense as concurrent vertices
in the version graph.
The second major contribution is a critical epistemological discourse on the question of ob-
servability and the function of observation. Our goal is to explore a new direction of artistic
research which is characterised by a mixed methodology of theoretical writing, technological
development and artistic practice. The form of the thesis is an exercise in becoming process-like
itself, wherein the epistemic thing is generated by translating the gaps between these three levels.
This is my idea of the new aesthetics: That through the operation of a re-entry one may establish
a sort of process “form”, yielding works which go beyond a categorical either “sound-in-itself”
or “conceptualism”.
Exemplary processes are revealed by deconstructing a series of existing pieces, as well as
through the successful application of the new framework in the creation of new pieces.
Date of Award | 2014 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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Supervisor | Eduardo Miranda (Other Supervisor) |
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- Computer music
- Sound art
- Data structures
- Electroacoustic music
- Composition process
Tracing the Compositional Process. Sound art that rewrites its own past: formation, praxis and a computer framework
Rutz, H. H. (Author). 2014
Student thesis: PhD