Sonic Landscape No. 3

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Recording of Barry Truax's Sonic Landscape No. 3. This work was created for four computer-synthesized soundtracks. This piece is intended to create a sound environment that surrounds the listener and envelopes them in an acoustic space of changing dimensions. Most of the sound structures used in this composition are synthesized with the P0D7 program for non-real-time synthesis.
Date: 1975
Creator: Truax, Barry
System: The UNT Digital Library

Peregrine

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Recording of Eduard Artemiev's Peregrine. The composer wrote this work under the theme of "pilgrims" and attempted to combine electroacoustic music with the energy and instruments of rock music. The main sounds in this piece are electronic as well as a soprano voice.
Date: 1975/1999
Creator: Artemʹev, Ėduard
System: The UNT Digital Library

Un Tiempo, Un Lugar

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Recording of Jorge Rapp's Un Tiempo, Un Lugar. This piece was composed in the composer's studio and CICMAT. This work reflects dramatic moments of the Argentine history during the decade of the 70's. It was composed from electronic sounds and acoustic sounds of instrumental origin and social environment, processed in the laboratory of the CICMAT and in own studio. The acoustic sounds inhabit with melodic rhythmic impulses of electronic origin, fusing or contrasting between them. It consists of five sections, these interlace without a breath in between to a growing tension that declines towards the end.
Date: 1975
Creator: Rapp, Jorge
System: The UNT Digital Library

It always takes a short time

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Recording of Peter Beyls' It always takes a short time. The work combines tape music and spoken words live with electronic transformation of vocal material. This work is a version for tape alone. The electronic sound material as well as the original sounds were used and structured on 4 tracks. The vocal material, spoken by Herman Sabbe, consists of a textual structure by the Belgian artist Yves Desmet. This material has been intensively manipulated, with particular attention to the purely sonic aspects of language. The resulting sounds are semantically meaningless although a musical compilation of the text content can be detected at times. In the first part, colored noises and textures of gradually increasing complexity were used. The central part is built on the exploitation of sounds similar to those of the percussions and almost at the end of the work a continuum with slight fluctuations in the colors and the dynamics is growing.
Date: 1975
Creator: Beyls, P. (Peter), 1950-
System: The UNT Digital Library

Miroirs

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Recording of Micheline Coulombe Saint-Marcoux's Miroirs. This work identifies the problem of togetherness with the coexistence of the two sound sources, mainly using as basic material a harpsichord score previously recorded and subsequently subjected to various electroacoustic treatments. Concrete sounds and modulated sounds (EMS synthesizer) are used, to which are added some electronic sounds recorded directly in the studio. The final cut of the magnetic tape then served as the basic material for the development of the score structured in six moments which evolve into "mirror games".
Date: 1975/1976
Creator: Coulombe Saint-Marcoux, Micheline, 1938-1985
System: The UNT Digital Library

Viola Celeste

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Recording of Michela Mollia's Viola Celeste. This work was performed at the Experimental Studio of Electroacoustic Music of the Conservatory of Pesaro. Its sound material is made up of 950 sines, grouped in a mixture of 4 sines, each and arranged in 16 sets of 21 mixtures from start to finish. Each layer (4 complexes) is a fairly complex superposition of sinusoidal sounds, the frequencies of which vary over time so as to avoid the creation of melodies, but to stabilize between one frequency value and the next, a very long interval. Viola Celeste is the name of an organ register. The title signifies the composer's intention to synthesize the sound of this instrument, but rather to create a sort of gigantic uniform "cluster".
Date: 1975
Creator: Mollia, Michela
System: The UNT Digital Library

Effetti Collaterali

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Recording of James Dashow's Effetti Collaterali performed by the clarinetist Phillip Rehfeldt. The composer's first effort in using systematically his concept of AM and FM spectra as inharmonic harmonizations of specific dyads. The specified pitches are made to generate their own accompanying frequencies, generally inharmonic with respect to the pitches themselves, as a result of FM or AM procedures. Each interval or each pitch-pair can generate several possible spectra, but the similarity in sound quality between kinds of spectra quickly reduces to a limited number of readily manageable families of chord-types. These chords are the basis for a variety of musically interesting relationships, and this work represents but one of many possible developments of these kinds of sounds. Effeti Collaterali was commissioned by Francois Bousch who was the resident holder of the "Prix de Rome" at the French Academy for the 1975/76 concert season.
Date: 1975
Creator: Dashow, James, 1944-
System: The UNT Digital Library

Cetacea Suite

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Recording of Wes Richard Wraggett's Cetacea Suite.
Date: 1975
Creator: Wraggett, Wes Richard
System: The UNT Digital Library

Micro-Macro

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Recording of John Anthony Celona's Micro-Macro. The composition deals with the illusion and timbral fusion of mixing voices with tape material. The voices were produced using the Extended Vocal Techniques Ensemble of the Center for Music Experiment who were instructed to utilize chanting, reinforced harmonics, dental trills, other extended technique, and imitation with the recorded bell material. The tape consists of a 4-channel Hybrid controlled filter sweeping of tuned oscillators and pre-recorded bamboo and bell material. The work is dedicated to Ed Emshwiller and Darrel DeVore.
Date: 1975/1976
Creator: Celona, John, 1947-
System: The UNT Digital Library

Tu Viens Chéri(e)

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Recording of Bernard Heisieck's Tu Viens Chéri(e).
Date: 1975
Creator: Heidsieck, Bernard, 1928-2014
System: The UNT Digital Library

Sonic Landscape No. 3

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Recording of Barry Truax's Sonic Landscape No. 3 for four computer-synthesized soundtracks. The work is divided into three sections, each of which organizes the timbral and textural component in different ways. Familiar percussion timbres occur in the first section. In the second section, less familiar timbres are introduced in heavier densities such that the interaction of entire groups of timbres and events are perceived. In the final section, individual events are not perceived as much as a single, complex texture composed of related broad-band elements. The work was realized with the composer's POD programs for computer sound synthesis and composition at Simon Fraser University. The synthesis method is that of Chowning's frequency modulation timbral synthesis. The programs run on a Hewlett-Packard 2116 minicomputer with 12-bit D/A converter and digital magnetic tape unit. The sound structures are initially composed interactively with the POD6 program that utilizes real-time monophonic synthesis. The compositional model involves the selection of sound objects to be distributed in a random, Poisson-determined frequency/time field whose density and frequency range are variable in time. For each structure, two or four random variants are calculated and stored; each later occupies a different track on magnetic tape. Most of the sound …
Date: 1975
Creator: Truax, Barry
System: The UNT Digital Library

Viola celeste

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Recording of Michela Mollia's Viola celeste. This work was realized at the Experimental Studio of Electroacoustic Music of the Pesaro Conservatory. Its sound material consists of 950 sinusoids (sine curves) grouped into a mixture of 4 sinusoids each and arranged in 16 sets of 21 mixtures from beginning to end. Each layer (4 complexes) is a rather complex superposition of sinusoidal sounds whose frequencies vary in time so as to avoid the creation of melodies, but to stabilize between one frequency value and the next, a very small interval. "Viola Celeste" is the name of an organ register. The title means by my intention to synthesize the sound of this instrument, or rather more accurately, to create a sort of gigantic uniform "cluster.”
Date: 1975
Creator: Mollia, Michela
System: The UNT Digital Library

Solitude of Sounds

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Last October while thinking about a composition I was to realize in the Columbia-Princeton Studio I spent a lot of time in my room listening to distant noises coming in through a half-open window. It was a seemingly disordered mixture of the street hubbub, signals of the river ships, and the distant thunder of planes. After some time I had an impression of all these noises being alive and perhaps even conscious of their existence; it seemed as it they wanted to speak. United into one whole and yet confined only to themselves they created a lonely choir. I wanted to express this feeling in my new composition. Solitude of Sounds does possess a certain plot. In the first phase, the homogeneous sound material exists only at the lowest register, as if unable to "free" itself from the area of darkness and uncertainty. Later, in the higher register, there appear sounds complexes of harmonic structure. They form a kind of a "choir" of aliquots, mutually penetrating and "singing through" one another. However, they are not allowed to create any new quality due to their restricted nature. Circling and persisting, they remain forever imprisoned in their own imperfection. I would like …
Date: 1975
Creator: Sikorski, Tomasz, 1939-1988
System: The UNT Digital Library

Telesuono Hologram

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After an intense period of analog familiarization with the range and enormity of available sounds extraterrestrially and in nature, I tried the only techniques then available to me, tape manipulation and speaker placements. The only coloration that I employed in early sound handling was through equalization, balancing and combining mix-downs. I have always monitored from nearly neutral sensors, and my interest has been in trading, configuring and juxtapositionings and in the presentation of sound in natural and climatically different contexts, mainly exterior and in realtime. Within the 1980s, I worked with 200-speakers using an Intel 8080 microprocessor used for satellite teleperformances, with collaborators and in outdoor "studios." Structure wise my work centers around spaces in spaces, scale and proportion and my soundworks effect an awareness of the psychological effects of sounds, for instance, from trees and wind transformation via my windribbon. I'm concentrating on conceptualizing a segue into Internet 2 realtime with oncall 2way availabilities of my data-laden resources. My basic groundwork includes several recyclings of the TerraInstruments including the signal discs, selfbroadcasting trees, lased raindrops and windribbon variations in an attempt to express the voltages I seek from natural sources as recontextualized audible constructs: offering personal connections to the …
Date: 1975
Creator: Brush, Leif 1932-
System: The UNT Digital Library
Effetti Collaterali (for clarinet in A and computer generated electronic sounds) transcript

Effetti Collaterali (for clarinet in A and computer generated electronic sounds)

The specified pitches are made to generate their own accompanying frequencies, generally inharmonic with respect to the pitches themselves, as a result of FM or AM procedures. Each interval, or, in fact, each pitch-pair (or if you don't want to limit yourself to the chromatic scale, each pair of arbitrarily decided upon frequencies) can generate several possible spectra, but the similarity in sound quality between kinds of spectra quickly reduces to a limited number of readily manageable families of chord-types. These chords are the basis for a variety of musically interesting relationships, and this work represents but one of many possible developments of these kinds of sounds. The clarinetist in this recording is Philip Rehfeldt.
Date: 1975
Creator: Dashow, James
System: The UNT Digital Library

Barisphère

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Recording of Zoltan Pongrácz's Barisphère. The work Barisphère is the central part of a cosmic series in three parts: Luna IX, Barisphère and The Big Bang. Its title refers to the central core of the earth, consisting of molten iron and nickel, with a diameter of about 30km. The composer's intention was to create, using electroacoustic means, a program music that excites the cosmic imagination of the listener. The sound material is made up of both synthetic and natural sounds rigorously structured by certain mathematical operations. Both rhythmically and formally, the proportions of the work are borrowed from the various measures of the earth. The treatments used are: transpositions, filtering, ring modulations, phase shifts, envelope transformations, feedback, reverberations, etc.
Date: 1975
Creator: Pongrácz, Zoltán
System: The UNT Digital Library

Pisces

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Recording of Jukka Ruohomäki's Pisces. The sound texture of this piece is exceptionally dense and compounds over one hour of mixed concrete and electronic sounds into six minutes. Some of the materials were originally made for a radio play in which people go through very painful experiences which finally transform them into fish.
Date: 1975/1976
Creator: Ruohomäki, Jukka
System: The UNT Digital Library

Méditations sur le temps

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Recording of Lothar Voigtländer's Méditations sur le temps. Based on a poem by Eugène Guillevic entitled "Le temps." The electronic composition is divided into three parts, each one preceded by sentences from the poem. These three quotes are suggestions for musical meditation and not programmatically to be understood in the narrower sense.
Date: 1975
Creator: Voigtländer, Lothar, 1943-
System: The UNT Digital Library

Le mythe de la machine

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Recording of Wilfried Jentzsch's "Le mythe de la machine" for piano and tape. The design is based on various calculations of chance. The tape was made in collaboration between the electroacoustic studio of the Hochschule für Musik Köln and the Center for Studies of Mathematics and Musical Automatics (C E M A M u) in Paris.
Date: 1975/1978
Creator: Jentzsch, Wilfried
System: The UNT Digital Library

Whispers Out of Time

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Recording of James Dashow's Whispers Out of Time. The title of this piece refers to the last line in a poem titled "Portrait in a Convex Mirror" by John Ashbery (1975). The composer used a VCS3, three ReVox tape recorders each with vari-speed gadget, and an AKG reverberation unit in an attempt to express with electronic sounds the moods, feelings, and sensations the four words of the title invoked in him.
Date: 1975
Creator: Dashow, James, 1944-
System: The UNT Digital Library

Valse molle

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Recording of Alain Savouret's Valse molle
Date: 1975
Creator: Savouret, Alain
System: The UNT Digital Library

Skelelemedania

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Recording of Hal Freedman's Skelelemedania. This piece falls into three sections; the first and third combine live and tape sounds, and the second is for tape alone. The piece as a whole represents an expansion of the middle tape section. The more purely electronic layers were composed to complement or contrast with the vocal elements. The first and third sections make use of tape echo and delay systems. The timing of the repetitions allow the delay to be heard not as feedback but as a continuous evolution of texture and harmonic, melodic, and contrapuntal interplay.
Date: 1975
Creator: Freedman, Hal
System: The UNT Digital Library

Champs

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Recording of Georges Boeuf's Champs.
Date: 1975
Creator: Boeuf, Georges
System: The UNT Digital Library

Haauqui

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Recording of Graciela Paraskevaídis's Haauqui (pronounced Wauki or Ouaouki) for two-track tape. The title is a Qechua word referring to a small statue carried by the Incas that resembles their own image, a meaning extended to brotherhood, community, and friendship. The sound events, created from both microphonic and electronic sources, aim at a non-discursive, non-anecdotic function based on a self-imposed simplicity and on the presence of structural silence. It was realized at Elac, pequeno estudio de Montevideo, in 1975.
Date: 1975
Creator: Paraskevaídis, Graciela, 1940-
System: The UNT Digital Library