Music Ex Machina: Methods and Methodologies for Technology-Centred Practice-Based Research in Contemporary Music

A free symposium at Royal Holloway, University of London

16 June 2023

Keynote Speaker: Dr Scott McLaughlin, University of Leeds

Registration is now closed

The entanglement of digital technology within practices of contemporary music-making cannot be overstated. Varied forms of cutting-edge technology, both hardware and software incorporating programming languages and artificial intelligence, are so enmeshed within contemporary music as to form its very aesthetic backbone as well as the stimulus allowing access to new forms of expression.

But in the ‘expanded field’ within which traditional roles of composer and performer are up for renegotiation (Shlomowitz 2018), what role does technology, itself a social and multi-layered actant (Latour 1991), play within the creative methods and methodologies of contemporary musical practice? Beyond an enabling tool or novel conduit, how does digital technology shape and affect creative musical processes?

This symposium, co-hosted by Cyborg Soloists and Technology in Musical Performance (TiMP), will explore and reflect upon the new methods and methodologies afforded by cutting edge technologies in creative musical practice.

Papers consider the opportunities and challenges recent technological developments pose for contemporary music making as well as how these approaches might be conceptualised within practice-based research methodologies, reassessing notions of agency, authorship and ethics within technology-informed practice and the sphere of the post- or transhuman.

The symposium will be divided into three sessions:

  • Hyperreality: How are technological tools and media used to render new and artificial realities for practitioners and audiences? What are the ethical implications of inviting an audience into such a ‘space’ as a visitor, or ‘user’?

  • Intelligent Machines: This session will explore various ways in which AI and machine learning technologies might be utilised in creative practice. Papers consider how practitioners must adopt new methods, including curation, data management and transmediation.

  • Augmented Instruments: How might new technologies be used to augment both historical and digital instruments? Not only do such practices allow for new and extended musical vocabularies, but also open avenues for accessibility and collaboration.

The Keynote speaker is Dr Scott McLaughlin (University of Leeds) and the symposium will conclude with a performance of his Entangled Trio by Dr Zubin Kanga and Dr Mira Benjamin.

Schedule below - the full programme will be available to download soon.

Details and Registration

This is a free event. Lunch and refreshments will be provided.
Date: 16 June 2023
Location: The Boilerhouse, Royal Holloway, University of London, Egham Hill, Egham, Surrey, TW20 0EX [Map] [How to get to Royal Holloway]

Registration is now closed

Schedule

View abstracts and biographies →

9:00 – 9:30Welcome
9:30 – 11:00Session 1 : Hyperreality
Chair: Mark Dyer

John Aulich
Reverberating the Relational Body: Artificial Space and Affect in in hollows spilled thin

Robert Reid Allan
The ethics of mediating reality in multimedia composition

Zara Ali
The Rise of Staged Virtual Worlds within the Contemporary Music Scene in Germany: 3 Case Studies

11:00 – 11:30Coffee Break
11:30 – 13:00Session 2: Intelligent Machines
Chair: Zubin Kanga

Bofan Ma
Machine Learning, Lived Experience, and a Novel Intermedia Artistic Practice

Maria Sappho
x-artist: transhuman relationships in the development of extended creative bodies

Robert Laidlow
Silicon Soul: Neural Synthesis as Archive-Specific Compositional Tool in Orchestral Music

13:00 – 14:00Lunch
14:00 – 15:30Session 3: Augmented Instruments
Chair: Edmund Hunt

Benjamin Tassie
Augmenting Historical Organs: The Use of Creative Technologies in Earth of the Slumbering and Liquid Trees

Dave Riedstra
Haptic Box and the Tangle of Its Own Making

Solomiya Moroz and Craig Vear
Keeping My Options Open: Digital Musical Instruments as Digital Score

15:30 – 16:00Coffee Break
16:00 – 17:00Keynote Lecture: Dr Scott McLaughlin (University of Leeds)
Individuation and Technology
Chair: Mark Dyer
17:00 – 17:30Wine Reception
17:30 – 18:00

Concert: Mira Benjamin and Zubin Kanga
we are environments for each other (Scott McLaughlin) - read programme note

Questions?

Please direct any questions to mark.dyer@rhul.ac.uk and caitlin.rowley@rhul.ac.uk

Supported by

Logos for Royal Holloway, University of London, TiMP and RMA