Destellos Competition 2010

The Foundation Destellos , call for works for the Third Competition of Electro-acoustic Composition, open to composers and artists of any nationality, up to 50.

The objectives of this competition are the promotion and development of the artistic creation in relation with new technologies. Likewise, it is an intention of the Foundation Destellos to stimulate the creativity of the young generations of artists and to provide to them new routes of diffusion of their works.

The first prize will be attributed by Destellos and will consist of 500 American dollars and a residence of study of Mar del Plata (Argentina).

  The second two prizes, consisting of paths collections of CD of electroacoustic music, will be granted for:

  • The organization Akusma<Motus , of France
  • The foundation Phonos of Barcelona, Spain.

The institutions participants will offer likewise the diffusion of the winning works, across concerts and festivals.

  Guidelines

1. Composers and artists of any nationality up to 5O. No entry fees.

2. Will be accepted stereophonic works of electro-acoustic music up to 11′ duration.

3. Will be accepted works of electro-acoustic music with video, up to 6′ duration. The work must follow an abstract esthetics and to be interrelated in musical and visual languages, either in their technical and esthetical characteristics. In case of works in collaboration the prize will be considered ex-æquo and the authors will have to determine a representative to receive it.

4. Are excluded pieces using instruments, live electronics and improvisations.

5. Each candidate can send only one work, not been edited or prized before.

6. The participants will have to register before, sending for e-mail the attached form due completed by computer. Manuscript forms will not be accepted.

Submission form

To send as attached document to: info@fundestellos.org

7. Each candidate will receive an e-mail of confirmation and a Code of inscription.

8. The materials must be sent by post with the only mention, on all the supports, of : the title of the work and the Number of Code assigned by e-mail.

9. Admitted supports: DVD and CD: The works with video must be sent in format QuickTime without compression (.mov), the electroacoustic works in CD audio.

10. The works will not be returned and will be conserved in the archives of the Foundation.

11. Prize winners of Destellos Competition 2009 cannot participate, neither members of the jury and their families.

12. The works must be send before 30 April 2010 (postmarked) by ORDINARY MAIL, with mention "For educational use, no commercial value", to:

            Dr. Elsa Justel

            Fundación Destellos

            Rodriguez Penia 1226

            7600 Mar del Plata

            Argentina

13. The jury will be integrated by members of recognized international prestige.

14. The jury has the right to declare the prize deserted and give one or more mentions, also to design an "ex-æquo" prize to works of the same quality level. Jury’s decision is unquestionable and definitive and will be published on August 30 th , 2010.

15. The foundation has the right to postdate, to annul or to modify the rules of the competition at any moment. All changes will be published at the time.

16. Candidates are asked to accept all the conditions of these regulations.

17. The prizewinners are engaged to write the mention "Prix Destellos 2010" in all concert programs including the work. The authors must inform the Foundation of the public presentations of the prized work.

The candidates can ask for the submission forms by email: info@fundestellos.org

More info: www.fundestellos.org

International Symposium on Music/Sonic Art

International Symposium on Music/Sonic Art

In conjunction with InterSymp 2010:
22nd International Conference on Systems Research, Informatics and Cybernetics
August 2-6, 2010
Markgraf-Ludwig Gymnasium, Hardstrasse 2, Baden-Baden, Germany

CALL FOR PAPERS: 

We are pleased to announce the  International Symposium on Music/Sonic Art: Practices and Theories, an interdisciplinary two-day event to be held in Baden-Baden, Germany. The provisional dates of the Symposium are August 2-3 in order that participants can also attend other symposia such as: the 8th Special Focus Symposium on Art and Science, the 3rd Symposium on Systems Research in Arts and Humanities and Comprovisations:

Improvisation Systems in Performing Arts and Technologies.

For further details on all these symposia please see: www.iias.edu.

Proposals for sessions and individual papers for the International Symposium on Music/Sonic Art: Practices and Theories are invited from academics, practitioners and post-graduate students of diverse fields of investigation, according to one of the following formats: academic research paper (including research in progress), report on practice-based work or educational programmes.

(Delegates wishing to present performances are advised to consult the call for papers of symposia listed above.) All proposals will be judged based on their scholarly quality, originality and potential for further discourse.

THEME and TOPICS:

The aim will be advancing interdisciplinary investigations between the domains of music, architecture, urban and industrial design, dance, performance, theatre, digital media and visual arts.

The premise of this symposium is that musicology (defined in its broadest sense) is intrinsically interdisciplinary. Music includes many theoretical positions as well as cultural, social practices: contemporary musicology reflects this diversity. There are three distinct (though related) themes to the International Symposium on Music/Sonic Art: Practices and Theories. Firstly, the organizers welcome presentations in ‘traditional’ subject areas such as historical/critical musicology, performance studies, aesthetics, analysis and ethnomusicology. What are the qualitative differences for performers in a rehearsal and the final concert? What metaphors (if any) do performers use to explain their processes? What strategies are appropriate to an analysis of ‘open’ forms? And can changes in style from Classical to Romantic and post-Romantic be considered seamless transitions or ruptures in musical language?

Secondly, as the symposium’s title suggests, we hope to encourage the submission of papers investigating relationships (and possible tensions) between music and sonic/sound art. For example, to what extent can the practices and theories of music inform sonic art? Is it more beneficial for sonic art to draw on the aesthetics of gallery-based fine art practice? How does the role of technology manifest itself in both music and sonic art? Can music be regarded merely as a subset of sonic art?

The role of the performer, expression, embodiment, the nature of the instrument, the status of the score… these are vitally important shared concerns. Consequently, we anticipate many papers will examine how music and sonic art corroborate or contradict each other’s practices and theories. The results will provide many mutually beneficial insights. Thirdly, presentations are also invited from scholars who are researching the connections between music and disciplines such as architecture, design, painting, theatre and literature. Are the blank canvases of Rauschenberg comparable to Cage’s ‘4:33’? Are the constraints employed by literary groups such as OuLiPo similar to the apparent restrictions in serial techniques?

Finally, are proportions evident in Baroque architecture consciously applied in music of the same period? These are, therefore, the three themes of the symposium. However, a paper dealing with any subject area that is within the broad remit of the International Symposium on Music/Sonic Art: Practices and Theories will be welcomed.

Proposals submitted for review should include:
•    title of paper;
•    abstract, in English, of approximately 300 words;
•    3 to 5 keywords, representative of theme and concepts addressed;
•    short paragraph with author(s)’s biography, briefly stating the field of specialisation or areas of interest and academic/professional affiliation (if any).

Paper Proposals/Abstracts should be submitted as soon as possible but no later than March 30, 2010. Notification of Acceptance and a Paper Template will be sent to authors by April 9, 2010. As in previous years, those selected will be scheduled for a 30-minute presentation plus 15-minute discussion, and will be invited to submit the camera-ready full paper of approximately 2,500 words including references (not to exceed 5 single-spaced typed pages), by no later than May 9, 2010. Papers submitted later than this date cannot be included in the conference proceedings.

The proceedings will be published as the Music/Sonic Art Symposium Proceedings – Volume I of the International Institute for Advanced Studies in Systems Research and Cybernetics, and will be available to all registered participants at the time of the Conference. Further details on Submission Guidelines, the Copyright Transfer Form, and the Conference Registration Form are available at the IIAS home page: www.iias.edu.

Please note that the early registration fee is 345.00 Euros (per one Conference participant) if paid on or before May 1, 2010 and 395.00 Euros thereafter: this includes participation in all Symposia of the IIAS InterSymp 2010 Conference, the festive reception, the symposium booklets and the Music/Sonic Art Symposium Proceedings – Volume I. Details for payment can be found on the IIAS home page: www.iias.edu. See: ‘Registration Forms’, no.5 ‘Registration Payment Instructions’.

Paper committee: Prof. Dr. Mine Dogantan-Dack (Middlesex University, UK); Prof. Clarence Barlow (University of California, Santa Barbara, USA); Holger Zschenderlein (University of Brighton, UK); Fiorenzo Palermo (University of Middlesex, UK); Dr. John Dack (Lansdown Centre for Electronic Art, Middlesex University, UK)
   

SUMMARY OF IMPORTANT DATES:

Please note this summary of the Symposium schedule:

MARCH 30, 2010        Abstract due
APRIL 9, 20010           Notice of Acceptance
MAY 1, 2010               Conference Registration and fees due
MAY 9, 2010        Final paper due
AUGUST 2-6, 2010    InterSymp 2010 Conference in Baden-Baden

As contributions will be peer-reviewed, please submit proposals and full papers electronically, as e-mail attachments in MS Word format, to the symposium’s chairs’ email address m.dack@mdx.ac.uk and j.dack@mdx.ac.uk according to the following guidelines:

For abstracts:
•    one email with the subject title “MuSA symposium – abstract”, containing a word file as an attachment with the title of paper, keywords and abstract only. For the process of blind peer reviewing, please do not include your name or affiliation in this attachment.
AND
•    a second email entitled “MuSA symposium – author”, containing a word file as an attachment with the author(s)’s name, title of paper, institution affiliation (if any) and short biography.

Please note that all emails should also be Cc: to the InterSymp 2010 Conference Chairman
Prof. George E. Lasker (lasker@uwindsor.ca).

Information regarding the International Symposium on Music/Sonic Art: Practices and Theories is available on the IIAS webpage (www.iias.edu). Furthermore, please do not hesitate to send any enquires to the Symposium Chairs:

Prof. Dr. Mine Dogantan Dack (Music Department, Middlesex University) – m.dack@mdx.ac.uk;
Dr. John Dack (Lansdown Centre for Electronic Art, Middlesex University) – j.dack@mdx.ac.uk;

****End of forwarded message****

 

Organised Sound: An International Journal of Music and Technology

Organised Sound: An International Journal of Music and Technology

 
Call for submissions

Volume 16, Number 2
 
Issue thematic title: Performance Ecosystems
 
Date of Publication: August 2011
Publishers: Cambridge University Press
 
Issue co-ordinator: Simon Waters (s.waters@uea.ac.uk)

 
The distinctions between a performer, an instrument, and an environment seem at first glance self evident, but plenty of evidence exists that the relationships between them can be complex and dynamic. An equally tempered Boehm clarinet affords, when ‘re-programmed’ by the mindset of a South Indian performer, entirely idiomatic interval structures and articulations for another highly developed musical tradition. A musical instrument is not, or at least not only, a physical object, but has properties which emerge through use or expectation (programming). A systemic understanding of performance activity might usefully enhance our understanding of the interpenetrations and feedback systems which exist between apparently disparate component parts. As we move into a musical world where we can intervene digitally in the performance ecosystem we open up possibilities for new formulations of and relationships between the ‘components’, whether by accessing ‘distant’ or virtual audiences/environments, or by combining physical and virtual elements in an unforeseen manner.
 
What happens when practitioners regard the context for the performance of their work as co-extensive with or even constitutive of that work? How can an understanding of the voice as an embodied performance tool help to sophisticate our understanding of the complex interpenetrations between a performer and ostensibly ‘separate’ instruments? How does an ecological approach to perception (Gibson, Windsor, Clarke) contribute to our understanding of what happens in highly technologised musical practices? How might performance systems that occupy both real and virtual space – hybrids of the physical and virtual – provoke shifts in our understanding of public and private action?
Can thinking of performance as an ecosystem, or the importing of other models from biology, help resolve the difficulties of making music with multiple laptops?  The power of ecological or ecosystemic metaphors for performance lies in the fact that they embrace adaptive, emergent or dynamical qualities. How might we go about designing such principles into performance interfaces? What would it feel like to perform with controllers whose behaviour evolves over time, or whose characteristics are ‘sticky’ or non-linear?
 
Music has always drawn on other disciplines and ways of modelling the world for metaphors which expand its resources both sonically, as organised sound, and socially, as human activity. This issue of Organised Sound invites submissions from both theorists and practitioners for whom ecosystemic or biological models form a provocative or productive point of departure for any aspect of their work.
 
As always, submissions related to the theme are encouraged; however, those that fall outside the scope of this theme are always welcome.
 
Deadline for submissions is 1 November 2010. Submissions may consist of papers, with optional supporting short compositions or excerpts, audio-visual documentation of performances and/or other aspects related to your submission that can be placed onto a DVD and the CUP website for “Organised Sound”.  Supporting audio and audio-visual material will be presented as part of the journal’s annual DVD-ROM which will appear with issue 16/3 as well on the journal’s website.

 

 
SUBMISSION DEADLINE: 1 November 2010
 
SUBMISSION FORMAT
 
Notes for Contributors and further details can be obtained from the inside back cover of published issues of Organised Sound or at the following url:
 
http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayMoreInfo?jid=OSO&type=ifc (and download the pdf)
 
Properly formatted email submissions and general queries should be sent to: os@dmu.ac.uk, not to the guest editors.
 
Hard copy of articles and images (only when requested) and other material (e.g., sound and audio-visual files, etc. – normally max. 15’ sound files or 8’ movie files) should be submitted to:
 
              Prof. Leigh Landy
              Organised Sound
               Clephan Building
               De Montfort University
              Leicester LE1 9BH, UK.
 
Editor: Leigh Landy
Associate Editors: Ross Kirk and Richard Orton
Regional Editors: Joel Chadabe, Kenneth Fields, Eduardo Miranda, Jøran Rudi, Barry Truax, Ian Whalley, David Worrall
International Editorial Board: Marc Battier, Hannah Bosma, Alessandro Cipriani, Simon Emmerson, Rajmil Fischman, David Howard, Rosemary Mountain, Tony Myatt, Jean-Claude Risset, Francis Rumsey, Margaret Schedel, Mary Simoni
 
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