Musical Applications of Real-Time Signal Processing

Call for Papers

In the recent years, musical signal processing applications have greatly expanded the palette of artistic expression by creating a myriad of new possibilities for music and sound creation and manipulation, as well as music listening. Home recording studios have greatly benefited, as virtually all of the tools needed for music production are now available as inexpensive software. In addition to generating abstract “electronic” sounds, modern synthesis techniques can convincingly simulate many wind, string and percussion instruments, and work on the singing voice is generating promising results. Artificial reverberation, pitch shifting, equalization, dynamic range compression, and other audio signal processing techniques in turn have enabled specialized manipulation of recorded and synthetic sounds for artistic as well as fixative purposes. Sophisticated compression, noise canceling, equalization, and bass enhancement algorithms can provide noise-free, high-quality audio for portable music players.

The ongoing pursuit for both creative and realistic sounds and processing nowadays includes real-time sound synthesis and control, spatial sound, and realistic emulation of analog and vintage effects devices and synthesizers, especially with strongly nonlinear and time-varying behavior. The aim of this special issue is to present current research advances in real-time musical signal processing applications. Prospective papers should be unpublished, and present novel, fundamental research offering innovative contributions from a methodological or an application perspective. The expected scope of manuscripts for this special issue includes, but is not limited to:

  • Sound synthesis techniques and synthesis control
  • Musical instrument and singing voice synthesis
  • Equalization and filtering, dynamic range compression, delay and distortion algorithms
  • Virtual analog and vintage audio effects
  • Reverberation synthesis, measurement and perception
  • Analysis of musical instrument sounds for real-time synthesis
  • Performance gesture measurement, analysis and synthesis
  • Active noise control in portable music players
  • Microphone and loudspeaker arrays
  • Bandwidth expansion and bass enhancement
  • Music loudness estimation
  • Synthesis and computer music languages
  • Audio coding
  • Hardware and software implementations

Before submission authors should carefully read over the journal’s Author Guidelines, which are located at http://www.hindawi.com/journals/asp/guidelines.html. Prospective authors should submit an electronic copy of their complete manuscript through the journal Manuscript Tracking System at http://mts.hindawi.com/ according to the following timetable:

Manuscript Due September 15, 2010
First Round of Reviews December 15, 2010
Publication Date March 15, 2011

SEAMUS 2011 National Conference

The SEAMUS Board of Directors is pleased to announce the selection of the Frost School of Music of the University of Miami as the site for the 2011 SEAMUS National Conference to be held January 20-22. Colby Leider and Kristine Burns will co-host.

Given January temperatures ranging from 60-70ºF this will indeed be a Springtime conference. Colby and Kristine have plans for some exciting peripheral events that may include a pre-conference outdoor excursion/concert and special banquet. The 260-acre University of Miami campus is located in Coral Gables, Florida, with easy access from Miami International Airport (MIA) and Fort Lauderdale International Airport (FLL).

Electronic Submissions and Call for Works With the 2011 conference SEAMUS is making a permanent move to complete online submissions. Details of the process for submitting works online will be provided in an upcoming Call for Works.

The change to online submissions puts SEAMUS in line with other media-intensive conferences and will have the benefit of streamlining the adjudication process, which given a substantial increase in the number of submissions over recent years has become a critical need.

For the 2011 conference the online submissions will have the added benefit of allowing us to maintain an October submissions deadline in spite of the need for earlier acceptance/confirmation notifications ahead of a January conference.

Christopher Hopkins, Director of Conferences, will host the submissions server with a technical team located at Iowa State University. For answers to questions about submissions formats and procedures not covered in the Call for Works please contact Chris at director_conferences@seamusonline.org. Submissions will be open from August 16through October 15. The Call for Works will be out shortly.
 

Michael Gogins’s Turorial

Hello all

Clicking on the link to mr. Gogins’s tutorial available at this page
(http://www.csounds.com/tutorials) reveals that the file is missing.
Someone may want to fix this for new readers and old readers alike,
that have failed to keep a copy (er… that would be me…).

Regards

Panos Katergiathis