- La Espai Evaluation (write up)
‘La Espai’, Catalan for ‘the space’, was a title we came up with for the project to represent ideas of territory within a space (the performance area). For example, musical ideas competing against each other (discussed below), and identities projected which are closely linked with each other.
In September, Sean was exploring surround-sound panning using an iPad (http://goo.gl/7WmQMD), using the iPad app ‘Mira’, which connects with Max/MSP on a computer.
At the same time, Martin (http://goo.gl/znNSMk) performed an improvisational and experimental piece that takes on a sonata form, consisting of two electric guitars with effects pedals, which provided drone and melodic textural sounds, accompanied by a melodic electric piano.
Our second performance was when Martin and Sean worked as a pair (http://goo.gl/3gGblK) - this incorporated a pianist and guitarist.
Our third performance brought together both audio and visual ideas (http://goo.gl/cgdIs7). This could be seen as the beginning of La Espai as we know it; we now had four live musicians, with a couple of iPads.
Musically, we were improvising to two projections. While this was a valuable experience, it didn’t feel quite right. We felt that the improvisation was contrived (ironically); we were ‘mickey-mousing’ the visuals, which had too much of a narrative - we did not want this. Instead, we developed an idea that is more organic, where we allow the audience to perceive their own narrative.
Evaluations of all of the above performances are on this tumblr site.
We’d decided that we wanted to progress with a surround-sound, four-screen, interactive media performance. However we had different visions for the project. Martin, the visual artist, wanted to design a surreal experience; Sean envisaged a noisy and gritty experience, designed to unsettle the audience. While in direct opposition with each other, we found a compromise that worked for both of us. Visually we would create something surreal and whilst musically Sean would use whole-tone scales to create floaty/dreamy textures, which then, through processing, would develop into thick, intense soundscapes (towards the end of the piece).
My interest in software development came into its own when I attended both NoiseFloor festival (2013 - Staffordshire University) and InTime music festival (2013 - Coventry University). During the former I witnessed lots of practitioners use a 16-speaker set up to pan their music, and the latter lots of people use Max/MSP and iPads to generate music.
While this was where my interest in music technology for performance originated, here are some more detailed examples that heavily influenced me:
An Ableton Live performance by Ben Bengler that I saw at NoiseFloor festival (https://vimeo.com/39285569 - this is elsewhere). The way in which rich harmonies were created from processing a small original sample was inspiring. The use of heavy audio processing in La Espai (present from 4:20 onwards, most clear from 9:00 onwards) was inspired by this.
‘Everything In Its Right Place’ by Radiohead (http://goo.gl/6f0YEg). The heavy use one of loop being central to the entire piece inspired me in composing a one-note loop on G# for the piano to loop for 10 minutes.
Similarly, whilst stylistically very different, Debussy’s ‘Voiles’ (http://goo.gl/Be8b6N) uses a Bb anchor to harmonically ground the piece, despite it using a whole-tone scale. The music of La Espai used such a scale, with an anchor note, which gradually changed. The electric guitar in La Espai created a drone of four notes at any one time, in this order:
This was to gradually shift the harmonic grounding of La Espai from an F# to a D over 10 minutes. As the whole-tone scale does not have any root note, this was necessary; without this it would have sounded too ambiguous tonally.
I felt that this production needed a symbol or a strong “identity” for the audience to face, recognize and remember. At the time I was influenced by the lighting, setting and costume design of the 2013 film ‘A Field in England’. For example, the film displays subtle imagery of individuals standing isolated in an open outdoor space, with a dark vibe being given off.
Developing from this, I designed and created our own “Plague Doctor Masks”, which we wore and acted ourselves in the film. The masks have connections to space, territory and environment - to the Black Death and Bubonic Plague of the 14th century (a time and event of which the Plague Doctors originated from). I felt that, since this production and performance is heavily based on the ideas of territory and environment, the Plague Doctor mask was perfect as an identity.
Here’s the setup/composition, as shown here http://goo.gl/PYj1kW:
A guitarist (Martin) and a pianist (Sam Mann) in a different corner of the room. Their respective audio output was played through a monitor. Martin played the sustained drones discussed above, and Sam set the pulse of the piece with the two-note loop in 5/4, before gradually adding to the loop. They each had an iPad for audio processing using Max/MSP (e.g. looping, long reverb, filters, delays).
The audio coming out of each monitor was gradually switched about halfway through the piece (through the Max/MSP patch); the pianist’s monitor now played guitar loops, and the guitarist’s monitor now played piano loops.
A drummer (Jim Mann) in another corner of the room, mic’ed up into a mixing desk, out into a monitor. Jim was in 4/4 throughout most of the piece, to phase in/out with Sam’s 5/4.
A violinist (Sean) in another corner of the room, mic’ed up into a mixing desk, out into a monitor. Sean was mostly in 3/4, to continue with this phasing (5/4 against 4/4 against 3/4).
Next to each performer was a screen, with a point-of-view, medium-shot projection of a character in a plague mask. It had natural lighting which aimed to make it realistic, with a chiaroscuro feel that felt very dramatic at the same time. The filming location was the aforementioned mountains, which gave it that sense of space we were aiming for.
It was the tightest performance yet, the textural processing sounded interesting (it’s different each time; naturally some instances sound better than others), and there was a good range in texture and dynamics throughout the piece (which is in A, B, C, B1 form - the B’s being more textural moments).
The audience were surrounded by the screens, which made it like they were part of that space and that they're in the middle of it all. Each character on the screens had their own character, which gave it a sense of personality and individualism.
From a theoretical perspective, the piece was about exploring concepts, ideas and relationships. By those standards, we feel that the work was very successful.
The guitar levels were a little quiet in the mix, the violin intonation was a little bit off at times, and technical limitations meant that we could not use an iOS device for each instrument to manipulate their sound (we did try this).
Visually, it would have been better to use four of the same projector to get the same image quality. Moreover, some of the film footage themselves weren’t consistent in terms of lighting (hard to control since the natural lighting of daylight was unpredictable). Finally, the pipes which Martin used to create the projection screens were unstable - in future they would need to be secured or if with more budget, to invest on actual quality rear-projector screens.
Sean was assigned to the AV team, which was a case of liaising with the artists prior to the event to see what kind of setup they would require, collecting all of their media to import onto the host computer, and sitting at the lighting desk with other members of the team. Sean also was playing the violin for Sam and Jim Mann’s project, ‘Barbed Wire Trees’.
Martin was assigned to the documentary team, which involved taking pictures of peoples practices prior to the event, operating the live-cam feed on the day, recording videos on the day, taking some stills on the day, and helping with the AV team also.
Since we (along with Jim and Sam) were performing very different projects to the rest of the course, we were almost entirely self-reliant for the weekly practices in the dance studio, in terms of setup, stage management, AV, sound, and documentary.