DocumentCode :
964551
Title :
Enhancing engagement in multimodality environments by sound movements in a virtual space
Author :
De Götzen, Amalia
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Informatics, Universita di Verona, Italy
Volume :
11
Issue :
2
fYear :
2004
Firstpage :
4
Lastpage :
8
Abstract :
Since 1959, when electronic music was established as a new way of music composition, the rules of traditional music performance and enjoyment have changed to include space, motion, and gesture as musical parameters. For example, musicians are often located somewhere other than the stage - sometimes even in the audience - and where the music will be performed often influences compositional thinking. Loudspeakers move sound through the space at varying speeds (based on other musical parameters). In addition, the development of live electronics - that is, computers applied to real-time processing of instrumental sounds - has allowed space as a musical instrumental practice to flourish. Electro-acoustic technologies let composers explore new listening dimensions and consider the sounds coming from loudspeakers as possessing different logical meanings from the sounds produced by traditional instruments. Medea, Adriano Guarnieri\´s "video opera", is an innovative work stemming from research in multimedia that demonstrates the importance and amount of research dedicated to sound movement in space. Medea is part of the Multi-sensory Expressive Gesture Application project (http://www.megaproject.org). Among Medea\´s intentions, is a desire to establish an explicit connection between sound movement and expressiveness and to show how engagement can be enhanced acoustically in multimodality environments - for example, through the motion of sound through virtual spaces. Whereas sound positioning and movement have seldom been used in concert settings, the ear has great detection capabilities connected to its primary role (a signaling device for invisible or unseen cues); music is now trying to put these capabilities to creative use.
Keywords :
electronic music; loudspeakers; multimedia computing; music; virtual reality; Medea; Multisensory Expressive Gesture Application project; compositional thinking; electroacoustic technologies; electronic music; expressiveness; gesture; instrumental sounds; live electronics; loudspeakers; motion; multimedia; multimodality environments; music composition; music enjoyment; music performance; musical instrumental; musical parameters; real-time processing; sound movement; sound movements; video opera; virtual space; Acoustic testing; Data mining; Extraterrestrial phenomena; Information analysis; Instruments; Kinetic theory; Music; Psychoacoustic models; Psychology; Timbre;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
MultiMedia, IEEE
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1070-986X
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/MMUL.2004.1289034
Filename :
1289034
Link To Document :
بازگشت