Thursday, 08. May 2008
Field, Entity, Software 

We've been doing some research and development for
Random Dance in the area of artificial evolution and programming language semantics, with a side-helping of graphical presentation thanks to
(F)ield. Over the next couple of years we'll be looking into ways that evolutionary techniques and software agency can be incorporated into the choreographic process.
(The thumbnail image is from a
biomorphs implementation which we translated into Python for (F)ield. And, yes, some gratuitous colour and compositing has been added for artistic effect.)

Max 5 at 0101 

Cycling '74's
Max 5 course for beginners runs at
01zero-one from Saturday to Tuesday. Instructors:
Gregory Taylor and
Nick Rothwell.

Expert Witness 

I have been appointed as an "
expert" (it says here) for the
Coda symposium (
Exploring software for music and audio: Cutting edge techniques and enabling technologies) at the University of the West of England, on the 31st of May. I wonder if my
very own Monome will be here in time?

Monome at Home 

We're seeing a number of
Monome boxes appearing here in London, mainly due to the efforts of
Cybersonica. I worked with Brian Crabtree in Los Angeles some years ago, when the Monome concept was starting to take shape, so it's wonderful that something is coming of an ecological, sustainable approach to product development and support.
We've had a Monome sixty four on loan for a few weeks, and have been doing some Python coding for it, although the box is currently out with a certain
music technology magazine, for whom we've written the review. More later, when the box returns. And, needless to say, we're on the waiting list (for a one twenty eight).

Snooping at SnipSnap 

Ever since Stephan Schmidt and Matthias Jugel discontinued development of the
SnipSnap wiki and blog platform (which runs several Cassiel sites), speculation has been rife as to the package's future. Luckily, since it's open-source, we're not locked into a dead product.
Paulo Abrantes has an active fork of the source code and has been working on enhancements to the system, and there's a SourceForge project headed by
Angelo Schneider.
We have the Abrantes version running here under laboratory conditions; in particular, we've managed to wean it off the Jetty packaging, and it seems happy talking to
MySQL under
Tomcat 6. We hope to go live with it soon, and also develop some plugins for hosting audio and video clips. (The main reason for deploying a Tomcat-hosted SnipSnap, rather than staying standalone, is that we are also working on a
Cocoon-based project; more later.)
I suppose we could have just jumped ship to
WordPress, but where's the fun in that?

Monday, 21. April 2008
Bath Sounds 

We're gigging as part of the Staging Sound event at
Media Art Bath, doing a solo set and kicking off an open improvisation alongside
Matt Davies,
Jo Hyde and
Adrian Smith. Expect a mix of P3 sequencing and MaxMSP sample shard … stuff.

Wednesday, 23. January 2008
Field Research 

We are currently doing a bit of exploration of Marc Downie's software package
Field (slightly more accurately written
(F)ield - I haven't yet found the circled "F" in the tables of HTML Unicode entities). It's a framework for media agents, written in Java but allowing dynamic extension via Python. It's too early to form any strong opinions about it, especially given our comparatively high levels of experience with the other paradigms found in
Max/MSP,
Jitter,
Isadora and
Processing. More later, as they say, with screen shots as soon as we've worked out how to actually draw stuff.

All Night Turkey at the Shrub Farm 

We are just back from a rather strange, but quite enjoyable, all-night Turkish-themed festival held at
La Ferme du Buisson in Noisiel, a few miles east of Paris. As well as "displays" of Turkish fortune-telling and Turkish börek-making, theatre spaces hosted dance works, including three by Aydin Teker:
STKH (for which we composed the score),
Trio and
Momentum. Audience numbers were very respectable, especially given that STKH and Momentum were performed at around 2am...
The stage was shared with a superb performance of the piece
Dolap by
taldans, featuring Mustafa Kaplan, Filiz Sızanlı and a heavily sellotaped fridge-freezer.
(Unless informed otherwise, I'm assuming that the video screen in the photograph is showing some suitably Turkish footage of Taksim, İstanbul on a Friday night.)

Sunday, 21. October 2007
Loud (and Bright) Festivities 

We have just finished the soundtrack for a massive outdoor Christmas display commissioned by the
Birmingham Bullring. The project was produced by
Isobel Advertising and the visual and technical design is by
Evoke Productions. The display launches on December 3rd: we plan to be there to blag some champagne.
(This image is from the design brief: a similar display for
Saks on Fifth Avenue, produced by Philips. It's been captured on a shaky camcorder and
uploaded to YouTube.)

Tuesday, 11. September 2007
Assembling the Troupe 

We've just done a week of rehearsals at
The Junction in Cambridge for
Jane Turner's
Troop project, coming to a theatre which may or may not be near you later this year. There's lots of
Isadora video processing going on, some of which we'll upload in due course.
Dates:
Friday October 19th: The Junction, Cambridge
Thursday November 15th: Colchester Arts Centre, Essex
Friday November 16th: The Cut, Halesworth, Suffolk
Friday November 23rd: The Centre for the Arts, NHC, Hitchin, Herts
Wednesday November 28th: The ShowRoom, Chichester University, West Sussex
Thursday December 6th: Southbank Centre’s Purcell Room,
Queen Elizabeth Hall