Research output: Contribution to journal/Conference contribution in journal/Contribution to newspaper › Conference article › Research › peer-review
Materiality for Musical Expressions : an Approach to Interdisciplinary Syllabus Development for NIME. / Lindell, Rikard; Tahiroğlu, Koray; Riis, Morten S. et al.
In: NIME Proceedings, Vol. 16, 2016, p. 344-349.Research output: Contribution to journal/Conference contribution in journal/Contribution to newspaper › Conference article › Research › peer-review
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TY - GEN
T1 - Materiality for Musical Expressions
AU - Lindell, Rikard
AU - Tahiroğlu, Koray
AU - Riis, Morten S.
AU - Schaeffer, Jennie
PY - 2016
Y1 - 2016
N2 - We organised an elven day intense course in materiality for musical expressions to explore underlying principles of New Interfaces for Musical Expression (NIME) in higher education. We grounded the course in different aspects of ma-teriality and gathered interdisciplinary student teams from three Nordic universities. Electronic music instrument makers participated in providing the course. In eleven days the students designed and built interfaces for musical expressions , composed a piece, and performed at the Norberg electronic music festival. The students explored the relationship between technology and possible musical expression with a strong connection to culture and place. The emphasis on performance provided closure and motivated teams to move forward in their design and artistic processes. On the basis of the course we discuss an interdisciplinary NIME course syllabus, and we infer that it benefits from grounding in materiality and in the place with a strong reference to culture
AB - We organised an elven day intense course in materiality for musical expressions to explore underlying principles of New Interfaces for Musical Expression (NIME) in higher education. We grounded the course in different aspects of ma-teriality and gathered interdisciplinary student teams from three Nordic universities. Electronic music instrument makers participated in providing the course. In eleven days the students designed and built interfaces for musical expressions , composed a piece, and performed at the Norberg electronic music festival. The students explored the relationship between technology and possible musical expression with a strong connection to culture and place. The emphasis on performance provided closure and motivated teams to move forward in their design and artistic processes. On the basis of the course we discuss an interdisciplinary NIME course syllabus, and we infer that it benefits from grounding in materiality and in the place with a strong reference to culture
M3 - Conference article
VL - 16
SP - 344
EP - 349
JO - NIME Proceedings
JF - NIME Proceedings
SN - 2220-4806
Y2 - 11 July 2016 through 15 July 2016
ER -