A resource for telematic performance presented by the Deep Listening Institute Ltd.Kingston, NY

ResoNations - An International Telematic Music Concert for Peace

November 20, 2009
7:30PM EST United Nations Headquarters, New York City, United States of America
4:30PM PST University of California San Diego, United States of America
5:30PM MST The Banff Centre, Alberta, Canada
November 21, 2009
12:30AM BST Queens University Belfast, Northern Ireland, United Kingdom
9:30AM KST Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST) and Dongguk University, Seoul, South Korea

Renowned musicians in five international locations perform new contemporary music works for peace through the telematic music medium. Telematic music is real-time performance via the internet by musicians in different geographic locations. The performance will take place on high-bandwidth internet with JackTrip audio software developed by Chris Chafe and Access Grid video software developed at Argonne National Laboratory. The concert will have local audiences and a world-wide webcast.

Program:
Hope's Dream by Mark Dresser and Sarah Weaver
Disparate Bodies by Pedro Rebelo
Rock, Paper, Scissors by Chris Chafe
Green-colored Harmony by Jun Kim

http://www.avantmusicnews.com/2009/10/22/resonations/

Ear sculpture by Taipei media artist Hsin Chien Huang

Ear sculpture by Taipei media artist Hsin Chien Huang

This one of a pair of ears created by media artist Hsin Chien Huang for a Taipei park. The ultimate plan is to have them act as listening posts to similar Ears in other parks around the world. Interested?

“Moving Stars and Earth for Water”

On October 9, 2009 (GMT), this live event will be presented around the world by a community of artists representing all cultures and creative disciplines. They will unite on one far-reaching global Internet network on the occasion of Guy Laliberté’s Poetic Social Mission on the International Space Station.

Although it will contain factual and scientific information, the program is primarily the reflection of a group of artists on the issue of water in our times and how this is expressed through their art and in the context of the community in which they live.

This global artistic community is made up of singers, actors, filmmakers, photographers, dancers, acrobats, poets, etc., many of whom are friends of Guy Laliberté and Cirque du Soleil—which marks its 25th anniversary this year and will be the driving creative force for the mission. While some of the artists are celebrated around the planet, others are leading lights in their respective communities. What they all have in common is their concern regarding access to water and in particular their desire to illustrate this in their own distinctive way.

ninjam- network jamming architecture for music

NINJAM is a program to allow people to make real music together via the Internet. Every participant can hear every other participant. Each user can also tweak their personal mix to his or her liking. NINJAM is cross-platform, with clients available for Mac OS X and Windows.

NINJAM - Novel Intervallic Network Jamming Architecture for Music - Main (4 August 2009)

http://www.ninjam.com/index.php

http://snipurl.com/op0h8

"Net vs. Net Collective" presents a networked concert

The "Net vs. Net Collective" presents a networked concert with music composed and performed by several of the most prominent practitioners of the art of network music around the world. Remote acoustics, distributed animated scores, virtual worlds and mechanical remotely controlled pianos are among the repertoire. Several interconnected ensembles of acoustic and electronic instruments will take place in this unique transcontinental event. Several years of research by the SoundWIRE group at CCRMA, Stanford University, powers up the technology and the music of this concert. Pieces by Pauline Oliveros (New York), Chris Chafe (Banff, Canada) Pedro Rebelo, Franziska Schreoder, Justin Yang (Belfast), Mark Applebaum, Juan-Pablo Caceres, Fernando Lopez-Lezcano, Robert Hamilton (Stanford) and Alain Renaud (Bournemouth, UK) will be featured. 

Date: June 3rd, 12:30pm PST This time the collective includes:

Posting Audio with Utterli



Here is Whitman's ode to America


Mobile post sent by scotgl using Utterlireply-count Replies.  

Testing Utterli for the first time

I am using a new service called utterli http://utterli.com/ that pushes content to several social media sites at once with one "utter" ...


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Utterli connecter

I am experimenting with a new social media integration tool called "
Utterli"
This is an interesting new system that pushes your connection to all the sites you subscribe to (including this one). Next post is hopefully from there ;-)

Indaba online music community

This is an interesting new online social media site that focuses on music and creating and creating tracks online.

INDABA.COM

Check it out

Network Music Performance Alain Renaud at SARC – ICMC2008

weblink This workshop offered a "nuts and bolts" session on how to run a successful network music performance (NMP). A set of essential tools allowing the transmission of real-time high quality multi-modal networked interactions were be showcased. This will include audio streaming, video streaming and message communication tools. Participants were shown how to implement and use such tools and will have the opportunity to run a real network session with a second live connected site. The workshop also explored the artistic possibilities brought by NMPs and looked into factors such as latency and the combination of acoustic spaces which are important to consider when designing NMPs. The workshop was partially organised by the CO-ME-DI-A EU Culture 2007 project.