James Harley: Xenakis: Stochastics to Sieves to Random Walks

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  • čas přidán 22. 07. 2013
  • About James Harley's talk: Early in his compositional activity, Iannis Xenakis applied "stochastics" to music, applying probability functions adapted from engineering analysis to generative processes (1955-1962). After developing his Fundamental Phases of Music Composition he programmed a computer algorithm to generate musical score data where most decisions were generated by stochastic processes. After producing a series of "ST" compositions, he turned his attention to deterministic processes (1963-1967). Xenakis pursued two main areas of theoretical research: sieves, and groups. The application of sieves to music provided him with the means to create ordered values to form a pitch scale or a rhythmic pattern. He used logical operations to generate the materials and to transform them (metabolae). Group theory provided a basis for organizing musical form, generating successions of defined elements by means of pre-determined relationships.
    While continuing to draw upon both stochastic and deterministic processes in his music, Xenakis turned to "random walks" (based on Brownian motion) as a new means of generating melodic material or linear structures based on glissandi. As an extension of the random walk, he used transformation processes to create related linear structure, sometimes bundled into ensemble he termed "arborescences." From the early 1970s, Xenakis drew upon all of these mathematically-derived compositional techniques throughout the rest of his career (his last works date from 1997). The only new procedure he explore later was the application of cellular automata to music (1986).

Komentáře • 5

  • @srogamina
    @srogamina Před 5 lety +6

    It's so smart, that you have split the screen and simultaneously view of the speaker and his presentation is possible. This solution should be exemplary for others.

  • @alessandroseravalle8674

    Thank you very much for this!

  • @germanothon1
    @germanothon1 Před 4 lety

    Crazy genius

  • @QuadriviumNumbers

    " So he started learning computer programming...in his spare time...hehe!" Tedious and predictable sycophancy aside, I found it to be quite interesting. One needs to read between the endless obsequious fawning though. Xenakis was an Architect and a mathematician who created pointillistic "music" from his viewpoint. Amazing!!! Why the perverse need to always portray yourself as "genius?"