Jacob Barton: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Wikispaces>guest **Imported revision 29911879 - Original comment: in bad taste, i wonder?** |
Wikispaces>xenjacob **Imported revision 198391028 - Original comment: ** |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
<h2>IMPORTED REVISION FROM WIKISPACES</h2> | <h2>IMPORTED REVISION FROM WIKISPACES</h2> | ||
This is an imported revision from Wikispaces. The revision metadata is included below for reference:<br> | This is an imported revision from Wikispaces. The revision metadata is included below for reference:<br> | ||
: This revision was by author [[User: | : This revision was by author [[User:xenjacob|xenjacob]] and made on <tt>2011-02-03 11:03:44 UTC</tt>.<br> | ||
: The original revision id was <tt> | : The original revision id was <tt>198391028</tt>.<br> | ||
: The revision comment was: <tt> | : The revision comment was: <tt></tt><br> | ||
The revision contents are below, presented both in the original Wikispaces Wikitext format, and in HTML exactly as Wikispaces rendered it.<br> | The revision contents are below, presented both in the original Wikispaces Wikitext format, and in HTML exactly as Wikispaces rendered it.<br> | ||
<h4>Original Wikitext content:</h4> | <h4>Original Wikitext content:</h4> | ||
<div style="width:100%; max-height:400pt; overflow:auto; background-color:#f8f9fa; border: 1px solid #eaecf0; padding:0em"><pre style="margin:0px;border:none;background:none;word-wrap:break-word;white-space: pre-wrap ! important" class="old-revision-html">[[toc]] | <div style="width:100%; max-height:400pt; overflow:auto; background-color:#f8f9fa; border: 1px solid #eaecf0; padding:0em"><pre style="margin:0px;border:none;background:none;word-wrap:break-word;white-space: pre-wrap ! important" class="old-revision-html">[[toc]] | ||
===Jacob in 2011=== | |||
[[http://jacobbarton.net/|Jacob A. Barton]] (b. 1985) decided in 2003 to make the rest of his music as microtonal as possible. Seeing the dearth of mere musical examples of many interesting tunings, he started a [[http://soundclick.com/funwithxenharmonicity|Soundclick page]] to share his microtonal meddlings, for better or for worse. Concurrent with an encounter with the [[http://designingasociety.net/|School for Designing a Society]] in 2005, a series of fortunate events led to the invention of the [[http://udderbot.wikispaces.com|UDDERBOT]], a microtonally capable slide woodwind instrument. Jacob is currently teaching at the School for Designing a Society, organizing a [[http://oddmusicuc.wordpress.com/programs/xenharmonic-praxis-summer-camp/|Xenharmonic Praxis Summer Camp]], and spreading the udderbot gospel. | |||
===Response to [[ProgressReport]] (from May 2007)=== | |||
===Response to [[ProgressReport]]=== | |||
//What was your path to discovering alternate tunings?// | //What was your path to discovering alternate tunings?// | ||
Line 34: | Line 33: | ||
# **Autotuning** via computers. I just purchased VoiceTweaker, an AU/VST that imports scala files and can even do a little harmonizing! I also recently built an autotuner in Kyma capable of //up to 31// notes per octave (octave repeating, for now), but the only attempt I've made at using it musically was the biggest disaster ever. Needs more work, is what it comes down to. | # **Autotuning** via computers. I just purchased VoiceTweaker, an AU/VST that imports scala files and can even do a little harmonizing! I also recently built an autotuner in Kyma capable of //up to 31// notes per octave (octave repeating, for now), but the only attempt I've made at using it musically was the biggest disaster ever. Needs more work, is what it comes down to. | ||
===Microtonalists & experimental instrument builders I have met=== | ===Microtonalists & experimental instrument builders I have met=== | ||
//Yep, I'm collecting them like trading cards. | //Yep, I'm collecting them like trading cards. Seriously, though, the people are consistently even more interesting than the music they make!// | ||
Elizabeth Adams, Chris Bailey, Easley Blackwood, Donald Bousted, Ian Dicke, Duo Contour, Jonathan Glasier, Kraig Grady, Andrew Aaron Heathwaite, Wim Hoogewerf, Aaron Andrew Hunt, Paul Kotheimer, Aaron Krister Johnson, Joel Mandelbaum, Brink McGoogy, Joe Monzo, Johnny Reinhard, Jose Antonio Martin Salinas, X.J. Scott, Dan Sedgwick, Dan Stearns, George Secor, Tommy Scheurich, Mark Stewart, Travis Weller, Erv Wilson, James Wyness.</pre></div> | Elizabeth Adams, Chris Bailey, Easley Blackwood, Donald Bousted, Ian Dicke, Duo Contour, Jonathan Glasier, Kraig Grady, Andrew Aaron Heathwaite, Wim Hoogewerf, Aaron Andrew Hunt, Paul Kotheimer, Aaron Krister Johnson, Joel Mandelbaum, Brink McGoogy, Joe Monzo, Johnny Reinhard, Jose Antonio Martin Salinas, X.J. Scott, Dan Sedgwick, Dan Stearns, George Secor, Tommy Scheurich, Mark Stewart, Travis Weller, Erv Wilson, James Wyness.</pre></div> | ||
<h4>Original HTML content:</h4> | <h4>Original HTML content:</h4> | ||
<div style="width:100%; max-height:400pt; overflow:auto; background-color:#f8f9fa; border: 1px solid #eaecf0; padding:0em"><pre style="margin:0px;border:none;background:none;word-wrap:break-word;width:200%;white-space: pre-wrap ! important" class="old-revision-html"><html><head><title>JacobBarton</title></head><body><!-- ws:start:WikiTextTocRule:6:&lt;img id=&quot;wikitext@@toc@@normal&quot; class=&quot;WikiMedia WikiMediaToc&quot; title=&quot;Table of Contents&quot; src=&quot;/site/embedthumbnail/toc/normal?w=225&amp;h=100&quot;/&gt; --><div id="toc"><h1 class="nopad">Table of Contents</h1><!-- ws:end:WikiTextTocRule:6 --><!-- ws:start:WikiTextTocRule:7: --><div style="margin-left: 3em;"><a href="#x-- | <div style="width:100%; max-height:400pt; overflow:auto; background-color:#f8f9fa; border: 1px solid #eaecf0; padding:0em"><pre style="margin:0px;border:none;background:none;word-wrap:break-word;width:200%;white-space: pre-wrap ! important" class="old-revision-html"><html><head><title>JacobBarton</title></head><body><!-- ws:start:WikiTextTocRule:6:&lt;img id=&quot;wikitext@@toc@@normal&quot; class=&quot;WikiMedia WikiMediaToc&quot; title=&quot;Table of Contents&quot; src=&quot;/site/embedthumbnail/toc/normal?w=225&amp;h=100&quot;/&gt; --><div id="toc"><h1 class="nopad">Table of Contents</h1><!-- ws:end:WikiTextTocRule:6 --><!-- ws:start:WikiTextTocRule:7: --><div style="margin-left: 3em;"><a href="#x--Jacob in 2011">Jacob in 2011</a></div> | ||
<!-- ws:end:WikiTextTocRule:7 --><!-- ws:start:WikiTextTocRule:8: --><div style="margin-left: 3em;"><a href="#x--Response to ProgressReport">Response to ProgressReport</a></div> | <!-- ws:end:WikiTextTocRule:7 --><!-- ws:start:WikiTextTocRule:8: --><div style="margin-left: 3em;"><a href="#x--Response to ProgressReport (from May 2007)">Response to ProgressReport (from May 2007)</a></div> | ||
<!-- ws:end:WikiTextTocRule:8 --><!-- ws:start:WikiTextTocRule:9: --><div style="margin-left: 3em;"><a href="#x--Microtonalists &amp; experimental instrument builders I have met">Microtonalists &amp; experimental instrument builders I have met</a></div> | <!-- ws:end:WikiTextTocRule:8 --><!-- ws:start:WikiTextTocRule:9: --><div style="margin-left: 3em;"><a href="#x--Microtonalists &amp; experimental instrument builders I have met">Microtonalists &amp; experimental instrument builders I have met</a></div> | ||
<!-- ws:end:WikiTextTocRule:9 --><!-- ws:start:WikiTextTocRule:10: --></div> | <!-- ws:end:WikiTextTocRule:9 --><!-- ws:start:WikiTextTocRule:10: --></div> | ||
<!-- ws:end:WikiTextTocRule:10 --> | <!-- ws:end:WikiTextTocRule:10 --><!-- ws:start:WikiTextHeadingRule:0:&lt;h3&gt; --><h3 id="toc0"><a name="x--Jacob in 2011"></a><!-- ws:end:WikiTextHeadingRule:0 -->Jacob in 2011</h3> | ||
<!-- ws:start:WikiTextHeadingRule:0:&lt;h3&gt; --><h3 id="toc0"><a name="x-- | <a class="wiki_link_ext" href="http://jacobbarton.net/" rel="nofollow">Jacob A. Barton</a> (b. 1985) decided in 2003 to make the rest of his music as microtonal as possible. Seeing the dearth of mere musical examples of many interesting tunings, he started a <a class="wiki_link_ext" href="http://soundclick.com/funwithxenharmonicity" rel="nofollow">Soundclick page</a> to share his microtonal meddlings, for better or for worse. Concurrent with an encounter with the <a class="wiki_link_ext" href="http://designingasociety.net/" rel="nofollow">School for Designing a Society</a> in 2005, a series of fortunate events led to the invention of the <a href="http://udderbot.wikispaces.com">UDDERBOT</a>, a microtonally capable slide woodwind instrument. Jacob is currently teaching at the School for Designing a Society, organizing a <a class="wiki_link_ext" href="http://oddmusicuc.wordpress.com/programs/xenharmonic-praxis-summer-camp/" rel="nofollow">Xenharmonic Praxis Summer Camp</a>, and spreading the udderbot gospel.<br /> | ||
<br /> | <br /> | ||
<!-- ws:start:WikiTextHeadingRule:2:&lt;h3&gt; --><h3 id="toc1"><a name="x--Response to ProgressReport"></a><!-- ws:end:WikiTextHeadingRule:2 -->Response to <a class="wiki_link" href="/ProgressReport">ProgressReport</a></h3> | <!-- ws:start:WikiTextHeadingRule:2:&lt;h3&gt; --><h3 id="toc1"><a name="x--Response to ProgressReport (from May 2007)"></a><!-- ws:end:WikiTextHeadingRule:2 -->Response to <a class="wiki_link" href="/ProgressReport">ProgressReport</a> (from May 2007)</h3> | ||
<br /> | <br /> | ||
<em>What was your path to discovering alternate tunings?</em><br /> | <em>What was your path to discovering alternate tunings?</em><br /> | ||
Line 59: | Line 57: | ||
<ol><li>obtain a <strong>reed organ</strong> and retune the reeds. Scrape the tips to raise pitch; scrape base of reeds to lower. I retuned a low-end electric-motor organ to 3 octaves of harmonics 12-24 and called it &quot;otonal organ&quot;. Good for JI, but hard to get exactly right. It's still not exactly right.</li><li>synthesizer (MR-Rack) with a user tuning table. I wrote a piece where the tuning was supposed to change between sections, so I rigged <strong>Max/MSP</strong> to send the appropriate sysex messages triggered by a pedal. Piece was for 3 live keyboards, but in performance I accidentally hit the pedal too many times and was stuck playing two sections in the wrong tuning - yuck!</li><li>when <strong>Scala</strong>'s GUI version became available for Mac I made quick friends with the live retuning feature, detwelvulating my QS8, which has robust samples. Still a favorite for auditioning new scales.</li><li>tried to teach an ensemble (clarinet, bass, cellos, violin, kazoo) to play 72-equal using <strong>Helmholtz-Ellis-Wilson-Monzo</strong> notation. Disaster! The signs &lt; and &gt; were oft-confused, and I was really only interested in a small subset of the 72 notes -- more complexity than I needed.</li><li>tried to learn 31-tone fingerings for bassoon, after Johnny Reinhard. Relatively successful, though timbral unevenness between some notes. Hope to do more of it in the future. I welcome any <strong>31-tone bassoon</strong> compositions anyone wants to throw at me.</li><li>tried to teach an <strong>ensemble</strong> (violin, saws, bass, trombones, bassoon) to play <strong>in 31</strong>, notated normally. it really came down to the attitude of the individuals, some of which were better than others. the main problem is a lack of pedagogical materials. i hope to generate some in my lifetime.</li><li>scratched that and went to <strong>bottle choir</strong>. much like handbells, the challenge all of a sudden was not in tuning at all but in lining up rhythms to make hocket melodies. highly successful and fun recommended! was toying with starting an ongoing bottle choir for awhile.</li><li>piece in <strong>8-equal</strong> (sesquitones!) for <strong>chamber ensemble</strong> (violins, cello, flute, oboe, clarinet, udderbot, slide trumpet, trombone, horn). hastily written and rehearsed; results inconclusive. slide instruments fared better than keyed, but the limits of difficulty were breached.</li><li>short sketch of <strong>string quartet</strong> in a simple 9-out-of-<strong>quartertones</strong> scale. not too shabbily read!</li><li>two Bb <strong>clarinets</strong>, but with one tuned a <strong>sixth-tone</strong> (33¢) flat for a composite 24-out-of-36 scale. The clarinet is already not really in 12, and even less so when pulled out. Such a constraint on 36 would make any reasonable xenharmonicist complain, but I found a lot of nice 7-limit stuff as I wrote the piece. Recommended.</li><li><strong><a class="wiki_link" href="/SeventeenTonePianoProject">SeventeenTonePianoProject</a></strong>. I was really really happy with this, but again, it's a compromise of what an instrument natively designed for 17 could do. Hockets - a good problem to have! Also, got so busy being performer and organizer that I didn't manage to compose much of what I wanted.</li><li><strong><a class="wiki_link_ext" href="http://www.udderbot.com" rel="nofollow">udderbot</a></strong>, a new slide bottle, played in any tuning imaginable. cheap and intuitive. like trombone, much depends on what you can hear. i'm working up a piece in 31 right now, and I hope to commission numerous microtonalists for <strong>solo</strong> pieces in the near future.</li><li><strong>Autotuning</strong> via computers. I just purchased VoiceTweaker, an AU/VST that imports scala files and can even do a little harmonizing! I also recently built an autotuner in Kyma capable of <em>up to 31</em> notes per octave (octave repeating, for now), but the only attempt I've made at using it musically was the biggest disaster ever. Needs more work, is what it comes down to.</li></ol><br /> | <ol><li>obtain a <strong>reed organ</strong> and retune the reeds. Scrape the tips to raise pitch; scrape base of reeds to lower. I retuned a low-end electric-motor organ to 3 octaves of harmonics 12-24 and called it &quot;otonal organ&quot;. Good for JI, but hard to get exactly right. It's still not exactly right.</li><li>synthesizer (MR-Rack) with a user tuning table. I wrote a piece where the tuning was supposed to change between sections, so I rigged <strong>Max/MSP</strong> to send the appropriate sysex messages triggered by a pedal. Piece was for 3 live keyboards, but in performance I accidentally hit the pedal too many times and was stuck playing two sections in the wrong tuning - yuck!</li><li>when <strong>Scala</strong>'s GUI version became available for Mac I made quick friends with the live retuning feature, detwelvulating my QS8, which has robust samples. Still a favorite for auditioning new scales.</li><li>tried to teach an ensemble (clarinet, bass, cellos, violin, kazoo) to play 72-equal using <strong>Helmholtz-Ellis-Wilson-Monzo</strong> notation. Disaster! The signs &lt; and &gt; were oft-confused, and I was really only interested in a small subset of the 72 notes -- more complexity than I needed.</li><li>tried to learn 31-tone fingerings for bassoon, after Johnny Reinhard. Relatively successful, though timbral unevenness between some notes. Hope to do more of it in the future. I welcome any <strong>31-tone bassoon</strong> compositions anyone wants to throw at me.</li><li>tried to teach an <strong>ensemble</strong> (violin, saws, bass, trombones, bassoon) to play <strong>in 31</strong>, notated normally. it really came down to the attitude of the individuals, some of which were better than others. the main problem is a lack of pedagogical materials. i hope to generate some in my lifetime.</li><li>scratched that and went to <strong>bottle choir</strong>. much like handbells, the challenge all of a sudden was not in tuning at all but in lining up rhythms to make hocket melodies. highly successful and fun recommended! was toying with starting an ongoing bottle choir for awhile.</li><li>piece in <strong>8-equal</strong> (sesquitones!) for <strong>chamber ensemble</strong> (violins, cello, flute, oboe, clarinet, udderbot, slide trumpet, trombone, horn). hastily written and rehearsed; results inconclusive. slide instruments fared better than keyed, but the limits of difficulty were breached.</li><li>short sketch of <strong>string quartet</strong> in a simple 9-out-of-<strong>quartertones</strong> scale. not too shabbily read!</li><li>two Bb <strong>clarinets</strong>, but with one tuned a <strong>sixth-tone</strong> (33¢) flat for a composite 24-out-of-36 scale. The clarinet is already not really in 12, and even less so when pulled out. Such a constraint on 36 would make any reasonable xenharmonicist complain, but I found a lot of nice 7-limit stuff as I wrote the piece. Recommended.</li><li><strong><a class="wiki_link" href="/SeventeenTonePianoProject">SeventeenTonePianoProject</a></strong>. I was really really happy with this, but again, it's a compromise of what an instrument natively designed for 17 could do. Hockets - a good problem to have! Also, got so busy being performer and organizer that I didn't manage to compose much of what I wanted.</li><li><strong><a class="wiki_link_ext" href="http://www.udderbot.com" rel="nofollow">udderbot</a></strong>, a new slide bottle, played in any tuning imaginable. cheap and intuitive. like trombone, much depends on what you can hear. i'm working up a piece in 31 right now, and I hope to commission numerous microtonalists for <strong>solo</strong> pieces in the near future.</li><li><strong>Autotuning</strong> via computers. I just purchased VoiceTweaker, an AU/VST that imports scala files and can even do a little harmonizing! I also recently built an autotuner in Kyma capable of <em>up to 31</em> notes per octave (octave repeating, for now), but the only attempt I've made at using it musically was the biggest disaster ever. Needs more work, is what it comes down to.</li></ol><br /> | ||
<!-- ws:start:WikiTextHeadingRule:4:&lt;h3&gt; --><h3 id="toc2"><a name="x--Microtonalists &amp; experimental instrument builders I have met"></a><!-- ws:end:WikiTextHeadingRule:4 -->Microtonalists &amp; experimental instrument builders I have met</h3> | <!-- ws:start:WikiTextHeadingRule:4:&lt;h3&gt; --><h3 id="toc2"><a name="x--Microtonalists &amp; experimental instrument builders I have met"></a><!-- ws:end:WikiTextHeadingRule:4 -->Microtonalists &amp; experimental instrument builders I have met</h3> | ||
<br /> | <br /> | ||
<em>Yep, I'm collecting them like trading cards. | <em>Yep, I'm collecting them like trading cards. Seriously, though, the people are consistently even more interesting than the music they make!</em><br /> | ||
<br /> | <br /> | ||
Elizabeth Adams, Chris Bailey, Easley Blackwood, Donald Bousted, Ian Dicke, Duo Contour, Jonathan Glasier, Kraig Grady, Andrew Aaron Heathwaite, Wim Hoogewerf, Aaron Andrew Hunt, Paul Kotheimer, Aaron Krister Johnson, Joel Mandelbaum, Brink McGoogy, Joe Monzo, Johnny Reinhard, Jose Antonio Martin Salinas, X.J. Scott, Dan Sedgwick, Dan Stearns, George Secor, Tommy Scheurich, Mark Stewart, Travis Weller, Erv Wilson, James Wyness.</body></html></pre></div> | Elizabeth Adams, Chris Bailey, Easley Blackwood, Donald Bousted, Ian Dicke, Duo Contour, Jonathan Glasier, Kraig Grady, Andrew Aaron Heathwaite, Wim Hoogewerf, Aaron Andrew Hunt, Paul Kotheimer, Aaron Krister Johnson, Joel Mandelbaum, Brink McGoogy, Joe Monzo, Johnny Reinhard, Jose Antonio Martin Salinas, X.J. Scott, Dan Sedgwick, Dan Stearns, George Secor, Tommy Scheurich, Mark Stewart, Travis Weller, Erv Wilson, James Wyness.</body></html></pre></div> |
Revision as of 11:03, 3 February 2011
IMPORTED REVISION FROM WIKISPACES
This is an imported revision from Wikispaces. The revision metadata is included below for reference:
- This revision was by author xenjacob and made on 2011-02-03 11:03:44 UTC.
- The original revision id was 198391028.
- The revision comment was:
The revision contents are below, presented both in the original Wikispaces Wikitext format, and in HTML exactly as Wikispaces rendered it.
Original Wikitext content:
[[toc]] ===Jacob in 2011=== [[http://jacobbarton.net/|Jacob A. Barton]] (b. 1985) decided in 2003 to make the rest of his music as microtonal as possible. Seeing the dearth of mere musical examples of many interesting tunings, he started a [[http://soundclick.com/funwithxenharmonicity|Soundclick page]] to share his microtonal meddlings, for better or for worse. Concurrent with an encounter with the [[http://designingasociety.net/|School for Designing a Society]] in 2005, a series of fortunate events led to the invention of the [[http://udderbot.wikispaces.com|UDDERBOT]], a microtonally capable slide woodwind instrument. Jacob is currently teaching at the School for Designing a Society, organizing a [[http://oddmusicuc.wordpress.com/programs/xenharmonic-praxis-summer-camp/|Xenharmonic Praxis Summer Camp]], and spreading the udderbot gospel. ===Response to [[ProgressReport]] (from May 2007)=== //What was your path to discovering alternate tunings?// I began music very early and was fortunate enough to have MIDI software and hardware from about age 8. By high school, I was over sequencing and into writing for acoustic instruments, even planning to build some new ones. Doing a music theory project in I stumbled upon LucyTuning and Partch's //Genesis of a Music//, fascinated by the seemingly wide-open possibilities of an extended pitch continuum. And yet, months went by as I searched to no avail for microtonal music that did what I wanted music to do (a hard enough task without the microtonal). Through that process I got a lot less picky in listening - MIDI sounds don't bother me so much, for instance. A big step in the search was realizing that people were calling this stuff "microtonal music". When I found some writings by Ivor Darreg, I found that his pan-intonational approach fit me better than Partch's more centered view. (I'm very diffuse!) //What instruments or means have you successfully used in the making of microtonal music? Recommendations?// Here are the things I've tried, in roughly chronological order, which I've called "Microtonal Solutions", many of which involve Western acoustic instruments: # obtain a **reed organ** and retune the reeds. Scrape the tips to raise pitch; scrape base of reeds to lower. I retuned a low-end electric-motor organ to 3 octaves of harmonics 12-24 and called it "otonal organ". Good for JI, but hard to get exactly right. It's still not exactly right. # synthesizer (MR-Rack) with a user tuning table. I wrote a piece where the tuning was supposed to change between sections, so I rigged **Max/MSP** to send the appropriate sysex messages triggered by a pedal. Piece was for 3 live keyboards, but in performance I accidentally hit the pedal too many times and was stuck playing two sections in the wrong tuning - yuck! # when **Scala**'s GUI version became available for Mac I made quick friends with the live retuning feature, detwelvulating my QS8, which has robust samples. Still a favorite for auditioning new scales. # tried to teach an ensemble (clarinet, bass, cellos, violin, kazoo) to play 72-equal using **Helmholtz-Ellis-Wilson-Monzo** notation. Disaster! The signs < and > were oft-confused, and I was really only interested in a small subset of the 72 notes -- more complexity than I needed. # tried to learn 31-tone fingerings for bassoon, after Johnny Reinhard. Relatively successful, though timbral unevenness between some notes. Hope to do more of it in the future. I welcome any **31-tone bassoon** compositions anyone wants to throw at me. # tried to teach an **ensemble** (violin, saws, bass, trombones, bassoon) to play **in 31**, notated normally. it really came down to the attitude of the individuals, some of which were better than others. the main problem is a lack of pedagogical materials. i hope to generate some in my lifetime. # scratched that and went to **bottle choir**. much like handbells, the challenge all of a sudden was not in tuning at all but in lining up rhythms to make hocket melodies. highly successful and fun recommended! was toying with starting an ongoing bottle choir for awhile. # piece in **8-equal** (sesquitones!) for **chamber ensemble** (violins, cello, flute, oboe, clarinet, udderbot, slide trumpet, trombone, horn). hastily written and rehearsed; results inconclusive. slide instruments fared better than keyed, but the limits of difficulty were breached. # short sketch of **string quartet** in a simple 9-out-of-**quartertones** scale. not too shabbily read! # two Bb **clarinets**, but with one tuned a **sixth-tone** (33¢) flat for a composite 24-out-of-36 scale. The clarinet is already not really in 12, and even less so when pulled out. Such a constraint on 36 would make any reasonable xenharmonicist complain, but I found a lot of nice 7-limit stuff as I wrote the piece. Recommended. # **[[SeventeenTonePianoProject]]**. I was really really happy with this, but again, it's a compromise of what an instrument natively designed for 17 could do. Hockets - a good problem to have! Also, got so busy being performer and organizer that I didn't manage to compose much of what I wanted. # **[[http://www.udderbot.com|udderbot]]**, a new slide bottle, played in any tuning imaginable. cheap and intuitive. like trombone, much depends on what you can hear. i'm working up a piece in 31 right now, and I hope to commission numerous microtonalists for **solo** pieces in the near future. # **Autotuning** via computers. I just purchased VoiceTweaker, an AU/VST that imports scala files and can even do a little harmonizing! I also recently built an autotuner in Kyma capable of //up to 31// notes per octave (octave repeating, for now), but the only attempt I've made at using it musically was the biggest disaster ever. Needs more work, is what it comes down to. ===Microtonalists & experimental instrument builders I have met=== //Yep, I'm collecting them like trading cards. Seriously, though, the people are consistently even more interesting than the music they make!// Elizabeth Adams, Chris Bailey, Easley Blackwood, Donald Bousted, Ian Dicke, Duo Contour, Jonathan Glasier, Kraig Grady, Andrew Aaron Heathwaite, Wim Hoogewerf, Aaron Andrew Hunt, Paul Kotheimer, Aaron Krister Johnson, Joel Mandelbaum, Brink McGoogy, Joe Monzo, Johnny Reinhard, Jose Antonio Martin Salinas, X.J. Scott, Dan Sedgwick, Dan Stearns, George Secor, Tommy Scheurich, Mark Stewart, Travis Weller, Erv Wilson, James Wyness.
Original HTML content:
<html><head><title>JacobBarton</title></head><body><!-- ws:start:WikiTextTocRule:6:<img id="wikitext@@toc@@normal" class="WikiMedia WikiMediaToc" title="Table of Contents" src="/site/embedthumbnail/toc/normal?w=225&h=100"/> --><div id="toc"><h1 class="nopad">Table of Contents</h1><!-- ws:end:WikiTextTocRule:6 --><!-- ws:start:WikiTextTocRule:7: --><div style="margin-left: 3em;"><a href="#x--Jacob in 2011">Jacob in 2011</a></div> <!-- ws:end:WikiTextTocRule:7 --><!-- ws:start:WikiTextTocRule:8: --><div style="margin-left: 3em;"><a href="#x--Response to ProgressReport (from May 2007)">Response to ProgressReport (from May 2007)</a></div> <!-- ws:end:WikiTextTocRule:8 --><!-- ws:start:WikiTextTocRule:9: --><div style="margin-left: 3em;"><a href="#x--Microtonalists & experimental instrument builders I have met">Microtonalists & experimental instrument builders I have met</a></div> <!-- ws:end:WikiTextTocRule:9 --><!-- ws:start:WikiTextTocRule:10: --></div> <!-- ws:end:WikiTextTocRule:10 --><!-- ws:start:WikiTextHeadingRule:0:<h3> --><h3 id="toc0"><a name="x--Jacob in 2011"></a><!-- ws:end:WikiTextHeadingRule:0 -->Jacob in 2011</h3> <a class="wiki_link_ext" href="http://jacobbarton.net/" rel="nofollow">Jacob A. Barton</a> (b. 1985) decided in 2003 to make the rest of his music as microtonal as possible. Seeing the dearth of mere musical examples of many interesting tunings, he started a <a class="wiki_link_ext" href="http://soundclick.com/funwithxenharmonicity" rel="nofollow">Soundclick page</a> to share his microtonal meddlings, for better or for worse. Concurrent with an encounter with the <a class="wiki_link_ext" href="http://designingasociety.net/" rel="nofollow">School for Designing a Society</a> in 2005, a series of fortunate events led to the invention of the <a href="http://udderbot.wikispaces.com">UDDERBOT</a>, a microtonally capable slide woodwind instrument. Jacob is currently teaching at the School for Designing a Society, organizing a <a class="wiki_link_ext" href="http://oddmusicuc.wordpress.com/programs/xenharmonic-praxis-summer-camp/" rel="nofollow">Xenharmonic Praxis Summer Camp</a>, and spreading the udderbot gospel.<br /> <br /> <!-- ws:start:WikiTextHeadingRule:2:<h3> --><h3 id="toc1"><a name="x--Response to ProgressReport (from May 2007)"></a><!-- ws:end:WikiTextHeadingRule:2 -->Response to <a class="wiki_link" href="/ProgressReport">ProgressReport</a> (from May 2007)</h3> <br /> <em>What was your path to discovering alternate tunings?</em><br /> I began music very early and was fortunate enough to have MIDI software and hardware from about age 8. By high school, I was over sequencing and into writing for acoustic instruments, even planning to build some new ones. Doing a music theory project in I stumbled upon LucyTuning and Partch's <em>Genesis of a Music</em>, fascinated by the seemingly wide-open possibilities of an extended pitch continuum.<br /> <br /> And yet, months went by as I searched to no avail for microtonal music that did what I wanted music to do (a hard enough task without the microtonal). Through that process I got a lot less picky in listening - MIDI sounds don't bother me so much, for instance. A big step in the search was realizing that people were calling this stuff "microtonal music". When I found some writings by Ivor Darreg, I found that his pan-intonational approach fit me better than Partch's more centered view. (I'm very diffuse!)<br /> <br /> <em>What instruments or means have you successfully used in the making of microtonal music? Recommendations?</em><br /> Here are the things I've tried, in roughly chronological order, which I've called "Microtonal Solutions", many of which involve Western acoustic instruments:<br /> <ol><li>obtain a <strong>reed organ</strong> and retune the reeds. Scrape the tips to raise pitch; scrape base of reeds to lower. I retuned a low-end electric-motor organ to 3 octaves of harmonics 12-24 and called it "otonal organ". Good for JI, but hard to get exactly right. It's still not exactly right.</li><li>synthesizer (MR-Rack) with a user tuning table. I wrote a piece where the tuning was supposed to change between sections, so I rigged <strong>Max/MSP</strong> to send the appropriate sysex messages triggered by a pedal. Piece was for 3 live keyboards, but in performance I accidentally hit the pedal too many times and was stuck playing two sections in the wrong tuning - yuck!</li><li>when <strong>Scala</strong>'s GUI version became available for Mac I made quick friends with the live retuning feature, detwelvulating my QS8, which has robust samples. Still a favorite for auditioning new scales.</li><li>tried to teach an ensemble (clarinet, bass, cellos, violin, kazoo) to play 72-equal using <strong>Helmholtz-Ellis-Wilson-Monzo</strong> notation. Disaster! The signs < and > were oft-confused, and I was really only interested in a small subset of the 72 notes -- more complexity than I needed.</li><li>tried to learn 31-tone fingerings for bassoon, after Johnny Reinhard. Relatively successful, though timbral unevenness between some notes. Hope to do more of it in the future. I welcome any <strong>31-tone bassoon</strong> compositions anyone wants to throw at me.</li><li>tried to teach an <strong>ensemble</strong> (violin, saws, bass, trombones, bassoon) to play <strong>in 31</strong>, notated normally. it really came down to the attitude of the individuals, some of which were better than others. the main problem is a lack of pedagogical materials. i hope to generate some in my lifetime.</li><li>scratched that and went to <strong>bottle choir</strong>. much like handbells, the challenge all of a sudden was not in tuning at all but in lining up rhythms to make hocket melodies. highly successful and fun recommended! was toying with starting an ongoing bottle choir for awhile.</li><li>piece in <strong>8-equal</strong> (sesquitones!) for <strong>chamber ensemble</strong> (violins, cello, flute, oboe, clarinet, udderbot, slide trumpet, trombone, horn). hastily written and rehearsed; results inconclusive. slide instruments fared better than keyed, but the limits of difficulty were breached.</li><li>short sketch of <strong>string quartet</strong> in a simple 9-out-of-<strong>quartertones</strong> scale. not too shabbily read!</li><li>two Bb <strong>clarinets</strong>, but with one tuned a <strong>sixth-tone</strong> (33¢) flat for a composite 24-out-of-36 scale. The clarinet is already not really in 12, and even less so when pulled out. Such a constraint on 36 would make any reasonable xenharmonicist complain, but I found a lot of nice 7-limit stuff as I wrote the piece. Recommended.</li><li><strong><a class="wiki_link" href="/SeventeenTonePianoProject">SeventeenTonePianoProject</a></strong>. I was really really happy with this, but again, it's a compromise of what an instrument natively designed for 17 could do. Hockets - a good problem to have! Also, got so busy being performer and organizer that I didn't manage to compose much of what I wanted.</li><li><strong><a class="wiki_link_ext" href="http://www.udderbot.com" rel="nofollow">udderbot</a></strong>, a new slide bottle, played in any tuning imaginable. cheap and intuitive. like trombone, much depends on what you can hear. i'm working up a piece in 31 right now, and I hope to commission numerous microtonalists for <strong>solo</strong> pieces in the near future.</li><li><strong>Autotuning</strong> via computers. I just purchased VoiceTweaker, an AU/VST that imports scala files and can even do a little harmonizing! I also recently built an autotuner in Kyma capable of <em>up to 31</em> notes per octave (octave repeating, for now), but the only attempt I've made at using it musically was the biggest disaster ever. Needs more work, is what it comes down to.</li></ol><br /> <!-- ws:start:WikiTextHeadingRule:4:<h3> --><h3 id="toc2"><a name="x--Microtonalists & experimental instrument builders I have met"></a><!-- ws:end:WikiTextHeadingRule:4 -->Microtonalists & experimental instrument builders I have met</h3> <br /> <em>Yep, I'm collecting them like trading cards. Seriously, though, the people are consistently even more interesting than the music they make!</em><br /> <br /> Elizabeth Adams, Chris Bailey, Easley Blackwood, Donald Bousted, Ian Dicke, Duo Contour, Jonathan Glasier, Kraig Grady, Andrew Aaron Heathwaite, Wim Hoogewerf, Aaron Andrew Hunt, Paul Kotheimer, Aaron Krister Johnson, Joel Mandelbaum, Brink McGoogy, Joe Monzo, Johnny Reinhard, Jose Antonio Martin Salinas, X.J. Scott, Dan Sedgwick, Dan Stearns, George Secor, Tommy Scheurich, Mark Stewart, Travis Weller, Erv Wilson, James Wyness.</body></html>