Al's XPUB2 proposal draft: Difference between revisions

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With my current research, I am exploring ways to create audiozines in a collective way. From my professional experience as a facilitator and editor, I find it much more interesting to bring some constrain while creating time and space for people to co-create. Having freedom within a predefined structure and frame. Thus, the format of audiozines in a particular restrain of length and concept [topic/practice etc.] is a method I am interested in researching and trying out with groups of people with or/and without musical training.
With my current research, I am exploring ways to create audiozines in a collective way. From my professional experience as a facilitator and editor, I find it much more interesting to bring some constrain while creating time and space for people to co-create. Having freedom within a predefined structure and frame. Thus, the format of audiozines in a particular restrain of length and concept [topic/practice etc.] is a method I am interested in researching and trying out with groups of people with or/and without musical training.


As a final output of the project, I would like to make series of sound publications in the format of audiozines. I am interested in exploring the connection between fanzines and audiozines as an independent, radical, liberating, self-publishing practice that can be created with others - embracing the DYI and DIWO culture. Audiozines are small format sound publications that are based on a particular concept, they are curated and mixed, unlikely today's format of podcasts and radio shows. An important element in this research and practice, for me, is the raw and pure, self-made aesthetics of the format. Accessibility to people without musical training to jam and create sound pieces (''as per the improvisation methods of Pauline Oliveros'').
As a final output of the project, I would like to make series of sound publications in the format of audiozines. I am interested in exploring the connection between fanzines and audiozines as an independent, radical, liberating, self-publishing practice that can be created with others - embracing the DYI and DIWO culture. Audiozines are small format sound publications that are based on a particular concept, they are curated and mixed, unlikely today's format of podcasts and radio shows.  
 




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==<span style="color: white; font-family: Menlo; text-decoration:none; background-color: #0033ff; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;"> Why do you want to make it? </span>==
==<span style="color: white; font-family: Menlo; text-decoration:none; background-color: #0033ff; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;"> Why do you want to make it? </span>==


Last year I loved the format of weekly releases - doing small experiments and reflecting on some topics/ideas with sound (and sometimes an image). I imagine that the experiments can then build up a bigger topic and research question.
Accessibility to people without musical training to jam and create sound pieces (''as per the improvisation methods of Pauline Oliveros'').
<br>
 
I am looking for a research question that can include collecting data through sound.
I am excited about doing the jams together with Mitsa and others, because I have always felt jamming sessions quite closed and inaccessible for people without musical training. As an amateur in music and an absolute music-lover, I have always dreamt to take part in jams, but I couldn't find people nor access to any jams. After the Music Moves You[th] residency in France in September 2022; but also after attending Tisa's home jams and Resister at WORM during 2022, I felt liberated to take part and even facilitate/host my own jams, which is something I want to do collectively (with Mitsa for our master research). An important element in this research and practice, for me, is the raw and pure, self-made aesthetics of the audiozine format. <br>
<br>


==<span style="color: white; font-family: Menlo; text-decoration:none; background-color: #0033ff; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;"> How do you plan to make it? </span>==
==<span style="color: white; font-family: Menlo; text-decoration:none; background-color: #0033ff; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;"> How do you plan to make it? </span>==
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==<span style="color: white; font-family: Menlo; text-decoration:none; background-color: #0033ff; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;"> Relation to previous practice </span>==
==<span style="color: white; font-family: Menlo; text-decoration:none; background-color: #0033ff; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;"> Relation to previous practice </span>==
My complicated relation to music and sound started in my early years of childhood when I was attracted to music but discouraged by my parents to pursue any musical training. However, listening to music was always a big part of my life and in 2012 I started my side-project "Lazy Indie Sundays" - monthly curated playlist with indie music. Then, I started performing in Sofia by DJ mixing this kind of music in conceptual events (listening to indie music in bars and clubs in Bulgaria is rather an underground and subcultural thing and not popular at all). After turning 30, I decided to try to learn playing a musical instrument and took acoustic guitar lessons in 2015. I was travelling for work too often, which made this process difficult and inconsistent. Thus, I started a music production 6-month course in 2016 which I couldn't finish because I had to travel again. Just finally started to focus on my artistic practice development for the first time at that moment, I had to choose a focus between learning music or working more in illustration and visual translation. I decided to develop my visual practice.
In 2019 I designed an Erasmus+ project which aimed at researching how music can be made accessible for people without musical training and how it can be used in educational activities. Because of COVID-19 outbreak, the project couldn't take place earlier than September 2022. The Music Moves You[th] residency was completely liberating for me and made me realise that I can still pursue my passion in music and sound. What was a really strong backbone to this liberation, were the events part of my studies at XPUB in Spring 2022: Radio Implicancies publication, visiting Resister at WORM, taking part in a jam session organised by Tisa (XPUB alimni), and all the jams we did with my XPUBies during the first year at the master programme.
==<span style="color: white; font-family: Menlo; text-decoration:none; background-color: #0033ff; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;"> Relation to a larger context </span>==
==<span style="color: white; font-family: Menlo; text-decoration:none; background-color: #0033ff; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;"> Relation to a larger context </span>==
==<span style="color: white; font-family: Menlo; text-decoration:none; background-color: #0033ff; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;"> References/bibliography </span>==
==<span style="color: white; font-family: Menlo; text-decoration:none; background-color: #0033ff; padding-top: 0.1vw; padding-bottom: 0.1vw; padding-left: 0.1vw; padding-right: 0.2vw;"> References/bibliography </span>==

Revision as of 16:28, 13 October 2022

// back to Ål's main page
// back to Graduate Seminar

Questions

  1. What do you want to make?
  2. How do you plan to make it?
  3. What is your timetable? [stages] [deadlines]
  4. Why do you want to make it?
  5. Who can help you and how?
  6. Relation to previous practice
  7. Relation to a larger context
  8. References/bibliography
  9. Who is the work for (part of why do you want to make it)

What do you want to make?

[collaborative research] this project is being done [partially] in collaboration with mits🤖. Together, we aim at researching and working on sound publication as a format for our project/s and on collective creation (jams) as a method.


=======================================

Mitsa and i shared our personal researches and looked for the keywords of our interests. Then, we put them together to build up to our joint project research.

13-10-2022

What is the exact focus of the project?

With my current research, I am exploring ways to create audiozines in a collective way. From my professional experience as a facilitator and editor, I find it much more interesting to bring some constrain while creating time and space for people to co-create. Having freedom within a predefined structure and frame. Thus, the format of audiozines in a particular restrain of length and concept [topic/practice etc.] is a method I am interested in researching and trying out with groups of people with or/and without musical training.

As a final output of the project, I would like to make series of sound publications in the format of audiozines. I am interested in exploring the connection between fanzines and audiozines as an independent, radical, liberating, self-publishing practice that can be created with others - embracing the DYI and DIWO culture. Audiozines are small format sound publications that are based on a particular concept, they are curated and mixed, unlikely today's format of podcasts and radio shows.



_01 [exploring and communicating a method of producing sound based publication collectively]

with the method in focus, the project is about researching the methods, trying different ways to facilitate jams and collecting them in a final publication. The form of the publication is not a focus, but a result/output of the research. Since this is a really big project that can be developed in a longer time frame, it might make sense that this starts now and continues after graduation.

or

_02 [publishing and performing audiozines]

with the form of the publication in focus, I put constrain in the final outcome and the way the content is being created is not that important. We are creating a library of sounds that will be published and performed as a final project. As a "smaller-scale" project focus, this might make more sense to focus at this point for the master proposal.


=======================================

29-09-2022

=======================================

[for the final graduation moment] i would like to make a sound performance and/or sound installation using the audiozines, created during our research during the whole year [could make a rhythm of making one zine per month, e.g.]. Those zines would be also documented in printed zine versions [the two formats can also go together - transmedia storytelling - like some part of the content is only on the printed zine; some - on the audio].

I am struggling with finding my research question.

Why do you want to make it?

Accessibility to people without musical training to jam and create sound pieces (as per the improvisation methods of Pauline Oliveros).

I am excited about doing the jams together with Mitsa and others, because I have always felt jamming sessions quite closed and inaccessible for people without musical training. As an amateur in music and an absolute music-lover, I have always dreamt to take part in jams, but I couldn't find people nor access to any jams. After the Music Moves You[th] residency in France in September 2022; but also after attending Tisa's home jams and Resister at WORM during 2022, I felt liberated to take part and even facilitate/host my own jams, which is something I want to do collectively (with Mitsa for our master research). An important element in this research and practice, for me, is the raw and pure, self-made aesthetics of the audiozine format.

How do you plan to make it?

I would like to try out the following:
_1 - collect and map methods to collect sound; also ways to edit it and looking for the reasons behind both choices of method;
_2 - starting doing small experiments with different ways to create sound (computer-base and analog, by jams, by field recording) - I feel like I need to try some of them out first (explain what is electronic and what analog);
_3 - creating small experiments with a particular ask/question/intention behind - in search of the research topic maybe?
_4 - recording sound, mixing it due to some concept and then creating small zines to see how it's going to look like
_5 - idea to create an instrument (maybe facilitating sessions when others play with this instrument with an assignment to create something specific)
_6 - idea of using Room for sound - invite residents to participate - diffractive mixing of their contributions

What is your timetable?

sound research process map // status on 11-10-2022

october

ways to collect and edit sound + ways to facilitate jams

1_ reflect on the mixing we did - to unpack what we did // with Mitsa
2_ schedule jams and collecting sounds moments // with Mitsa
3_ filed recording experiments // 10-14 oct
4_ public moment in leszaal - ??? what to do // (idea of sound installation or recording people doing stuff)

outcomes:

_documentation and raw-raw draft of proposal
_field recordings
_sounds created
_experiments with edited sound
_pure data experiments
_facilitated jam(s) experiments


november

ways to collect and edit sound + ways to facilitate jams + proposal draft

1_ get inspiration // 2 nov Bon Iver live // 25 nov Arooj Aftab, Lucrecia Dalt live
2_ prototype of audiozine + print zine - test the combo - put all experiments together
3_ edit music and sound + document methods
4_ explore topics: what makes all the experiments so far come together?
5_ thesis outline - what form will it take (a report of the research and practice?)

outcomes:

_proposal ready // 18 nov 
_thesis outline (form) // 18 nov
_prototype of audiozine 
_topics drafting start

Who can help you and how?

[space] would like to try out different spaces and locations in rotterdam; also inviting different people and orchestrating jams with various publics [when that is possible]

  • make a list with spaces that we are interested in making jams in;
  • what are the characteristics of these places and how to use them in relation to our jam?

[publics] define different publics and test with them; who is also doing something similar in the area?

[xpub]

  • check with tutors: places in Rotterdam where we can make jams + do we have budget to rent rooms & equipment; read & works recommendations on audiozines and sound publications

Relation to previous practice

My complicated relation to music and sound started in my early years of childhood when I was attracted to music but discouraged by my parents to pursue any musical training. However, listening to music was always a big part of my life and in 2012 I started my side-project "Lazy Indie Sundays" - monthly curated playlist with indie music. Then, I started performing in Sofia by DJ mixing this kind of music in conceptual events (listening to indie music in bars and clubs in Bulgaria is rather an underground and subcultural thing and not popular at all). After turning 30, I decided to try to learn playing a musical instrument and took acoustic guitar lessons in 2015. I was travelling for work too often, which made this process difficult and inconsistent. Thus, I started a music production 6-month course in 2016 which I couldn't finish because I had to travel again. Just finally started to focus on my artistic practice development for the first time at that moment, I had to choose a focus between learning music or working more in illustration and visual translation. I decided to develop my visual practice.

In 2019 I designed an Erasmus+ project which aimed at researching how music can be made accessible for people without musical training and how it can be used in educational activities. Because of COVID-19 outbreak, the project couldn't take place earlier than September 2022. The Music Moves You[th] residency was completely liberating for me and made me realise that I can still pursue my passion in music and sound. What was a really strong backbone to this liberation, were the events part of my studies at XPUB in Spring 2022: Radio Implicancies publication, visiting Resister at WORM, taking part in a jam session organised by Tisa (XPUB alimni), and all the jams we did with my XPUBies during the first year at the master programme.

Relation to a larger context

References/bibliography

WIP

Hackpact by Nagy.png

reads

Oliveros, P., 2005. Deep Listening. New York. Deep Listening Publications. [annotated pad] Evens, A., 2005. Sound Ideas: Music, Machines & Experience. U of Minnesota Press [annotated pad]
Kreidler, J. 2013. loadbang. Programming Electronic Music in Pure Data. 2nd edition. Hofheim: Wolke Verlag.
Weiss, A., 2001. Experimental Sound & Radio. The MIT Press.
Groot, M. 2019. The Amateur's Armour. [online] Available at: <https://underbelly.nu/wp-content/uploads/2015/04/The-Amateurs-Armour.pdf> [Accessed 11 October 2022].

sound publications

Brown, A. R., 2022. Beneath Maiwar.[online] Available at: <https://www.explodingart.com/arb/2022/06/28/beneath-maiwar/> [Accessed 30 September 2022]. [annotated pad]
Nagy, A., 2018. Hackpact / Sonification Studies. [online] Available at: <https://stc.github.io/HackPact/> [Accessed 30 September 2022]. [annotated pad]

Who is the work for?

_educators: people who are facilitating various educational activities and are looking for ways to bring more mixed media in their activities;
artists: who are looking for new techniques for their practice and ways to experiment, boost their creative process; to find more ways to reflect over topics and contents;
_tba: who else? tba

Research places

wiki

Al Nik's Hackpact
Sound jams research

wip

the first draft pad [created during the Graduate Seminar on 29-09-2022]
jams ideas
references - collective pad with Mitsa

research pads

audiozines
pure data
live coding