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<channel>
	<title>guitaristic cyborgs</title>
	<link>https://guitarcyborgs.cargo.site</link>
	<description>guitaristic cyborgs</description>
	<pubDate>Wed, 11 Dec 2024 07:35:04 +0000</pubDate>
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	<item>
		<title>Homepage — left</title>
				
		<link>https://guitarcyborgs.cargo.site/Homepage-left</link>

		<pubDate>Sun, 27 Oct 2024 08:47:58 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>guitaristic cyborgs</dc:creator>

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		<description>guitaristic cyborgs
︎Works for Guitar and Electronic






GUITARISTIC CYBORGS 

 is an ongoing research on works for guitar and electronics by ︎Jannis Wichmann and Tom Smith.&#38;nbsp; 
You can find here ︎work presentations and a collection of resources on the subject of guitar and electronics.


What ist true for composition alone is even stronger when it is combined with electronics: 
The field is white and cis-male dominated for structural rather than quality reasons. Therefore we always try to focus on works by female composers and consider structural discriminations.

GUITARISTIC CYBORGS is fundamentally open to collaboration and cooperation, and will stay non-commercial. 




Recently added articles:


&#60;img width="2362" height="3543" width_o="2362" height_o="3543" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/4c99dedd140e4bb4cc9d8d11cdbc6da7672e2517fb8a1026d26d218ce1d66ca8/AndrejaAndric_PortraitPhoto_UllaSkovJensen.jpg" data-mid="223199593" border="0" alt="Andreja Andric - Streams" data-caption="Andreja Andric - Streams" src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/4c99dedd140e4bb4cc9d8d11cdbc6da7672e2517fb8a1026d26d218ce1d66ca8/AndrejaAndric_PortraitPhoto_UllaSkovJensen.jpg" /&#62;
&#60;img width="586" height="420" width_o="586" height_o="420" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/3f33fddadfecb342d31095f1530e41cf740fda24229a368cd81ac713118beb2e/natasha-barret.png" data-mid="220395003" border="0" alt="Natasha Barrett - Deconstructing Dowland" data-caption="Natasha Barrett - Deconstructing Dowland" src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/586/i/3f33fddadfecb342d31095f1530e41cf740fda24229a368cd81ac713118beb2e/natasha-barret.png" /&#62;
&#60;img width="560" height="420" width_o="560" height_o="420" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/9822f47f1e1c62145008c24971a48eaa86290476d9d59fb3974fd6d567615907/brandon.png" data-mid="220359710" border="0" alt="Amy Brandon - War Games" data-caption="Amy Brandon - War Games" src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/560/i/9822f47f1e1c62145008c24971a48eaa86290476d9d59fb3974fd6d567615907/brandon.png" /&#62;
&#60;img width="319" height="388" width_o="319" height_o="388" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/7ebbb949a039e0d731ca43ed33178ce835c10bca9ba320972d85c08b1b3abf2c/madelynbyrne.jpg" data-mid="220361937" border="0" alt="Madelyn Byrne - Dream Tableaux" data-caption="Madelyn Byrne - Dream Tableaux" src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/319/i/7ebbb949a039e0d731ca43ed33178ce835c10bca9ba320972d85c08b1b3abf2c/madelynbyrne.jpg" /&#62;
&#60;img width="640" height="480" width_o="640" height_o="480" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/8a815bae6811185441ddd344ce7749c5f7b9f8d7e54b053dd479a64d16d021c7/images.jpg" data-mid="220361623" border="0" alt="Tine Surel Lange - Periferi" data-caption="Tine Surel Lange - Periferi" src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/640/i/8a815bae6811185441ddd344ce7749c5f7b9f8d7e54b053dd479a64d16d021c7/images.jpg" /&#62;
&#60;img width="6200" height="8272" width_o="6200" height_o="8272" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/10e860fbb123bc6d0843a98f2abc7a59022099e7b8d3fbcc7a04abb14eced50a/john-metcalfe-portrait-2014.jpg" data-mid="220361926" border="0" alt="John Metcalfe - Third Fire" data-caption="John Metcalfe - Third Fire" src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/10e860fbb123bc6d0843a98f2abc7a59022099e7b8d3fbcc7a04abb14eced50a/john-metcalfe-portrait-2014.jpg" /&#62;
&#60;img width="187" height="228" width_o="187" height_o="228" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/fff4f3f102ce1fbbb38b97d7c36ad41aab9e1c8fbf98025266582d40acc1e497/Thea_Musgrave_2017_-_St_Brides-_London.jpg" data-mid="220394990" border="0" alt="Thea Musgrave - Soliloquy I" data-caption="Thea Musgrave - Soliloquy I" src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/187/i/fff4f3f102ce1fbbb38b97d7c36ad41aab9e1c8fbf98025266582d40acc1e497/Thea_Musgrave_2017_-_St_Brides-_London.jpg" /&#62;

	
	
	
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	<item>
		<title>Amy Brandon - War games</title>
				
		<link>https://guitarcyborgs.cargo.site/Amy-Brandon-War-games</link>

		<pubDate>Sun, 27 Oct 2024 08:47:59 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>guitaristic cyborgs</dc:creator>

		<guid isPermaLink="true">https://guitarcyborgs.cargo.site/Amy-Brandon-War-games</guid>

		<description>
	
Amy Brandon&#38;nbsp;
- War games

for classical guitar and soundfile.




Amy Brandon's compositions move between influences from jazz, new and experimental music. Her works for solo guitar or guitar and soundfile from the Scavenger Suite have received some attention and captivate with new, exciting soundscapes.Amy Brandon's compositions for guitar and electronics are particularly exciting because they leave a lot of room for one's own interpretation and artistic creation. Although they are works for guitar and soundfile, the soundfile functions more as a background atmosphere and is not timed to the guitar part. "War games" contains passages that partly remind of a music box or a Roland Dyens gone a little crazy, while a field recording of the end of the world explodes in the background.



Website of Amy Brandon 
	






	



“The album Scavenger started out as a way to 'destroy' certain live recordings I had of my own performances. It was cathartic turning them into electronics over which I could perform again.”






&#60;img width="560" height="420" width_o="560" height_o="420" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/9822f47f1e1c62145008c24971a48eaa86290476d9d59fb3974fd6d567615907/brandon.png" data-mid="220360441" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/560/i/9822f47f1e1c62145008c24971a48eaa86290476d9d59fb3974fd6d567615907/brandon.png" /&#62;






	



Scavenger von Amy Brandon
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	<item>
		<title>Andreja Andric - Streams</title>
				
		<link>https://guitarcyborgs.cargo.site/Andreja-Andric-Streams</link>

		<pubDate>Wed, 11 Dec 2024 07:35:04 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>guitaristic cyborgs</dc:creator>

		<guid isPermaLink="true">https://guitarcyborgs.cargo.site/Andreja-Andric-Streams</guid>

		<description>
	
Andreja Andric &#38;nbsp;- Streams

for classical guitar and Pitchbender software.


Andreja Andric (b. 1973) is a Serbian
composer and programmer now based in Denmark. Mathematical processes,
intuition and chance are regularly explored in his works, which often
feature networked laptops or smartphones, as well as traditional
instruments and voices. His music has been performed across Europe
and in the USA, and he holds a PhD in Music Informatics from the
State University of Milan.


&#60;img width="2362" height="3543" width_o="2362" height_o="3543" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/a12263c24b8ffbfed4dd6f3bd8ada19955db186a73042f267c0f1fe08051f67f/AndrejaAndric_PortraitPhoto_UllaSkovJensen.jpg" data-mid="223199565" border="0" data-scale="82" src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/a12263c24b8ffbfed4dd6f3bd8ada19955db186a73042f267c0f1fe08051f67f/AndrejaAndric_PortraitPhoto_UllaSkovJensen.jpg" /&#62;





	
	
	
	







Streams was written for Jakob Bangsø
in 2015, and uses the computer and live instrument combination to
extend the concept of polyphony. The score is a combination of chords
written in standard notation with text-based improvisational guides
which the performer can navigate in a way that is meaningful to them.
There are two meanings behind the piece’s title: one, that it
follows a lineage of works throughout musical history that use
arpeggiated motifs to evoke images of water; and the second that it is
related to digital streaming – here used to transform the sound of a
live instrument rather than reproducing a piece of recorded music. 




The electronics for Streams are
produced through Andric’s own Pitchbender software, which changes
the sample rate of the audio input in various rhythmic or glitchy
ways
using text files containing lists of sample rates and related time intervals, prepared in advance by the composer.






Website of Andreja Andric



	









	

Interview with Andreja Andric#1&#38;nbsp; Your works show that you understand and know the guitar very well. Can you briefly describe your personal history with the guitar?


Thank you! That's very nice to hear. I have been studying classical guitar privately for a number of years. I am a big fan of the repertoire for romantic guitar, or at least of some composers from that period. In my spare time I enjoy playing guitar sonatas by Ferdinando Carulli and Anton Diabelli among others - they are really fun to play. I perform my own guitar music in public on occasion, sometimes as a guitar duo with my friend, the Danish guitarist Jakob Bangsø. Most recently I have started a series of pieces as a speaking guitarist, where I tell stories and accompany myself on guitar.


#2 What were your main challenges or considerations when writing for guitar and electronics?


Streams is my first and, so far, most played work for guitar and electronics. In it I was interested in an electronic part that shapes a guided improvisation on guitar. My starting point was the idea of ornament in classical music, where a single tone is embelished with many shorter tones, that either oscillate around it or create more complex shapes. I thought how cool it would be if I made a computer program that makes wild ornaments around every note, by jcapturing the guitar sound, and playing it back at the same time while speeding it up and down in a certain pattern. This speeding up and down is all that the computer does here, but the patterns in which it does it can be very complex: occasionally the changes of playback speed happen every millisecond, creating white noise out of guitar sound. I have created the software for such fast changes in playback speed, first as I don't think it is possible to do efficiently with any existing computer program, and secondly, because it was fun to do.Intermissions is my second work that explores this same idea, and it is played on guitar using the same software, but it focuses almost exclusively on various types of noise that guitar sound can be transformed into by changing the real-time playback speed extremely quickly, in order of one to several milliseconds.



#3 You have a very unique approach to electronics and programming. Could you tell us a bit more about your background in this area?


I have a MSc in Computer Engineering from the University of Belgrade, Serbia, and a PhD in Music Informatics from the University of Milan in Italy. Computer programming has always fascinated me as a creative discipline, as it allows you to not just describe how something looks or sounds, but how it works, its inner life, so to speak. It makes it possible for me to set up systems that create something new or unexpected. Computer programming is for me the key means of artistic expression. Many of my music works take the form of computer programs, that either produce a music score for an acoustic instrument or ensemble (December and Trillium for piano, Meditations for ensemble, Summertide for violin and harp/piano and many more), or provide an interface for guided electronic music improvisation (Pocket Electronic Symphony and Flux, both for a solo performer with a smartphone), or connect a variety of devices into a collaborative electronic music performance / real-time composition instrument (Concert for Smartphone Network, for an ensemble of smartphone-wielding performers), or provide a live electronics setup that captures the sound of an instrument and transforms it in various ways (Streams and Intermissions for guitar and live electronics), or create automatic real-time mashups of YouTube videos (YTConcerto, YTEcho and more).


#4 From the pieces of yours that I've played, I get the sense that your music is very much concerned with mood and atmosphere, and you show a real commitment to the inherent mood of each piece. I'd be interested to know your thoughts on that, or if it's even something you think about.


I am most interested in inner workings of a piece, in its concept or "truth", process or evolution. How its different elements combine for something new and unexpected to emerge as a result. I usually come up with some sort of process that I have a vague idea what it would sound like, and that I want to listen to, but can't because it doesn't exist. That often may result in a certain atmosphere which I usually have an indistinct intuition of at the start of my creative process.


#5 Your scores often contain text instructions, which I find really engaging to work with. When you write in this way, do you feel you are trying to guide the performer in a certain direction, or is this
something you place firmly in their hands?

I think it is both! Text scores try to outline a broader set of possible outcomes than a traditional score, but they do give a definite direction to the performer. Also, I see the sounding result of a performance more as a collaborative effort of performer and composer, rather than the composer setting out a definitive, fixed outcome which the performer has to only strive to understand and faithfully transmit to the audience. I see it that way if traditional score is involved as well. I feel that in every piece there has to be something that is left to the performer's creativity and interpretation skills.



#6 You use the phrase ‘listen closely’ several times in your pieces, which is very nice for me because on the one hand it creates a strong connection to the moment, the atmosphere and the sound. On the other hand, I wonder whether it also contains the possibility of 
interpretative freedom. ‘Listen closely’ can also lead me to follow my ear and deviate from the textual instructions. My question is, when I play traditionally notated music, I know which parameters can be changed by me as an interpreter and to what extent. What is the (tense) relationship between performer and composer in your works?


I used "Listen closely" so far in a very specific context. I used it in works that involve live electronics with guitar, where what you play is transformed and played back to you by the electronic part. Even if you know what you are going to play, you don't know what you will hear as a result of your playing. It is different from when you are playing just with your instrument: when you play a tone, you know what you expect to hear. With the electronic part, it's like a response in a dialogue, and it hopefully inspires you and prompts you to respond back in turn. In this context (I am referring to the scores of Streams and Intermissions, both for guitar and live electronics), the textual scores are relatively brief, giving and overall frame to your improvisation, while the responses from the electronic part give you further prompts and direction in which to continue the dialogue. This direction is more intuitive and implied, whereas the text score gives you, as I already said, a broader frame for the dialogue.Conversely, even with a traditional score, "what can be changed and to what extent" is to some degree left implied and vague (for instance "ppp" is interpreted differently by different performers), else you wouldn't have many different interpretations of the same classical piece.More generally, I really like text scores, both because they open broader possibilities for creative input from the performers, but also because I can structure music in novel ways and create new kinds of interactions between performers in ensemble context. I would cite here as examples lengthy text scores of "Meditations", an instrumental cycle for a variety of different ensembles, as well as my vocal cycles "World Is Beyond Repair" an "Poem Based on Coincidence", for a singer and piano or guitar.



#7 Last question: Assuming you are only allowed to take 3 pieces of music to a desert island, what would they be? Or alternatively: Which works by other composers inspire you the most in your own work?


I hope I will never be exiled to a desert island, and I promise I will never do anything to deserve such a fate. But if I am exiled, and if I am allowed the luxury of three pieces of music, I am going to choose the longest ones from my favorites. I will bring with me, first, Roland Kayn's 10-hour long electronic work "Scanning". Electronic music has always been a great inspiration, especially this kind of music that seems to blend improvisation and automatic processes in a sort of a sonic living organism. Next, I will take Music in Twelve Parts by Philip Glass, the three-hour long encyclopedia of Glass' own kind of minimalist music development. I bought his Virgin set of 6 LPs when I was eighteen years old, and I am still listening to it from time to time, and discovering different new sides to it. I think it would be great accompaniment to lying on the beach and watching the slow changes of sea and clouds. As the third, I would take something from the music of the past - Telemann's always fun and fresh-sounding Tafelmusik. In its four-hour run time, it is again an encyclopedia of baroque instrumental forms, from solos and trio-sonatas to concertos and orchestral suites, with a great instrumental variety and invention, fun attitude, optimistic outlook, and all in a seamless connected flow, not unlike my previous two choices. I would also probably try to sneak in John Cage's Music for the Piano, to fit with the sound of rain and waves on the island, and I hope that I am not caught.





	
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	<item>
		<title>Tine Surel Lange - Periferi</title>
				
		<link>https://guitarcyborgs.cargo.site/Tine-Surel-Lange-Periferi</link>

		<pubDate>Sun, 27 Oct 2024 08:47:59 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>guitaristic cyborgs</dc:creator>

		<guid isPermaLink="true">https://guitarcyborgs.cargo.site/Tine-Surel-Lange-Periferi</guid>

		<description>
	
Tine Surel Lange 
- Periferi





for classical guitar and ableton live set.


Tine Surel Lange (*1989) is a cross-disciplinary composer and artist. One focus of her work is the combination of spatiality and sound. In the work "Periferi" the guitar is strongly alienated by effects, so that it approaches the noisy quality of the field recordings that are also used. The result is an almost cinematic or visual soundscape. In the realization of the work, the composer allows the interpreter great freedom, improvisational changes are expressly desired.A special technical feature of the work is that the guitarist simultaneously assumes the role of a sound director and controls loops, samples and effects. As a result the work brings with it somewhat more complex technical requirements, but is relatively easy to play once set up. 
The performer controls the program during the performance via a midi keyboard. If this simultaneous control of keyboard and guitar is too complicated for you, you can create a midi file that replaces the keyboard and takes over the control of the software. (Feel free to ask J. Wichmann for the technical implementation or if you want the midi file).



Website of Tine Surel Lange







	







&#60;img width="3472" height="2604" width_o="3472" height_o="2604" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/d2d7f261465a1a9c3c3d12f65e940a844a073cef4c1eefa7926448b541667f15/Tine-Surel-Lange.jpeg" data-mid="220363997" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/d2d7f261465a1a9c3c3d12f65e940a844a073cef4c1eefa7926448b541667f15/Tine-Surel-Lange.jpeg" /&#62;




	

href="https://janniswichmann.bandcamp.com/album/guitaristic-cyborx-works-for-guitar-and-electronics-live-recording"&#62;Guitaristic Cyborx - works for guitar and electronics (live recording) von Jannis Wichmann &#124; classical guitar






	



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		<title>Madelyn Byrne - Dream Tableaux</title>
				
		<link>https://guitarcyborgs.cargo.site/Madelyn-Byrne-Dream-Tableaux-1</link>

		<pubDate>Sun, 27 Oct 2024 08:47:59 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>guitaristic cyborgs</dc:creator>

		<guid isPermaLink="true">https://guitarcyborgs.cargo.site/Madelyn-Byrne-Dream-Tableaux-1</guid>

		<description>
	
Madelyn Byrne - Dream Tableaux


for classical guitar and soundfile .



Madelyn Byrne (*1963) is an American composer who has distinguished herself in particular through works for instruments and computer / sound file. She studied with Charles Dodge, John Corigliano and David Olan.The piece "Dream Tableaux" for guitar and soundfile has a rather meditative, calm sound impression despite expressive playing techniques and sometimes high tempo. Actually, a singing bowl is supposed to be used at the end, but it was omitted in various versions (C. McAllister, J. Wichmann). The work is particularly interesting because guitar and soundfile do not only form a convincing symbiosis in terms of sound. Playing to the sound file is also relatively easy, despite the necessary very precise timing, because the electronic sounds have a long attack and there are many cues.

Website of&#38;nbsp; Madelyn Byrne
	
&#60;img width="319" height="388" width_o="319" height_o="388" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/7ebbb949a039e0d731ca43ed33178ce835c10bca9ba320972d85c08b1b3abf2c/madelynbyrne.jpg" data-mid="220364055" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/319/i/7ebbb949a039e0d731ca43ed33178ce835c10bca9ba320972d85c08b1b3abf2c/madelynbyrne.jpg" /&#62;
&#38;nbsp;
	








Guitaristic Cyborx - works for guitar and electronics (live recording) von Jannis Wichmann &#124; classical guitar
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		<title>Eve Beglarian - Until it blazes</title>
				
		<link>https://guitarcyborgs.cargo.site/Eve-Beglarian-Until-it-blazes-1</link>

		<pubDate>Sun, 27 Oct 2024 08:48:00 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>guitaristic cyborgs</dc:creator>

		<guid isPermaLink="true">https://guitarcyborgs.cargo.site/Eve-Beglarian-Until-it-blazes-1</guid>

		<description>
	
Eve Beglarian 
- Until it blazes



for classical guitar and delay.

&#38;nbsp;

Eve Beglarian (b. 1958) is a U.S. interdisciplinary composer and performer who, in addition to a focus on ensemble works with exciting new instrumentations, has been particularly successful and active in music and dance theater. Many of her works are easily accessible on her website in the form of a database.The composition "Until it blazes" (2001) is composed in the style of Steve Reich's minimal music. Through a stereo delay, interesting and driving new figures are created from simple musical structures. A great strength of the composition lies in the interpretational freedom for the performer. Since in the notation of "Until it blazes" the treble clef is not given in the usual octave for guitar, different interpretations exist, in high or low octave.




Website of&#38;nbsp;Eve Beglarian



Link to the score
	


	&#60;img width="800" height="600" width_o="800" height_o="600" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/96c6dcd61fb4edaaf4d47d04e263680b4e7f03b15b48bd3cda90788545245b2f/eve.jpg" data-mid="220364141" border="0" data-scale="99" src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/800/i/96c6dcd61fb4edaaf4d47d04e263680b4e7f03b15b48bd3cda90788545245b2f/eve.jpg" /&#62;




“It's easy enough to play, 
but shaping it to be maximally effective requires experience and insight to achieve, which I think is likely to be satisfying for musicians”
	








Electric Creatures von Giacomo Baldelli



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		<title>John Metcalfe - Third Fire</title>
				
		<link>https://guitarcyborgs.cargo.site/John-Metcalfe-Third-Fire</link>

		<pubDate>Sun, 27 Oct 2024 08:48:00 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>guitaristic cyborgs</dc:creator>

		<guid isPermaLink="true">https://guitarcyborgs.cargo.site/John-Metcalfe-Third-Fire</guid>

		<description>
	
John Metcalfe

- Third Fire &#38;nbsp; 

for guitar and delay



John Metcalfe is a New Zealand composer whose works are situated between different genres and blur the boundaries: Avant-garde pop, electronica, film music, classical music, neo-classical, minimal music.This background is reflected in the three-movement "Third fire" for solo guitar with delay. Sometimes the music seems cinematic or reminiscent of minimal music by Steve Reich. In any case, the term neo-classical does not do the work justice.The first movement, "Never even", makes great demands on the guitarist, especially&#38;nbsp; because of the unusual way in which chord are arpeggiated and changes of position are used. This light-footed sounding, but somewhat difficult to play movement is followed by "First Trip to Palatine" which may cause some trouble at first ( because of many accidentals), but has a beautiful and unique use of delays. The last movement, "The third fire", rewards with a good to play, virtuosic sounding finale.The first movement is played in scordatura and separate delay settings are needed for each movement. Programmable delays are therefore an advantage. "Third fire" is a commission for the G Plus Ensemble around Tom Kerstens. On their album "Utopia", the individual movements are titled differently and were apparently renamed after this first recording.




http://www.john-metcalfe.co.uk/



	





&#60;img width="6200" height="8272" width_o="6200" height_o="8272" data-src="https://freight.cargo.site/t/original/i/10e860fbb123bc6d0843a98f2abc7a59022099e7b8d3fbcc7a04abb14eced50a/john-metcalfe-portrait-2014.jpg" data-mid="220394360" border="0"  src="https://freight.cargo.site/w/1000/i/10e860fbb123bc6d0843a98f2abc7a59022099e7b8d3fbcc7a04abb14eced50a/john-metcalfe-portrait-2014.jpg" /&#62;

	Guitaristic Cyborx - works for guitar and electronics (live recording) von Jannis Wichmann &#124; classical guitar


	


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		<title>Alexandra Gardner - Luminoso</title>
				
		<link>https://guitarcyborgs.cargo.site/Alexandra-Gardner-Luminoso-1</link>

		<pubDate>Sun, 27 Oct 2024 08:48:01 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>guitaristic cyborgs</dc:creator>

		<guid isPermaLink="true">https://guitarcyborgs.cargo.site/Alexandra-Gardner-Luminoso-1</guid>

		<description>
	
Alexandra Gardner
- Luminoso&#38;nbsp;

for guitar and soundfile




Alexandra Gardner (b. 1967) is a US composer who creates music of a contemplative and expressive quality through the use of acoustic instruments, electronic devices, and extra-musical sounds. &#38;nbsp;“Luminoso for guitar and sampled sounds was written for Enrique Lop and created in the studios of the IUA/Phonos Foundation in Barcelona, Spain. It is the third work in a series of compositions for solo instrument and electronics. The guitar part combines flamenco and classical guitar techniques with percussive sonorities played on the body of the instrument. The electronic part of Luminoso is comprised entirely of acoustic guitar sounds, some of which are easily identifiable, and others of which have been processed into completely different forms using a variety of software tools. The title refers to the quality of sunlight in Barcelona, which I found myself trying to capture in this music.”The guitar part involves a small amount of improvisation that the performer arranges. This style of composition makes for an exciting listening experience that is different at every performance.




https://alexandragardner.net/music/luminoso/


photo: © Thom Parks




	


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	<item>
		<title>Anna Murray - La Cathedrale Dissoute</title>
				
		<link>https://guitarcyborgs.cargo.site/Anna-Murray-La-Cathedrale-Dissoute-1</link>

		<pubDate>Sun, 27 Oct 2024 08:48:02 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>guitaristic cyborgs</dc:creator>

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Anna Murray
- La Cathedrale Dissoute&#38;nbsp;

for guitar and soundfile



Anna Murray (*1987) is a mixed-media composer and artist from Ireland who lived in Tokyo for several years. She is particularly interested in language and text-based composition as well as graphic and open scores in combination with live electronics.In "La Cathédrale dissoute", airy, atmospheric passages stand next to hard, broken electronic sounds. These ambivalent sound worlds make the work a very exciting, independent and expressive experience. The guitar is played in scordatura. Some of the faster arpeggios require the guitarist's own arrangement, as they can be a challenge at the given speed
.



Score/Bio:&#38;nbsp;https://www.cmc.ie/composers/anna-murray
www.annamurraymusic.com/



	



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	<item>
		<title>Natasha Barrett - Deconstructing Dowlandd</title>
				
		<link>https://guitarcyborgs.cargo.site/Natasha-Barrett-Deconstructing-Dowlandd</link>

		<pubDate>Sun, 27 Oct 2024 08:48:02 +0000</pubDate>

		<dc:creator>guitaristic cyborgs</dc:creator>

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		<description>
	
Natasha Barrett
- Deconstructing Dowland&#38;nbsp;

for guitar and MaxMSP




Natasha Barrett (1972) is an accomplished composer whose focus on new technologies and experimental approaches has resulted in a wide variety of works: electroacoustic, acousmatic, traditional compositions, installations and interactive works. &#38;nbsp;Deconstructing Dowland (2008-2009) for guitar and interactive live electronics is a challenging work that maintains unusual and expressive sound textures while maintaining a meditative and calm mood. The starting point of the composition are the three Galliards from the "First Book of Songs" 1597. The composer describes the process of deconstruction as follows:"Deconstruction can be a process of dismantling to create something new; a transgression, a disruption, a shifting of meaning from the inside out. "Deconstructing Dowland was commissioned by Stefan Ostersjo with funding from the Norwegian Fund for lyd og bilde. Technical requirements are a Mac, MaxMSP, microphones and a multi-channel audio interface and speaker system. The guitar is prepared with plasticine balls for a short part at the beginning.www.natashabarrett.org/



www.natashabarrett.org/Decon_dow.htmlwww.youtube.com/watch?v=aXQO1s0is30


	
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