Musical montage
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Musical montage (literally "putting together") is a technique where sound objects or compositions are created from collage. One example is Christian Marclay's playable sound collages produced by glueing together sectors of different vinyl records.
Micromontage is the use of montage on the time scale of microsounds, its primary proponent being composer Horacio Vaggione in works such as Octuor (1982), Thema (1985, Wergo 2026-2), and Schall (1995, Mnémosyne Musique Média LDC 278-1102). The technique may include the extraction and arrangement of sound particles from a sample or the creation and exact placement of each particle to create complex sound patterns or singular particles (transients). It may be accomplished through graphic editing, a script, or automated through a computer program. (Roads 2001, 182-187)
Regardless, digital micromontage requires (ibid):
- creation or compilation of a library of sound files on several different time scales
- importation into the library of the editing and mixing program
- use of the cursor, script, or algorithm to position each sound at a specific time-point or time-points
- editing of the duration, amplitude, and spatial positions of all sounds (possibly done by a script or algorithm)
Granular synthesis incorporates many of the techniques of micromontage, though granular synthesis is inevitably automated and micromontage may be realized directly, point by point. "It therefore demands unusual patience" (Roads, 2001), though it may be compared to the pointillistic paintings of Georges Seurat. (ibid)
[edit] See also
Digital Montage can now be executed live with iTunes, Windows Media Player or using specially designed software for sound editing, such as Ableton Live, Steinberg Cubase, or DigiDesign ProTools.
[edit] Source
- Roads, Curtis (2001). Microsound. Cambridge: MIT Press. ISBN 0-262-18215-7.