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2022

International Seminar on Sonic Design

The seminar explored sonic design from multiple angles and celebrated the achievements of Professor Rolf Inge Godøy.

Time and place: May 5, 2022 10:00 AM – May 6, 2022 5:00 PM, Salen, ZEB building, Department of Musicology / Zoom

Introduction

The seminar is set up to celebrate the achievements of Professor Rolf Inge Godøy and continue discussing some of the topics he has contributed to throughout his career. After studying musicology, philosophy, and the history of ideas at the University of Oslo, Professor Godøy moved on to obtain diplomas in music theory and composition from the Norwegian Academy of Music. He then worked as a freelance composer for several years before returning to academia to undertake a PhD in musicology. As a professor of music theory at the University of Oslo for almost 30 years he has taught and supervised several generations of students in a broad range of musicological sub-disciplines.

During most of his academic career, Professor Godøy has developed Pierre Schaeffer's concept of the sonic object into his own embodied sound and music theory. During the last decades, he has also been central in establishing the fourMs Lab as a world-leading infrastructure for research into music-related body motion. He is a principal investigator at RITMO Centre for Interdisciplinary Studies in Rhythm, Time, and Motion, a Norwegian Centre of Excellence, until his retirement.

Sonic Design

Professor Godøy has over the years proposed the concept of sonic design as an amalgam between artistic and scientific approaches to the creation and study of (musical) sound. On one side, sonic design includes the practices of synthesising entirely new sounds or recording, editing and mixing acoustic sounds. Over the years, these practices have merged with composition and orchestration techniques and various music production methods to allow for previously unheard of sonic results. In addition to such creative applications, sonic design can also encompass different sonification strategies aiming to create “objective” representations of data through sound.

Underlying all the practical approaches to the creation of sounds for various purposes are several basic research perspectives, including music theory, music perception, embodied cognition, phenomenology, acoustics, cognitive neuroscience, and digital signal processing, to mention just a few. As such, sonic design can be seen as a meeting point between basic and applied research, "soft" and "hard" approaches, and creative and analytic perspectives.

As a longtime practitioner, researcher, teacher, and supervisor, Professor Godøy has been central in developing a holistic approach to sonic design, from theory to practice. While much of his early work focused on sound as sound, he has extended his approach to considering the embodied aspects of both the performance and perception of music over the last decades. He is particularly known for his work on Musical Imagery (2001) and Musical Gestures (2010) and has over the last decade focused his attention on sonic and bodily (co)articulations.

Programme

Thursday 5 May 2022

9:30    Coffee and registration

10:00    Welcome    Zafer Özgen    University of Oslo

10:10    Sonic design and the power-theory of music    Marc Leman    Ghent University

10:30    Connecting theories of music performance and expression for sonic design                   Dahl, Sofia    Aalborg University

10:50    A Grammar of Conducting Expressive Gestures    Gibet, Sylvie    University of               South Brittany

11:10    Break

11:25    Empirical Analysis of Gestural Sonic Objects Combining Qualitative and                         Quantitative Methods    Visi, Federico    Luleå University of Technology

11:45    Cecil Taylor's Gestural Designs    Stover, Chris    Griffith University

12:05    Excitations and resonances: Misinterpreted actions in Neon Meditations                       Holopainen, Risto

12:25    Introducing the Self-playing guitars installation    Erdem, Cagri    University of               Oslo

12:27    Introducing the Dr Squiggles installation    Krzyzaniak, Michael    University of               Oslo

12:30    Lunch

13:15    Sonic Objects and Motor-mimetic Cognition: Promises, Limitations, and                         Emotive Affordances    Aksnes, Hallgjerd    University of Oslo

13:35    Music and Enactive Time Design: Glitches, (Dis-)Orientations, and the Ethics               of Hesitation    Kozak, Mariusz    Columbia University

13:55    The Gestural Sonorous Other    Kelkar, Tejaswinee    University of Oslo

14:15    Break

14:30    Analyzing kinematics of complex embodied music interaction    Toiviainen,                     Petri    University of Jyväskylä

14:50    Embodied pitch while walking to music    Migotti, Léo    Ecole Normale                           Supérieure, Paris

15:10    Sonic design and spatial morphology    Ulf A. S. Holbrook     

15:30    Break

15:45    A Motion Capture Story from Facebook to the New York Times    Kobb,                         Christina

16:05    Different attitudes of expressive movements awareness in professional                         musicians through a phenomenological approach    Minafra, Annamaria                         Conservatorio di Musica "N. Piccinni"-Bari

16:25    Gestures and instrument design    Wanderley, Marcelo    McGill University

16:45    Break

17:20    The Listening Body: Sound and the Sensory Apprehension of Movement                       Gemma Crowe    Emily Carr University of Art + Design

17:40    Modifying audio parameters as we move: a site-specific approach to sonic                     design    Thomas, Denez    University of Rennes 2

18:00    Bubbles and tapas

Friday 6 May 2022

9:30    Coffee

10:00   Interactive Music Performance   Erdem, Cagri and Lan, Qichao   University                  of Oslo

10:15    Acoustic Metamaterials for Sonically Designing Musical Instruments and                       Room Acoustics    Bader, Rolf    University of Hamburg

10:35    From a squeak to something general    Halmrast, Tor    University of Oslo /                   Cowi

10:55    Wearable musical instrument in rehabilitation    Louhivuori, Jukka    University               of Jyväskylä

11:15    Break

11:30    Sonic Design in Augmented Reality    Wang Yichen    Australian National                       University

11:50    Rendering Collected Ephemera Audible: Sonic Design as Attending to                           Multiplicity    Sagesser, Marcel Zaes    Southern University of Science and                     Technology, Shenzhen

12:10    Broadcast Signals that Enable Sustained Concurrent Action    Upham, Finn                   University of Oslo

12:30    Lunch

13:15    Metrical Shapes    Haugen, Mari Romarheim    University of Oslo

13:35    My 50-year stroll through Sonic Design and Embodiment    Van Noorden,                     Leon    Ghent University

13:55    Embodied sound design of robots to reflect desired personality traits    Coca,                 Andres    Edinburgh Napier University

14:15    Break

14:30    The evolution of electroacoustic music in a live SuperCollider composition                     Christodoulou, Anna-Maria    National and Kapodistrian University of Athens /               University of Oslo

14:50    Computational detection and characterisation of sonic shapes: Towards a                     Toolbox des objets sonores    Olivier Lartillot, Rolf Inge Godøy, Anna-Maria                   Christodoulou    University of Oslo

15:10    Break

15:20    Sonic design    Rolf Inge Godøy    University of Oslo

15:50    Reflections on sound and structure    Anne Danielsen    University of Oslo

16:00    Closing of seminar    Alexander Refsum Jensenius    University of Oslo

16:15    End of program

Performances and installations

During the seminar there will be several installations and performances.

Self-playing guitars installation

Cagri Erdem and Sebastian Fongen Langslet

The Self-playing Guitars is a platform for exploring the meeting point between acoustic and digital sound production in a collection of self-playing instruments. As part of our “out-of-lab” experimentations at the RITMO centre, this platform has formed the basis for various types of scientific research into sensors used for detecting people's motion, digital sound generation, and mappings between action and sound. We explore the artistic possibilities of self-playing guitars through several public performances and exhibitions, including researching the differences between performing and perceiving an instrument and investigating the differences between acoustic and electroacoustic instruments. We will present a new installation piece for the International Seminar on Sonic Design. The participants will experience a multi-agent system that generates a variety of textures depending on the interaction of people passing by.

Dr. Squiggles installation

Michael Joseph Krzyzaniak

Dr. Squiggles is an interactive rhythmic tapping robot that can listen to music and play along. In this installation, visitors can tap rhythms on a tabletop. Several Dr. Squiggles robots listen to the tapping and play along by tapping their own rhythms on glockenspiels and other objects. Dr. Squiggles was developed at the UiO RITMO Centre for Interdisciplinary Studies in Rhythm, Time and Motion.

Interactive music performance

Students from the course MUS2830, directed by Cagri Erdem and Qichao Lan

The Interactive Music (MUS2830) is an elective course tailored for the bachelor programme at the Department of Musicology, focusing on diversifying students’ artistic repertoire via interactive music technologies. In this performance, the students will present a special series of short musical performance acts using the interactive music systems they have developed as part of their coursework. These systems span a wide range of analog and digital tools from Victorian synthesizers to sensor-based control of computer music software, live coding, and Eurorack systems. While some acts will be based on pre-composed musical ideas for solo performance, some will be entirely free improvised in ensemble settings. This course provides students with knowledge and skills in designing, building, and performing with various types of musical instruments and interactive music systems.

2017

Kyma International Sound Symposium

Explore the theme of Augmenting Reality through talks, live performances, hands-on workshops, and lively discussions.

Time and place: Oct. 12, 2017 5:00 PM–Oct. 15, 2017 7:00 PM, Teknisk Museum, IMV, Victoria Jazzscene og NMH

Sound and music are the original augmented reality technology. Throughout human history, sound and music have played an intrinsic role in magic, ritual, ceremony, and celebration, transforming the mundane into the sublime, marking everyday events as memorable milestones, and enhancing the flow of experience. Acoustic archeologists speculate that certain acoustic properties of ancient monuments were intentionally designed to transform the human voice into something supernatural and that, throughout history, centers of power have been constructed as polished stone surfaces enclosing vast spaces in order to augment the sounds created within them — creating mysterious, impressive, and transformative experiences.

The Norwegian Academy of Music, the University of Oslo Department of Musicology, NOTAM and Symbolic Sound invite you to join us as we explore the theme of Augmenting Reality through talks, live performances, hands-on workshops, and lively discussions at the Kyma International Sound Symposium, KISS 2017 in Oslo Norway 12-15 October 2017.

Thursday 12 October 2017

  • 16:30 Registration, Norwegian Museum of Science & Technology
  • 17:00 Reception & Museum Tour
  • 18:00 Concert
  • 20:00 Dinner together (included with conference registration), Science Museum

Friday 13 October 2017

  • 09:30 Coffee, University of Oslo (Helga Engs Hus)
  • 10:00 Morning Session, Helga Engs Hus
  • 12:30 Lunch together (included with conference registration), Helga Engs Hus
  • 14:00 Afternoon Session, Helga Engs Hus
  • 16:00 Desktop Demos & Kyma Open Lab, University of Oslo (IMV)
  • 18:00 Concert I, Salen IMV
  • 19:00 Dinner together (included with conference registration), IMV
  • 21:00 Concert II, Victoria Jazz Club

Saturday 14 October 2017

  • 09:30 Coffee, Norwegian Academy of Music (NMH)
  • 10:00 Morning Session, NMH
  • 12:30 Lunch together (included with conference registration), NMH
  • 14:00 Afternoon Session, NMH
  • 16:00 Desktop Demos & Kyma Open Lab, IMV
  • 18:00 Concert, Levinsalen NMH
  • 20:00 Dinner together (included with conference registration), NMH

Sunday 15 October 2017

  • 11:00 Coffee, NMH
  • 11:30 Morning Session, NMH
  • 13:00 Lunch together (included with conference registration), NMH
  • 14:30 Afternoon Session I, NMH
  • 16:00 Concert, Salen IMV
  • 17:15 Afternoon Session II, Salen IMV
  • 20:00 Dinner together (no host)

Organizer

Symbolic Sound, NOTAM, IMV and NMH


IASPM Norden & Nordic Sounds

Popular Music in the Nordic Countries 
A Study Day co-hosted by IASPM Norden & Nordic Sounds 

All are invited to the International Association for the Study of Popular Music (IASPM Norden) Study Day at the Department of Musicology, University of Oslo on September 14 2017.

Time and place: Sep. 14, 2017 10:00 AM–5:30 PM, ZEB-bygningen

The theme of the day is the study of popular music in the Nordic countries. Professor Stan Hawkins will introduce the event, which is co- hosted by our department’s Nordic Sounds: Critical Music Research Group.

We invite proposals in the form of a short abstract/description of what you are studying within popular music research (max. 100 words). Participants will be selected on the following criterion:

Topic that fits with the theme of popular music within the Nordic

  • countries (e.g. if you study a specific Nordic band, artist, composer, producer, subgroup, festival, etc.)
  • Quality of the abstract / research questions / methodologies
  • IASPM Norden-members are given priority, but all IASPM members welcome to apply

Please send proposals as electronic mail attachment in doc/docx/pdf format to organisers Hans T. Zeiner-Henriksen & Áine Mangaoang as soon as possible, no later than March 15, 2017. 

Any questions about the event, contact Áine or Hans. 


2016

Research workshop on musical rhythm

Time and place: Sep. 23, 2016 9:00 AM–4:00 PM, Seminar room 1, ZEB

Programme

Timing and Reference Structures
  • Rainer Polak (Cologne Univeristy of Music) et al.: How to empirically tell temporal reference structures from timing variations: Arguing “swing meter” in Malian drumming
  • Tellef Kvifte (Telemark University College): Precision in timing as an emergent property
Timing and Sound
  • Hans T. Zeiner-Henriksen (University of Oslo): Sound modulations and pulse perception
  • Anne Danielsen (University of Oslo): Investigating the perception of sound-timing relationships.
Rhythm and the Body I
  • Peter Vuust (Center for Music in the Brain, Aarhus)
  • Maria Witek (Center for Music in the Brain, Aarhus): Filling in: Syncopation, pleasure and distributed embodiment in groove
Rhythm and the Body II
  • Justin London (Carleton College): Speed on the dance floor: auditory and visual cues for musical tempo
  • Rolf Inge Godøy (University of Oslo): Coarticulation in rhythm

Organizer: Anne Danielsen

2014

 

Making Music – Producing Sound: the Nordic angle.

Time and place: Dec. 3, 2014 11:00 AM–Dec. 4, 2014 10:30 PM, ZEB-building, Blindern

The Nordic popular music scene is an active arena of ambitious bands and artists striving for success, on a national as well as an international level.

Notably, we would like to excavate and question the overarching ideological perspectives of reputation, positions and hierarchies, instrumental incentives like governmental subsidies and support for education and training, new technologies of production and mediation and the negotiation of identity and subjectivity.

Organizer

IASPM Norden, Department of Musicology and Nordic Culture Fond
About IASPM

IASPM is an international organization established to promote inquiry, scholarship and analysis in the area of popular music. Founded in 1981, IASPM has grown into an international network of more that 700 members world-wide.


Listening to the 20th Century and Beyond

This three day conference explores the question of musical listening with regard to a wide variety of musical genres and artists. November 11 and 12: Auditorium U 35 in Helga Eng's house from 9:30, November 13: room 103 ZEB from 9:30.

Time and place: Nov. 11, 2014 9:30 AM–Nov. 13, 2014 7:30 PM, Auditorium U 35 in Helga Engs house

A wide variety of musical genres will be explored from Ligeti to The Beatles, from Mahler to Nordheim, from James Brown and jazz standards to Stockhausen, Boulez, Maja Ratkje and Nordic folk Music.

November 11

  • Julian Johnson (London): Listening for the Voice
  • Paper presentations by students at the Department of Musicology
  • Darla Crispin (London): Critical Listening; Listening as Criticism: ‘curating’ performances of Schoenberg as a route to new audience insights
  • Paper presentations by students at the Department of Musicology

November 12

  • Charles Wilson: Listening in the Contemporary Moment
  • Paper presentations by students at the Department of Musicology Thursday

November 13

  • Paper presentations by students at the Department of Musicology, UiO                      

Organizer: Department of Musicology
Contact: Tanja Orning


Symposium: Popular Music & Gender in a Transnational Context

This international symposium marks the end of the NFR-financed Project: Popular Music & Gender in a Transcultural Context. The symposium is open to the general public.

Time and place: June 3, 2014 1:30 PM–6:00 PM, Undervisningrom 2 Universitetsbiblioteket

  • Opening Remarks: Alexander Refsum Jensenius, Head of Department
  • Introductory Remarks: Stan Hawkins, Project Leader
  • “Performativity, Performance and Musical Genres” - Antoine Hennion, Research Director, Centre de Sociologie de l’Innovation, Paris
  • “Popular Music & Gender in a Transcultural Context” - Stan Hawkins, Mats Johansson, Jon Mikkel Broch Ålvik, Birgitte Sandve
  • "Sites of Memory: Public Emotionality, Gender and Nationhood in the Music of Googoosh”. Laudan Nooshin, Senior Lecturer, City University London

Organizer

Department of Musicology

Contact

Stan Hawkins

2011

Music and Health: Generative mechanisms

Nordic Network of Research in Music, Culture, and Health: Announcement of the First Network Conference March 14-16 2011.

Time and place: Mar. 14, 2011 9:00 AM–Mar. 16, 2011 5:00 PM, Olavsgården
The first Nordic network conference on Music, Culture, and Health (MUCH) will be held at Olavsgården (outside Oslo).   

Guest lecturers

  • Professor Suzanne Hanser, Berklee College of Music
  • Professor Tia DeNora, Exeter university
  • Professor Stephen Clift, Sidney De Haan Research Centre for Arts and Health, UK

From the MUCH-Network:

  • Associate professor Kari Bjerke Batt-Rawden
  • Professor Brynjulf Stige, University of Bergen

Kari Bjerke Batt-Rawden will speak about her action research on the use of music with persons with long-term illness. Brynjulf Stige will speak about criteria for the use of qualitative research methods.

Contact

Kristin Kjølberg, Ph.D., Norwegian Academy of Music, will assist in the process of planning the conference. She will be serving the address muchconference@nmh.no, please use this address for further communication

We are looking forward to welcome you to this great event! 

Organizer

Nordic Network of Research in Music, Culture, and Health


NIME 2011: 11th International Conference on New Interfaces for Musical Expression

Time: May 30, 2011 9:00 AM–June 1, 2011

The International Conference on New Interfaces for Musical Expression (NIME) is an annual interdisciplinary conference gathering 200-500 participants from all over the world to share their knowledge and late-breaking work on new musical interface design.

In 2011 this conference will be organised by the Department of Musicology, University of Oslo and the Norwegian Academy of Music, in collaboration with NOTAM, BEK, NTNU and Simula.

Please visit www.nime2011.org for more information about calls, submission and programme.

Organizer

The Department of Musicology and The Norwegian Academy of Music

2010

Musical Heritage. Editing Historical Music in the 21st Century

The National Library and the Department of Musicology, University of Oslo are pleased to announce the international conference "Musical Heritage. Music Editing in the 21st Century".

Time and place: Dec. 10, 2010 11:30 AM–Dec. 11, 2010 3:30 PM, The National Library, Henrik Ibsens gate 110, 0255 Oslo

About the conference

The seminar addresses the challenges of editing and publishing historical music in the 21st century. The long tradition of historical music editions, from Charles Burney’s La Musica che si canta nella cappella pontificia (1771) to Carl Nielsen Udgaven (2009), reflects the changing interests in historical music over the ages.

The choice of music for edition, the editing principles themselves and the modes of publication have changed according to cultural and technological conditions, and so has the market for historical music in print.

The seminar will explore the present conditions for enterprises in the field against the background of recent developments in musical scholarship, new  historigraphical perspectives, the present state of concert life, and the role of historical music in contemporary cultures.

Special attention will be given to publication strategies between the monumental edition in quarto, and the scenario of a more fluid and interactive multimedia version on the Internet.

Final date for registration: 1 December 2010
Registration form (N.B. In Norwegian. Please contact a.c.wesnes@imv.uio.no if you need help with Your registration) - See list of registered participants

All interested parties are welcome to take part. The conference is free of charge.

Programme

1st Session: Historiographical perspectives on music editing in the 21st century - Friday 10 December
  • Opening, Professor Ståle Wikshåland, University of Oslo
  • Professor Leo Treitler, New York University: «The mimetic Heritage»
  • Professor Jim Samson, University of London: «Interpreting the Chopin Sources»
  • Research fellow Morten Christophersen, University of Oslo: «Johan Svendsen’s (1840-1911) lost or unfinished symphony. Realizing sketches into performance»
2nd Session: Music editing in a digital age - Saturday 11 December 
  • Introduction, Kristin Bakken, The National Library, Oslo
  • Professor Niels Krabbe, Danish Centre for Music Publication (DCM), The Royal Library, Copenhagen «Danish Centre for Music Publication: visions - results - problems after the first 15 months»
  • Doktor Frans Wiering, University of Utrecht: «Music Information Retrieval and Musicology: what do the two have in common?» 
  •  Researcher Jørgen Langdalen, The National Library, Oslo: «Editing historical Music in the Age of Globalization and Digitization»
  • Presentation of the project ”Musical Heritage”
  • Panel discussion

The conference will be held in English. N.B. There might be changes in the programme.

Speakers

Bjørn Morten Christophersen

Bjørn Morten Christophersen (1976-) has a Cand.philol. degree in musicology from the University of Oslo and MA in Composing for Film and TV from Kingston University in London. He has composed choral, orchestral and chamber music, music for several large scaled TV dramas for the Norwegian Broadcasting Company (NRK), as well as for the stage.

He has also worked as an arranger for the Norwegian Radio Orchestra, Stavanger Symphony Orchestra and Kristiansand Symphony Orchestra. In addition he has taught harmony, counterpoint, orchestration and arranging at the University of Oslo since 2003.

www.organisertlyd.no

    
Niels Krabbe

Niels Krabbe is at present research professor and leader of the Danish Centre for Music Publication (DCM) at the Royal Library, Copenhagen. He has been in charge of the team and the publication of the Carl Nielsen Edition. For years he was leader of the Music and Theatre Department in the Library, and he has also been teaching musicology at the Copenhagen University.

Jørgen Langdalen

Jørgen Langdalen earned his Ph.D. in music history at the University of Oslo with a thesis on Gluck and Rousseau and has recently concluded a post doctoral research project on the public entertainment in early eighteenth-century Copenhagen. He is presently engaged as researcher at the National Library of Norway, taking part in the Musical Heritage Project, where he conducts research on the music of Johan Svendsen.

Jim Samson

Jim Samson is at present professor and chair of the Department of Music at Royal Holloway, former professor at the Universities of Exeter and Bristol. He has published several important books and is also in the leader troika of The Complete Chopin: A New Critical Edition (Peters Edition, in progress). His edition of the Chopin Ballades (Peters Edition) was named '2009 Edition of the Year' in the International Piano Awards.

Leo Treitler is Distinguished Professor of Music Emeritus at the Graduate Center of City University of New York. He has taught at the University of Chicago, Brandeis University, Stony Brook University and CUNY Graduate Center. He has published a number of books, articles and essays on music history and historiography, music criticism and hermeneutics, and philosophy of music. Among these are Music and the Historical Imagination (Harvard U. Press 1989), Strunk’s Source Readings in Music History, Revised Edition (W.W.Norton, 1998), and With Voice and Pen: Coming to Know Medieval Song and How it was Made (Oxford University Press, 2003, revised edition 2007).  He has also participated at a number of recearch seminars in Norway.

Frans Wiering

Dr. Frans Wiering has for years worked both in informatics and in musicology and has contributed to forming the interdisciplinary subject Music Information Retrieval (MIR). In this work he has also published on digital critical editions of music. He is working at Department of Information and Computing Sciences, Utrecht University, and he was organizer and host for the ISMIR conference of 2010. 

Organizer

The National Library, Oslo and Department of Musicology, University of Oslo


Kanon I: Sigmund Freud, Moses and the Gender of Monotheism

Time and place: Sep. 15, 2010 1:15 PM–6:30 PM, Undervisningsrom 1 Georg Sverdrups hus

Contributors

  • Ilana Pardes, Professor of Arts and Letters, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
  • Roland Boer, Associate Professor, Education and Arts, University of Newcastle, Australia
  • Erik Steinskog, Associate Professor of Musicology, Department of Arts and Cultural Studies, University of Copenhagen
  • Hedda Høgåsen-Hallesby, Ph.D.-fellow, Centre for Gender Research, University of Oslo
  • Øystein Gullvåg Holter, Professor of Gender Equality and Masculinities, Centre for Gender Research, University of Oslo

About the seminar

The seminar will focus on the religious critique of Sigmund Freud in a gender perspective. The occasion for the seminar is Ilana Pardes and Ruth Ginsburg's recent volume New Perspectives on Freud's 'Moses and Monotheism' (Niemeyer 2006). With Freud's Religionskritik as a point of departure, and in the spirit of Pardes and Ginsburg's volume, the seminar will focus on connections between monotheism and constructions of masculinity - and gender models more in general.

It is also a stated aim of the seminar to have an interdisciplinary conversation on the status of Freud's cultural critique in a range of humanities disciplines.

Organizer

Senter for tverrfaglig kjønnsforskning

Published Feb. 4, 2022 3:26 PM - Last modified Feb. 5, 2024 11:31 AM