Composing with Analog Tape in a Post-Digital Age

Author:

Hallowell Sean Russell1

Affiliation:

1. Stanford University, San Francisco, United States

Abstract

This essay explores the practical and theoretical dimensions of composing with analog tape in a post-digital age. Its point of departure is the belief that, instead of dismissing them as outmoded and impractical, we ought to embrace analog devices as invaluable tools for exploring the liminal realm in which encounters between concrete reality and abstract form take place. By working on sound as continuously varying electrical voltage as opposed to binary units of discrete value, a variety of compositional possibilities disclose themselves, particularly in relation to techniques of permutational variation. By reflecting on such techniques as implemented with analog rather than digital tools, crucial aesthetic insights emerge. The question of analog timbre is likewise explored, specifically in terms of aesthetic properties that testify to the unique physical origins of any given sound. Phenomenology as conceived and practiced by Husserl serves as a framework for these investigations. Its distinctive tools and methods enable exploration of the metaphysical dimensions of perceptual facts uncovered during encounters with analog and digital audio devices.

Publisher

INSAM Institute for Contemporary Art, Music and Technology

Subject

General Medicine

Reference21 articles.

1. Bergson, Henri. 1961. Introduction to Metaphysics. New York: Philosophical Library. Carlos, Wendy. 2008. “On the Eltro.” Accessed September 28, 2019. http://www.wendycarlos.com/other/Eltro-1967/

2. Clark, Mark H. 1999. “The Magnetic Recording of Sound.” In Magnetic Recording: The First 100 Years, edited by Eric D. Daniel, C. Denis Mee, and Mark H. Clark, 6-14. New York: IEEE Press.

3. Fantel, Hans. 1994. “The Tangled Web of Magnetic Tapes (History of the German Invention of Sound Recording Tape).” Opera News 59(2): 37-8.

4. Gayou, Évelyne. 2007. “The GRM: landmarks on a historic route.” Organised Sound 12(3): 203-11.

5. Hallowell, Sean Russell. 2013. The Déploration as Musical Idea. Ph.D. dissertation, Columbia University.

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