Week 6 - SoundHack and Music Technology Panel
My left ear was blocked all this week, so forgive me if my blog is a little ‘one-sided’. In any case, this is my ‘monocracy‘.
Our creative computing class this past week involved an introduction to SoundHack, and more Spear exploration, including deleting and transposing entire harmonic sections and also using a PCM editor to layer a manipulated sound file over the top of the original. After learning the file editing capabilities of SoundHack, I plan to crack the 396kbps audio file that I mentioned last week. In our Audio Arts class we were taught how to send and receive signals between the dead room and studio 1. On Friday I assisted honours student Tim Swalling in setting up a mic and headphones in the dead room to connect to C|24 in studio 1. Apart from some sound level issues, we got it working in 5 minutes, talk back and all. We checked to see how much bleed (if any) occurs between the two rooms by recording silence on the mic while an audio track was being played through the headphones, however there was minimal discrepancies.


Barry Truax‘s “Wings of Nike” (1987) consisted of wind sounds with a tinkling sound on top, rising and falling intermittently with some effects thrown in. Nothing incredible or thought inspiring.


(1) Paul Griffiths: ‘Varèse, Edgard’, Grove Music Online ed. L. Macy (Accessed 07/04/2006), http://www.grovemusic.com
(2) Quote: David Harris. Music Technology Workshop- “Milton Babbit, Ensembles for Synthesisers." Presented at the Electronic Music Unit, EMU space, University of Adelaide, 06/04/2006.
Stephen Whittington, Mark Carroll, Tristan Louth-Robbins. "What is Music Technology". Presented at Electronic Music Unit, EMU space, Adelaide University, 06/04/2006.
Christian Haines. "Audio Arts - Studio 1 and Dead Room." Practical class presented at Studio 1, Electronic Music Unit, University of Adelaide, 04/04/2006.
Christian Haines. “Creative Computing - SoundHack and Spear.” Practical class presented at Audio Lab, Electronic Music Unit, University of Adelaide, 06/04/2006
For a huge collaboration of pictures of synthesisers, amplifiers, mixers and customisations from around the world, check this out. Be careful though, as there is a TONNE of pictures, and they start downloading as soon as you open the page. I would only recommend viewing if you don’t have a download limit (like I do- 200Mb *sob*).