www.x-tet.com/deriveA musical exploration of
space, with reference to Henri Bergson, Guy Debord, Kevin Lynch, and Henri Lefebvre. This study requires the arrow keys of a standard computer keyboard and the
Flash player.
Summary (added 2/28/08):
This research has taken me to some unexpected and very interesting places. "Psychogeography" in the writings of Guy Debord (1955) and the idea of "city imageability" by Kevin Lynch (1960) have helped me come to the latent realization of a conceptual spatiality in the way I organize sounds in a musical work. My approach is to first conceptualize the core ideas of a project as different sounds. I then arrange these within a conceptual territory (similar to Henri Lefebvre's socially produced space (1991)) that is then given over to exploration. Debord's psychogeography, Lynch's imageability, and Lefebvre's social space are all constructions of consciousness. They may make reference to actual physical space, but they are immaterial. These spaces are only real to us as a means of facilitating communication and understanding. I am interested in making music that can be experienced in this way. By conceiving of a subject spatially I find the freedom to explore that subject in all its nuance and complexity. When rooted in sound, spatial concepts can acknowledge potentiality. Movement through space then becomes a kind of instrumental performance where the openness and emergence of true interactivity is articulated through sound, as music.