Live music making can be understood as an enactive process, whereby musical experiences are created through human action. This suggests that musical worlds coevolve with their agents through repeated sensorimotor interactions with the environment (where the music is being created), and at the same time cannot be separated from their sociocultural contexts. This paper investigates this claim by exploring ways in which technology, physiology, and context are bound up within two different musical scenarios: live electronic musical performance; and person-centred arts applications of NIMEs. In this paper I outline an ethnographic and phenomenological enquiry into my experiences as both a performer of live electronic and electro-instrumental mus...
This dissertation is an ethnographic examination of contemporary musicians who improvise with new, r...
This introductory chapter starts with a look at evolving terminology in the field of what is loosely...
Notions of Virtuosity in Electronic Music? This paper will utilise a reflexive methodology to re...
This paper situates NIME practice with respect to models of social interaction among human agents. I...
The question motivating the work presented here, starting from a view of music as embodied and situa...
This project presents a multimedia performance and a written exegesis. It will focus on the way crea...
Instrumentally oriented and individualistic approaches dominate the current perspectives on musical ...
Creativity studies have traditionally tended to focus on the evaluation of products generated by cre...
No new technology appears in a society without causing changes to that society. Artists instinctivel...
Edited Research Companion (Emmerson) with contributions by 26 authors.The theme of this Research Com...
Music, as Christopher Small observed ‘is not a thing at all but an activity, something that people d...
We present a new framework to study the interaction between musicians, technology and various capabi...
Musical technologies are evolving in such a way that they start to resemble the people that use the...
This Companion captures a new paradigm in the study of music interaction, as a wave of recent resear...
E-tudes contributes to the field of live electronic performance and interactive music by synthesisin...
This dissertation is an ethnographic examination of contemporary musicians who improvise with new, r...
This introductory chapter starts with a look at evolving terminology in the field of what is loosely...
Notions of Virtuosity in Electronic Music? This paper will utilise a reflexive methodology to re...
This paper situates NIME practice with respect to models of social interaction among human agents. I...
The question motivating the work presented here, starting from a view of music as embodied and situa...
This project presents a multimedia performance and a written exegesis. It will focus on the way crea...
Instrumentally oriented and individualistic approaches dominate the current perspectives on musical ...
Creativity studies have traditionally tended to focus on the evaluation of products generated by cre...
No new technology appears in a society without causing changes to that society. Artists instinctivel...
Edited Research Companion (Emmerson) with contributions by 26 authors.The theme of this Research Com...
Music, as Christopher Small observed ‘is not a thing at all but an activity, something that people d...
We present a new framework to study the interaction between musicians, technology and various capabi...
Musical technologies are evolving in such a way that they start to resemble the people that use the...
This Companion captures a new paradigm in the study of music interaction, as a wave of recent resear...
E-tudes contributes to the field of live electronic performance and interactive music by synthesisin...
This dissertation is an ethnographic examination of contemporary musicians who improvise with new, r...
This introductory chapter starts with a look at evolving terminology in the field of what is loosely...
Notions of Virtuosity in Electronic Music? This paper will utilise a reflexive methodology to re...