explodingcat (
realexplodingcat) wrote2003-08-14 07:05 pm
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What gift has the internet brought me today?
http://eigenradio.media.mit.edu/
Sounds rather like you're sitting in space, maybe far out there on Pluto, and trying to make sense of all the radio frequency noise blasting off the planet Earth. I'll let the site explain itself. What a wacky and fascinating idea.
http://eigenradio.media.mit.edu/
Sounds rather like you're sitting in space, maybe far out there on Pluto, and trying to make sense of all the radio frequency noise blasting off the planet Earth. I'll let the site explain itself. What a wacky and fascinating idea.
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More cowbell
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But I will use it to capture some wacked muffled samples....
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And this computer is playing by its own set of rules regarding what kind of structure and choices are pleasing to it. Its music theory believes that sounds that are statistically more different in a moment of time are more pleasing to its ear than other sounds. It makes a qualitative choice regarding which sounds to use (in our view it's quantitative, but the computer doesn't know any difference...so quantity = quality in its limited perception).
The computer's idea of structure is surely different than our own. It doesn't compose with a beginning, middle, end in mind...but why do we do that? I've always been fascinated by musical and narrative structures and why they have evolved to their current state. I believe it has something to do with the organism (humans) that create that causes specific kinds of structure. Perhaps something to do with natural biological rhythms. Consequently, if the computer could be considered its own creative entity, as a different type of creature, it will likely have a different sense of appropriate creative structure for its art.
So, in short, I think it depends upon your frame of reference, regarding whether you believe the computer is being creative or not.
Holy shit. I didn't intend to write that much. Oh well...I hope my academic ramblings weren't too boring. And, in the end, yeah...it's a computer doing it's job. Not truly creative in the usual human sense.
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Shame we don't have that problem. Faced with too much reading, most people these days just give up reading altogether.
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oh yeah? i think it was....
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John Cage would have loved this.
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I ought to expose myself to more John Cage music. I only ever hear variations on his "4:33" during the rare quiet moments in my day.