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Physical interaction with electronic instruments in devised performanceSpowage, Neal January 2016 (has links)
This thesis describes how I took part in a series of collaborations with dancers Danai Pappa and Katie Hall, musician George Williams and video artist Julie Kuzminska. To realise our collaborations, I built electronic sculptural instruments from junk using bricolage, the act of subversion, skip diving and appropriation. From an auto-ethnographic viewpoint, I explored how collaborations began, how relationships developed and how various levels of expertise across different disciplines were negotiated. I examined how the documentation of the performances related to, and could be realised as, video art in their own right. I investigated the themes of work, labour and effort that are used in the process of producing and documenting these works in order to better understand how to ‘create’. I analysed the gender dynamics that existed between my collaborators and myself, which led to the exploration of issues around interaction and intimacy, democratic roles and live art. The resulting works challenged gender stereotypes, the notion of what a musical instrument can be and how sound is produced through action/interaction. I found that reflective time was imperative; serendipity, constant awareness of one’s environment, community and intimate relationships greatly enhanced the success of the collaborations. Instruments became conduits and instigators with shifting implied genders based on their context or creative use. As well as sound being a product of movement, effort and interaction, I realised it was also an artefact of the instruments.
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Parametrizovatelný hudební nástroj pro mobilní platformy / Parametrizable Music Instrument for Mobile PlatformsŘezáč, Martin January 2014 (has links)
The goal of this thesis is to create an application, which will be primarily used as three-axis parametrizable musical instrument, respectively a modifi ed MIDI controller, suitable for Android devices. Firstly, several products, which are available on the market, are reviewed and the reader is introduced to the problematics of audio synthesis, available technologies and typical Android device potential. The next chapter is dedicated to application design. Few designs are mentioned with focus on the chosen design concept. A part of this chapter is also a speci cation of the original concept, its implementation and advantages/disadvantages. The next part is dedicated to implementation and optiomalization of some of the critical points. Also the tests are evaluated including a survey about application usability. At the end, the whole work is concluded and the further development is outlined.
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Experimental Investigations of Bassoon AcousticsGrothe, Timo 03 June 2014 (has links)
The bassoon is a conical woodwind instrument blown with a double-reed mouthpiece. The sound is generated by the periodic oscillation of the mouthpiece which excites the air column. The fundamental frequency of this oscillation is determined to a large extent by the resonances of the air column. These can be varied by opening or closing tone-holes. For any given tone hole setting a fine-tuning in pitch is necessary during playing. Musicians adjust the slit opening of the double-reed by pressing their lips against the opposing reed blades. These so-called embouchure corrections are required to tune the pitch, loudness and sound color of single notes. They may be tedious, especially if successive notes require inverse corrections. However, such corrections are essential: Due to the very high frequency sensitivity of the human ear playing in tune is the paramount requirement when playing music. This implies, that embouchure actions provide an important insight into a subjective quality assessment of reed wind instruments from the viewpoint of the musician: An instrument requiring only small corrections will be comfortable to play.
Theoretical investigations of the whole system of resonator, reed, and musician by use of a physical model nowadays still seem insufficient with respect to the required precision. Therefore the path of well-described artificial mouth measurements has been chosen here. For the separate treatment of the resonator and the double-reed, existing classical models have been used. Modifications to these models are suggested and verified experimentally. The influence of the musician is incorporated by the lip force-dependent initial reed slit height. For this investigation a measurement setup has been built that allows precise adjustment of lip force during playing. With measurements of the artificial mouth parameters blowing pressure, mouthpiece pressure, volume-flow rate and axial lip position on reed, the experiment is fully described for a given resonator setting represented by an input impedance curve. By use of the suggested empirical model the adjustment parameters can be turned into model parameters. A large data set from blowing experiments covering the full tonal and dynamical range on five modern German bassoons of different make is given and interpreted.
The experimental data presented with this work can be a basis for extending the knowledge and understanding of the interaction of instrument, mouthpiece and player. On the one hand, they provide an objective insight into tuning aspects of the studied bassoons. On the other hand the experiments define working points of the coupled system by means of quasi-static model parameters.
These may be useful to validate dynamical physical models in further studies. The experimental data provide an important prerequisite for scientific proposals of optimizations of the bassoon and other reed wind instruments. It can further serve as a fundament for the interdisciplinary communication between musicians, musical instrument makers and scientists.:1 Introduction 1
1.1 Motivation 1
1.2 Scientific Approaches to Woodwind Musical Instruments 3
1.3 Organization of the Thesis 6
2 Acoustical Properties of the Bassoon Air Column 7
2.1 Wave propagation in tubes 7
2.1.1 Theory 7
2.1.2 Transmission Line Modeling 8
2.1.3 Implementation 18
2.1.4 Remarks on Modeling Wall Losses in a Conical Waveguide 19
2.2 Input Impedance Measurement 23
2.2.1 Principle 23
2.2.2 Device 23
2.2.3 Calibration and Correction 24
2.3 Comparison of Theory and Experiment 27
2.3.1 Repeatability and Measurement Uncertainty 27
2.3.2 Comparison of numerical and experimental Impedance Curves 32
2.4 Harmonicity Analysis of the Resonator 35
2.4.1 The Role of the Resonator 35
2.4.2 The reed equivalent Volume 35
2.4.3 Harmonicity Map 36
2.5 Summary 38
3 Characterization of the Double Reed Mouthpiece 41
3.1 Physical Model of the Double-Reed 41
3.1.1 Working Principle 41
3.1.2 Structural Mechanical Characteristics 42
3.1.3 Fluid Mechanical Characteristics 44
3.2 Measurement of Reed Parameters 49
3.2.1 Quasi-stationary Measurement 49
3.2.2 Dynamic Measurement 50
3.3 Construction of an Artificial Mouth 52
3.3.1 Requirements Profile 52
3.3.2 Generic Design 53
3.3.3 The artificial Lip 54
3.3.4 Air Supply 55
3.3.5 Sensors and Data Acquisition 57
3.3.6 Experimental setup 59
3.4 Summary 59
4 Modeling Realistic Embouchures with Reed Parameters 61
4.1 Reed Channel Geometry and Flow Characteristics 61
4.1.1 The Double-Reed as a Flow Duct 61
4.1.2 Bernoulli Flow-Model with Pressure Losses 65
4.1.3 Discussion of the Model 68
4.2 Quasi-static Interaction of Flow and Reed-Channel 72
4.2.1 Pressure-driven Deformation of the Duct Intake 72
4.2.2 Reed-Flow Model including Channel Deformation 75
4.2.3 Influence of Model Parameters 76
4.2.4 Experimental Verification 78
4.3 Effect of the Embouchure on the Reed-Flow 81
4.3.1 Adjustment of the Initial Slit Height 81
4.3.2 Quasi-static Flow in the Deformed Reed-Channel 83
4.3.3 Simplified empirical Model including a Lip Force 85
4.4 Summary 93
5 Survey of Performance Characteristics of the Modern German Bassoon
5.1 Experimental Procedure and Data Analysis 95
5.1.1 Description of the Experiment 95
5.1.2 Time Domain Analysis 97
5.1.3 Spectral Analysis – Period Synchronized Sampling 98
5.1.4 Spectral Centroid and Formants 99
5.1.5 Embouchure parameters 100
5.2 Observations on the Bassoon under Operating Conditions 105
5.2.1 Excitation Parameter Ranges 106
5.2.2 Characteristics of the radiated Sound 110
5.2.3 Reed Pressure Waveform Analysis 115
5.2.4 Summarizing Overview 118
5.3 Performance Control with the Embouchure 120
5.3.1 Register-dependent Embouchure Characteristics 120
5.3.2 Intonation Corrections 123
5.3.3 Sound Color Adjustments 127
5.3.4 Relation to the acoustical Properties of the Resonator 129
5.4 Summary 137
6 Conclusion 139
6.1 Summary 139
6.2 Outlook 141
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Polyfunkční budova / Mixed-use BuildingFibikar, Tomáš Unknown Date (has links)
This Master’s thesis deals with the design and elaboration of project documentation for the construction of a multifunctional building in Pardubice. The building is located on plots No. 2426/35 and 2426/36, in the cadastral area of Pardubice. It is located in an area close to the city center. There used to be barracks in this place. The outline of the house is "bitten" L-shaped. The building consists of civic amenities, where there are Alza showrooms, musical instrument showrooms, cafes, rehabilitation centers and massage centers. Another part are offices. All floors are barrier-free. The building has no basement. The main arterial communication of the house passes through the hall, which goes diagonally through the building. This corridor connects the individual establishments, technical facilities, stairs, elevator, and parking lot behind the building. Movement between individual floors is ensured by a monolithic staircase and an elevator. The building also includes a parking area for cars, access road and another garden with space for outdoor seating. The building is based on strip foundation and pad footing foundation made of plain concrete. The load-bearing structures are made of ceramic and brick blocks and columns. The building has a longitudinal compositional system. The ceilings are designed as reinforced concrete slabs. The exterior walls are plastered with thermo-insulating plaster. The walls in the roof entrance section are contact-insulated with mineral wool. In the place of the plinth, the insulation is made through extruded polystyrene. The roofing is designed as a single-skin flat roof with rainwater outlet/roof outlet. Next to the land there is a local road.
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