|
|
|
Go
to the download page for a soundfile
for The Voice of the Phoenix (1).
Program note
The Voice of the Phoenix (1) is a tape piece created by
digital synthesis, using a chaotic process; this process is derived
from a system of differential equations used to model the sun's
magnetic field (the sunspot cycle). The piece consists of the output
of 13 chaotic oscillators, being driven for the most part by
parameters that take them to the edge of instability. (The French
fast breeder nuclear reactor was called Phénix.)
One can perhaps imagine a creature living in the turbulent
atmosphere of the sun.
The synthesis program for the chaotic process was written by the
composer in the language C++. The piece was realised for the most
part on a Sun workstation belonging to the School of Mathematics and
Statistics, University of Sydney.
The oscillators in this piece were subsequently used for the companion piece
The Voice of the Phoenix (2).
Performances, etc
- "Pure Sound" concert (organised by
ACMA and the Contemporary Performers' and Composers' Fellowship),
Old Darlington School, University of Sydney, 19 October 1996;
- National radio broadcast (Australian
Broadcasting Corporation FM network), 30th October 1996;
- "Watt's this" concert by watt, Sydney Conservatorium of Music,
24 February 1997;
- Interface 97 Computer Music Conference
and Concerts, School of Music, University of Auckland, New Zealand,
11 July 1997;
- Broadcast on the
"ELECTROMUSICA" program, Municipal Radio Station, Buenos Aires,
Argentina, April 1998;
- Concert at the Logos Tetraëder
(Tetrahedron concert hall), Ghent, Belgium, 20 August 1998;
- The "Beaming the Theremin" concert,
Grainger Museum, University of Melbourne, 10 October 1998;
- "Beckonings 1999" listening forum, CCRMA, Stanford University, July
1999;
- Broadcast on CKCU-FM 93.1, Ottawa,
Ontario, Canada, June 2003;
- Streamed by Location 1, New
York, June 2003;
- "Disorientation" series (curated by Shannon O'Neill,
University of Technology, Sydney), Lanfranchi's, Chippendale, Sydney,
8 April 2004.
- The Voice of the Phoenix (1) is on the
CD "Cocks Crow, Dogs Bark", which is the companion CD to Volume
7 (1997) of the
Leonardo Music Journal.
|