Creative Media Practice Research Insights
In this episode of Creative Practice Research Insights, Roy Hanney speaks with Dr Scott McLaughlin, Associate Professor in Composition and Music Technology at the University of Leeds. Scott is a composer and practice researcher whose work explores materiality, agency, indeterminacy and emergent musical structures. He is also closely involved in the development of practice research infrastructure through SPARKLE and the AHRC-funded ENACT Practice Research Data Service. The conversation focuses on a central challenge for creative practice researchers: how research generated through practice can be communicated without reducing or flattening the practice itself. Roy and Scott explore the distinction between research articulation and research exposition, methods for doing research and methods for sharing it, and the role of structured reflection in making creative research legible and reviewable. They also consider whether articulation might function as an intermediate stage between practice and exposition, helping researchers clarify their insights before returning them to more material, experiential or practice-specific forms. At the centre of the discussion is a deceptively simple question: should practice research primarily make its knowledge explicit, or should it create the conditions through which that knowledge can be encountered?
10 episodes
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