The Audiosphere
A special live edition of the Radiogram as an experiment. When you are a podcast/radio producer you are in charge of pretty much everything. You do the interviews, you edit the recordings, you choose the music and sound, and you choose how it is applied, and you control the mood and meaning of the whole programme. What if it was different? What if I gave up my power as a producer? What if, as my thesis suggests, the process could be more like music – open to interpretation, collaborative, improvisational? To find out what would happen, I asked two classically trained musicians to perform the music for this programme live in front of an audience. With the interviews pre-edited and loaded into a computer sequencer to be cued at will the musicians were to interpret and improvise as they saw fit. They had not heard the interviews before - they were allowed only a written transcription and my 'conducting' them in and out as a rough guidance as to the over all shape of the programme. In this way the mood and affect of the show would be influenced beyond my control. Would the work still make emotional sense? Would the audience receive the programme favourably? The musicians performing here, Sam Bailey (piano) and Tom Jackson (clarinet), both hold PhDs in musical improvisation so were ideal candidates to take part. Peter Kelly played The Announcer as usual, and appeared live. The programme as presented here features my introduction and concluding remarks to as to give a flavour of the evening as this adds some affective content as well as the show itself. For full details see the programme's own website: www.goodwinsandsradio.org [http://www.goodwinsandsradio.org]
6 Folgen
Kommentare
0Sei die erste Person, die kommentiert
Melde dich jetzt an und werde Teil der The Audiosphere-Community!