From: richard barbrook <[log in to unmask]>
Subject: E-FLYER FOR NET.MUSIC CYBERSALON & SYMPOSIUM - Wednesday 11th
April 2001
Cc: [log in to unmask]
Date: Thu, 22 Feb 2001 00:49:50 +0000 (GMT)
NET.MUSIC CYBERSALON & SYMPOSIUM
<please forward and circulate>
Wednesday 11th April 2001
The ICA,
The Mall,
London SW1
Sponsored by the ESRC Immateriality Seminar Series
Schedule
1.00pm-2.00pm Registration (food and drinks are available at the
ICA).
2.00pm-3.30pm Symposium session 1: the new aesthetics of interactive
music.
3.30pm-4.00pm Break (food and drinks are available at the ICA).
4.00pm-5.30pm Symposium session 2: the new political economy of
interactive music.
7.00pm-8.30pm Cybersalon discussion: interactive music as prophecy
of the
future.
8.30pm onwards Party and exhibitions.
Participants
We have so far had expressions of interest from:
Richard Barbrook (HRC, Westminster)
Ray Holiday (Wildlife Records)
David Laing (Westminster)
Matt Black (Coldcut, Ninja Tunes)
Andy Cameron (HRC, Westminster; Romandson)
Paul Taylor (Salford)
Tim Jordan (OU)
Kwela Hermanns (Westminster)
Warwick Metcalfe (Ericsson)
Lewis Sykes (CID, Cybersalon)
Steve Goodman (Hyperdub)
Iris Garrelfs (Sprawl)
Benoit Faucon (Les Echos)
Pat Kane (Play Ethic)
Charlie Gere (Birbeck)
Ian D (Salford)
Lee Marshall (Worcester)
Eva Pascoe (Zoom)
Outline of Event
In his seminal text 'Noise', Jacques Attali celebrates the prophetic
power
of music. What is pioneered first within music-making is later adopted
as
the political economy for the whole of society. For instance, the
constant
turnover of hit records in the 1920s prefigured the mass consumerism
of
late-twentieth century Fordism. According to Attali, each epoch of
music-making creates its own specific social, technological and
aesthetic
forms. For instance, twentieth century music developed some apparently
unbreakable paradigms: stars, fans, record companies, copyright laws,
pieces of plastic, top 40 singles and experimental albums. Yet, at the
beginning of a new century, these fixed Fordist forms are being
superseded.
What began with a few skilled DJs mixing vinyl now involves almost
everybody with access to a computer and the Net. This new situation
won't
just create new social, technological and aesthetic paradigms for
music-making. As in the past, music is pioneering a new political
economy
for the whole of society. Napsterisation is a prophecy of the
peer-to-peer
future.
This cybersalon and symposium will examine the impact of this
transformation within music-making - and its consequences for the rest
of
society. Since copyright laws and technological fixes can only slow
down
this process, the event will concentrate on analysing the emerging
social,
technological and aesthetic paradigms. Musicians, fans, academics and
policy-makers will be invited to give their views about the new
situation.
The event will begin with a two-session symposium in the afternoon.
Each
session will be structured around a series of short interventions
followed
by periods of discussion. In the evening cybersalon, the chairs of
each
session will summarise these findings and talk about the wider social
consequences of the new forms of music-making.
The first session will look at the new aesthetics of interactive
music.
This could include DJ culture, mixing, sampling, digital recording,
Napster, MP3, music toys, on-line jamming and the latest technological
developments. This session will discuss how far new methods of
production
and distribution are creating new aesthetics. What will be the sounds
of
the age of composition predicted by Attali?
The second session will examine what happens once the existing legal
and
economic structures of music industry are no longer viable. The spread
of
new music technologies reflects the emergence of new methods of making
music. However, when peer-to-peer computing becomes ubiquitous, how do
musicians get paid for their work? How do people receive
acknowledgement
for their ideas? Can the copyright laws be updated for the new
situation?
Can music exist as both commodity and gift?
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Dr. Richard Barbrook
Hypermedia Research Centre
School of Communications and Creative Industries
University of Westminster
Watford Road
Northwick Park
HARROW HA1 3TP
<www.hrc.wmin.ac.uk>
+44 (0)20 7911 5000 x 4590
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"While there is irony, we are still living in the prehistoric age. And
we
are not out of it yet..." - Henri Lefebvre
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The HRC is involved in running regular cybersalons at the ICA in
London. If
you would like to be informed about forthcoming events, you can
subscribe
to a listserver on our website: <www.cybersalon.org>.
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