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Re-patching Bach
Luleå University of Technology, Department of Social Sciences, Technology and Arts, Music, Media and Theater.ORCID iD: 0000-0002-6967-8077
2023 (English)Artistic output (Unrefereed)
Resource type
Sound recording, musical
Description [en]

Re-patching Bach was composed for and performed on a customized 10-unit Buchla 200e modular system within the project Back to the Future (BTTF), funded by Vetenskapsrådet, and hosted by the Royal College of Music in Stockholm.

In the BTTF project, four new music musicians (George Kentros, Ida Lundén, Rei Nakamura and Mattias Petersson) apply the techniques they use in their contemporary music lives to historical works of music.

The supplied recording is from a lecture recital made at the Back to the Future symposium at the Royal College of Music in Stockholm on March 28-29, 2023.

Abstract [en]

Acknowledging the social, cultural and immaterial aspects of musicking, but also the cybernetic perspectives on musical instruments, this composition applies an expanded understanding of pieces and instruments as interactive modular musicking systems. 

Using this mindset as a conceptual framework, and applied as an analysis to the famous Chaconne from J.S. Bach’s Partita in d minor for solo violin, BWV 1004, a new interpretation and re-composition of the original has been made. By deconstructing and modularizing the system that the score, Bach's composition, the instrument, and the performance practice comprise, the aim with this project was to re-patch the agencies of these components of the system, in order to reshape the Chaconne into a new piece, but also to make an interpretation of certain aspects of Bach’s compositional methods.

Place, publisher, year, pages
2023.
Keywords [en]
re-composition, interpretation, modularity, patching
National Category
Music
Research subject
Musical Performance
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:ltu:diva-112412OAI: oai:DiVA.org:ltu-112412DiVA, id: diva2:1952172
Available from: 2025-04-14 Created: 2025-04-14 Last updated: 2025-10-21Bibliographically approved
In thesis
1. The Act of Patching: Musicking with modular systems
Open this publication in new window or tab >>The Act of Patching: Musicking with modular systems
2025 (English)Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summary (Other academic) [Artistic work]
Abstract [en]

This artistic PhD project is a composer-performer oriented exploration of live electronics understood as modular musicking systems. The conceptual framework draws upon an understanding of agency that views musical instruments as real or virtual objects-in-time that come into existence through the act of musicking. The systems created and presented in the thesis are explored through various scenarios presented as patches that include compositions, performance systems, and strategies for musicking.

The project seeks to gain knowledge about the co-evolutionary processes found within the acts of composing and performing with such systems. At the core of the research is an exploration of the field of tension between the relative stability and flexibility in the affordances of live electronic instruments. It presents strategies for the design of live electronic systems in order to obtain a balance between these two states, and to understand how instruments are adapted in relation to the artistic processes of composing and performing. The thesis addresses the following research questions:

  • In what ways are my live electronic setups adapted within the acts of composing and performing?
  • How do my live electronic instruments manifest the field of tension between stability and flexibility?
  • What type of strategies can be used to create a predictable field of affordances of live electronic instruments?

Through artistic research methods of meletē, transcription, and re-composition, the project gains a deeper understanding of when, how, and why human and non-human agents co-evolve in musicking with live electronics. It presents four core systems developed and refined within the project: Paragraph — a live coding environment, Parsimonia — a modular, digital musical instrument, the EMP Triangle — a serial and modular composition tool, and the Sinew0od feedback system — used a foundation for three transcriptions. The artistic outcomes are further studied using qualitative methods for data collection and analysis.

The main contribution of this thesis is a novel understanding of live electronic musicking as co-evolutionary acts of patching. These acts entail processes of making and breaking connections between human and non-human agencies, and through patching create, transform, and manipulate compositions and performance setups, in order to achieve metastable systems. Hereby, the thesis proposes a cybernetic understanding of musicing as a process, challenging the traditional notion of fixed musical works, blurring the lines between compositions, instruments, interpretations, and performances.

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
Luleå: Luleå University of Technology, 2025
Series
Doctoral thesis / Luleå University of Technology 1 jan 1997 → …, ISSN 1402-1544
Keywords
Musicking, Composition, Composer-Performer, Electronic Music, Live electronics, Modularity, Modular synthesizer, Live coding, Cybernetics, Hyperorgan, Telematic performance
National Category
Music
Research subject
Musical Performance
Identifiers
urn:nbn:se:ltu:diva-112414 (URN)978-91-8048-817-4 (ISBN)978-91-8048-818-1 (ISBN)
Public defence
2025-06-10, Sparbankssalen, Luleå University of Technology, Piteå, 10:00 (English)
Opponent
Supervisors
Available from: 2025-04-16 Created: 2025-04-15 Last updated: 2025-10-21Bibliographically approved

Open Access in DiVA

Re-patching Bach at the BTTF symposium 2023(28383 kB)62 downloads
File information
File name AUDIO01.mp3File size 28383 kBChecksum SHA-512
7b7ab859b104191293e9e51c350921a0f2c9d97aee4ee5bcc9dcbbaccf08bcb52a53e7c9e5e2ff4a7926c404bfc2420330fd673b9d8edf42b58db55d7de78e9e
Type audioMimetype audio/mpeg

Other links

https://bttf.se/

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Petersson, Mattias

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  • apa
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Output format
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