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MAX/MSP 5: The Demise of Pluggo

When I started looking at switching from Reaktor to Max/MSP, there were a number of factors influencing the choice: cross-platform operation, standalone distributables (users did not need to buy Max/MSP), standalone operation, and integrated support for any multimedia environment via VST/AU plugins.Last month, Cycling'74 announced a tight collaborative agreement with one vendor, Ableton, and it would be migrating its product to a dedicated versions that works in the Ableton Live! sequencer. Since then, it has announced it won't effectively support other multimedia environments going forward.I was told previously, Max/MSP version 4 could create plugins that could run in multiple VST/AU environments via a shared interface with a product called Pluggo. With the advent of Max/MSP version 5, the environment was initially intended to include the Pluggo interfaces.Sadly, according to current reports, Cycling'74 no longer intends to support the Pluggo interfaces going forward. The Pluggo product has been discontinued, and Cycling'74 is focusing its effort on supporting Ableton Live!This is perfectly understandable considering the current economic climate, but it places my own development work in limbo. Originally, I had intended to start development with the Max/MSP 4.0 SDK and migrate to 5.0 SDK when the Pluggo interface was available.The 5.0 SDK is much better than the 4.0 SDK, and also Cycling'74 is committed to fixing bugs in it. However, with the recent announcement of discontinuing Pluggo and creating a dedicated product for Ableton Live!, developer support for other integration environments cannot be expected.This is a big disappointment as I was looking forward very much to creating exciting new applications with Cycling'74. But now the main advantage of adopting this development path has been discontinued.I can only wait and hope that cycling'74 reintroduce non-captive support for new applications going forward.
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Jasmina Prolic’s latest project ‘Julie(t)- duet in absentia’ deals with technology versus body interrelations… elusive moments and impulses between sexes…The performance she choreographed and performed was collaboration with multimedia artist Hubert Pichot, known for his project ‘Try Me’ Rolling Chair Jockey - RCJ which he had introduced at the iMAL’s OpenLAB Projects in Belgium three years ago. About what Pichot said back then: ‘RCJ (music and vidéo compatible) is an electric rolling chair with sensors measuring its move and acceleration, and also some of the moves of its user. A computer processes the sensors data and generates images and sounds. The person using the chair becomes a sort of conductor controlling an audiovisual creation through his/her moves in and with the chair.’

Photo: Compagnie Jasmina (c)

Along with this line Hubert Pichot designed an experimental wearable sound device for dancer in order to give her a tool for generating soundz connected with her movements via bending wires and pick ups through accelerometers to computer and mixer at the end.Jasmina Prolic dances 'tuned on' with minimal, transcendental movements at the beginning, which grows up as the dramaturgical structures are growing too, into rhythmically more completed textures…

Photo: Compagnie Jasmina (c)

The piece is fragmented into smaller parts which are developed through wordz / dialogues with a man ‘behind’ the ‘technological wall’ emanating himself through video installation and complex DIY electronic sound device letting different sounds to come out depending on dancer’s moves. It’s a kind of a sound mapping of their virtual communication based on practical physics (more precisely micro-kinetics) - her dancing.

Photo: Compagnie Jasmina (c)

Although, the use of such devices could be constraining for the performer, seems like Hubert did a great job with his real-time sound device, Jasmina Prolic accepted it superbly as part of her body, mainly because it’s a communication tool between human being and entity of electronic nature, if you understand it banally.Prolic deploys a sort of micro-inquiring within her body narration and technique creating an artwork of emotional depth… She is questioning the issues of being emotional and physical attached via technology to another person, and the possibilities of having the same relation as if this person would be made of flash and blood…

Because of choreographer’s intention to go further the whole story is not finishing with a pair of lovers running through the meadow into each others arms… But seems like this whole ‘wired’ love is functioning with some boundaries… which leads you to the point where, as a viewer, you can realize that lots of thingz in our lives turned out in some direction because of our previous expectations… Can we accept relations with ‘entities’ and being emotionally involved with… well, actually we already live this life without even perceiving it, or maybe we all like to live in certain oblivion…

Photo: Compagnie Jasmina (c)

Jasmina Prolic is a Sarajevo ex-ballet girl on her ‘movable’ life journey, heavily ‘spiced’ with contemporary dance, in France… At the beginning of 90’s Jasmina was already an award winning ballet dancer and member of Sarajevo’s National Ballet Ensemble … but due to terrible thingz which started to happen in Bosnia at that time, she first found refuge in Zagreb, and then she entered at The National Superior Conservatoire of Dance and Music of Paris in order to study Contemporary Dance.Her graduation dance piece was her first solo work ‘Sarajevo, 25th of April 10 o’clock in the morning or Why?’. Jasmina Prolic has received Award for French Young Choreographers in 1999; she was a member of the Junior Ballet of the CNSMDP from 1996-97, which followed the residency - danceweber at DanceWeb Project within ImpulsTanz in Vienna in 1998. Artists she had collaborated with are: Jean Claude Gallota, Maguy Marin, Joachim Schlomer, Palle Granhoj, Gildas Zepffel, Gildas Bourdet, Balazs Gera, Maja Pavlovska, Szilard Mezei, Albert Markos, Henrik Jaspersen et Ko de Regt (Duo Resonante), Jérome Poret etc.

Photo: Compagnie Jasmina (c)

Lucid choreographer Joseph Nadj invited her in 2002 to base her very own dance company in Orléans (France), which was initially a new trigger in her carrier, not just for her solo artworkz but for promoting younf dancers and companies from South Eastern Region… Jasmina Prolic is spending a lot of time on givin’ dance workshops and classes in this region…From 2007 she is an art consultant for Nomad Dance Academy regional network presenting the Bosnian organisation for contemporary dance Tanzelarija; and she have an active participating role in the Balkan Dance Network and IETM. She’s the organizer of ‘Choreographic Meetings of the Balkans’ dance event with the National Choreographic Centre of Orléans and National Scene of Orléans in France. Jasmina is artistic director of the First Bosnian Contemporary Dance Festival ZVRK in Sarajevo.

Photo: Compagnie Jasmina (c)

After such a technical complex dance piece ‘Julie(t)- duet in absentia’ with a dancer immersed deeply in the theme, I couldn’t resist not inviting Jasmina for a small talk on her solo work… technology… about her challenges…about ZVRK … and all that stuff…Hi, Jasmina! Could you please tell me something about that how did you first get involved with technology? Something that actually can’t be controlled in a way you can control your own body and expressiveness…J: Hubert Pichot and I met while working together on the theatre production in February 2006. Then he introduced me with his technological stuff and expressed a wish to work with a dancer in order to create a live instrument!!! He said he would like to work on Romeo and Juliet by Prokofjev, but I replied that Romeo and Juliet that I think off are written by Shakespeare. In that sense I was ready to enter the adventure of exploration for a live instrument, not being interested in the love story, but in the conflict and all that destroyed love.

Photo: Compagnie Jasmina (c)

Are you planning to work or develop the same working process within ‘Julie(t)- duet in absentia’ or some other future performance?J: The work with Juliet isn’t finished yet; we’re still developing and rethinking this piece. Maybe, if I will feel the urge, I’ll provoke something similar in some other project.In your opinion, what is the perspective of a human moveable body through dance in the context of technology?J: Well, there are so many things in that context that need to be discovered. It also depends a lot on what you want to express, in what direction you want to develop and what kind of message to send.Do you think that you can expand your possibilities as a dancer by using experimental performing devices, DIY tools, data sensors and so?J: These devices push you in some very different ways to use your body and to develop conscience about some still undiscovered parts and possibilities. But, they influence your style also.

Photo: Compagnie Jasmina (c)

Josef Nadj has inspirited you with invitation to work and base your dance company in Orleans…J: I can only thank him for everything.What do you give to dancers on one side and learn from them on other side in your international classes?J: When I teach, first of all I give respect and get human quality. Sometimes, I learn everything from the beginning…What could you tell me about the development of dance scene at the moment in South Eastern Europe, in the European context?J: Although I am not completely familiar with the whole South-East European scene; dancers and choreographers that I do know can with confidence stand side by side in the European context.

Photo: Compagnie Jasmina (c)

The first Bosnian Festival for Contemporary Dance took place in September in Sarajevo… That’s great news for young people willing to expand their experiences in the field of contemporary dance, but also for society and the city of Sarajevo in general… How do you see the future of the scene that will certainly emerge from it in ten, twenty years from now?J: Who could know how the scene will look like tomorrow, not to say in ten or twenty years! (laughs).I only hope that something has finally been moved. This first edition convinced us of the great need for this kind of events in the contemporary societies; so we can’t give up. Dance makes you free and gives you a chance for interaction. There are no limits and that is what we really need.In any case, it won’t be easy, but it never is in Bosnia and Herzegovina! ‘Nice and easy’ approach. And maybe the standing tomb-stones will revive through our bodies; they’ll become off petrified and therefore even nicer and stronger.Jasmina, thanks!p.s. Bosnia and Herzegovina is well known for archaeological sites of medieval tomb-stones.(This blog post was originally posted on Personal Cyber Botanica at www.lomodeedee.com)
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STEP IT UP FOR A CAUSE AND CHANGE YOUR COMMUNITY!


Nike and YouthNoise Introduce the Battle of the NYC Boroughs, the Super Bowl of Dance Competitions Encouraging Community Advocacy

This month YouthNoise, in partnership with Nike, the Department of Youth & Community Development, and the Global Youth Leadership Institute, is introducing Step It Up: Battle of the Boroughs, a city-wide contest where dance teams from all five New York City boroughs compete for up to $10,000 in cash and prizes, including a team grant, a Nike ID session in which the winning team will be able to design their own team shoe and the coveted NYC Battle of the Boroughs trophy to be featured on Gamechangers, YouthNoise Play City, and Live Leadership Now.

Heralded as the “Super Bowl of dance competitions,” the Battle of the Boroughs gives young dancers the opportunity to showcase their talent and encourages participants to declare a cause for their communities. Issues like Inequality, Education and Violence are among the few causes participants can declare to help support their communities.

The competition is organized in three phases. The first phase is auditions, in which teams register online, volunteer for a community service project and compete for the semifinals on June 4, 2009; the Battle Zone. The semifinalists that make it to the Battle Zone will create video PSAs that will be hosted on YouthNoise.com/playcity. Finally, the teams chosen to move on will compete in the Battle of the Boroughs on June 30, 2009, where the final teams will create, develop and launch a borough-wide campaign around their causes and compete for the grand prize!

Young people from all over New York City now have the opportunity to participate in a one of a kind dance competition while representing and advocating for their surrounding communities. Register now for the Battle of the Boroughs and Step It Up for a cause to change your community!
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Dance Plus

In Short:It is a series of three documentaries about dance and technology bringing to light the current development of movement research, meaning and context. The overall title is “Dance Plus”.THE PROJECT:The 1st Documentary is about Jeannette Ginslov who stems from Johannesburg, South Africa. She is the Founder and Director of Walking Gusto Productions multimedia dance theatre, a choreographer, video dance maker and multimedia artist. Her video dance works are presented locally and internationally. Her current work “Sanctum” is an interactive, multi sensory Screendance work that exposes the heinous crime of FGM or Female Genital Mutilation and attempts to elicit the viewer’s response of empathy to an act of cruelty perpetrated on women. Sanctum emphasises technology serving content and audience reception. The Screendance medium will capture the experience and sensation of the restricted dancing body interacting with sites of interactivity that amplifies the kinesthetic and emotional content in order to shape Screendance reception.The 2nd documentary is about Arthur Elsenaar’s “Artifacial” which is an Algorithmic Facial Choreography. “Artifacial Expression” is an art and research project that investigates the computer controlled human face as a medium for kinetic art and develops algorithms for facial choreography. Besides the Leonardo Award for Excellence Elsenaar received an "Anerkennung" from Prix Ars Electronica for his work into facial choreography. Most recently The Stedelijk Museum in Amsterdam has acquired the algorithmic facial choreography piece entitled "Face Shift" for their permanent collection.The 3rd documentary is about the award winning Katrina McPherson and Simon Fildes who have been collaborating on single screen video dance works and web-dances at hyperchoreography.org, for over 10 years, but their latest project MOVE-ME.com combines their individual interests in dance and interactive installations that takes them in a new direction with significant international success. The move-me booth is a special video booth touring to theatre foyers, festival venues, arts centres, galleries, universities and dance agencies. Over 10,000 people have entered the booth to try it out and 2000 completed video clips have been recorded and are on the website. The booth tour visited 35 venues in the UK and Holland to April 2008 including Sadler’s Wells London in September 2006 and it was also in Australia and New Zealand during the summer of 2008.Why I want to document this:The first silent films were often described as early forms of ‘screendance’; a fact that is nearly forgotten. Our physical connection and muscular empathy to movements on screen is vital to our overall perception and wellbeing. There is an immense power and potential in the exploration of this medium and my three documentaries want to capture this. It serves as a purpose to document three of our most interesting contemporary video dance makers and raises awareness of their works.
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Hello All,Please forward this information to anyone you think might be interested."The Borders Project Residency" at Centrum (www.centrum.org) is looking for a film artists to collaborate on a dance and film project with 8 artists from NYC, Tampa, Washington D.C., and Vancouver, BC, Canada. Unfortunately, the person who was to film the project can not attend, and I am in dire need of finding a film artist for the residency June 14-18, 2009 in Port Townsend, WA.For more information, please contact me at adam@dnaworks.org. To get a better idea of the work, please visit: http://dnaworks.org/Agulhas-Theatre-Works-Healing-Dance-Workshop.phpThanks so much,Adam McKinneyCo-Director, DNAWORKSwww.dnaworks.org
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SideBySide art center defines its main purpose in supporting and cultivating art and culture, stage-play and dance. In general, the association wants to help talented artists of any genre. In detail, SideBySide art center especially wants to give social support to young people in the areas of art, culture, training and education. Thus, the association exclusively and immediately serves public welfare purposes.SideBySide art center offers artists of all kinds a new cultural platform. Always on behalf of their urges - communication, exchange and public images - the association tries to bring artists of different genres together and paves the way for their artistic development (side by side). Young talents as well as renowned artists can use this platform to get into contact with each other, to participate in a project or to find a new and individual way of presenting themselves effectively to the public.FESTIVALChoreographers who take part in the fifth international internet dance festival SideBySide-net 2009 get the unique opportunity to present themselves and their art online to a broad international audience over a longer period of time.The videos of the recent four festivals’ participants have in sum been watched and voted by almost 100.000 viewers from all over the world.The audience’s favourite artists receive prizes summing up to 3.000 Euro.» Download application form here http://www.side-by-side.org/en/festival/2009Application deadline is July 31st 2009.
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Robert Hylton is an ‘urban classicist’… being continuously tainted with the virus called street art in its most refined sense…As a youngster he was involved in the UK’s underground Hip Hop scene (break dance and popping techniques included), then jazz dance&stylez, and after a while he realized that contemporary dance might work for him too in a very coolish way…

Photo: Robert Hylton Urban Classicism (c)

As a very young artist he was a member of many street art crews, for instance Bamboozle; then he decided to blast himself to the next level by studying contemporary dance at the Northern School of Contemporary Dance.In 1999 he founded Robert Hylton Urban Classicism which could be considered as a dance company, production crew and a training platform within whose Robert ‘transmits’ his knowledge and artistic vision.As a real ‘gimme some tunes’ artist he often collaborates with respectable DJs, among them also with Billy Biznizz - UK’s well known DJ, producer and remix-maestro who did some stuff for the House of Pain, Jade, N.W.A, 4Hero and Mark Morrison.

Robert Hylton performed at many international festivals either as a solo dancer either with his own crew. He was a member / guest performer of several dance companies, such as: Jonzi D, JazzXchange and Phoenix Dance. Hylton is also well known for his hip hop/art/educational movies: Urban Classicism South Side, Two Sugars with My Hip Hop please…, The Real Thing, Frames, Urban Classicism, Urban Voodoo, Jaffaman, Simmetry, etc.This spring he spent some time in Zagreb (Croatia) with b-girls and b-boys from the School for Contemporary Dance ‘Ana Maletic’ and the local company What Evaa in order to work with them… they successfully presented their skills almost two months ago where else but on the street…

Photo: Robert Hylton Urban Classicism (c)

I took few minutes of his time to chat a little bit with him at Dance Week Festival, and here is some stuff on street art from Jaffaman, ops… Robert Hylton’s perspective…Yo, Robert! The blood in your veins is the blood of a street artist, somebody artistically raised on asphalt with urban background… those are your foundations… what sort of ‘switch’ has happened when you decided to accept other forms of expressiveness?R: I think I’m a dance junkie, you know. The challenge of learning to dance was good. Culturally, hip hop is in my heart and my brain. Contemporary as well, it’s just a part of dance and I found that I was able to learn it, so I kept it, but I always returned. I mean, I never left hip hop and it was always there. But I enjoy both paths and that’s why I bring to the next generations of contemporary dancers discipline and how to work in the studio. So, fortunate I’m able to kind of help other people. If they just wanna stay hip hop - often come straight hip hop dancers to work with me; but when you are in a rehearsal studio and you make them work, there has to be some rules.

Photo: Robert Hylton Urban Classicism (c)

It’s obviously that you take care a lot about soundz in your artwork… not just ‘gimme some beatz and tunez’ attitude… but a lot of classics, down tempo, trip hop, ambient… you mix it all… seems like they are all equal in your choreographic language? Basically, how do you treat sounds in your work?R: If I like it, I’m drawn to it. I think, even with hip-hop music… when hip-hop first came through, it was an amalgamation of many many different sounds. There was no formula, it was whatever the DJ thought could work for the crowd and listen to. Now, it’s a formula. It’s a straight-forward beat, and it loses its reliance it has back then. So, specifically for this project, before I came, because I didn’t know anyone, I just put a lot of different types of music in my computer and then when I met everyone I just thought: Well, this music makes a language to particular people to keep them in the comfort zone. And I think the music ballet is an important part of dance. If I like it doesn’t matter what it sounds like as long we dance to the music, whether it’s classical or ambient, as long it helps to those textures more then anything else.

Photo: Robert Hylton Urban Classicism (c)

How did you manage to get the street vibe in your choreographies to fit in your style to theatre stage? Do you even think about that? Does it concern you at all?R: I think it’s a part of a natural evolution. Hip hop is young, about 35 years in its growth from the first wave in the seventies, and then in the eighties it was like the big media hustle, now it’s defined like: who the body- architect is; what the vocabulary is; what the history is and I think that’s a rich culture. Self-expression, inventiveness and all this things. So, I think that now there are more tools and it’s a combat to any kind of cultural birocracy in a way of policy. So, like ballet was a peasant dance, was a folk dance when it started. Hip hop is now a folk dance that is changing. You know, it’s a stage of a natural evolution at the moment. Now teachers require knowing the name of every single move in hip hop like in ballet. When you know the name of every move, then you know what the vocabulary is. Therefore, you are building something. It becomes a dance that grows with a form and structure, now excuse to the old ways of thinking.

Photo: Robert Hylton Urban Classicism (c)

You run workshops and dance classes all around the planet. What do you want to accomplish with your dance classes?R: It’s an experience of teaching and developing. Again, wherever I was: New Zealand, Croatia, Indonesia, etc. going with the basic knowledge and vocabulary with the intention to get everyone to dance, to challenge everyone. It’s inside of me and it’s the challenge that I like and it’s always very successful. Then, this education challenge is here… And this is what it takes for me to get on stage, basically. When you come with the honesty, all the things you use are the fundamentals of dance and the experimentation. When people don’t know the fundamentals of dance I would teach them fundamentals of dance. I would challenge them with experimentation. My intention is, wherever they are, to try to push them further.You get the satisfaction from it…R: Yeah, I think I get the satisfaction from it because the more they push themselves forward the more environment in the culture grows, the more it looks to be growing up, the more looks to be organized and I think it just helps the general development of dance, whether it’s fusion, contemporary, hip hop or whatever is hip hop in it’s purest form.

Photo: Robert Hylton Urban Classicism (c)

What do you think about Banksy, the graffiti artist… you probably know that some people are buying his artworks for a lot of bucks, an artwork that essentially belongs to the street and to all people?R: Yeah, I mean Banksy is a graffiti artist in a graffiti sense; he is not necessarily from hip hop background and all that stories. He is very clever, great political references and he does a great job. Banksy is definitely an outlaw, like the older graffiti artists were, when nobody knows who he is - in that sense is hip hop; and he takes big risks and gets away with it. But he is also a businessman. I know his manager; he is a good friend of mine.It’s a good marketing…R: Yeah, it’s a good marketing as long he keep that outlaw that it’s all business and that street artist can be on that level. I think, back again to dancers, that hip hop performers even when they know they wanna be b-boys, they have to learn some business; which is a part of organization when you are professional: contacts, business negotiating and all this. It takes them away from not just dancing on the street. Banksy was not just painting on the walls, he has books out, and his work is in art galleries. If his work is not in the gallery he will sneak by himself and put it there (laughs).Robert, TNX a lot!This interview was originally published on Personal Cyber Botanica: www.lomodeedee.com)
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DANCE:FILM in Edinburgh

Hi Guys,two of my films are in DANCE:FILM...TRENCH is screening in Dance For Camera on Sat at 11.30am and URBAN DANCERS is in Dance With Camera on Sat at 13.30! It'd be great to see you there!!!Sabine xSo, here are the dates & links:Dance for Camera – Saturday 23rd May 2009, 11.30 http://www.dancefilmscotland.com/2009/films/danceforcamera.htmlDance with Camera – Saturday 23rd May 2009, 13.30 http://www.dancefilmscotland.com/2009/films/dancewithcamera.htmland there are also:Is it Dance? – Saturday 30th May 2009, 11.30 http://www.dancefilmscotland.com/2009/films/isitdance.htmlNew works – Saturday 30th May 2009, 13.30 http://www.dancefilmscotland.com/2009/films/newworks.html
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FEST TRAINING GROUND – 22ND TO 27TH OF JUNE 2009 IN ESPINHO, PORTUGALFEST Training Ground is a place where film enthusiast and filmmakers from all over the world gather in one week to attend atraining, from workshops to master classes, lectured by experts fromthe film industry. The event will take place between the 22nd and the27th of June 2009 in Espinho, Portugal.Deadline for registration: 12th of June, 2009Information:www.fest.pt
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ZURICH MASTER CLASS # 4

ZURICH MASTER CLASS # 4THE ZURICH FILM FESTIVAL'S TALENT WORKSHOPSEPTEMBER 30TH – OCTOBER 4TH, 200925 directors, authors and producers are given the opportunity tointeract with filmmakers in intensive and fruitful workshop talks. Thefestival's periphery programme also offers the possibility to carry outsome intensive networking, be it with international directors,producers of the Producers Forum or the Shooting Stars of theEuropean Film Promotion. Exchange is interactive: the participantsprepare for the talks on the basis of concrete film scenes and controlthe discussion themselves. The discussions will be simultaneouslytranslated.Deadline for entry is August 21st, 2009.Information:www.zurichmasterclass.org/en/master-class-2009/
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EKOTOPFILM 2009

EKOTOPFILM 2009The 36th International Festival of Sustainable Development Films -ekotopfilm 2009 will be held in October 19 – 23, 2009 in the capital cityof Bratislava, Slovak Republic. The program structure and its contentfocus on all fields of economic, industrial and human activitiesstressing the need for sustainable development to be a continuousprocess.Deadline for entries: July 31 st, 2009General information and entry form:www.ekotopfilm.skTerms of participation:www.ekotopfilm.sk/index.php?page=statute
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ARTISTS-IN-RESIDENCE PROGRAM 2010

KYOTO ART CENTERARTISTS-IN-RESIDENCE PROGRAM 2010Kyoto Art Center offers an artist-in-residence program to supportyoung artists and art researchers who wish to pursue creativeactivities in Kyoto. Applications are invited from young people in art-related fields who would like to produce works, conduct research, etc.,during their stay in Kyoto.Applications must arrive no later than June 30th 2009.Information:www.kac.or.jp
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DANCERS! is an interactive video data base of professional dancers of any style or technique improvising within a precise context : 2 minutes, defined space, exact lighting, chosen music.Designed by Bud Blumenthal, the DANCERS! project aims to put the dancer in the center to demonstrate his/her art without having to adapt to the vision of a choreographer.DANCERS! can be viewed online for free at www.dancersproject.com. where one can navigate through the dances in an easy and entertaining way that also provides links to the artists and commentaries. You want a high quality version of a particular dance for your television or mobile phone? By purchasing online for less than a euro, you can download the HQ file to your computer. - AND you will be supporting these artists financially.The DANCERS! installation will be presented for the first time in the Biennale of Charleroi/Danses in November 2009. In a public place in the city of Charleroi, Belgium, spectators can interact with the database via a control panel in front of a giant screen where the dances are life size!more info at http://dancersproject.com/Public2/
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MAX/MSP 4: Data Types

One of the big differences between Reaktor and Max/MSP is the way information for your own design is represented within the system.Numeric Data typesReaktor has two levels of design: primary and core. In the primary level, all numbers are stored and calculated as 32-bit floats. Some processors, such as the Celeron, do not have hardware floating-point acceleration, so mathematical calculations (especially division and transcendentals) can take up alot of CPU cycles. Reaktor also supports 64-bit numbers, integers, and some bitwise manipulations in the core.Max/MSP supports intermingling of integers and floats throughout the design.Numeric ArraysIn the primary level, Reaktor supports the storage of 2-D and polyphonic data arrays of 32-bit floats in table modules. The table modules also provide a range of display options. In the core level, Reaktor's built-in modules support 1-D arrays only, but they may be integer and 64-bit types as well as 32-bit floats.Max/MSP also has table objects, but their display is not as comprehensive as in Reaktor's primary-level table modules. Tables are also not passed as messages, they are for storage only.Jitter also supports arrays, glowingly described in the promotional materials, and at first I thought I could use Jitter for advanced DSP audio calculations. However while audio manipulation in Jitter could be possible with some significant effort, the Jitter arrays (called matrices) are really intended for displaying Quicktime pictures, videos, and animations. For audio, Jitter's main benefit is to display oscilloscope-style waveforms or color-coded temporal bars. Jitter is not natively intended to provide any array processing of audio data.Text StringsReaktor permits users to store strings in the module properties, so that ports and screen elements can be named for example. However it is not possible to manipulate strings with Reaktor modules.Max/MSP handles text strings just like numeric values. Strings are passed from the ports of one object to another just like numbers. There are a range of functions for changing text strings. This is one area where Max/MSP is really superior to Reaktor. Max/MSP can change text strings much like mathematical manipulation of numbers. This enables designs to change the text in drop-down list boxes for example, which is not possible in Reaktor.ListsAn additional data type in Max/MSP, lists, provides the ability to pass messages containing more than one value in an ordered array called a list. While this theoretically simplifies design, in practice it can be very difficult to debug as the values in the lists are difficult to observe. One notes that there are a number of college courses in Max/MSP and all of them spend quite a bit of time on lists, so obviously, they are not as simple to use as they may appear at first blush.On the other hand, lists can be very powerful if you do not overload the system with them (a fast list processing object in Max/MSP is called the 'Ouzi,' a type of submachine gun. There are strong warnings in the documentation that indiscriminate firing of the Ouzi object can hang your computer).Environment MessagesMax/MSP is also more powerful than Reaktor in that it can access and control environment control variables via messages. In Reaktor, environment properties are preset in the environment and cannot be changed unless a module is available to set them.Max/MSP interacts directly with the environment so it is possible to change internal characteristics, change menus, set alert boxes, and so on.BangsFinally, Max/MSP really beats Reaktor hands down on providing the Bang message. The 'bang' message is issued at startup for initialization, as well as to set and pass parametric values through the network. A 'BangBang' module is available to send 'bangs' at power-up and preset change.This is a vast improvement over Reaktor, which provides no systematic method to manage initialization events. I was very happy to discover the 'BangBang' object, after having spent many days struggling with event initialization order in Reaktor.But do You Really Care about Data Types?Now after presenting all the data types available in each system, there is the opposing question: should an artist really need to care about data types? Well, if you are intending to create something with Max/MSP, you really need to be able to manipulate data types just like in a software program. You can get away without understanding data types too much in Reaktor, but for Max/MSP, you have to understand data types at least to the level of basic programming. So the argument here is that you should regard being able to write software programs just like being able to mix paints: it is a necessary skill that the artist must master. As to which paints the artist chooses to mix, that is the fundament of being a successful artist.Do Data Types Really Work in GUI Environments?Historically, those who sell GUI environments that manipulate data types have often had a hard time persuading the rest of us that the GUI environments actually help. Messages of different types move invisibly on the wires between the objects, and the objects need to receive messages of the type they expect in order to respond properly (messages of incorrect types are usually ignored).This is an area where many state a scripted language program is much better, because one can directly observe and control the data types moving between objects. The graphical interface actually makes it much more difficult to find problems, because the type data and messages are hidden and obscured by the pretty graphical interface.So from this perspective, if you are looking for a simple graphical environment, Reaktor is better because it has less data types. At primary level, everything is forced to one data type which may be slower to process, but at least the likelihood of there being a programming error that is difficult to find is smaller too.However Reaktor's data types are more limited in power than Max/MSP, which also has interfaces to other programming environments. it does take some significant effort to set up these interfaces, but I hope to have it done and ready for a report very soon.
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“Dazzling… eye-popping … Umeda uses very specific limited movement, seemingly becoming a three-dimensional force emanating from the screen, part MATRIX, part TRON, trapped in a digitized computer world… a beautiful, exhausting display of raw physical talent and studied control.”-- TWI-NY.com (This Week in NY), Mark Rifkin“Cool, minimalist, high-tech hip hop… Umeda has made of dance a total theater under the control of his photographer's eye. He certainly has new tricks to teach American hip hop dancers seeking fresh ways to translate their skills to the concert stage.”-- Infinite Body, Eva Yaa Asantewaa
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[Sorry for cross-postings]***************************************************************************FINAL CALL FOR PAPERS***************************************************************************SBM2009- Social Behavior in Musicwww.infomus.org/SBM2009Vancouver, Canada, August 29, 2009Workshop in the framework of IEEE Intl. SocialCom-09 ConferenceMusic making and listening are a clear example of human activities that are above all interactive and social. On the one hand, however, nowadays mediated music making and listening is usually still a passive, non-interactive, non-context sensitive, and non-social experience. The current electronic technologies have not yet been able to support and promote these essential aspects. On the other hand, new mediated forms of sharing music experience in a social context with local or remote users or as a part of a community are emerging. At the same time we observe an increasing need for paradigms for embodied and active experience of music where non-verbal communication channels, and in particular movement and gesture, play a central role.This workshop focuses on the social signals and their features that are most significant for a qualitative and quantitative analysis of social behavior and experience in music. The workshop will discuss computational models, algorithms, techniques for analysis of social behavior in music, their application in concrete test-beds, and their evaluation in experimental set-ups. We are interested in exploring many-to-many human interplay, such as the performer-listener, performer-performer, and listener-listener interaction, in novel scenarios where the distinction between listeners and performers fades out and users become producers and consumers of music experience.WORKSHOP TOPICSWe encourage papers and demos addressing fundamental research issues including, but not limited to, the following topics:- theoretical approaches to social behavior in music- experimental methodologies for analysis of social behavior in music - computational models of social behavior in music- analysis of social signals in music- synchronization of human behavior in music- analysis of social roles in performers and listeners groups- analysis of attention and salience in social music experiences- multimodal interfaces for active and social music experience- cooperative social environments for participative music experience - multi-user systems and application for social music experienceELECTRONIC SUBMISSIONSSubmissions should follow the IEEE conference paper format.Submissions should include: title, author(s), affiliation(s), e-mail address(es), tel/fax number(s), and postal address(es).The contributions can be submitted at:http://infomus.org/SBM2009/commenceBoth accepted papers and demos will be presented at the workshop as oral presentation or in a demo session. The accepted contributions will appear in the Proceedings of Social-Com09 Workshops published by IEEE Computer Society Press. Authors of accepted contributions will be required to submit a camera ready version.At least one author for each accepted paper or demo is required to attend the workshop to present the work.Papers submission:Manuscripts should be 8 pages maximum, including references, tables, and pictures.Demo submission:Proposal for demonstrations should be submitted as a (max) 2-pages extended abstract including pictures and technical details.IMPORTANT DATESMay 17, 2009: Submissions deadlineJune 5, 2009: Notification of acceptance June 15, 2009: Camera ready version due to electronic form August 29, 2009: SBM2009 WorkshopWORKSHOP ORGANIZERS AND CHAIRSAntonio CamurriDonald GlowinskiMaurizio ManciniGiovanna VarniGualtiero VolpePROGRAM COMMITTEEFrederic Bevilacqua (IRCAM, France)Roberto Bresin (KTH, Sweden)Shuji Hashimoto (Waseda University, Japan) Ben Knapp (Queen's University Belfast, UK) Marc Leman (Univeristeit Ghent) Anton Nijholt (University of Twente, NL) Maja Pantic (Imperial College London, UK and University of Twente, NL) Catherine Pelachaud (CNRS, France) Isabella Poggi (Università Roma 3, Italy) Xavier Serra (UPF, Spain) Alessandro Vinciarelli (IDIAP, Switzerland)The workshop is partially supported by the FP7 EU-ICT Strep Project SAME (www.sameproject.eu).
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The Cuban Motion present in the Latin American dances is characterized by a movement of the hips caused by the natural shifting of weight from leg to leg and the bending and straightening of the knees. When done properly, the swaying of the hips becomes an instinctive part of the style of the dance. Smaller steps, rather than larger, are the key to a lovely Cuban Motion. Larger steps actually causes your weight to fall onto the stepping foot rather than a shift to the stepping foot, which is desirable.Salsa, Mambo, Samba, Cha-Cha, and Rumba all require Cuban Motion to get the right look. It transforms the dance from just a pattern of steps to a fun and sensual communication between the dance partners. Get those hips moving to the music, and have fun!
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