This also profiled the upcoming CreateWorld 2007 'Music 2.0' keynote as well as taking about the work we're doing at the Queensland Conseravtoirum in online publishing at Radio IMERSD. The full article can be read here on The Australian Higher Education website.
30 November 2007
Reading Music in the Digital Realm
As an adjunct to the recent QCRC Twilight Lecture, I wrote a short piece called Reading Music in the Digital Realm for The Australian newspaper, published in the Higher Education feature on 28 November.
This also profiled the upcoming CreateWorld 2007 'Music 2.0' keynote as well as taking about the work we're doing at the Queensland Conseravtoirum in online publishing at Radio IMERSD. The full article can be read here on The Australian Higher Education website.
This also profiled the upcoming CreateWorld 2007 'Music 2.0' keynote as well as taking about the work we're doing at the Queensland Conseravtoirum in online publishing at Radio IMERSD. The full article can be read here on The Australian Higher Education website.
Labels:
digital arts,
IMERSD,
knowledge transfer,
music 2.0,
recording industry
03 November 2007
iOrpheus – The Movie
iOrpheus – the Movie was produced and directed by Masters (Honours) student Paul Davidson who led Griffith Film School student crews as part of a Community Engagement project. 5.1 sound production for DVD was completed in IMERSD by myself as part of a Music Technology (Honours) research training project. The film documents iOrpheus: Art Among Us (the iPod Opera), a concept developed by New York-based composer and internet music pioneer William Duckworth together with co-artistic director and technology developer Nora Farrell. Bill was a visiting scholar with Griffith University from June–August 2007 on a Fulbright Senior Specialist grant awarded for iOrpheus.
The project gratefully acknowledges the support of Griffith University’s DVC-Academic, Prof John Dewar, MacBook Pros from Apple Computer Australia, wearable sound systems from MusicLab, a state-of-the-art 5.1 surround sound PA system from Acoustic Technologies Electronics, and wireless network systems from Griffith Research Computing Services. Full production credits are listed over at the iOrpheus site.
The DVD can be ordered from the Queensland Conservatorium Research Centre and also is part of the collection at the Australian Government's National Film & Sound Archive.
The project gratefully acknowledges the support of Griffith University’s DVC-Academic, Prof John Dewar, MacBook Pros from Apple Computer Australia, wearable sound systems from MusicLab, a state-of-the-art 5.1 surround sound PA system from Acoustic Technologies Electronics, and wireless network systems from Griffith Research Computing Services. Full production credits are listed over at the iOrpheus site.
The DVD can be ordered from the Queensland Conservatorium Research Centre and also is part of the collection at the Australian Government's National Film & Sound Archive.
Labels:
digital arts,
knowledge transfer,
music 2.0,
performance,
podcast,
video
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