Organized Sound Spaces with Machine Learning
Dr. Kıvanç Tatar
1. Materiality of Music
1.2.1 Music as Organized Sound
Music as Organized Sound – Varèse
Later, towards the mid 20th century, some composers started to think about what is then to make music if we can use any sound as musical material? One of those composers was Edgard Varèse, and again, I would like to read a paragraph from an article titled Liberation of Sound by Edgard Varèse (1966).
Varèse opens up the idea of music. Starting from the expansion of musical material, and thinking about, how can we call something music if any sound can be musical? And in his view, it is the organization that matters. And following Varèse's suggestion, we also have other composers coming in and giving us a more comprehensive understanding of the materiality of music:
- any sound can be used to produce music (Russolo 1913);
- music is organized sound (Varese 1966);
- relationships exist between pitch, noise, timbre, and rhythm involving multiple layers (Stockhausen 1972);
- sounds exist in a physical 3-D space (ibid.);
- the timescales of music is in multiple levels infinitesimal, subsample, sample, sound object, meso, macro, supra, and infinite (Roads 2004).
We started from Luigi Russolo's expansion of musical material. And then, we came to Varèse's understanding of music, a generalized definition of music. And then after that, Karlheinz Stockhausen proposes four criteria of electronic music, which he later expands those criterias in the late 20th century. Without getting into the details of those criterias, Stockhausen emphasizes the relationships between pitch, noise, timbre, rhythm, and how music consist of multiple musical layers. Additionally, Stockhausen emphasizes the physical 3-D space that we can use for musical composition. In the beginning of 21st century, Curtis Roads (2004) proposes the time scales of music in multiple levels.