Granular Gong
(2000)
Genre: Acousmatic Music
Duration: 13:50
Granular
Gong explores and experiments with the following subjects:
-
the creation of pure synthetic metal-like sounds
with Chowning FM and then varying and combining them with another synthesis
procedures like Phase Vocoding (both time-and-pitch shifting),
spectral mutations and convolution (multiplication of 2 different spectra) and
mostly Granular Synthesis (therefore giving the name to the piece), trying to
use this particular type of synthesis in an original and new way, attaching the
type of synthesis to all formal structuring as well.
-
large crescendo structures, resolving their
inner tension in different sounds. Very loud and very soft moments are an
essential part of the very structure of Granular Gong.
- the movement and rotation of all these sounds
in a space or room. Therefore the original version was composed for an 8-Track diffusion
set, which is the best performance possibility.
Software used for
the composition and production of the piece:
Csound (mainly for
the physical modelling of the Gong Sounds), Soundhack, Audiosculpt.
Granular Gong is available on
the public domain commercially on the CD: Festival Internacional
Sonoimágenes 2005 / VOLUMEN 1/ Colección SONIDOS Y
VISIONES DEL SUR / Música electroacústica de compositores
nacionales e internacionales’, edited 2005 by the Universidad Nacional de Lanús
(Argentina).
Technical
specifications:
The Final 8-track
Master was mixed using ProTools.
The channel
distribution for concert purposes follows the American octophonic surround way,
as follows:
The performer on the
Mixing desk should not try to diffuse the piece, as all octophonic movements
are already pre-composed and saved on the tape. A general indication would be
to consider all 8 Output Busses at 0dB level basis (Unity), but as the overall
dynamics can vary substantially from one system and concert hall to another,
the final decision of a common overall level for all 8 channels remains on the
performer.
The
octophonic version is the only version which brings the whole compositional
ideas together, as the space is indeed a primordial parameter and therefore
should be given priority. However, if an octophonic system is not in place, a
quadraphonic reduction as follows:
Channel 1
& 5 together,
Channel 2
& 6 together,
Channel 3
& 7 together,
Channel 4
& 8 together.
should replace it.
This acousmatic piece,
composed in 2000, is available on the following different formats (all
octophonic):
- ADAT – 48
kHz Sampling Rate
- DTRS – 44.1
kHz Sampling Rate
- 8 separate AIFF files,
which can be uploaded to any current computer Audio Sequencer (Pro Tools,
Nuendo, etc) for performance on a PC or Apple based computer.
Commercially
available on CD since April 2006, there is a stereo version of the piece as
well, but this one only qualifies for Radio or home reproduction.