information

Type
Séminaire / Conférence
performance location
Ircam, Salle Igor-Stravinsky (Paris)
duration
20 min
date
June 8, 2016

Part #1:
Vocal Archetypes in Music
One of the most natural ways to explain emotions created by musical sounds is their proximity to lan- gage, and to expressive speech in particular. Our first guest talk, the workshop’s keynote address by Aniruddh Patel, will review the neurobiological inva- riants between speech and music, and explain whe- ther one can indeed be invoked to explain the other. Our second invited speaker, researcher and artist Gregory Beller, will give examples from his own prac- tice to illustrate how modern voice synthesis techno- logies are used in contemporary music performance. Finally, three of the participants of IRCAM’s own pro- ject “6months” will describe their attempts at “high- jacking” in-house voice manipulation tools designed for music production, in order to create sounds for music neuroscience experiments.


Archétypes émotionnels : musique et neurosciences, journée du 8 juin 2016

Music holds tremendous power over our emotions. Through a particularly touching phrase, a forceful chord or even a single note, musical sounds trigger powerful subjective reactions. For neuroscientists, these strong reactions are vexing facts, because such emotional reactions are typically understood as survival reflexes: our increased heart rates, suddenly- sweaty hands or deeper breath are responses preparing our organism to, for example, fight or run away if we stumble into a bear in the woods. Stumbling into music, be it a violin or a flute, a C or a C#, hardly seems a similar matter of life or death. In the past decade or so, experimentalists have tried to dissect musical sounds to see what exactly makes our brains think them worthy of such strong reactions – perhaps because they mimic the dissonant roar of a predator, reproduce the accents and prosody of emotional speech, or the spectral patterns of certain environmental sounds. For music composers, sonic events that are able to drive us into such Darwinian reactions also are the topic of an endless quest. With careful workmanship, the art of the composer is to sculpt sounds – how they’re written, how they’re performed, how they’re heard – that are optimally significant for the listening audience. For a certain school of contemporary crea- tion in particular, music making proceeds by delibera- tely reducing and rarefying its sonic material to the point of imitating our most minimal biological acts, e.g. in voice (crying, shouting, breathing) or movement (brushing, sliding, springing). With this symposium, featuring invited contributions by some of the most influent voices in the worlds of music neurosciences and contemporary music, our aim is to explore and confront the views of both scientists and composers on this issue – what are the origins of musical emotions?

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