Friday 13 April 2012

Phantom of the Opera in Singapore


Some years ago I was involved with rigging for The Really Useful Group, which is Andrew Lloyd Webber’s production company. They were setting up ‘Phantom Of the Opera’ at Esplanade Theatres in Singapore and I took part in the sound team, which was delivered by System Sound in Australia. System Sound is one of the largest PA companies in the world and I was there through a placement during my studies. Under you can see some of my behind-the-scenes pictures from the production:

Esplanade Theatre from the stage

A lot of fire power is needed to run all the speakers...


Main PA amps

Smaller amps for surrounds etc

Before delay times were set for the speakers

Phantom of the Opera is done in full surround. These speakers are found at the front of the stage.  Most front speakers are built directly into the stage rig without a cabinet. The result is a very natural sound and the team is very concerned with clean phase-response. The system is designed by Martin Levan, whom you can read about here & here.

Preparing the orchestra pit
A Neumann U-89 for the backstage chorus and
a screen where the singers can follow the show
Neumanns, Sennheisers and AKGs
ready to go into the orchestra pit


A huge Cadac console (in two modules) ensures both a clean phase response and versatile operation (and heavy lifting)
Double playback systems with A/B switch and reverbs
Early dress-rehearsal in progress
The whole stage is flown in from Australia in modules and lots of speakers are hidden inside the rig. Here you can see the lighting team running through the scenes.
The Phantom's organ backstage
Costumes
More costumes
Props
How to dress up the actors
'Phantom of the Opera'
Elaborate communication systems
Comms

Backstage: one side of the stage was turned into a huge production-area with power-supplies wire-less receivers, special effects operations etc. Right behind the stage there were wardrobes, make-up and much of the props. The side you can see here however was dedicated to flights, equipment and storage. All the equipment was flown in from Australia with a Boeing 747, consequently there'll be the need for both proper backstage infrastructure and storage. 





Thursday 12 April 2012

Leeds International Festival for Innovations in Music Production and Composition (IFIMPaC) 2012

Spring is here again and that only can mean one thing! Leeds College of Music in association with the Journal of Music, Technology & Education is perilously close to holding its annual conference on music production and composition. It has undergone a slight name-change and is now known as ‘Leeds International Festival for Innovations in Music Production and Composition’ (IFIMPaC).

The event will take place on Thursday 26th and Friday 27th of April 2012 and it is packed with top quality paper presentations and mingling. You can find a links to the event here and here.

Leeds College of Music (Photo credits)
Former keynote holder Bill Drummond enjoying a climb in a tree like most other kids (photo credits)

Dr. Dale Perkins of Leeds College of Music, the brain behind IFIMPaC (photo credits)

Paper Publication by Louise Rossiter

Last year I mentioned a research paper written by Louse Rossiter from the University of Edinburgh. It was presented at The Forum for Innovation in Music Production and Composition at Leeds College of Music.

Rossiter has been researching on the use of acoustic ecology as a therapeutic and educational tool for children and young people with troubled backgrounds, and I am pleased to share that Rossiter’s paper has been published. It is well worth a read for anyone involved in Music Technology, Music Therapy, Electro Acoustic Composition, Acoustic Ecology and Education. The paper was published in the Scottish Journal of Residential Child Care and you can find the link to the journal from the Celcis web page.

Information about the paper:
Scottish Journal of Residential Child Care October/November 2011

Rossiter completed her PhD in January 2016 (CV).

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(This post has seen minor edits since first published to update links and content.)

Updates: April 2012

1. Sound Production for Tour in Norway

City of Ã…lesund


Week 13 was spent on the road doing sound for a band from a local Folkehøgskole, which is a particular type of school much found in Scandinavia. The school was Rødde Folkehøgskole, which was fun for me cause they used to collaborate with the Folkehøgskole I went to myself many years ago.

The tour went through the inland South of Trondheim and eventually to the town of Oppdal. After Oppdal the tour bus drove on towards the coast to the cities of Molde, Ålesund and some of their surrounding areas. After Ålesund we had an over-night journey in the bus, crossing fjords with ferries and driving through the deep mountain valleys of the coast. A few days later I was back at Rødde Folkehøgskole to do sound for their final show at their own school. What a show! Playing for the home-audience was definitely something special and all we had been working at for a week came together as perfectly as it possibly could.

The band played a mixture of 60’s covers from the likes of the Beatles, modern blues-rock and their own original compositions. No doubt there were some songwriters in the pack to look out for as well!

Thanks very much to the iMusic tour crew for letting me travel around with you for a week of fun! If you want a glimpse behind the scenes, here’s days: 1, 2 (my favourite), 3 and 4.

2. High School Show

Like announced in a previous post March saw another Creative High School Project at the Christian Senior High-school in Trondheim. This time the topic was ‘Justice.’ For one week a great team of almost 160 students took part in making two final shows around the topic of justice. In particular, we narrowed in at the problem of human trafficking and the growing number of slaves around the world in our own days.

The student-group was split into dancers, actors, singers, band, designers, scenography, video-producers and more. An editorial team kept the wires hot in social media to promote the show and presented the whole group with an overview of what the other groups were doing on a day-to-day basis.

The show was received incredibly well by audience, school staff and parents and we got a real sense that the quality of this production was touching new heights. Leading the production was great fun thanks to a very dedicated group of students and a strong team of professional instructors from the creative industries!

For more on the Christmas show, click on this link!




3. And…

Much time has also been spent on writing research proposals and the outlines of a possible television series. More to come!

Sunday 4 March 2012

Updates: March 2012


1. In January and February I've gone back to my roots and been out doing some live sound again. In a world of fast paced innovation and ample digital technology I've been very happy to work on some big ol' analogue consoles again. Most notably the Midas Legend Series.

Midas Legend 3000
In February, David Vallier (US) who also played at the Skogbrann Festival this summer visited Norway again. David has together with Amber Brooks just released a new album through Morningstar Ministries in the US. Something magic happens whenever the Morningstar people meets our Norwegian musicians and things have a tendency to turn into a jazzy experimental Woodstock feeling. A real joy to do sound for!

David Vallier (Picture: Last FM)

2. I am currently working on a research proposal in Music Technology/ Production and Education/ Didactics. A lot of reading is done and I hope to update you further some time.

3. Next week I'm back to the KVT High-School in Trondheim Norway to head up another creative project. Like last time it will culminate in a large stage-production and a portfolio of films made by the students. 

Much looking forward to it and speak soon!

Thursday 5 January 2012

Creative High-school Project, December 2011


Right before Christmas each year, the Christian Senior High-school in Trondheim sets all of its freshers in motion for a grand scale production. Some 150 students work together during an intensive week to produce a final show comprising of dancers, actors, singers, band and film-clips. All the elements of the show are fully integrated through the storyline of the project. In addition to those who are on stage there are also a number of ‘behind the scenes groups.’ These included a cooking group who provided treats for the whole project; a ‘good deeds’ group who did community work and collected a lot of clothes to be sent to a charity in Eastern Europe; a costume and scenography group that worked with the actors, dancers and the stage; a stage design and stage attire group who worked with musicians, singers and with the stage design; a photography group who prepared an exhibition in one of the halls, plus provided visual content for the screens during the show; and finally, the editorial group who documented the whole project through films that were shown during the morning meetings, an official blog and through a number of different social media.

The tag line for the project was ‘real image.’ At the morning meetings all students were gathered, and through those meetings we aimed to establish both a Biblical view and a practical life approach, and to marry them together. We put a particular focus on this at the first morning meeting to set the pace for the rest of the week. At the first meeting, all the group-leaders came up on stage and talked about their personal relation to image and self-worth. To bring in further angles to the topic we also used a number of video presentations. And since it’s a creative project in Norway we showed a few ski-movies, base-jumping films and music videos just for fun and to loosen up everyone’s shoulders a bit.

With 11 production-groups in motion and a team of professional creatives leading them, I was hired to coordinate the project and lead all groups towards the same final goal. A lot of admin and meetings, but I also got to sneak off to hold a master-class in sound-engineering and lead some of the stage-building work.

A week is a short time for a production this size, but the students and leaders really put in the effort and the final production was something to be proud of for everyone! The feedback from the regular staff was very positive and it was said to have been one of the best projects to date.

The show was on the same day as the School’s final Christmas celebration and the day was ended with a big meal for all the students at the in-house sport’s hall, before they went off to a Christmas service in church. A great punctuation mark to the semester before the holidays!

You can read the official blog by the editorial group with pictures and film here.

Wednesday 4 January 2012

The 'Music Technology Days' Conference, Norway 2011


 The Rockheim Museum


The Music Technology Days (Musikkteknologidagene) is an annual Norwegian academic conference. In October 2011 it took place in Trondheim’s own museum of rock, Rockheim. It was hosted by the Department of Music at The Norwegian University for Science and Technology (NTNU). NTNU has over the last decade established itself with a very solid Music Technology stream both for under-graduate and post-graduate students.






The interactive wall of Norwegian recorded music


At Rockheim you can test your DJ'ing skills


Yours truly behind an old SSL mixer from Fagerborg Studio in Oslo

The Music Technology Days is predominantly held in Norwegian language, but receives talks in both English and the other Scandinavian languages close to Norwegian. In addition to Norwegian papers and projects, the 2011 conference also saw a collection of presenters from Sweden, Germany and the UK and at least one visitor from Iceland. The evenings had a number of concerts by students and staff from NTNU and there was plenty of time for mingling and looking around the museum.

Below you’ll find a complete list of the presentations that took place. Most Norwegian and Swedish project titles have been translated for the purpose of this post, but originally there were a mix of English, Swedish and Norwegian project titles. Titles translated from Swedish are marked [S] and translations from Norwegian are marked [N], this to clarify when the titles are my translations of the authors’ works. I have written a few lines about the works I took most note of and have provided as many links as possible (some of the links will inevitably be in Scandinavian languages). These are my personal comments, so for further information about the presentations I encourage you to contact the respective presenters or look up their works. I would also like to stress that there is no quality-judgement between those I have written about and those I have not. Some of those I have not written about were on the borders of my areas of competence so I’ll leave it up to someone better suited to comment.

You can find the official programme for the event here. It is in Norwegian, but has all the links provided by the university in it.

Svein Berge has collaborated with Natasha Barrett on developments in higher order Ambisonics. I’m afraid some of the technicality behind what they do is beyond me, but one of the ideas is to split up auditive happenings into different frequency bands and make Ambisonics process them more like we know the human psyche does. The system sounded very natural when demonstrated. As I am more likely to be on the user side than the developer side I found it interesting how you can pan around in a sound-sphere by using a simple interface. The results sounded incredibly convincing and if you use headphones it can also be used with a head-tracker.

HÃ¥kon Kvidal and Sigrid Jordal Havre both are or have been undertaking research in Norwegian schools on the use of modern music technology:

HÃ¥kon Kvidal of the Norwegian Academy of Music has years of experience in working with music technology in education. He has also contributed with research and texts on a national level for a long time. Currently he is conducting a study where he uses iPads with a selection of apps to deliver a music module. The apps are easy to get into and create an entry point for digital literacy in music and sound, but have little in common with a traditional musicological approach. It will be an interesting space to watch since the field is totally new.

Sigrid Jordal Havre has undertaken a research project where students could use computer technology to jam with each other or play music on their own. The software used was jam2jam and it allows you to create a musical output by using a selection of software instruments. The software allows you to work as a group and rearrange other people’s choices or grab their instruments. In the first sessions this lead to a lot of digital fighting between the students (everyone tried to grab the drum-kit etc.) As the project progressed this gradually changed and the students became increasingly interested in developing a product together. All sessions were recorded on video and have been meticulously dissected.

Maja Bugge has created a project at a public library where children can come and take part in a show where all the audio is presented on headphones. The stage is the whole library where they are lead around by the narration and various actors. The project comprises narration and sound on the headphones, and dancers and actors at the premises. The story is created as a mystery and the children are in a way taking part in solving it as they explore the whole space of the library in the hunt to solve the riddle. Children were used as “consultants” in the making of the experience.

Gary Bromham ‘Man in the machine or machine in the man – the ever changing role of music technology in popular music culture” (Keynote, day 2)
A grand tour in the history of modern music production covering topics like technology developments, recording media, the sound of different types of equipment, the loudness war and much more. With Bromham’s extensive background from music production this was probably one of the most exciting talks of the whole event, but one that would be hard to sum up in just a few lines…

Musicologist Gunnar Ternhag points to three main spreaders of music production terms in education: Software, books and lecturers. He has studied the quantity of terms are in use in a number of music production softwares and he also argues that these softwares are often more effective in establishing lingual terms than the lecturers are. Books, which are often written in English present foreign terms that you may or may not wish to hold on to. Ternhag presented his method of testing and choosing effective expressions to communicate the desired knowledge.

Ternhag runs a well-recognized programme in Sound and Music Production (For English, click here) at the Dalarna College in Sweden. There is currently a new book out that he has authored together with a number of Scandinavian music production academics. It’s called PÃ¥ tal om musikproduktion,” that from Swedish translates into “On music production,” or more literally “Talking about music production.” It is a collection of articles that touches on a variety of topics in music production.

Andrew Scott has done a study of how people traditionally have learned a craft and how various philosophers from antiquity till today comments on different modes of learning. Scott takes a particular interest in apprenticeships and argues strongly for a practical real world approach to learning.

Professor Brantsegg and his team have together with an Irish and two other Norwegian institutes developed a system for web-based studies to train and test students’ knowledge of DSPs through listening. The system is used as a part of NTNUs regular DSP module, but it can also be delivered as an online module. For the regular students the concepts are still taught in the classroom, but with the additional web-based training they’ll have more opportunity to dive into the world of sound in their personal study time. The system is also automatically correcting your performance. If you continuously mix up chorus and flanger it will suggest you spend more time studying the sound of those processes. This feedback mechanism multiplies the time the lecturers put into each student.

Arne Nordheim was one of the great 20th century profiles in Norwegian arts music. Ola Nordal is currently writing his PhD thesis on Nordheim at NTNU in Trondheim. In his talk Nordal examined one of Nordheim’s works; how and why it was created and it’s public reception and legacy. The work was created to play continuously from a sculpture called ‘Ode to the Light,’ or ‘Ode til Lyset’ in Norwegian from 1968. You can read Ola Nordal’s blogpost from the conference here.


Tone Ã…se and Andreas BergslandVoice meetings – a meeting between performer and researcher’ [N]



Musician Tone Ã…se and researcher Andreas Bergsland, both of NTNU in Trondheim, has teamed up to examine the audience response from Ã…se’s vocal/ electro acoustic performances. Tone Ã…se was one of the concert-holders the night before, so most delegates had already seen her perform before the talk. Their research showed that what you aim to communicate is not always what comes through, and they looked at ways to develop her performance to better communicate with audiences. Seen from my more commercial angle, I think it is a brave move of Ã…se to develop her art along with the audience-feedback provided through the research. Ã…se and Bergsland have some valuable lessons to teach us in the area where new and groundbreaking arts meet an audience.

Gerhard Steinke ‘The Subharchord story
Steinke joined the East-German radio in 1947 as a sound-engineer and was one of the developers behind the Subharchord instrument. His presentation was a very entertaining and in-depth history of the instrument and the state of the current surviving instruments. –One of which (albeit currently not in playable condition) is placed at the Ringve Museum of music and musical instruments in Trondheim, where he travelled off to after the conference. Mr. Stenike will be releasing a paper on the Subharchord in German at some point during 2012.

Hadron is a synthesizer plug-in created by Brandtsegg and his team at NTNU. It performs several types of granular synthesis and has an easy to use interface that allows you to morph between these types of synthesis. Hadron has the capacity to be a useful tool both for commercial music producers and experimental sound-artist looking to create new sounds.

Natasha Barrett (Keynote, day 1): "Ambisonics, spatial ontology and invisible music"
Simon Emmerson (Keynote, day 3): "What is live about electronic music?"
Alex Gunia: "Live electronics / 300 acting spaces"
Mats Claesson: "The Kjell-Tore project"
Arnfinn Killingtveit: "Undervannshode"