DISSCO makes ‘music' for Argonne, UIUC researchers
ARGONNE, Ill. (June 21, 2005) – A mathematician and a musician have teamed
up to create a new computer program that both composes music and creates the
instrumentation to play it. The software is available for free from SourceForge.net.
The mathematician – Hans G. Kaper of the U.S. Department of Energy's Argonne
National Laboratory – and the musician – Sever Tipei of the Computer
Music Project at the University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign – have worked together
for several years on the project, called DISSCO for Digital Instrument for
Sound Synthesis and Composition. A key feature of DISSCO is that it integrates
composition and sound synthesis in one seamless process, delivering a finished
product that needs no further processing.
“The idea is to use the computer as an assistant in composing a piece of music,” Kaper
said. “The computer takes a general idea and develops sheet music or recorded
sound.” Kaper knows the concept from both sides; in addition to his position
at Argonne, he is also adjunct professor of music in the Computer Music Project.
“It's like writing a symphony and at the same time building the instruments
to play it,” Tipei added.
The resulting sounds are not Mozart, or Thelonious Monk, or even Moby, but
an interesting amalgam of notes. A sample of computer-composed music is at ems.music.uiuc.edu/cmp/manyWorlds.wav,
and a sample of computer-composed and sound-generated music is at ems.music.uiuc.edu/ANL-folds3.wav.
Included in that second sample is a series Kaper and Tipei call the “Argonne
chime” – a series of notes created by the computer program that spell the word
Argonne – the notes A, Re, G, Sol, two computer-selected sounds to represent
the letter “n,” and E.
The program serves two major purposes: The ability to create and hear sounds
allows students to understand the interplay between structure and randomness
in music composition; and the ability to produce sounds from computer data
offers scientists a new way to discover the patterns and aberrations in data – “data
sonification” instead of “data visualization.”
Tipei appreciates showing his students how structure and randomness can blend
to enhance the creative process. “The idea," he said, "is to develop a manifold
composition, which is one musical structure that includes some degree of randomness.
The end product is a composition that changes every time it is played.”
DISSCO permits variable degrees of indeterminacy at all levels while producing
a fully completed musical product. Parallels are established between the
way sounds are grouped in various structural units and the way partial sounds
and notes contribute to the makeup of a sound, which leads to the use of similar
tools to manage events that occur at different time scales.
DISSCO uses additive sound synthesis to build sounds from sine waves. It allows
precise control over each parameter of each sine wave, as well as over the
overall qualities of the resulting sound.
“Scientists can use this instrument
to explore scientific data by rendering them in a sound file,” Kaper said. “The
data are used to define the characteristics of the sound wave, such as the
way it is tuned, its loudness, its spatial distribution and the amount of reverberation.
In all there are more than a dozen useful degrees of freedom that we can build
into a sound – more than enough for most physical or computational experiments.”
DISSCO is available at dissco.sourceforge.net,
and is free software distributed under the terms of the GNU General License.
The University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign is the birthplace of computer
music, first produced in 1956. The Computer Music Project, founded in 1984,
is both a research and a teaching facility involved in computer sound analysis
and synthesis, computer-assisted composition, music notation and printing,
visualization of music and scientific sonification.
Argonne National Laboratory seeks solutions to pressing national problems in science and technology.
The nation's first national laboratory, Argonne conducts leading-edge basic
and applied scientific research in virtually every scientific discipline. Argonne
researchers work closely with researchers from hundreds of companies, universities,
and federal, state and municipal agencies to help them solve their specific
problems, advance America 's scientific leadership and prepare the nation for
a better future. With employees from more than 60 nations, Argonne is managed
by UChicago
Argonne, LLC for
the U.S.
Department of Energy's Office
of Science.
For more information, please
contact Steve McGregor (630/252-5580 or media@anl.gov)
at Argonne.
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