Nettsider med emneord «Music» - Side 2
A Study Day co-hosted by IASPM Norden & Nordic Sounds
All are invited to the International Association for the Study of Popular Music (IASPM Norden) Study Day at the Department of Musicology, University of Oslo on September 14 2017.
The theme of the day is the study of popular music in the Nordic countries. Professor Stan Hawkins will introduce the event, which is co- hosted by our department’s Nordic Sounds: Critical Music Research Group.
Jim Tørresen will present the ROBIN group at Department of Informatics.
Anne Danielsen, Kristian Nymoen, Mari Romarheim Haugen and Gui Camara present the new project "Timing and Sound in Musical Microrhythm" (TIME).
Tor Endestad will present the research of the FRONT neurolab in the Department of Psychology.
Alexander Refsum Jensenius, Victor Sanchez and Agata Zelechowska will present the new MICRO project.
Pritty and Patrick Patel-Grosz (Linguistics) and Bruno Laeng (Psychology) will present some of their latest research.
Solveig Aasen (IFIKK) and Kai Olav Ellefsen/Jim Tørresen (IFI) will present some of their latest research in music, dance, movement, robotics and health applications.
Research fellow Kristian Nymoen will defend his dissertation on Friday 25 January 2013.
Methods and Technologies for Analysing Links Between Musical Sound and Body Motion
Gesture Controlled Audio Systems (ConGAS) was an EU COST Action running from 2004 to 2007.
Oslo Laptop Orchestra (OLO) is an ad-hoc ensemble consisting of students and faculty from the University of Oslo and Norwegian Academy of Music. The main idea is to explore the laptop as a musical instrument in a collaborative setting. The orchestra performs the standard repertoire for laptop orchestras, and develops own pieces for different setups and constellations.
Oslo Mobile Orchestra (previously Oslo iPhone Ensemble) explored the future of mobile music performance in a collaborative setting in 2009-2012. The ensemble was an ad-hoc group of students and researchers from the University of Oslo and the Norwegian Academy of Music.
Postdoctoral researcher Kyrre Glette participated in (and won!) the 64kB intro competition at the Assembly computer festival in Helsinki. A 64kB intro is an executable program in 64kB which includes realtime generation of graphics and music.
The animation includes a dancing robot, where the motion is based on data recorded with our new Qualisys infrared motion capture system.
Graphics programming done by Kim Kalland, Thomas Kristensen and Kyrre Glette. Sound programming and music by Gergely Szelei-Kis.
This week's version of the student newspaper Universitas has an article about music and movement, featuring visiting researcher Yago de Quay .