Call: Convergence 2022!











CONVERGENCE 2022: ...Making it UP!

De Montfort University
Institute for Sonic Creativity—MTI2
Leicester, UK
22-25 September 2022

Convergence 2022 will be a festival/conference celebrating new work and ideas in music and technology. Following the inaugural event in 2019, we now call for work to be included in Convergence 2022.

Submissions in the form of creative outputs, performances, artist talks and research papers related to all genres of music and technology are welcome.

https://www.dmu.ac.uk/research/research-faculties-and-institutes/technology/mtirc/convergence-2022.aspx

21st century musical creativity rides on the convergence of many streams of musical cultures, styles and value systems.  The previous century’s passage through modernist and postmodern imperatives, mixes and meetings of cultures has propelled us into a state of glorious collision, where tradition and innovation coexist in fusion and confusion.  New technologies are a central element in this creative ferment - from immersive multichannel and audiovisual environments, expressions of artificial intelligence and transmedia storytelling to human-machine interaction and hardware hacking. 

How might we make sense of this multiplicity of creative endeavours? What are the tensions and synergies we feel amongst the creative approaches of practitioners and between the insights of theorists and critics? What, if anything, might we sense is our relationship with the ideals and cultural products of the past?  How does the collective imagination of artists, engineers and listeners collaboratively shape the way we form our future? 

We also want to address the following questions:

In what ways has creativity been influenced by the distinctive possibilities of new technologies?  

How do we recognise what is new in our field and what makes it new?

How might we trace the roots of electroacoustic music’s practices and theories and how might they compare across different cultures? 

Do we still have, or need, a theoretical canon in music—and did we really ever have one? 

How might notions of modern and postmodern be reflected in the sonic arts?

Does the technology of music build bridges across musical and other artistic cultures, or has it made a wall around itself?

What new conceptual tools do we have or need for understanding relationships between digital sound and image?

How do we improvise with music technologies?

Do we have, or need, new ways to write about digitally mediated music to express our relationship with it?

Across cultures and diverse creative agendas, how do creative people find each other and form effective communities?

How might audiences connect what they hear in electronic/electroacoustic/computer generated music with more familiar languages within popular music, folk music, classical forms, or jazz? 

Do we have, or need, a map for these many new directions, or are we making it up?

For enquiries
John Young, Convergence 2022 Chair
E: convergence[at]dmu.ac.uk

Keynotes

Our keynote speakers for 2022 are Joanna Demers and Tim Garland.

Joanna Demers is Professor of Musicology at the Thornton School of Music, University of Southern California.  One of today’s most authoritative and interesting thinkers on music and technology she is author of Listening Through the Noise: The Aesthetics of Experimental Electronic Music (Oxford University Press, 2010); Steal This Music: How Intellectual Property Law Affects Musical Creativity (University of Georgia Press, 2006); Drone and Apocalypse: An Exhibit Catalog for the End of the World (Zero Books, 2015) and; Anatomy of Thought-Fiction: CHS Report, 2214 (Zero Books, 2017).

Tim Garland is a world-renowned jazz musician: saxophonist, composer and arranger. A former member of Chick Corea's bands Origin and The Vigil, and with over 40 albums and a Grammy Award to his credit, Garland is internationally respected across jazz and classical music as performer, composer, orchestrator and educator in genres spanning symphonic and small combo blends of notated and improvised music-making.  Tim Garland’s Duology, with Jason Rebello (piano) will perform in an evening concert at Convergence 2022.

Submissions

We welcome submissions from all researchers, composers and artists whose work involves or seeks to understand relationships between music, sound and new technologies.

Links to submission portals follow each submission category below.

The deadline for all submissions is 31 March, 23:59 BST.

All submissions will be anonymously peer reviewed, and acceptance notified by early May 2022.

Research Papers

https://de-montfort.onlinesurveys.ac.uk/convergence-2022-papers-posters

Scholarly papers on any aspect of the application of new technologies to music are welcome, including, but not limited to:

Compositional methods

Improvisation

New performance practices

Audiovisual practices

Virtual and augmented reality

Artificial intelligence

Live coding

DIY electronics

Hardware hacking

Sampling/sampling culture

New interfaces for composition/performance

Perspectives on theory and analysis

Case studies of works

Studies on sonority and sound design

Listening behaviours and audience reception

Auditory perception and psychoacoustics

Spatialisation

Collaborative processes

Software design

Educational initiatives in music and music technology

Approaches to neurodiversity in music

Cultural contexts

Situatedness in music

Ethnographic perspectives

Music and gender

Audio testimony and storytelling

Historical studies

Music in cross-arts contexts: dance, drama, live art, etc

Radio art

Music and environment

Sound ecology

Papers will be allocated 30 minutes in total, 20 minutes presentation (including any audio/video examples offered) plus 10 minutes for questions.

Abstracts should be no more than 3,800 characters in length and clearly summarise the aims, methods and results of the research.

Posters

https://de-montfort.onlinesurveys.ac.uk/convergence-2022-papers-posters

Submissions should be in the form of a link to summary document, no more than two A4 pages in length, minimum font size 11point and may include example images.  Any additional technical requirements should also be specified. The content should summarise the research aims, methods and outcomes clearly and concisely. Selected poster presentations will be supplied by conference delegates in A1 format, and should be designed to be legible from approx. 1.5m.

Artist Talks

https://de-montfort.onlinesurveys.ac.uk/test-convergence-artist-talk

Artist talks provide a space for those presenting a piece at Convergence 2022 to express speculative or provocative aesthetic, technical or contextualising ideas relating to their work. These should be no more than 12 minutes in duration, with no more than two slides, and may include audio/video examples. Abstracts should be no more than 2,500 characters in length.  A collective Q&A will be held at the end of a session.  Proposing an artist talk (or not) will not influence the music /performance/installation or papers/posters selection process.

Music / Performance / Installations

https://de-montfort.onlinesurveys.ac.uk/convergence-2022

We welcome all forms of music made entirely by or with the assistance of digital or other electronic technologies—with or without conventional instruments eg. acousmatic, audiovisual, live performance with computers, mixed instrumental-electroacoustic works, hardware hacking/DIY, etc.  

Performances demonstrating a novel approach to acoustic sound sources are also welcome.  Submissions from performers (solo or ensemble) offering repertoire not of their own creation/composition are welcome.

We will accept up to two submissions in this category per applicant, but will limit final selection to one work per person.

Multi-channel compositions that are suitable for the DMU PACE Studios can be considered. The PACE 1 array supports up to 33.2 discrete channels, including stereo diffusion).  

A further 8.1 channel array will be available in PACE Studio 2.

Preference may be given to music with a performance duration of no more than 12 minutes.

Convergence 2022 will not be able to supply performers for works submitted—instrumentalists must be supplied by composers and it will unfortunately not be possible to offer fees to performers.

Bespoke materials or resources, such as modified instruments or hardware essential to the work to be performed must be supplied by participants.

In the application portal below, please include a permanent web link appropriate to the nature of your work (eg Website, Google Drive, Soundcloud, Dropbox, Vimeo – please do not use a time-limited method such as Wetransfer).

For acousmatic/audio only work, include files used in performance and a stereo version (binaural is acceptable) as well as a sound projection plan for multichannel works.

For work involving traditional instrumentalists/live performance include a score, where relevant, and indicative recording/realisation.

For work involving other forms of performance (eg. hacked hardware, live [performance] art focused, live coding, D/VJ-ing, mixed media), please provide an online video link (Vimeo, etc) in addition to a brief statement of concept.

For audiovisual submissions (fixed media), please include a link to a streaming site (eg Vimeo) for submission-review purposes. AV work selected for Convergence 2022 must then be provided as MP4 or MOV containers, normally with H264, H265 or Apple ProRes compression, up to 1920x1080 resolution, 25 or 30 FPS, and audio at least 48kHz/16 bit, in up to 7.1 format.

We welcome installations with a clear focus on audio content and a limited number may be presented at Convergence 2022, depending on the required resources and suitable match between available spaces and the nature of the work. In your submission please include a full description of content and concept, visual layout, example images (still or moving), an indication of suitable types of spaces and a stereo audio example.