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KreativInstitut.OWL
Emilienstraße 45
32756 Detmold
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Kreativ Campus Detmold
Bielefelder Straße 66a
32756 Detmold
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Sound and music are omnipresent parts of our media culture. Today, creative work with them is enriched in many ways and made more productive by digital tools. Digital media enable completely new ways of accessing sound and music, even for non-experts. There is a lot of innovative potential in the overarching field of music informatics, which we explore while interfacing with other disciplines such as human-technology interaction, musicology, and application domains such as the games industry, organ building, and museum technology.
Professorship for Modeling of Linked Virtual Data Spaces (in the Domain of Music and Media), Musicology Seminar Detmold/Paderborn der Paderborn University, KreativInstitut.OWL
Research assistant (PostDoc) at the cemfi Center of Music and Film Informatics at OWL University of Applied Sciences and Arts and University of Music Detmold
Research assistant (PostDoc) at the chairs of Media Design and Interactive Media Lab Dresden, Fakulty of Computer Science, Technischen Universität Dresden
Doctorate. Title of the dissertation: "Musik für interaktive Medien: Arrangement- und Interpretationstechniken"
Research assistant at the chair of Visual Computing, Department of Simulation and Graphics, Otto-von-Guericke University of Magdeburg
Research grant of the state of Saxony-Anhalt
Studies of computer science with secondary subject in music at Otto-von-Guericke University of Magdeburg
Despite of the ever-expanding variety of technological means accessible to composers, performers, orchestrators, music producers, and music pedagogues of our time, the essence of music composing has mostly remained the same for centuries: the key question is, how to form an artistically innovative core idea of a musical piece and to find the most ideal instruments for it? This paper discusses composers’ explorations on establishing their individual voices, as well as finding and selecting the tools and techniques that would best serve their artistic goals in today's complex and pluralistic network of aesthetics.
Dr. Maria Kalionpää, Prof. Dr.-Ing. Axel Berndt, Mag. rer. nat., Dipl.-Psy. Hans-Peter Gasselseder, wissenschaftlicher Artikel zur XXV Generative Art Conference - GA2023
An arpeggiator is a system that takes in input notes (or chords) and breaks them up into sequences, so-called arpeggios. While typical MIDI arpeggiators receive and produce MIDI messages Arpeggiatorum allows for an audio signal to be the input of the system, performing monoor poly-phonic pitch estimation. Arpeggiatorum is also specifically designed to work with pipe organs. In this contribution we present the architecture of Arpeggiatorum, highlighting the design choices that lead to the development of specific features, and its strengths and current limitations. We will focus our attention on the possibility to use an audio input, for example a voice, or multiple voices, to control the system, and the new musical possibilities that emerge. We discuss the impact that of some of the most crucial parameters, namely accuracy and delay of the audio input have on the performances and suitability of the system.
Berndt, A., & Mauro, D. A. (2024, July 6)
PDF DownloadEdirom Summer School
Berndt, A., & Waloschek, S. (2024, September)
Digitale Methoden in Den Geisteswissenschaften. Herausforderungen Und Chancen.
Berndt, A. (2024, March)