Final Project for RAPS

Title
Kaspar

Project Description
The name of my project, Kaspar, comes from Kaspar Hauser, a mystical German youth who claimed to have spent most of his life in a dark cell completely isolated from society and therefore had acquired almost zero knowledge for any language by the time he was discovered in a street at the age of sixteen. Although the myth of Kaspar remains unresolved and is said to be a fraud, it has inspired numerous works in literature and theater including Peter Handke’s play Kaspar which directly inspired the concept behind my project. Handke’s play unfolds with the lonely presence of Kaspar himself and develops through Kaspar’s interaction with abstract human voices which are meant to instruct him in speaking like a normal social being. Throughout the play, Kaspar struggles painstakingly to pronounce words, grasp the meaning of them, and pairing the sounds and meanings of language. As Kaspar eventually learns to speak, he dies.

Handke’s play is a critique of language’s powerful constraint on human expression and the conventional way of thinking in accordance with the inner logic of language. The concrete subject of his critique is post-war Germany where the adverse impact of war persisted even after the end of the war in the form of the spoken German language. There was a lack of words to appropriately address people and events, as well as to express the post-war trauma. I feel very relatable to the inadequacy of language, a subject that haunted most of my time in college — while language is broadly regarded as the most straightforward and efficient medium for communications, there are thinkings and emotions one can’t express through spoken words; at the same time, the omnipotence of language may very well be a constraint to thoughts.

After all, language is nothing but the pairing between sounds and meanings or signs and meanings, it is respected as a useful tool which bond almost all of us together. I feel that most of the people I know including myself are much too used to treating language as something already developed or assigned, and therefore ignoring the true nature of written and spoken words. The most important knowledge I acquired from RAPS is the realization that sounds and visuals are all effective and affective languages. I feel inspired to make my final project a tribute to this knowledge and later came up with the idea of deconstructing and alienating the familiar language through software manipulations.

Perspective and Context
Live audiovisual performances are incredibly rich in possibilities that performers can either focus on generating an immersive sensual experience or creating a narration through storytelling. While the ideas of live cinema, VJing, and live audiovisual performance according to Gabriel Monotti, Eva Fischer, and Ana Carvalho all focus on the possible approaches to the representation of visual materials, I see my project as an experiment where the theory of visual representation is applied to the performance of sounds. While my live manipulation of the visuals during the performance is a response to the practice of VJing as an improvisation responsive to music, the arrangement/ deconstruction of sounds is closer to a narration than an abstract experience as in the case of live cinema. Moreover, my project incorporated an improvisation with sounds comparable to a jamming section of visual materials. The implementation is all about the subtle balance between representing a prepared idea using preexisting materials and creating new meanings adding live manipulation to the performance.

Development & Technical Implementation
The execution of the project started with me working in DAW creating the intro track. Rather than structured music, I expected the intro to be an assemblage of different sounds including the sound of broken glasses (implying how I hear the deconstruction of things in a subtle manner…), scattered drum beats, as well as a ground layer. Further into the intro are distorted sound fragments taken from a recording of my own reading which is also played later in the performance — I pitched, stretched, echoed, or reversed three samples of me reading the words “speak”, “talk”, and “walk” in order for an effect of alienation and an eerie metaphor for machines learning to speak. The intro ends with a dramatic pitch-up of the ground layer sound and a final drop of percussion. Since the intro is pre-recorded, I directly ran it through the mixer on Max without any extra sound effects. So are the background for my reading section and the sound of reversed orchestra. Besides the stereo output I connect after the mixer module which held most of the sounds used in the project – the prerecorded materials and the SAMPLR modules I used for recording, playback, chopping, and pitching, I had one extra output for the input of the microphone running through flanger, chorus, and reverb effects for simpler manipulation of the patch. I also attached effect modules after two of the samplers which I only triggered approaching the end of the performance. I made the playing speed adjustable for one of the pre-recorded materials so that I could switched between my own reading voice and a pitched-down and machine-like version or directly show the alternations of sounds to the listeners.

In generating the visuals I planed three main chapters utilized by different effect modules in Vizzie. The first section is an abstract movement of shapes of glasses which I created through running a picture through modules. Aligning with the intro track, I gradually layered, darkened, and blurred the visuals through twisting different values on the modules live on a midi controller till the image temporarily disappeared as I started to read. In the second stage, I layer the the previous visuals with movement of stripes created from the combination of two easemappers as a response to the floating orchestral sound. In the final stage, I run an image of the word “speak” through a ZAMPLR and a BRCOSR to play with the pixelation of the image and make it flicker in response to the tiny sound loops from the live recording.

Prepared “nonsense” on the status of language: To recognize, in order to compromise / To receive, and repeat, / So that I could release, as a relief; / But I want to be free. / Hammer a sentence, sentence a word, / Reverse an orchestra, / Expression has no extra. / Be free, speak or not speak. 

Links to GitHub:

https://gist.github.com/HoiyanGuo/d9f216e62a7c32a68e223d295fea0489

https://gist.github.com/HoiyanGuo/9c60c98b1d9e5db1d01ba49422911896

Performance
The final performance was an incredible source for my nightmares for a whole week before it eventually took place. Thinking of the anxieties and nerves, I feel glad that I did go upstage and finish the performance without escaping from it! I felt really nervous during the performance —when controlling the visual materials during the performance intro, I realized that one of the control knob on the midi-controller wasn’t properly assigned; when reading through the microphone, I felt unsure how it sounded like for the audience and couldn’t quite handle their confused facial expressions in my realtime imagination; another desperate moment struck me heavily as I recorded myself and saw no waveform in the recoding’s visualization — luckily, I actually did have something recorded and could smoothly continue my performance till the end.

The two experiences of live performance for the class (another one in the auditorium) taught me how sounds could strike completely differently when played in different space and sound system. I feel that I should have taken more time exposing myself to different sound system or sound environment as a warmup, especially when live reading and live recording was such an important component in my project. Moreover, I never timed myself during the rehearsals and ended up having the shortest performance with a limited amount of materials. I will definitely pay more attention to a performance’s timing and pacing for potential future projects. I also find it necessary to deign an ending of any performance since the ending of my project was not obvious during the performance.

Conclusion
The process of accomplishing the project was a valuable experience for me to form a creative relationship with softwares or technology in general. At the same time of executing ideas with softwares, I had to experiment with them in the first hand to explore different possibilities. Nonetheless, I feel regretful that I only worked with what I already knew in creating the project rather than using it as an opportunity to learn new knowledge and generate fresh visual experience. I am aware that there is an imbalance between the visual and the audio components since I actually did put much more focus onto the sounds. I didn’t make the visual component of the project necessary or at least crucial to the overall representation of my idea — it was there for the sake of the assignment’s requirement and didn’t add to the essential meaning of the whole project. But the experience helped me understand the difference between an audiovisual work and an audio or visual work merely accompanied by audio or visual factors.

I think the final outcome did successfully imply an alienation of spoken language, however, while the deconstruction is achieved, I now find possibilities in further transforming the deconstructed pieces of sounds, for example, in generating music. I reversed an orchestral sample with the intention to imply a reversion of pre-existing order for the potential generation of new knowledge and aesthetics. However, I achieved it with an extra sound sample rather than transforming the recorded sounds themselves. With me cutting the sounds into tiny pieces and looping them crazily, I merely suggested a possibility rather than showing the formation of a new language. The experience of working for the final project did open a new world to me — the infinite possibilities of human voice with the alternations made possible by technology. Nothing is more natural and at the same time more complex than the human voice. And I believe that is where the secret to a new musical language lies. I feel very passionate about incorporating more alienated voices into my personal experiments with music. At last, I’d like to thank Professor Parren and my peers for this semester of exciting journey and putting up with my weirdness and overall inexperience with IMA — I can’t wait for more wonderful works from them and future encounters!

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