Journal of Music, Technology and Education: Volume: 1 - Issue: 1
Journal of Music, Technology and Education: Volume: 1 - Issue: 1
Journal of Music, Technology and Education: Volume: 1 - Issue: 1
Articles
7–21 The discipline that never was: current developments in music
Journal of
technology in higher education in Britain
23–35
Carola Boehm
Crossing borders: issues in music technology education
Giselle M. d. S. Ferreira
Music, Technology
37–55 Reframing creativity and technology: promoting pedagogic
change in music education
Pamela Burnard
and Education
57–67 Problem solving with learning technology in the music studio
Andrew King and Paul Vickers
69–81 The ElectroAcoustic Resource Site (EARS)
Leigh Landy
83–96 DubDubDub: Improvisation using the sounds of the World Wide Web
Jonathan Savage and Jason Butcher
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Journal of Music, Technology and Education Volume 1 Number 1 © 2007 Intellect Ltd
Editorial. English language. doi: 10.1386/jmte.1.1.3/2
Editorial
David Collins
1. I. Schoon (1992), Carola Boehm’s article, based upon findings from an HE academy
Creative Achievement award, provides a succinct commentary and overview of the current
in Architecture: A
Psychological Study, issues facing music technology in HE in the United Kingdom and, fittingly
Leiden University: for this first issue of the journal, explores what is understood by the term
DSWO Press, p. 2. ‘music technology’ in the educational context in which we find it. Boehm’s
analysis of some 350 categorized ‘music technology’ courses in the United
Kingdom provides food for thought for course developers but such analysis
does not only occur at a quantitative level, but Boehm explores the implicit
and non-implicit interdisciplinarity in this profusion of currently available
undergraduate provision and she reminds us of Barthes’s statement that
‘interdisciplinarity is not the calm of an easy security’.
I have intended Giselle Ferreira’s article to follow Boehm’s since it too
identifies the ‘conundrum’ facing course developers in music, technology
and education who face a multiplicity of courses on offer, and also mirrors
the previous article’s discussion on the so-called ‘divide’ between art and
science (or technology). Ferreira suggests that the relationship between
music and technology has ‘not been extensively explored in its implications, in
particular, for educators treading in this complex area’, and in doing so she
further highlights the importance of this new journal for the community.
From the broad overview provided by Boehm, Ferreira focuses down onto
a case study of course development and in doing so, asks us in what sense
‘music technology’ differs from the ‘technology of music’.
We have seen the demise of the heated debate surrounding the alliance
of technology with creative activity. McLuhan’s comment on the age-old
ability of the artist to side-step the bully-blow of new technology was writ-
ten at a period in the twentieth century prior to the explosion – one can-
not find another description – of digital media technologies, and it could
be said that of all the art forms, it is music which has led the field in link-
ing new technologies with creative practice. Pamela Burnard interrogates
this interrelationship between creativity and technology in school music
in her conceptual article, and aims to reframe current pedagogical think-
ing and practice. Burnard presents her notion of classrooms as ‘creative
spaces that hold out the possibilities for, and implementation of, new kinds of rela-
tionship between creativity and technology’, and in doing so draws upon
post-Vygotskyan activity theory as a tool for implementing change in
educational practice, and uncovering the key relationship(s) between
young people’s creative behaviour and learning technologies.
While a significant body of empirical work has been undertaken in the
use of technologies in supporting skills of music analysis, and aural aware-
ness, together with the use of technology to explore musical perception,
only a small number of studies examine creative activity – such as music
composition, improvisation and performance. Of course, the field of cre-
ativity research is vast, and the body of material in the field includes a
wide variety of approaches – enabling conditions, environmental condi-
tions, intellectual and personality characteristics, combinatory/associative
theories and so on. One author has spoken of the creativity literature as an
‘accumulation of an increasing body of unintegrated theoretical and
empirical material’.1 Despite this, one perspective upon musical creativity
agreed on by many researchers is that it can be construed as a form of
problem-solving activity. It is within this particular frame that Andrew
4 David Collins
JMTE_1.1_01_edt_Collins.qxd 11/7/07 9:40 PM Page 5
King describes a case study set within a recording studio: what he terms a 2. P. Auslander (2005),
‘practical activity in a situated environment’ and his article examines how ‘At the Listening Post,
or, do machines
students’ problem-solving activity of music production are supported, or perform?’,
not, by the learning technologies available. This is, as King rightly points International Journal
out, a neglected area of study. Problem-solving/creative activity in the of Performance Arts
and Digital Media,
context of the recording studio is, as King’s study indicates, not simply a 1: 1, p. 8.
matter of surmounting technical issues; there is a pedagogical relevancy.
Returning from King’s, Ferreira’s and Boehm’s focus upon music,
technology and education in higher education, Leigh Landy explores the
pedagogy of electroacoustic music at a pre-university educational level. It
is intriguing that, as both Boehm and Ferreira aim to encapsulate what we
understand by ‘music technology’, Landy seeks to encourage practitioners
to use terminology with consistency, highlighting the grey area between
what we understand as ‘electroacoustic music’ or ‘sonic art’, and the diffuse
nature of the term ‘computer music’. Indeed, this need for appropriate ter-
minology galvanized his initiation of the ElectroAcoustic Resource Site
(EARS) and in his article Landy outlines the development of EARS from
2001 to the present and the consequent resonances for educational appli-
cations – ‘pedagogical EARS’. For those who are convinced of the need for
electroacoustic music to be given more profile in our schools, Landy’s arti-
cle makes essential reading.
Finally, there is concern among some educators that children are
increasingly mediating the ‘real world’ through screen culture – what
Auslander describes as a ‘progressive decorporealisation of the live event’2
– and the article by Jonathan Savage and Jason Butcher which rounds off
this inaugural issue of JMTE describes a project which responds to their
concern that ‘more and more pupils are huddled, staring at computer screens
in their music lessons’. Projects which include the use of internet-based
audio with live music pushes forward the implementation of new media
technologies in music praxis . The diversity of audience, user and genre
described here returns us to Burnard’s concept of music classrooms (for
any level of learner) as spaces which galvanize new relationships between
creativity and technology.
In all these articles we observe practitioners, researchers and educators
exploring differing ways of thinking and doing in the field of music, tech-
nology and education. JMTE warmly welcomes contributions from
authors who wish to join us in this exploration.
Editorial 5
JMTE_1.1_Ads.qxd 11/7/07 9:54 PM Page 6
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Journal of Music, Technology and Education Volume 1 Number 1 © 2007 Intellect Ltd
Article. English language. doi: 10.1386/jmte.1.1.7/1
Abstract Keywords
This article discusses current issues around the provision of music technology in music technolog
British universities. The discussion is based on the most current results from the education
project ‘Betweening’, funded by Palatine (Higher Education Academy). The aim interdisciplinarity
of the project was to explore the educational landscape of music technology in HE higher education
and to provide an oversight of the different models used. The way a particular
discipline – music technology – becomes established and how it evolves has as much
to do with institutional and governmental politics, social constructs and pedagogical
methodologies, as it does with the discipline itself. As well as an overview
of the findings from quantitative studies (published in detail in Boehm 2006), this
article discusses the findings from the qualitative information gathered from the
Betweening project in order to provide an overview of the educational landscape
of music technology in higher education in Britain today.
Introduction
In the last few years there has been unprecedented increase in Music
Technology courses within British universities. The term ‘music technology’
itself represents meaning in the widest sense of the phrase: technology
of/around/in/for music, but order to stress the ambiguous nature of term,
it also possesses, for this article at least, the ubiquitous post-modern
quotation marks.
This term, ‘music technology’ has perceptually different and shifting
meanings, depending on the context in which it is being used. The multi-
plicity of what exactly is understood by ‘music technology’ is an indication
of the fragmentation of communities at large and their emerging cultural
boundaries, be it sound-engineering, electro-acoustic music, music infor-
matics, or music education technology. It also represents a fragmentation
of our formerly holistically humanistic concept of knowledge and the
delivery of knowledge. We are slowly moving from a modernist concept of
university to a postmodern one, or so it may seem. And the postmodern
quotation marks indicate that: I have to know that the reader knows that
I know that it is not as simple as music technology.
And so this journal comes at a good time for us, as practitioners and
educators, to reflect explicitly on our educational practices; to discuss
the boundaries of this discipline or possibly the fact that it may never
have clear boundaries, or that it may never represent a single academic
discipline; to investigate how this fits into our current disciplinary struc-
tures or our educational institutions; to create a discourse on how and
what and in which contexts we teach and facilitate learning; where we
have been and where we are going.
8 Carola Boehm
JMTE_1.1_02_art_Boehm.qxd 11/7/07 9:41 PM Page 9
1. “Music Technology”
As in
Sound Recording,
Tonmeister,
Record Production, etc.
TECHNOLOGY
0)
99
,1
re
oo
(M
ART SCIENCE
course developers and degree managers, forget that these are degrees
that do not have a long-standing tradition on which practices can be
based, and that we are ourselves still in the process of learning how best
to facilitate the provision of these new degrees. The challenge exists
concerning how best to integrate an interdisciplinary field into a disciplinary
framework.
This challenge exists on all levels of academic endeavour: from the
running of the courses and their administrative frameworks, to the teach-
ing and facilitation of learning, the disciplines’ pedagogies and specific
vocabularies, and research with its own particular methodologies. We
know, as interdisciplinary academic practitioners, that a substantial com-
plexity is involved in providing a supporting and educationally valuable
environment for students and staff in an area that reaches not only
across different scientific domains, but also across different working and
investigatory methodologies, different approaches for presentation and
practice, different underlying – but implicit – justificational hypotheses,
different vocabularies and terminologies, as well as different conceptual
frameworks – not even to mention often different budgets and adminis-
trative units.
This area, no matter what perception one has of it, is genuinely inter-
disciplinary. All the flavours of the subject need a multitude of different dis-
ciplines, from acoustics to music performance to composition to engineering
to all sorts of other things.
The classic taxonomy of Pope (Pope 1994) collated a 4-page list of cat-
egories and sub-categories and sub-sub-sub categories. Just as classic, but
more minimalist, Moore (Moore 1990) represented it in a simple triangle
which included science, music and technology. We could allocate to this
triangle (Figure 1) the degree names used in universities in Britain and
come up with a triad of music technology degrees that furthermore repre-
sent the present communities and cultural boundaries at large.
10 Carola Boehm
JMTE_1.1_02_art_Boehm.qxd 11/7/07 9:41 PM Page 11
Music informatics
Music multimedia and electronics
Music technology and/with audio systems design
Music technology
Music technology software development
Music with computing
Sonic arts
Sound design technology
Sound engineering
Tonmeister etc.
12 Carola Boehm
JMTE_1.1_02_art_Boehm.qxd 11/7/07 9:41 PM Page 13
2% 1% 0%
3%
Total: 351
BA (137) 39%
BSc (195)
BEng (10)
MEng (6)
BMus (2) 55%
MA (1)
actually worked.1 Not only are the majority of degrees BScs, also a quite
substantial number of BScs are coordinated by arts departments.
Some oddities are noteworthy: there are only ten BEng degrees and six
MEng degrees. In general, IEE (Institute for Electrical Engineers) accredited
degrees have difficulty in fitting all the engineering as well as all the music
needed in this interdisciplinary field into their 3-year time span. In 2006/07
only two of the BEng degrees were coordinated across two departments
(music and engineering), dropping to only one in 2007/08, located in
Scotland. As Scotland has traditionally had a 4-year undergraduate
degree, Scottish universities generally find it easier to fit interdisciplinary
degrees into a programme that has additional guidelines from accrediting
bodies, such as the IEE. For English universities, this means an extra
burden if they are planning to acquire accreditation.
BMus and MA degrees are also exceptional cases: in England MA
degrees tend to be postgraduate courses, in Scotland they can denote
undergraduate degrees. Additionally, music departments have generally
kept their own BMus degrees, but as the figure above shows, they are
generally not used to denote music technology degrees, but rather used for
‘pure music’ degrees, whatever that may entail.
14 Carola Boehm
JMTE_1.1_02_art_Boehm.qxd 11/7/07 9:41 PM Page 15
sion, and specifically in institutions, where there are more flowing bound-
aries between the disciplines.
This model of ‘glue courses’ provides for both deep specialism and broad
interdisciplinarity to be balanced by playing with the ratio between them.
It also provides a reasonable additional administrative and resource bur-
den, i.e. by adding one or two ‘interdisciplinarians’ to the staff body a height-
ened involvement with specifically interdisciplinary aspects can be achieved.
However, this model is also felt by educators and students to have some draw-
backs – besides the obvious administrative question of which educational unit
will pay for the additional members of interdisciplinary staff. Additionally,
once finances are sorted out, it does tend to be these members of staff who are
in danger of falling between the stools, in all sorts of ways: from research
assessment exercises and their strategic implications, to promotional chances
or even redundancy processes. For the education of students, there is a more
immediate drawback (and one that has been mentioned most often by
the interviewees): students still feel that a part of one or the other pure disci-
pline of the joint degree is irrelevant to their core interest. It is felt to be a con-
stant process of delicately balancing ‘pure subjects’ (whatever we may mean
with this term) with interdisciplinary subjects.
A few institutions have addressed this issue to the extent of having
every single course in the degree relating to the interdisciplinary subject.
That is, whereas in the joint model a student might study a pure C+ +
course in Computing science and a pure music history course in Music, in
the ‘integrating model’, where every module is designed specifically for the
interdisciplinary degree, he/she may study ‘C+ + for music applications’
and ‘history of music technology’. It is these degrees that seem to have the
largest amount of perceived relevance by students as every single course
seems to be specifically tailor made for their degree.
To achieve this , institutions use different resource models: one being that
contributions may come from different departments, but these contributions
being specific to the interdisciplinary degree. Thus the cost burden of addi-
tional staff or resources can be shared (e.g. both the engineering department
and the music department having on music technology lecturer).
But the difficulties of being dependent upon another department,
possibly without one’s own faculty, can also create conflicts. Conflicts of
interest regarding a department’s own priorities may clash with the need
of a shared degree model. An easy example for this can be seen in class
sizes, and quite a few institutions have stopped providing a shared degree
between two faculties exactly because of the conflicts surrounding quotas
on student intake. Using as an example a typical average pre-1992 university,
its hypothetical music department -specifically if concentrating on compo-
sitional activities -may have an ideal number around 5 to 15 students,
with a maximum of 25. Its science and engineering department, however,
may find any courses of under 25 students not acceptable. The conflict
increases in the present climate, where the old (pre-1992) universities
tend to have increasing difficulty in recruiting engineering and computing
students, and the most popular courses tend to be the interdisciplinary
degrees.
Another model to address this is to simply buy in staff from a discipline
that does not seem core to the faculty, e.g. computing science departments
16 Carola Boehm
JMTE_1.1_02_art_Boehm.qxd 11/7/07 9:41 PM Page 17
ES AND CONSERVATO
LEG RIU
L M
CO S
1. “Music Technology”
As in
Sound Recording,
Tonmeister,
Record Production, etc.
TECHNOLOGY
)
90
19
re,
oo
(M
ART SCIENCE
G
INE CE
M US
ERIN
NG CIEN
IC D
.E GS
Creative Music Technology, Computational Musicology,
EP
EC TIN
Electro-acoustic Composition,
AR
Technology Engineering,
Sound Design, Music Informatics,
TM
EL PU
Electronic Music Music Technology
Soft/Hardware Development,
EN
TS Digital Music M
O
C D
AN
Figure 5: The disintegration of a discipline.
2. Discussion between
author, Nick Bailey
guage; neither of which has a place in the field of the sciences that were to be
and Graham Hair, brought peacefully together, this unease in classification being precisely the
June 2006. point from which it is possible to diagnose a certain mutation’
(Barthes 1986: 155)
And if we are aware of all this, if we have enough self-awareness and self-
criticism of the aspects mentioned by Barthes above, then should it not be
possible and certainly worthwhile to remain in an interdisciplinary state
indefinitely? (Moran 2002: 113).
Interdisciplinarity has been said to be the modern ‘motherhood and
apple pie’ issue. That is to say, everyone, including decision makers in higher
education, recognizes that it is a Good Thing.2 It has ‘become a buzzword
across many different academic subjects in recent years, but it is rarely inter-
rogated in any great detail’ (Moran 2002: 1). In 1989 Liu pointed out that
interdisciplinarity is the most ‘seriously underthought critical, pedagogical
and institutional concept in the modern academy’ and in 2006 we still, as
Sperber says, ‘do not, normally, discuss among ourselves interdisciplinarity
per se. What we do is work on issues that happen to fall across several disci-
plines, and, for this, we establish collaboration […]’. (Sperber 2005).
But we have to admit to ourselves that the separation of ‘music
technology’ into its three distinct boundaries has more to do with how we
do something, than with what we do; or, in other words, more to do with
which methodologies are more similar, and which ones are not. For
example, the reason for one sub-discipline, such as electro-acoustic
composition, to be more accepted in music departments, is not because it
is ‘more musical’, nor because it is ‘less technical’. It is because the method-
ologies for working, teaching and researching in this sub-discipline are
more similar to the ones used in departments of music across the country.
The same can be said of music informatics and computer science depart-
ments. Music informatics has as much to do with music, as with informatics.
But its methodologies just simply do not seem to fit into traditional
music departments. It seems we haven’t learned much: the classical divide
between the arts and the sciences is still there.
Even forty-seven years after C.P.Snow’s classic article on the cultural
divide of the arts and sciences (1959), the gap is still there. And although
the communities on both sides of the gap might be talking, they certainly
are not understanding each other. Even after Kant’s The Conflict of the
Faculties (1798), Nietzsche’s We Scholars (1886), Snow’s The Two Cultures
(1959), Popper’s The Logic of Scientific Discovery (1959), Habermas’ Zur
Logik der Sozialwissenschaften (1967), Derrida’s Structure, Sign and Play
(1978), Becher’s Academic Tribes and Territories (1989), Apostel’s
Interdisciplinarity (1972), Moran’s Interdisciplinarity (2002) and Sperber’s
Why Rethink Interdisciplinarity? (2005), we still live in a world where those
in the sciences criticize the lack of empirical methods of humanities scholars
and their seeming reliance on subjective interpretations. In turn, those in
the humanities attack scientists for a misguided faith in the possibility of
absolute objectivity, a narrow conception of useful knowledge and an
unwillingness to interrogate the broader social, political and cultural
implications of their work. ‘Many of these disagreements can be traced not
18 Carola Boehm
JMTE_1.1_02_art_Boehm.qxd 11/7/07 9:41 PM Page 19
only to the different scope and subject matter of the sciences and humani-
ties, but to their contrasting assumptions about how knowledge should
actually be accumulated’ (Moran 2002: 150).
In addition to this 200-year-old struggle between the sciences and
arts, a newcomer into the world of methodologies has entered. It is now
valid, so current high education management policy would like us to
believe, to create knowledge and learning through practice, through more
vocationally related experiences, as demanded by the students. But it is also
common knowledge that some practices of creating knowledge are more
valid than others, specifically for the purposes of the RAE and, conse-
quently, strategic decision-making processes.
In conclusion, it seems that in the degrees of the interdisciplinary sub-
ject area of music technology, we see an example of interdisciplinary
things to come. We see a collection of academic and professional commu-
nities evolving and sometimes clashing in the evolutionary and culturally
ingrained tendency in academia to standardize methodology and termi-
nology. We see the movements of sub-disciplines moving apart and
regrouping and sometimes creating new single disciplines within new
boundaries. And this movement is governed by different outside factors
such as government policies, the Research Assessment Exercise, or the
Further and Higher Education Act of 1992.
We see a movement of disintegration, the splitting of music technology,
in the largest sense of the word, into (for the sake of a better terminology)
compositional-sound-and-music-technologies, sound-and-music-processing-
technologies and sound-and-music-production-technologies. These three
areas are becoming distinct, as their communities are distinct, as well as
their different places of learning and with them certain methodologies.
But there are also movements to see music technology as one subject
area and to allow subject combinations to appear from student demand,
industry demand or the subject matter itself. As inquiry and problem
based learning theories have matured, they are slowly establishing
themselves as a major drive for change in learning as well as an argu-
ment for a more self-directed process towards knowledge and skills
acquisition. What certainly could help is for universities to leave the exper-
iment in modernism – Habermas’s ‘project of modernity’ – behind and
accept what post-modernity can give to the ways we approach teaching,
learning, researching and, most of all, administering our knowledge. A
postmodern approach would be to accept and accommodate these new
concepts of fragmentational knowledge and self-organizing areas of
interdisciplinary domains of knowledge; it would present an environ-
ment in which learning is driven by a process of inquiry, for foundations
of a subject area to be created where needed in the inquiry and out of the
inquiry, rather than pre-ordained and culturally engrained in specific
disciplines.
In order for interdisciplinary subjects such as ‘music technology’ to
flourish, without prejudice and discipline-specific cultural constraints,
teaching and research have to be allowed to happen at the brink of and in
the spaces between disciplines, spaces where new theories emerge out of
inquiry and where they are informed but not bound by pre-existing
schools of thought.
Acknowledgement
The author wishes to acknowledge the support of Palatine (Higher
Education Academy) in carrying out the research.
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Habermas, J. (1983), ‘Modernity – An incomplete project’, in The anti-aesthetic: Essays
on postmodern culture (ed. H. Foster), Port Townsend, WA: Bay Press, pp. 3–15.
Kant, I. (1992 [1798]), The Conflict of the Faculties (trans. Mary J. Gregor), Lincoln,
NB: University of Nebraska Press.
Liu, Alan (1989), ‘The power of formalism: the new historicism’, English Literature
History, 56: 4 (Winter), pp. 721–71, quoted in Moran 2002: 1.
Moore, R. (1990), Elements of Computer Music, New Jersey: Prentice Hall.
Moran, J. (2002), Interdisciplinarity, London: Routledge.
Mourad, R.P., Jr (1997), ‘Postmodern Interdisciplinarity’, The Review of Higher
Education, 20: 2, pp. 113–40.
Nietzsche, F. (1990 [1886]), ‘We Scholars’, in Beyond Good and Evil: Prelude to a
Philosophy of the Future (trans. R.J. Hollingdale), Harmondsworth: Penguin,
pp. 129–46.
Pope, S.T. (1994), ‘A Taxonomy of Computer Music’, Computer Music Journal 18:1.
Foreword.
Popper, Karl (1972 [1959]), The Logic of Scientific Discovery, London: Hutchinson.
Popper, Karl (1973), Objective Knowledge: An evolutionary Approach, Oxford:
Clarendon Press.
Snow, C.P. (1993 [1959]), The Two Cultures, Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press.
20 Carola Boehm
JMTE_1.1_02_art_Boehm.qxd 11/7/07 9:41 PM Page 21
Suggested citation
Boehm, C. (2007), ‘The discipline that never was: current developments in Music
technology in higher education in Britain’ Journal of Music, Technology and
Education 1: 2, pp. 7–21, doi: 10.1386/jmte.1.1.7/1
Contributor details
Carola Boehm holds degrees in musicology, computer science and electrical engi-
neering. She is currently Head of Music and Principal Lecturer at the University of
Wolverhampton. Lecturing and researching in the area of music and music tech-
nology for more than 15 years, she has held previous positions at the University of
Glasgow, the University of Mainz, the Conservatory of Music in Hannover, and the
Royal Conservatory of Music in Den Haag. Since 1999 the Co-Director of the
Centre for Music Technology at Glasgow University, she is also one of the founding
members of n-ISM (Network for Interdisciplinary Studies in Science, Technology
and Music). Her research areas include music technology education, methodologies
for designing music systems, performance research and the interplay of inter-
disciplinarity, creativity and technology. Contact: Carola Boehm, Head of Department,
Department of Music, School of Sport, Performing Arts and Leisure University
of Wolverhampton, Walsall Campus Gorway Road, WALSALL West Midlands,
WS1 3BD.
E-mail: carola@n-ism.org
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Journal of Music, Technology and Education Volume 1 Number 1 © 2007 Intellect Ltd
Article. English language. doi: 10.1386/jmte.1.1.23/1
Abstract Keywords
Music technology can be construed in a variety of ways, ranging from the design to music technology
the use of technologies for musical purposes, thus involving skills across the tradi- open education
tional disciplinary divide that polarizes art and technology. This creates a conun- curriculum
drum for curriculum developers who are aiming to create learning opportunities interdisciplinarity
that are relevant and exciting for students with widely varying backgrounds. This team teaching
paper examines some of the issues that arise in music technology curriculum
development, illustrated with examples taken from the experience of the team
responsible for the production of the UK Open University course TA225 The
Technology of Music and its expanded version TA212. The paper discusses
the rationale negotiated by the team to guide course-related decision making, while
bearing in mind the fundamental question of how to create an interesting learning
context for students with very different educational experiences and reasons
for studying.
Introduction
‘Music technology’ in Britain appears currently as a sub-area within the 1. Available online at
Music Benchmark Statement (QAA 2002), but training and education pro- www.ucas.ac.uk
visions include a multitude of courses in further and higher education in
which the subject is often offered as the sole or main specialism. A quick
search in the UCAS (the Universities and Colleges Admission Service)1 sys-
tem will return hundreds of courses; indeed, based on data extracted from
the system, Boehm (2005a, 2005b) highlights the breadth of ‘music tech-
nology’ as construed in the United Kingdom. Course titles often do not
include the expression ‘music technology’, but they do suggest tacit pur-
poses in purporting to cater for wider contextual needs: academic or discipli-
nary housing and, consequently, legitimacy; artistic goals; commercial and
industrial job roles. Despite the lack of a Benchmark statement relating
exclusively to the area, ‘music technologists graduating from [those] courses
emerge both as artists and scientists’, as McGettrick (n.d.) suggests, implying
that ‘music technology’ may be viewed as an emerging discipline in its
own right. What does seem clear, however, is that in the last two decades
music technology has been progressively gaining strength as a sort of
umbrella term for a number of academic and professional practices that, nev-
ertheless, have been conventionally considered as an integral part of other,
well-established disciplines such as (audio) engineering or (musical) acoustics.
Importantly, ‘the finest musical instruments throughout history have both
reflected and focused the technical capabilities of their time and culture’, as
2. A current enterprise Orton (1992) puts it. Indeed, music making has traditionally profited from
in the area is Boehm’s state-of-the-art technologies and contemporary scientific insight, from the
Betweening project;
see project description Neanderthal flute to the latest software synthesizer controlled by haptic
at www.mccarthy- interfaces; from the first music-printing technologies to computer-based
boehm.org.uk/ musical composition systems. Nevertheless, the crucial relationship between
projects/Betweening/
Palatine_Betweening_ music and technology – albeit contextually located and often tense – is not
V3.pdf always clearly acknowledged. This is an issue for the most part strategi-
cally overlooked in discourses that polarize the categories ‘art’ and ‘tech-
nology’. Indeed, this dichotomy, which supports predominant definitions
of the remit and scope of different disciplines and areas of knowledge, has
only recently begun to be contested in critical discourses on music
(Théberge 1997; Wishart 1992; Taylor 2001), with occasional recourse
to the ancient Greek notion of technê (Di Scipio 1998). This fragmentation
of knowledge and practice creates a paradoxical situation: despite the mul-
tiplicity of ways in which ‘music technology’ can be conceptualized and
categorized in disciplinary terms, both the development and the use of
technologies for musical applications require, albeit with different levels of
expertise, knowledge of core topics traditionally located across disciplinary
boundaries.
Crucially, the interdependency between music making and technology
has not been extensively explored in its implications, in particular, for edu-
cators treading in this complex area.2 This article explores some of the
implications by examining a particular educational setting, the production
of the UK Open University (UK OU) course TA225 The Technology of
Music and its expanded version, TA212. The article argues that the multi-
disciplinary character – with ‘multidisciplinarity’ understood here as
a coming together of different disciplines in juxtaposition (Klein 1990: 56) –
of this context both compounds and parallels a problem that already
confronts educators located in the setting: the issue of creating interesting
and, simultaneously, relevant learning opportunities in agreement with
an ‘open access’ policy. Also, it is suggested that the general approach of
‘teaching the conflicts’ (a paraphrase of Baynham 2003), the rationale
negotiated by the course developers (albeit not articulated, during produc-
tion, in these terms), capably maps the multiplicity of the subject onto ways
in which it could be taught.
Context
Teaching at the UK OU is a team effort that consists of two major, interre-
lated stages referred to as course development and course presentation.
Course development is carried out centrally by Course Teams (CTs), groups
of (predominantly) campus-based staff that include professionals from var-
ious areas clustered around a core of academic authors. CTs exploit the
existing institutional structure in that this is arranged to provide expert
input into various tasks required for course development (in addition to
academic and pedagogical expertise, graphic design, software development
and legal advice and support in respect to copyrights issues, for example),
which is guided by broader curriculum considerations and, more recently,
market intelligence. Course presentation, on the other hand, is monitored
and supported by central academic staff, but direct student support is pro-
vided primarily by Associate Lecturers (ALs), who offer tailor-made advice
24 Giselle M. d. S. Ferreira
JMTE_1.1_03_art_Ferreira.qxd 11/8/07 3:16 PM Page 25
to small groups of learners (typically 15–25 in number).3 The roles of CTs 3. ALs are part-time
and ALs differ significantly, but the split of functions between different members of staff
recruited according to
groups of teachers in a broader student-support network has been pivotal their subject expertise;
to the logistics required for the production and presentation of courses to they are often full-time
often substantial numbers of students. members of staff in
further education or
As part of a process that supported the eventual institutionalization of other higher
the CT, new administrative layers have been progressively introduced to education institutions.
manage the growing concerns with costs and, more recently, the University’s
general orientation towards providing complete programmes of study lead-
ing to named qualifications (that is, certificates and degrees qualified in
respect to an area of knowledge or professional remit). This move, in itself,
has implied the need for a significant change of culture within the organi-
zation, a process currently under way, as courses now integrate broader
programmes which set out specific curricular requirements that courses,
grouped together, must meet – as opposed to what had been a course-centred
mode of operation. TA225 and TA212 have been, arguably, the last
courses to be developed tangentially to a set of programme-specific learning
outcomes, and the current status of TA212 is that of an elective course in
a number of named qualifications awarded by the University. The institution
now appears to be rethinking and redefining itself within a wider, business-
oriented context in which it is located on an assumedly equal, competitive
footing with more ‘conventional’ universities. The wider adoption of business-
oriented thinking and accompanying rhetoric within the institution, how-
ever, contributes to bring to the fore previously veiled tensions among rep-
resentatives of different disciplines, professions and particular viewpoints.
Team teaching is not, of course, an idiosyncrasy of distance education,
but it has grown into the predominant style for developing curriculum
and creating learning resources in distance-education institutions. Indeed,
according to Chung (2001), the structure of these organizations – and the
UK OU is here only one example among others – tends to reflect a commonly
perceived need to endow course development with a more widely accepted
notion of ‘professionalism’. At the UK OU, the current model of the
course production process is described, in its various stages, processes and
personnel required, in an online document available internally to staff
(OU, Curriculum Management Guide), which outlines the relationships
among the various areas of the university responsible for the creation and
delivery of a course. Interestingly, non-academic services are no longer
construed as subsidiary to the development process, even though this is
assumedly based on pedagogical and academic considerations. A focus on
budgetary and market-related concerns, traditionally not major academic
affairs, compels a radically different reality that opens up an avenue for
much controversy and disagreement. CTs can, therefore, be viewed as arenas
that highlight administrative, disciplinary and professional divides; from
this perspective they are sites of debate, contestation and conflict, as exam-
ined in Ferreira (2006).
It was within the convoluted scenario of change sketched above that the
course TA225 The Technology of Music was proposed and developed. The
fact that an initial proposal was informally circulated in the mid-1990s, but a
course team assembled only by 2001, points to the difficulties in carrying out
what had been construed, from its early stages, as an ‘ambitious project’.
26 Giselle M. d. S. Ferreira
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Student feedback from TA225 indicated that the ‘Primer’ was of limited
usefulness to students entirely new to music notation, as it was developed
as a subsidiary reference and not a teaching text as such, while Block 1 of
TA212 provides a much more substantial introduction. Block 5, on the
other hand, covers two different areas, namely, communication skills and
practical work. The practical work in this last Block expands on work carried
out throughout the course, providing opportunities for further use of the
course software in preparation for the final project, which requires students
to carry out a number of tasks and write a structured report.
Figure 1 illustrates the interface of the ‘TA212 Activities’ utility
program created to provide access to the learning materials on CD. The
figure shows, specifically, the activities associated with chapter 5 in Block 2;
the chapter includes various simulations created to support the study of
topics in psychoacoustics as well as numerous musical examples, which
are included on the audio CD that accompanies the Block. The software
provides coherent access to all the computer-based and listening activities
contained in the course, organized by Block and chapter, respectively.
Computer-based activities consist of simulations and animations developed
in-house, some of which are interactive. Other chapters include practical
tasks using the third-party software listed above, and the ‘TA212 Activities’
utility program provides access to the subsidiary program(s).
Although the focus of both courses is on the technologies, these are
generally contextualized in historical and musical terms across most of the
course text. The CT, however, agreed not to impose on all text any single
rationale for providing contextual information, leaving individual authors
to decide how (and if at all) to incorporate details on people, places and
times associated with the topics taught. Contextualization was indeed
assumed as an important ingredient to provide interest and motivation to
arts-based students, in particular, although, as in other areas of debate,
the notions of ‘context’ and ‘history’ appeared to be construed in very
different ways by different members of the team. Another essential ele-
ment informing authors’ decisions was the assumed relevance of this sort
of detail/structure vis-à-vis the constraints imposed on each part of the
course in terms of the study time implications for students. Consequently,
some chapters (particularly the introductory chapters in Block 2, which
deal with basic notions in acoustics and tonal music theory, as well as
4. See Johnson (2003: most of the chapters in Block 3, which present contextual details in separate
36– 45) for an boxes) have little or no contextual information, while others are framed
overview of the UK
OU’s SOL model. ‘historically’ (e.g. recording and storage).
In addition to the materials described above, direct student support is
5. See ww.firstclass.com
provided by ALs within the Supported Open Learning (SOL) framework,4
including, as usual at the UK OU, a number of face-to-face tutorials orga-
nized regionally. Asynchronous online support (along the lines of other OU
offerings, e.g. Weller 2000; 2002) is offered optionally. A group of (course-
wide) conferences using the University’s system (FirstClass)5 is provided,
one specifically for peer support among tutors (supported by the CT), and
three bundled conferences for students (a ‘Café’ for informal chat; a
‘Course discussion’ and ‘Course Assessment’ for self-help among students),
the latter overviewed by the CT. Also, a password-protected website con-
tains electronic versions (pdf) of the printed text as well as a number of
resources; this is a compulsory element of the course in that it includes a
‘news’ area that acts as a vehicle for the delivery of noticeboard informa-
tion (e.g. errata) quickly and directly by the presentation team (a sub-group
of the CT).
Course assessment in TA225 was assignment-based, comprising a total
of four short, question-based assignments (averaged to provide the stu-
dent’s continuous assessment score) and a final unseen invigilated exam
(the examined component), and a ‘pass’ was guaranteed when scores
above 40 per cent are obtained in both components. The style of the ques-
tions used parallelled that of the many in-text activities interspersed
throughout the teaching text and associated with specific learning outcomes.
On the other hand, in TA212 the exam has been replaced with a final pro-
ject, and the number of tutor-marked assignments is increased to six.
An important observation in respect to the courses’ emphasis on tech-
nologies is that a ‘creative’ element – understood in terms of developing
skills in the area of musicianship and applying the skills and techniques
taught for compositional purposes – is absent. The courses teach the prin-
ciples upon which the operation of musical instruments and technologies
is based, providing a fairly limited picture of the many contexts associated
with those technologies. In other words, the courses are relevant to per-
formers (professional and ‘amateur’ alike) in that they may, in principle,
inform their practices; the courses are also potentially of interest to music
teachers who may wish to develop their ICT skills with a view to introduc-
ing changes in their practice. However, TA225 and TA212 cannot fulfil
the role of many other ‘creative music technology’ courses/programmes in
the UK that teach, specifically, compositional thinking associated with the
technologies they explore.
28 Giselle M. d. S. Ferreira
JMTE_1.1_03_art_Ferreira.qxd 11/8/07 3:16 PM Page 29
recommendations,6 which splits learning outcomes into various categories 6. Quality Assurance
(‘knowledge and understanding’, ‘cognitive skills’, ‘practical and profes- Agency in Higher
Education, online at
sional skills’ and ‘key skills’). However, in practice, despite the variety of www.qaa.ac.uk
categories entailed in the model, the focus was on knowledge (hence, content)
7. I am using quotes
and, to a lesser extent, practical and professional skills, as appropriate to a here to highlight that
level-2 course. the meaning of the
Internal, institutional perceptions of the project as ‘ambitious’, as noted term in this context is
not necessarily
above, may have contributed to this situation; given that ‘music technol- precise; indeed,
ogy’ was an area in which the institution had not previously ventured, the students’ discourses
disquiet regarding the ‘credibility’ or ‘legitimacy’ of the courses in acade- often construe simple
algebraic operations
mic terms compounded those concerns with the appeal of the courses to as ‘mathematics’, and
students. The institutional location of the development process has clearly this seems to be an
had an enormous impact on the courses eventually produced, which sup- issue that emerges
time and time again
ports the notion that curriculum ‘reflects cultural beliefs – folk traditions – as in student discussions
well as social and political values and organization’ (Joseph et al. 2000: 19). online.
Nevertheless, the focus on content can be understood as symptomatic of
a broader questioning, namely, that of defining what ‘music technology’ is.
The conflation of views on what ‘music technology’ as a subject entails –
or should entail – has certainly been a significant factor impacting on
procedures involved in the development of TA225 and TA212. In this
sense, the courses emerged as a response to the challenge articulated in
Boehm (2004): ‘if [music technology] is to exist successfully within current
HE institutions, there is a need for institutions to explicitly formulate
teaching-content responsibilities according to faculties, department or
schools, and it requires those involved to lay down and quantify the
amount of knowledge, i.e. to create a corpus and thus define a discipline’.
The need to outline boundaries and, crucially, locate these within the
existing institutional framework, provided the CT with profound questions
and implied tacit disputes that much contributed to the final shape of the
courses.
8. These assumptions, and science. Epistemologically, the issue at stake here is that of representa-
albeit grounded in the tion, of acknowledging that ‘the map is not the territory’ (as Gregory
members’ experiences
(extensive for a num- Bateson puts it in Bateson 1980: 32) while exploring the implications of
ber of CT members, the relationship established between them. Accordingly, questions con-
but also relevant to cerning representation are also crucial in musical thinking when notation
more junior staff, as
such assumptions is approached from a broader, epistemological perspective. The question of
appear, to a certain identity of the author/teacher emerges here significantly, suggesting that
extent, to be the CT itself mirrored, generally, the potential variety of students’ back-
‘ingrained’ in
internal, institutional grounds in that members’ experiences and perspectives of the relationship
discourses on between music and technology varied dramatically, as did their fluency in
students’ profiles), each other’s specialist vernacular. Indeed, the chapter on ‘music represen-
seem to me crucial
but, significantly, tation’ included in the third Block aims, essentially, at providing a preamble
potentially harmful to to MIDI coding and digital storage formats by locating them in some sort
the development of historical continuity. However, materials exploring contemporary issues
process. Given the
current rate at which of relevance to musicians (e.g. the advent of alternative, at times composer-
the institution and its specific, notation systems from the 1960s onwards, and the emergence of
‘market’ appear to be compositional methods that are not mediated by widely agreed notational
changing, it would be
potentially damaging systems) were not included. The encounter of experiences and perspectives
to use such re-enacted in the CT meetings thus intensified intra-disciplinary debates
assumptions as the by suggesting a further avenue for questioning: would arts-based students
only source informing
CTs on the potential be able to cope with ‘the maths’? Would technology-based students be able
audience of the to cope with ‘the music bits’? What types of resources would be required to
courses we produce. support students in their development of skills across the borders?
The fact that some of
the CT members also Clearly, these issues are not idiosyncratic to educational enterprises in
operate ‘at the point music technology; they are, indeed, the types of questions that would need
of delivery’ as ALs or to be asked in the development of any course above introductory level with
in some other capacity
somewhat alleviates an open entry policy. In TA225/TA212, however, the problems were com-
the problem. pounded by likely differences between perceptions of technology-based stu-
dents, on the one hand, and those of arts-based students, on the other
hand (although the courses might clearly appeal to a variety of learners
located in different disciplines or studying, simply, for leisure, without spe-
cific disciplinary allegiances).8 One solution adopted by the CT was to
include teaching material on some topics while marking them clearly as
non-assessable. A number of points were considered essential (e.g. the
relationship between frequency and period of a waveform, the ability to
perform calculations with powers of 10, naming notes and relating these
to staff notation, to name just a few) and, therefore, covered in the main
text materials but included in the Reference Manual that students were
allowed to take with them to the final exam in TA225.
There was also considerable debate regarding the use of musical nota-
tion, which is the usual visual basis upon which comparisons and, gener-
ally, commentary on sound/music, are based. Naturally, in a course as
broad as TA225/TA212, listening activities appear associated with a wide
variety of purposes, including demonstrating basic psychoacoustical phe-
nomena (e.g. beating, masking and examples of auditory illusions), sup-
porting the development of listening skills (e.g. identifying musical
instruments, identifying features of sound, assessing the balance of a mix
or the quality of a recording) generally, developing skills that are fundamen-
tal to sound recording and processing. Creating such activities required
careful consideration of envisaged benefits and possible complications
30 Giselle M. d. S. Ferreira
JMTE_1.1_03_art_Ferreira.qxd 11/8/07 3:16 PM Page 31
created with the use of musical notation. A further resource was created
to address this question, the ‘Music Primer’, which groups together funda-
mental concepts in tonal music theory; this provides a reference (that is, a
summarized presentation of notes) and not a piece of teaching material as
understood at the UK OU. Indeed, students’ response to the ‘Primer’ was
mixed, and this partially guided the development of a new introductory
Block for TA212.
32 Giselle M. d. S. Ferreira
JMTE_1.1_03_art_Ferreira.qxd 11/8/07 3:16 PM Page 33
Conclusion
In summary, this article has provided an account that highlights ways in
which the multiplicity of the subject area is reflected in both the course
development process and the course materials themselves. This ‘mapping’
of multiplicity brought to the fore a fairly broad range of questions con-
cerning music technology education. One crucial issue implied, nonethe-
less, is that the coming together of specialists in different areas does not
guarantee the existence of a common language for the negotiations
involved: the ability to identify (or, perhaps, construe) links across discipli-
nary borders does not pertain to a multidisciplinary encounter, a mere
conflation of methods, approaches and languages. This is all the more
obvious vis-à-vis contextual factors such as disciplinary, professional and
institutional allegiances. I do wonder whether, perhaps, the main question
that should be considered by teaching teams is not how students with dif-
ferent backgrounds will be able to cope with skills across the border, but
how team members themselves can do so in the first place.
Works Cited
Bateson, G. (1980), Mind and Nature. A Necessary Unity, New York: Bantam Books.
Baynham, M. (2002), ‘Academic writing in new and emergent discipline areas’, in
R. Harrison, F. Reeves, A. Hanson and J. Clarke (eds) Supporting Lifelong
Learning. Volume 1: Perspectives on Learning. London: Routledge/Falmer.
Boehm, C. (2004), ‘Music Technology in Higher Education’. in T. Claes (ed.), The
Idea of Education, Interdisciplinary Press vol. 12, eBook available online at
www.inter-disciplinary.net/publishing/idp/eBooks/ptboindex.htm
Accessed 3 August 2007.
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JMTE_1.1_03_art_Ferreira.qxd 11/8/07 3:16 PM Page 35
Weller. M. (2002), Delivering learning on the net: the why, what and, how of online edu-
cation, London: Kogan Paul.
Wishart, T. (1992), ‘Music and Technology: problems and possibilities’, in
J. Paynter, T. Howell, R. Orton and P. Seymour (eds), Companion to Contemporary
Musical Thought. Volume 1, pp. 565–82, London: Routledge.
Suggested citation
Ferreira, M. d. S. G. (2007), ‘Crossing borders: issues in music technology
education’ Journal of Music,’ Technology and Education 1: 1, pp. 23–35,
doi: 10.1386/jmte.1.1.23/1
Contributor details
Giselle Ferreira is a Lecturer at the Faculty of Maths, Computing and Technology at
the UK Open University, where she is part of the team responsible for the introduc-
tion, integration and development of music technology in the university’s curricu-
lum. Giselle has a multidisciplinary background in electronic engineering, music
and education, and her research interests include issues surrounding disciplinar-
ity, with particular interest on questions that arise in the relationship between edu-
cation, technology and politics. She is a Fellow of the UK Higher Education
Academy and has been recently awarded a Teaching Fellowship at the Open
University’s Centre for Open Learning of Mathematics, Science, Computing and
Technology, COLMSCT. Giselle is currently a member of the Academic Team of
OpenLearn, the university’s Open Educational Resources initiative. Contact:
Giselle M. d. S. Ferreira, Walton Hall, Milton Keynes MK7 6AA, United Kingdom.
E-mail: g.m.d.s.ferreira@open.ac.uk
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Journal of Music, Technology and Education Volume 1 Number 1 © 2007 Intellect Ltd
Article. English language. doi: 10.1386/jmte.1.1.37/1
Abstract Keywords
No matter what else may divide us, most music educators are agreed on one gen- creativity
eral point. A central aim of defining how effective music educational practice technology
should happen in the new e-learning environments which expand and connect music education
communities of learners in music classrooms, is an imperative; a view which is pedagogy
emphasized in policy and widely acknowledged in teacher training. Yet, the critical pedagogic change
roles played by creativity and technology in supporting the promotion of peda- activity theory
gogic change are less clear. This paper integrates theoretical framing and practical
insights into a set of basic principles that may be useful for researching the inter-
relationship between creativity (as an essential human attribute lying at the
heart of all learning and as processes of making something new) and technology
(as tools that mediate how creative activity occurs). Several ways of driving ped-
agogical evolution, in ways that resemble the relationship between creativity and
technology as we see in the world beyond school, are introduced. These include
consideration of the potential contribution of sociocultural, post-Vygotskian
Activity Theory (AT) to overcome some of the problems that have plagued both
music educational theorizing and practice. While outlining potentials for future
research, the article highlights how these processes may be brought into a productive
relation as agents of pedagogic change in music education.
Introduction
Imagine a music pedagogy that builds upon assumptions about creativity
and the instrumental use of technology as unrelated concepts, treated sep-
arately or at best where one was made to ‘fit in’ to the other’s way of work-
ing. Imagine having no expectations about the usefulness of integrating
creativity and technology in aiding and extending musical learning or
meeting a pedagogical need in classroom practice – in fact, that the essence
of each was to be not-the-other. Imagine creativity as an internal process
and technology as an external strategy for (rather than process of) acquiring
musical knowledge, skills and understanding that teachers would use at
different instructional levels.
Conversely, imagine multiple forms of music pedagogy, where creativity
(like inspiration) comes from outside in and inside out as a process insepa-
rable from technology, playing into and recruiting different forms of peda-
gogy. Where a gradual but perceptible process of pedagogical evolution
takes place, with music educators developing new strategies that go beyond
making new tools ‘fit in’ to current ways of working. Instead, the ‘deeper’
object of musical learning arises inseparably from creativity and technology
as interrelated tools. Both teachers and learners use these tools to manage
their own learning, creating opportunities for the making, creating,
receiving and producing of music. In this scenario, learning goals concern
how the pupils would like to work musically and what resources they
would like to use: e-learning tasks and e-communication are expected
ways of promoting creativity in the music classroom. Various models of
artistic and creative engagement are negotiated with collaborative oppor-
tunities for media-rich choices in adaptive learning environments. These
are richly resourced to both provoke and support reflection between partic-
ipants, where interaction with and through diversified networks supports
worldwide access to school and home.
Clearly, there are many approaches to and models of music pedagogy that
reside on a spectrum between simple dichotomies. Where these dichotomies
emphasize assumptions about the mutuality of creativity and technology
they suggest that creativity and technology are not autonomous, nor are
they competing or irrelevant to each other. Discourse on teacher effectiveness
in music education (Savage 2007; Mills 1997; QCA 2005) brings the notion
of pedagogic change with new technology use into unprecedented focus.
The following article offers some framing points for reframing how cre-
ativity and technology may be brought into productive relation as cata-
lysts for change in pedagogic practice, policy and teacher professionalism
in music education.
38 Pamela Burnard
JMTE_1.1_04_art_Burnard.qxd 11/7/07 9:44 PM Page 39
context of leisure for cultural consumption, offers new challenges to 1. Designed to enhance
teachers (Leong 2007). On the one hand, technologically mediated music social collaboration as
illustrated by wikis
making can shake the most cherished practices of classroom music teachers – and blogs.
but, on the other, it can generate the desire to (and ways in which to)
diversify existing pedagogical practice. Furthermore, the online technolo-
gies available, along with the shift towards a second generation internet
(Web 2.01) can be adapted to constructive learning environments in which
the making, experiencing, receiving and creating of music changes dramati-
cally (Fautley and Savage 2007; Ruthmann, 2007). There is growing
research interest in how teachers define and discuss the enhancement of
their pedagogical repertoires through the use of online collaborative tech-
nologies in music teaching. Yet, conceptual frameworks for investigating
the multifaceted nature of creativity and technology are desperately lack-
ing (see for example Prensky, 2001; Webster 2002, 2006; Finney and
Burnard 2007).
The application of new technologies to support and develop music
learning and teaching in school and how students use technology at home
preoccupies teacher thinking about what should be included in the cur-
riculum, how it should be delivered, and the confluent questions of why,
when and where in the curriculum it should be positioned (Espeland 2006).
The particular ways in which new technologies (including ICT) and
creativity are promoted, perceived and practised continue to underscore
key reports and promotions in resource materials (Fautley and Savage,
2007; Ofsted 2004, 2006).
There have been a small number of studies that have explicitly examined
the processes of creative music making in a computer-mediated environ-
ment (Hickey 1997; Seddon and O’Neill 2003; Collins 2005; Kirkman
2007) or the impact of technology on learners’ creativity (Dillon 2003,
2004, 2006). Studies of collaborative creativity using music technologies
(Dillon 2003, 2004) and of students’ perspectives on composing with
MIDI (Airy and Parr 2001), and web-enhanced learning (Bauer 2001)
establish that technology provides an enabling environment in which
learners and teachers enter a co-participative process around activities
and explorations where learners can take back control of their learning
(Challis 2007).
Various potential lines of enquiry originate from the intersecting
contexts in which teaching and learning are situated. These may include
the kinds of creative courses of action that young people choose and the
extent to which these courses are imbued with dilemmas relating to tech-
nology. For example, as passive consumers, who are the subjects of musical
learning, how do they learn, what do they learn, why do they learn, what
makes them make the effort and where?
Whether seeing creativity being in relationship with technology or
creativity as emerging through technology, both vantage points are essen-
tial to genuinely fostering music learning. This assumes that we know
where technology belongs and how it is embodied in accounts of creativity,
and whether one is different from and more than, the other, or not irre-
ducible, and thus essentially different from the reality of the other. While
some work is taking place in this area (Reese, McCord and Walls 2001;
Baer 2001; Reese 2001; Seddon and O’Neill, 2003; Nilsson and Folkestad,
individual
pupil
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at t io
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40 Pamela Burnard
JMTE_1.1_04_art_Burnard.qxd 11/7/07 9:44 PM Page 41
years. Yet, if it is possible for teachers to radically change how they teach, 2. Musical Futures
provides online access
then coming to new understandings of how creativity and technology can to specialist music
mediate the learning environment as creative spaces in which pupils (and technology experts
teachers) learn collaboratively, is crucial. We need to take account of ‘how’ and resources.
these environments conform to the learner and ‘what’ role is played in the 3. Interconnected
complementary recasting of home and school use of music technology. Musical Networks (or
IMNs), a phrase
coined by Weinberg
Framing point 2: Building flexible educational environments (2005), are computer
systems that allow
that conform to the learner – a shifting amalgam players to
The second framing point involves the tool of ‘reframing’ self/others independently share
(i.e. teachers and learners) together in an adaptive learning environment. and shape each
others’ music in real-
Moreover, in taking account of new thinking about pedagogy and the time, facilitating both
making of links between local communities and the global community, synchronous and
then we need to reframe the expanding classroom environment. What asynchronous
communication.
evidence do we have for ‘how’ pupils (and teachers) learn collaboratively?
‘When’ and in ‘what’ contexts is the establishment of creative spaces made
implicit as technologically and pedagogically coupled?
Educational environments differ from those characterized in earlier
decades, as exemplified in music classrooms. The rich connections built as
consequences of using integrated, pervasive networks to support innova-
tions in teaching have been well documented and theorized in educational
research (see Loi and Dillon 2006; Deaney and Hennessy 2007); less so in
music education research. Studies have been published, however, on the
possibility of media-rich sources of musical information (Dillon, S. 2006),
the opportunity to interact and collaborate with people who otherwise are
inaccessible (Seddon 2007), and the use of digital networked technologies
in adaptive educational environments where these facilitate creative music
activities (Ruthmann 2007).
We have seen that technology frees time for creative development
through automation. Several studies have pointed to time saved when
teachers use online technologies and collaborative tools, which include
blogs, podcasts and wikis used instrumentally in their practice to amplify
and extend pre-existing instructional practices (Loveless et al 2001;
Nordkvelle and Olson 2005) and develop reflective practices which increase
collaboration within and beyond formal school settings (Ruthmann, 2007b).
Somekh (2000), Savage (2005, 2007), Ruthmann (2007a; 2007b), Brown
and Dillon (2007), along with Jennings (2007), maintain that digital tech-
nologies offer the opportunity to extend the spaces for creativity by bringing
communities together – for example, in collaborative partnerships between
schools and other learning sites at the level of individual artist, arts organiza-
tion, school and university. Composers, performers, audiences and artists
offer teachers new, collaborative kinds of interactivity (see for example
Musical Futures2 and Interconnected Musical Networks or IMNs3) which
extend the spaces available for interaction and exhibition. For example, in a
study of synchronous communication (based on real0time interaction) and
asynchronous communication (based on delayed interaction), Seddon
(2007) highlights key considerations to be made in an on-line classroom
and the benefits of interactive e-learning, not only within and between
schools but also in terms of group composing in global classrooms. These
musical networks occur through the technology. There are many examples
42 Pamela Burnard
JMTE_1.1_04_art_Burnard.qxd 11/7/07 9:44 PM Page 43
TECHNOLOGY CREATIVITY
KS
INT
OR
N
NE
EG
RA
IO
TW
W
TE
AT
O D MU ICAL NE
P
F
RM S I CI
ES
SO T
IN
N
O F MUSICAL PAR TI
C
VA C
TIV A
ET PR
ECHNOLOGICAL
44 Pamela Burnard
JMTE_1.1_04_art_Burnard.qxd 11/7/07 9:44 PM Page 45
that are salient to learning (and the detail of the systems of activity that
support it) at a macro (i.e. the social/collective level) and micro level (i.e. at
the individual learner level) of analysis. Teaching and learning are self-
organizing events framed by activity. These activity systems include peda-
gogical practices and involve the elements of community, rules, divisions of
labour, object-oriented actions, norms of practice and sense making
(Daniels, 2006).
Activity Theory (AT) provides a theoretical tool and means for studying
musical learning as the expansion through change and development of
pedagogy. It has the potential to overcome some of the most profound
problems that have plagued attempts to look well below the surface of
interactions – at the exchange sequences and mechanisms of creativity
and technology mediating pedagogic processes (and musical learning).
Furthermore, it relates to what music educators (and researchers) might
usefully do to create, consult and research adaptive learning environments
in music education settings.
ating Artefacts
Medi :
nd
Tools a Signs
E
OM
E TC
NS OU
SE G
ct
Ob
IN
AN
bje
ME
jec
Su
bo of
Ru
La sion
ur
l es
Community
vi
Di
central to teaching and learning, though not perhaps manifest in the initial
contact between teacher and students. Through the myriad of systems
exhibiting patterns of contradictions and tension, AT can make visible the
relationships and structures within music participation and the roles and
rules within practices. In this way, it has the potential to illustrate the key
components of the relationship between creativity and technology as they
develop in different learning communities.
46 Pamela Burnard
JMTE_1.1_04_art_Burnard.qxd 11/7/07 9:44 PM Page 47
process whereby teachers (along with their pupils) look critically not only
at their own practice (and learning) but at broader educational questions
(Burton and Bartlett 2005; Hargreaves 1996; Burnard and Hennessy
2006; Fishman et al. 2006). This should involve both teachers and pupils
developing new strategies and ways of thinking in response to new experi-
ences of musical networks, new forms of musical participation and new
technological practices. As Figure 4 illustrates, when technology and
creativity are construed as closely interrelated, Activity Theory (AT) can
provide a means of investigating musical learning understood as the
expansion of the learning environment through pedagogic change.
Teachers are currently under increasing pressure – they have less time
and opportunity for professional risk taking, innovation and deep engage-
ment with the principles and tensions between practice and policy (DfES
2003, 2004). Yet, as researcher practitioners, it is possible for teachers to
author change from inside the classroom. Teachers can combine observa-
tional data with interviews of learners as they interact with and react upon
the issues they seek to understand. This is not a pretentious claim because the
human capacity for sheer adaptation is as defining of teachers’ work as it is of
their life histories (Anderson 1997; Baker 2005; Day et al., 2006). Although
music education ‘enjoys’ the educational potentials of creativity and technol-
ogy, in order to do so vigorously, teachers need to recognize the problems
besetting music education as opportunities for change (Iemma 2006).
Teachers need to view the educational experience through the eyes
and perspectives of their pupils. They also need to understand, and trace
the roots of, success and failure in classroom practice, and motivation and
demotivation in both themselves and their pupils.
Some ideas for practitioner-researchers’ pedagogic enquiries have been
articulated in this article. Others might include:
• Exploring how the real creative use of technological platforms for new
media and creative production helps and potentially may inhibit pupil
creativity.
• Identifying how this (wired) generation of creative users (along with
the technophobic users) differs from other generations.
• Developing deep understanding of what the relationship with the tech-
nology reveals and conceals about how adaptive learning environments
and creativity interact and support music teaching and learning.
• Evaluating the affordances (or enabling conditions and limitations) of web-
based and e-technology environments for advancing the development of
musical creativity, i.e. what technology reveals and conceals as opportuni-
ties in creative production or in teaching when blocked by technological
rather than musical problems (see Dillon, S. 2006; Heidegger 1977);
• Consulting pupils (i.e. giving learners a critical and democratic or genuine
say) about the acquisition of technologies, how to use new learning
technologies and opportunities to create their own learning technolo-
gies. These may be different kinds of technological spaces that enhance
collaborative and personal creativity.
48 Pamela Burnard
JMTE_1.1_04_art_Burnard.qxd 11/7/07 9:44 PM Page 49
PUPILS AS RESEARCHERS
ing Ar tefac
Mediat ts : CR
G
Tools and Signs EA
N
VI
TI
NG
EI
C
RE
E
OM
E TC
NS OU
SE
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je
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TECHNOLOGY CREATIVITY
ur f
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AK
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IN M
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INT
NE EGRAT RKS ON
WF ED MUSICAL NETWO I
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OVA MUSICAL PAR T
TIVE AC
TECHNOLOGICAL PR
TEACHERS AS RESEARCHERS
enquiry into aspects of what is distinctive about views at the level of (1)
learner and classroom and (2) learner and out-of-school settings. We need
to take into account the institutional and home factors that contribute to
learning and thereby to new models of creative teaching with technologies
(as illustrated by the reframings offered earlier). We need to understand
what learners say and do as a consequence of how they interpret the
world. Importantly, we need to understand more about experiences, inter-
actions and events from the viewpoints of students.
Teachers need to aspire to work as practitioner-researchers and to con-
sult their pupils in contexts where researching their own classrooms and
learning together is the norm (Price 2005). University lecturer-researchers
can help with mentoring conversations in producing new classroom-based
enquiry and the effective use to which academic research may be put by
teachers anxious to learn from research findings (see Wubbels and
Poppleton 1999; CapeUK 2006; Creative Partnerships 2004a, 2004b).
In the 1970s, Stenhouse (1975) advocated classrooms as sites for
teacher research. He also advocated learning itself as a research process
and research as the basis for teaching (Stenhouse, 1983). Schools and
teachers need to acknowledge classrooms as collaborative, adaptive learning
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54 Pamela Burnard
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Suggested citation
Burnard, P. (2007), ‘Reframing creativity and technology: promoting pedagogic
change in music education,’ Journal of Music, Technology and Education 1: 1,
pp. 37–55, doi: 10.1386/ jmte.1.1.37/1
Contributor details
Pamela Burnard, PhD is a Senior Lecturer in the Faculty of Education at the
University of Cambridge, UK where she coordinates and lectures on the MPhil in
Educational Research and the MPhil in Arts, Culture and Education courses,
supervisors PhD students and teaches courses on creativity, creative learning and
teaching, musical creativity, artist partnerships and visual-based research methods.
She is Co-editor of the British Journal of Music Education, Treasurer of SEMPRE, an
Executive member of the Board of Directors for ISME, and co-convener of BERA:
SIG Creativity in Education. She has co-edited 3 books including Reflective Practices
in Arts Education, Kluwer; Music Education with Digital Technologies, Continuum; and
Documenting Creative Learning, Trentham; edited the Creativity Section in L. Bresler
(Ed) International Handbook of Research in Arts Education and has been guest editor
for special issues of the Cambridge Journal of Education (CJE) and Music Education
Research (MER). Contact: Pamela Burnard Faculty of Education 184 Hills Rd
Cambridge CB2 2PQ.
E-mail: pab61@cam.ac.uk
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JMTE_1.1_05_art_King.qxd 11/7/07 9:45 PM Page 57
Journal of Music, Technology and Education Volume 1 Number 1 © 2007 Intellect Ltd
Article. English language. doi: 10.1386/jmte.1.1.57/1
Abstract Keywords
This article presents some of the findings from a mixed-methods case study that recording
investigated studio recording for undergraduate students collaborating in pairs. The learning technology
students were actively engaged in experiential learning (Dewey 1966) and the studio practice
idea that students will develop within an environment with their peers (Pear and music
Crowne-Todd 2001). Using a stratified purposive sampling technique students problem solving
were matched with a learner of similar ability via a pre-test, often referred to as a contingent learning
social-conflict approach (Schneider 2002). The groups of students were then allo-
cated a support mechanism (either a learning technology interface or paper-based
manual) to provide contingent on-demand assistance (Wood and Wood 1999)
during the recording of a drum kit. Analysis of observational data revealed the
types of studio-based problems the learners were encountering, and that the
learning technology solution suggested a quicker and more reliable form of
support.
Introduction
While to date there have been no empirical investigations into the use of
learning technology to support activity in the recording studio, there have
been a number of studies both within the music domain and outside; we
will deal with the latter first.
Chang (2001) describes and evaluates a case study in the earth sciences
using learning technology to support the completion of a test. In addition
to the computing technology, the student also has access to a number of
other resources such as maps, weather images and precipitation data.
Spicer and Stratford (2001) investigated the use of computing technology
to implement a virtual field trip for students with embedded questions
within the hypertext. Not surprisingly, students reported that they preferred
the actual visits to the virtual.
In addition to these studies that centre on computers supporting
practical activity, there are also a number of other studies in the area
of computer-supported collaborative learning (CSCL). Weinberger and
Fischer (2005) propose a framework for analysing knowledge construction
in a CSCL environment. This is analysed and segmented into four different
dimensions of learning: participation, epistemics, argument and social
construction; while Baker et al (2003) specifically highlights argument
within an online collaborative learning environment.
Within the music domain there has been considerable research into
using computers to support or develop skills such as music analysis, aural
awareness and music synthesis by groups of researchers at Huddersfield
(the CALMA project) and Edinburgh universities. Other empirical studies
include the development of a unique symbolic language for the study of
composition in the form of networked drum steps (McCarthy et al 2005) and
Harmony Space (Holland 1989), which is an interactive interface to aid both
novices and more experienced composers with aspects of tonal harmony.
More recent researches into the use of computers in music education
involve designing online communities for creative musical activities
(Salavuo 2007) and how young people listen to, compose and share
music with technology (Gall 2007). Dillon and Brown (2007) discuss
the philosophical implications of introducing technology into music making,
and put forward methods and ideas for exploration. The need for an inves-
tigation area of practical activity in a situated environment (Lave and
Wenger 1991) such as the recording studio has thus far been neglected.
Technology in the studio
The use of technology in the music curriculum poses a problem for the
educator: how can students gain access to support when using complex
tools in creative work, and what is the nature of the problems they are
encountering? Software packages such as Cubase and Pro Tools offer
support in the form of online help and minimal manuals embedded within
the software; however, little help is provided beyond the procedural
knowledge (Anderson 1996) concerned with these tools. In addition, support
for the use of hardware recording devices such as mixing desks, signal
processors (noise gates, compressors) and signal generators (reverb, delay,
chorus etc) usually relies upon either the student’s ability to take effective
notes in a workshop, or the use of manuals.
These hardware recording devices are often used by audio professionals
and the manuals are written for this particular audience, and this can
present a problem for the student of music and technology. A survey of
150 students over three years conducted at the University of Hull revealed
that students were more likely to seek studio support guidance from a
member of staff (43%) or a peer (41%) than a manual (16%) or a textbook
(0%). Indeed, while overburdening the student with technical specifications
and data concerning maintenance of a particular item, rarely (if ever) do
textbooks or manuals include within their pages pedagogical strategies for
problem solving. It is possible to see the number of potential pitfalls for a
student when considering a basic input (Figure 1).
Figure 1 illustrates the various stages followed by a source sound (such
as a voice or guitar) through a mixing-desk channel: sound is converted
from acoustical to electrical energy by the microphone, transmitted out of
phase via a balanced cable and then put back into phase at the mixing
desk. The student of sound recording is then faced with a series of options:
selection of the type of input (microphone or line), whether the phase of
the signal needs to be inverted, the possibility to decrease the input
amplitude (pad switch), a gain (potentiometer) dial, parametric equalization,
auxiliary sends, panning, signal routing (to a group fader or main studio
monitors) and finally the slider that controls the overall amplitude of the
signal. If any stage is set incorrectly, this can lead to an unintentional
Source
Microphone
Cable
EQ
Aux
Stereo
Placement
Signal
Routing
Amplitude
Level
Figure 1: Mapping out the process from sound source into the mixing desk channel.
The support material included either the LTI or a manual, one of which was
placed in the control room of the recording studio. The drum kit was set up
in the studio floor for the duration of the study, while all the necessary
cables, microphones and stands were stored in the studio ready for use.
The following material was used in the assessment and evaluation of
the study:
A blank CD was given to each pair of students for their audio recording.
The pre-test and post-test were designed to evaluate students’ knowledge
of the theory and practice of drum-kit recording. Both tests followed the
same format, so the nature and standard of questions was equivalent.
The feedback questionnaire contained open and closed questions (see
Oppenheim 1992; Gillham 2000) to allow students to comment on the
task and the support material.
Procedure
The directions given to the participating students are shown below. Note
that each pair was allocated a 2-hour session in the studio to complete
the set task and the drummer was available in the studio to perform
when required. The musician did not interfere with the music technology
students, except to play a drum sequence.
Preliminary task:
• Complete pre-test.
Data analysis
A considerable amount of data was produced as part of the study. For the
purposes of this article the following data was analysed:
• 64 completed pre-tests
• 16 data logs of students’ interactions with the LTI (group 1 only)
The video cameras collected around 200 hours of data. Three cameras
were used to collect the data (two in the control room of the studio and
one on the studio floor). In order to analyse this data, the tapes from the
three video cameras were played simultaneously on separate monitors.
This was then dual-coded (verbatim) and utterances were categorized
using Interactive Process Analysis (IPA) (Bales 1999). IPA is a method of
categorizing utterances based upon direct observation. There are twelve
categories of utterance (e.g. shows tension release and asks for opinion)
which are further sub-divided into four main areas: positive and negative
social emotional responses, and questions and answers concerning a task.
These are sub-classified further into the following six areas: orientation,
evaluation, control, decision, tension management and integration. It is
then possible to assign a particular utterance to one of the twelve observa-
tional categories. Afterwards, a comparison of the quantity and type of
utterances with the mean profiles developed by Bales is possible. Bales and
his team analysed thousands of groups of different sizes and in different
contexts to discover the types and amount of utterances the individuals
used. All this data was compiled into a single set of tables that investiga-
tors can use to compare their own work.
Analysis
Broadly speaking, it is possible to consider the process of studio recording
in three main areas: pre-production, production and post production.
Pre-production involves preparing for a session by setting up technical
equipment (microphones, mixing desks and recording apparatus) and
musical (drum kit) instruments. Production is the actual recording, and
post-production the modification and balancing of the recorded tracks.
However, it is worth pointing out at this stage that some industry experts
(and educators) prefer to think of the process more holistically and the
term production is used to describe the whole process. For the purposes of
this study it is easier to consider the recording in these three stages in
order to understand the problems encountered by learners, and at what
stage of the process they arise.
The most common problem to emerge in the recording sessions for all
of the students was the use of the talkback system. Using the timings
recorded in the transcriptions, it was also possible to work out how long it
took for each pair to arrive at the solution. It is evident from this data that
all of the students who encountered problems using the studio talkback
were able resolve the problem by using the LTI. The average time spent
using the LTI to resolve the problem was 2 minutes 57 seconds. The data
relating specifically to those students who used the manual shows that
only three of the seven pairs in the group were able to resolve the problem
of using the studio talkback. The average time spent using the manual to
resolve the issue was 6 minutes 30 seconds for all of the pairs; for the
three pairs who managed to resolve the problem, the average time taken
was 7 minutes 10 seconds. In all cases, the students tackled the problem
by consulting the support material.
These problem areas reflect a similar story to the issue of using the studio
talkback: while all of the students who had access to the LTI were able to
resolve a given problem having consulted the support tool, the problems
that hampered the students who were using the manual were not always
resolved. Moreover, in these cases the students did not always manage the
problem by exclusive use of the manual; use of trial and error was evident.
The average time spent resolving these technical issues was 1 minute
36 seconds for pairs in the LTI group, and 4 minutes 18 seconds for pairs
using the manual.
The problems encountered during the post-production stage of the
recording sessions were as follows:
• Signal processing
• Recording practice
• Signal routing.
“What shall we do
first? Shall we set up
2 B 8 Manual 0’30
the mics or look at
mic positions?”
3 A “Yeah.” 3 0’33
“I reckon we should
4 A turn this [points at 5 0’38
mixer] on first.”
[Look at microphones
5 A+B and position in the Manual 0’45
manual.]
[Continues to look at
7 B Manual 1’46
manual]
[Sets up microphone
8 A D112 1’55
on bass drum]
[Takes microphone
10 A to position on snare SM57 2’50
drum.]
It should also be noted, however, that other pairs in the manual group
did not consult the support material at the pre-production stage at all, so
the management of the task arose in a more ad hoc fashion. Figure 3 is an
extract of transcript taken from the pre-production stage of a session in
which the students launch immediately into the practical activity without
consultation about the process. Here, management of the task is implicit
and not made verbally explicit, so there appears to be a lack of planning in
how to go about the task.
In Figure 3, student B requires information regarding the deployment
of the microphones; student A gives mixed information based on personal
knowledge. If the manual had been consulted, these students would have
found out that while the SM57 can be used with a floor tom, it could be a
[Students leave
control room and go
1 A+B 0’00
straight to studio
floor]
[Starts to position
2 A microphone on bass D112 0’32
drum]
[Positions SM57 on
5 B SM57 0’55
floor tom]
more suitable choice for the snare drum in this particular set-up because
of the microphones available. From the outset, therefore, the students have
perhaps deployed a less suitable microphone on the snare drum, consider-
ing the other microphone resources available.
Suggested citation
King, A. and Vickers, P. (2007), ‘Problem solving with learning technology
in the music studio,’ Journal of Music, Technology and Education 1: 1, pp. 57–67,
doi: 10.1386/ jmte.1.1.57/1
Contributor details
Contact: Dr Andrew King, School of Arts and New Media, University of Hull,
Scarborough Campus, Filey Road, Scarborough. North Yorkshire, YO11 3AZ, UK.
E-mail: a.king@hull.ac.uk. Contact: Dr Paul Vickers, School of informatics,
Northumbria University, Pandon Building, Camden Street, Newcastle upon Tyne,
NE2 1XE. UK.
E-mail: paul.vickers@unn.ac.uk
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JMTE_1.1_06_art_Landy.qxd 11/7/07 9:46 PM Page 69
Journal of Music, Technology and Education Volume 1 Number 1 © 2007 Intellect Ltd
Editorial. English language. doi: 10.1386/jmte.1.1.69/1
Abstract Keywords
This article introduces the reader to the ElectroAcoustic Resource Site (EARS, electroacoustic music
www.ears.dmu.ac.uk). It examines the site’s raison d’être, its history thus far, chal- studies
lenges encountered, and then moves on to introduce the project’s future plans, in Internet resources
particular within electroacoustic music education for children. A key focus is how online learning
those working on EARS are attempting to make the site relevant to anyone involved access
in the field of electroacoustic music studies, regardless of previous experience.
Context
As we welcome this new education journal for music technology, a ques- 1. In recent years, there
tion comes to mind. To what extent are we aware of the subjects that seems to be a tension
between the usage of
should ideally constitute music technology courses? One of the areas the term
within music technology is that of electroacoustic music. Its associated electroacoustic music
field of studies will be the focus of this article.1 on the one hand and
sonic art on the other.
Electroacoustic music tends to be taught in music and, more recently, For those whose work
music technology departments, an entirely logical state of affairs. An is with sounds more
increasing percentage of staff members of many of these music departments than notes, sonic art
may be seen as the
is now represented by technological development researchers, particularly better designator, but
in American universities. Again, this seems rather logical, given the two there is an awkward
words of the phrase ‘music technology’. The humanities side, that is, the issue with this term.
If you consider sonic
study of the music, its history, theoretical bases and its place in culture, is artworks to be music
often seen to be a bolt-on. This state of affairs may be considered something – and the word
of a shame, because the success of any type of art is the sum of its appreci- ‘music’ is absent from
the term – sonic art
ation, knowledge related to it and, in our case, knowledge of the technology gives people the
supporting it as well. opportunity to
Perhaps the humanities side has been kept to a minimum partially due to separate its works
from music.
the fact that the field of studies related to electroacoustic music is currently Electroacoustic music,
somewhat ill defined. How might one delineate this field? Which disciplines on the other hand, is
are involved? Does it even have a commonly accepted name? Furthermore, not involved with, for
example, acoustic
how easy is it for people interested in studying electroacoustic music to sound works, and
locate the research of others working within the same area of specialization? also includes a fairly
At the beginning of this decade, it appeared that whenever one wanted significant number of
note-based
to discover something about the technological aspects of electroacoustic compositions. To
music, the information was normally not difficult to trace. Similarly, there avoid this
was a reasonable selection of histories related to this music.2 However, conundrum, I have
recently coined the
most specialists in the field would also have been aware of the challenges term, sound-based
facing them as well as many of their students when searching for sources music (Landy 2007).
related to musical issues. It would be a radical
step to rename EARS
Part of that challenge is relevant to education and deserves mention to take this into
within this contextual introduction. The scholarship available today in account at this point
and, therefore, the our field is reasonably abundant as is evident given the size of EARS’s bib-
term, electroacoustic liography; however, other than those historical overviews, to what extent
music has been
maintained. do we have foundational level publications for people interested in learn-
ing more about electroacoustic music from the musical point of view?
2. Regarding these
histories, note that Taking this one step further, to involve pre-university students: to what
many of them miss extent are we developing electroacoustic music courseware of all sorts for
two opportunities: entry-level students at secondary (or even primary) schools? The fact that
(1) they tend to focus
on art or pop music – a good deal of useful foundational material is missing has done the field of
few look across electroacoustic music studies little good.
electroacoustic
music’s broad
horizon; and (2) they EARS: Why it was needed
tend to be technology- EARS has come into being due to the issues just raised: the difficulty one
driven or person- or encounters in finding sources related to a musical area within electroa-
studio-driven, but
rarely combine coustic music studies and the fact that the discipline has not yet been prop-
historical, musical, erly delineated nor been provided with a widely accepted framework. Such a
technological and framework could be easily integrated with studies in electroacoustic music
socio-cultural
developments, all of making, relevant aspects of computing and other forms of technology, etc. In
which contribute to short, it has direct bearing on our music technology curricula.
electroacoustic music There is one further subject that deserves some discussion before pre-
history.
senting the EARS site, another issue of foundational importance. To what
3. Regular readers of the extent do we, music technology specialists, use our terminology in a consis-
CEC Conference
forum (www.concor- tent manner? Let’s start with a curious example, ‘computer music’.
dia.ca/cec-conference Granted, this term is not used very often in the United Kingdom; but it is
/index.html) will be quite common in many countries around the globe, not least in the United
aware of how many
terms are causing States. But what does it mean? Ages ago one was taught that computers
problems similar to could be used musically as assistant composers, such as in algorithmic
what is presented composition and/or to produce audio, as in computer synthesis. The
here.
‘and/or’ is quite important, as the first-known computer composition was
the ‘Iliac Suite’ for string quartet by Lejaren Hiller and Leonard Isaacson
(1957). In other words, traditional instruments can perform computer
music. However, many use the term ‘computer music’ to mean music pro-
duced and performed by a computer. To complicate matters further, there is
the annual International Computer Music Conference in which everything
ranging from any technological development related to computers and
music, music cognition and computational analysis and much more are all
welcome, and thus form part of computer music. Yet old analogue elec-
tronic or electroacoustic works that are not digital do not fit under com-
puter music – but how many are aware of this? Is this separation of any
particular relevance today? ‘Computer music’ is but one of many terms that
are highly problematic.3 Of course, even the term ‘electroacoustic music’
knows several variances in its definition. For the purposes of this article and
to avoid any further ambiguity it will now be defined in its broadest sense:
‘Electroacoustic music refers to any music in which electricity has had
some involvement in sound registration and/or production other than that
of simple microphone recording or amplification’ (Landy 1999: 61). Suffice
it to say that not everyone uses the term this way. Such terms are indeed at
the foundation of our field, and without some consensus, the rest of that
foundation may remain difficult to construct.
This lack of consensus regarding terminology usage was a further
stimulus for creating the original EARS site. The idea was to find a way to
70 Leigh Landy
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provide the general public an unbiased view of the state of play in terms of 4. The UQAM team, led
our terminology, create the architecture for the field of electroacoustic by Louise Poissant,
now has plans to
music studies and use this architecture to help interested parties find expand its project into
research results in their particular area(s) of focus. These goals are an ‘Encyclopédie des
reflected in the site’s glossary, its structured index and its bibliography arts médiatiques’
(see www.teleinfo.
respectively; they will now be introduced. uqam.ca/projets/
gram/).
EARS: Its development up to the present 5. A reasonable propor-
Initially, before embarking on this rather ambitious journey, colleagues tion of the 360 terms
were contacted around the globe and asked what might be needed on the were for the glossary
only, as we did not
site. Clearly, future advisers were being sought. Other than the UQAM expect articles to refer
(Montreal) Dictionnaire des arts médiatiques (www.comm.uqam.ca/GRAM/), to them specifically. In
which consists of a modest glossary of terms relevant to new media, 2006 it was decided
that this was an inef-
including electroacoustic music,4 there was nothing available that was ficient approach. A
comparable to what was being planned. The general view was that there few terms were
was a need for EARS and that, as suggested, it should focus on terminol- turned into referred
items, as they were
ogy and resources. relatively obscure;
Funding was received from the then Arts and Humanities Research most of them were
Board (now Council, AHRC), the first of three grants that EARS has received added to the index.
from it thus far. The goal was to set up an international consortium, define
the goals of the EARS project and suggest a planning scheme for its initial
phases. This was achieved by 2001, the original consortium consisting of
Kevin Austin (Concordia University, Montreal, Canada), Marc Battier
(Sorbonne, Paris, France), Joel Chadabe (Electronic Music Foundation, EMF,
Albany, New York), Bernd Enders (University of Osnabrück, Germany) and
Simon Waters (University of East Anglia, Norwich, United Kingdom). It was
decided to attempt first to create the glossary and structure a subject index
that would help delineate the field, before embarking on the much more
ambitious bibliography project. The discussions also involved creating the
parameters of operation of this steering board.
The second grant supported a six-month part-time postdoctoral
research fellow, Simon Atkinson (who has since become co-director of the
project). Some 360 defined terms, 165 referred terms (see ‘x’) and 375
keywords were collected in the initial index, a number of which appear
more than once.5 The point of departure was to include terms that could
be called upon as keywords regarding electroacoustic research related to
the music, thus not solely technological. Granted, within acoustics, for
example, there are literally dozens of terms to choose from, obviously a
selection was made. This notion of music-related research remained the
key criterion for choice because otherwise the project would simply have
become unfeasible. Wherever possible, multiple definitions have been
included to illustrate eventual inconsistent word usage. Preferences are
not suggested; the focus is simply on current word usage.
Making sense of the entries in terms of creating the index structure
was a marvellous exercise in finding an optimal solution. It took months
before the site’s six main headings were chosen. They were (and still are):
72 Leigh Landy
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music. For the sake of completeness, it should be noted that genre and cat- 7. Socio-cultural aspects
egory terms that have had an extremely ephemeral existence have not been include access and
impact issues as well
included. The index would simply become too cumbersome and there as culture-theoretical
would be a risk of bibliographic items’ keywords not working efficiently. issues, among others.
Through referral, these terms do appear on the site; a less ephemeral genre 8. Pierre Schaeffer is
or category is called upon to represent the area in question. singled out as the
The Musicology of Electroacoustic Music is, in many ways, the heart of most prolific author,
not to mention one of
the EARS site. A list of the second-level sub-headings is useful in terms of the earliest, to have
gaining a view of the types of areas represented. contributed to
electroacoustic music
theory (see, for
Aesthetics example, his most-
Analysis cited work, Traité
des objets musicaux,
History of Electroacoustic Music Schaeffer 1977).
Music Criticism
9. The Russian construc-
Music Theory tivist term faktura has
Philosophy of Music been found to be of
importance as one
Socio-cultural Aspects of Electroacoustic Music7 means of discussing
this subject (see, for
The third level (sub-sub-heading) under Music Theory includes: example, Battier
2003: 249–55).
Classification of Sound
Discourse within Electroacoustic Music
Listening Experience
Schaefferian Theory8
Similar examples can also be cited within the Performance Practice and
Presentation and Structure, Musical headings.
Analogous with concepts of sound production and manipulation are
those related to musical structure (Str). Musicians involved in the applica-
tion of formalism in electroacoustic music, such as algorithmic composition,
will find a number of relevant terms in this list. Structure can be approached
at different levels. The sub-headings Macro-level and Micro-level Structure
assist in this differentiation. Of course, an increasing number of people are
creating formalisms that work at several levels, so some of their writing may
fall under more than one Str header.
These six main headings and all entries under them delineate and
define the structure of electroacoustic music studies. The terms delineate
the field; the disciplines and subjects of inquiry form the site’s contents.
Clearly, there are things that have been missed. As EARS is an Internet
resource, what’s wrong can always be put right with little or no delay. It is
for that reason that user feedback is essential to its success.
The original LaTeX-based EARS site went public in 2002. The follow-
ing year UNESCO adopted it as part of its DigiArts initiative (portal.
unesco.org/digiarts). As will become clear below, EARS is now working
even more closely with UNESCO, reflecting the desire that EARS’s content
in the future become even more relevant to people in developing nations.
In 2004 a third EARS-related grant was received from the AHRC. This
time substantial funding resulted in two postdoctoral researchers joining
us over the period 2004–2007. Pierre Couprie joined the project in 2004
and Rob Weale a year later. During this period the creation of the bibliog-
raphy has been the key focus.
Pierre Couprie redesigned the site immediately, using SPIP (www.
spip.net) for the organization of the site’s data. This has led to significant
improvements, although it is hoped that a future version will allow for the
implementation of an even more sophisticated form of search protocol
than that currently available.
Throughout this period, the glossary and index have undergone
dynamic changes under the editorial direction of Simon Atkinson, includ-
ing a major updating process in 2006/2007 when the number of glossary
terms exceeded 500. Still, the main task during the period was to create
the site’s bibliography.
During the first two years, all bibliographic items were entered solely
in English, regardless of the original language. Where relevant, transla-
tions of titles and, for books, chapter titles are included. As more and
more entries for non-English-language publications were entered, it
became clear that it would be useful to be able to look up these works in
their original language as well. Therefore, today, for example, Italian-lan-
guage publications’ abstracts and keywords appear in Italian and in
English; French, Spanish and German texts are similarly treated. To facil-
itate this, translations of the index and, wherever possible, of the glossary
were needed. Thus far the glossary has appeared in French (Pierre
Couprie) and Spanish (Ricardo Dal Farra). At present a possible
Mandarin translation, requested by UNESCO, is under investigation and a
German translation is planned. The index is also available in German
(Martin Supper) and Italian (Laura Zattra). Consortium member Marc
74 Leigh Landy
JMTE_1.1_06_art_Landy.qxd 11/7/07 9:46 PM Page 75
76 Leigh Landy
JMTE_1.1_06_art_Landy.qxd 11/7/07 9:46 PM Page 77
Du Toit’s question made complete sense and the EARS team’s immedi- 10. An offline, stand-
ate reaction was positive, especially given today’s lack of opportunities alone version could
eventually also be
available regarding electroacoustic music instruction at pre-university lev- created.
els and the fairly ‘how to’ approach applied to music technology education
in many schools internationally. Pedagogical EARS could potentially offer
a clear, educationally innovative alternative. Although making the key
decisions concerning which terms to retain and which to drop for this pro-
ject will be extremely challenging, it is clear that definitions adopted for
those with no prior knowledge can be created and supported, where rele-
vant, with sound examples and with relevant opportunities to try out con-
cepts, such as the various types of filters and of visual representations of a
given recording. In other words all online10 new media and hypermedia
aids can be incorporated, something EARS does not yet provide – a truly
exciting opportunity.
However, it is logical to suggest that creating a pedagogical form of
EARS solely based on its current format may not be sufficient. The reason
for this can be found on the Groupe de Recherches Musicales’s CD-ROM
entitled La musique électroacoustique (Ina/GRM-Hyptique 2000). This
superb new media publication offers the user three choices upon opening:
connaître (understand), entendre (hear) and faire (do). This tripartite
approach is extremely sensible, focusing on the comprehension of con-
cepts and gaining historical knowledge; supporting music appreciation
through documented examples, with evocative scores providing users
something to hold on to when first hearing music that is possibly totally
new; and allowing learning to take place through creativity, by providing
users the opportunity to manipulate sounds.
This approach is holistic; its holism would be essential to support the
request made during that meeting in Paris. EARS is therefore planning its
own tripartite project, all based on current initiatives of the Music,
Technology and Innovation Centre (MTI) at De Montfort University (DMU).
It, too, involves an understanding aspect on what has been named “EARS
II”, an adaptable listening methodology supporting access and appreciation,
part of the MTI’s ongoing Intention/Reception (I/R) project and a ‘learning
by doing’ aspect by way of the Sound Organiser audio software program
currently under development for any novice user group. All three are intro-
duced below.
78 Leigh Landy
JMTE_1.1_06_art_Landy.qxd 11/7/07 9:46 PM Page 79
Obviously, the three parts of this project will be harmonized in the form
of a curriculum so that asp1ects learned on Pedagogical EARS can be
heard in context in the I/R environment and applied creatively on the
Sound Organiser platform. As more and more countries move towards
including various forms of music technology onto their schools’ curricula,
Pedagogical EARS will be ready for use by younger students. Sound orga-
nization is already part of their aural experience and they are extremely
open to discovery at late primary/early secondary school age. By using an
integrated, holistic system such as the one proposed here, scientific, IT and
graphic concepts can be developed alongside electroacoustic musical ones.
Brief conclusion
‘Somebody had to do it’ is the answer to the query, ‘Why did you all
embark on the EARS project in the first place?’ As stated at the beginning
of this article, the field of electroacoustic music studies was discovered to
be somewhat ill defined. Its related curricula are extremely diverse: some
are more related to media, some to traditional music and some to directly
vocational aspects. EARS, a project that might have taken place within a
library science department, has become increasingly gratifying to those
involved as the years have gone by. Its need has been proven through its
usage. The field of electroacoustic music studies no longer seems like an
odd concept. Now the time has come for people in the field to find holes in
areas of scholarship through searching the EARS site. The MTI, for exam-
ple, plans to develop a large-scale electroacoustic music analysis project in
an attempt to discover which analytical tools are most appropriate in
which circumstances. Alongside such high-level research, specialists must
also ensure that the foundation of the field is solid, something that is
hardly the case at present. Both EARS and Pedagogical EARS will repre-
sent a contribution to the creation of that foundation for interested people
of all ages.
Works Cited
Battier, Marc (2003), ‘A Constructivist Approach to the Analysis of Electronic
Music and Audio Art – Between Instruments and Faktura’. Organised Sound, 8: 3,
pp. 249–255.
Chion, Michel (1983), Guide des objets sonores: Pierre Schaeffer et la recherche musi-
cale, Paris: Ina-GRM/Buchet-Chastel.
Fields, Kenneth (2007), ‘Ontologies, Categories, Folksonomies: An organised lan-
guage of sound’, Organised Sound, 12: 2, pp. 101–111.
Grove, Robin, Stevens, Catherine and McKechnie, Shirley (eds) (2005), Thinking in
Four Dimensions: Creativity and Cognition in Contemporary Dance, Melbourne:
Melbourne University Press (e-book).
Ina/GRM-Hyptique (2000), La musique électroacoustique, Paris: Éditions hyptique.net,
CD-ROM.
Landy, Leigh (1999), ‘Reviewing the Musicology of Electroacoustic Music’,
Organised Sound, 4: 1, pp. 61–70.
—— , (2006), ‘The Intention/Reception Project’, in Mary Simoni (ed.), Analytical
Methods of Electroacoustic Music, New York: Routledge, pp. 29–53 + appendix
on the volume’s DVD.
—— (2007), Understanding the Art of Sound Organization, Cambridge, MA: MIT Press.
80 Leigh Landy
JMTE_1.1_06_art_Landy.qxd 11/7/07 9:46 PM Page 81
Suggested citation
Landy, L. (2007), ‘The ElectroAcoustic Resource Site (EARS),’ Journal of Music,
Technology and Education 1: 1, pp. 69–81, doi: 10.1386/ jmte.1.1.69/1
Contributor details
Leigh Landy is a composer and researcher in an area that he calls sound-based
music. He has written five books, including the recent La musique des sons / The
Music of Sounds (OMF/MINT Sorbonne, 2007) and Understanding the Art of Sound
Organization (MIT Press, 2007) and is editor of the journal Organised Sound. He is
director of the Music, Technology and Innovation Research Centre at De Montfort
University and co-founder/director of the Electroacoustic Music Studies Network.
He is also Artistic Director of the company Idée Fixe – Sound and Movement
Theatre. Contact: Leigh Landy, Music, Technology and Innovation Research
Centre, De Montfort University, Clephan Building, Leicester LE1 9BH, UK.
E-mail: llandy@dmu.ac.uk
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JMTE_1.1_07_art_Savage.qxd 11/7/07 9:47 PM Page 83
Journal of Music, Technology and Education Volume 1 Number 1 © 2007 Intellect Ltd
Article. English language. doi: 10.1386/jmte.1.1.83/1
Abstract Keywords
DubDubDub was an educational project conducted by staff at Egerton High musical performance
School, Manchester Metropolitan University and UCan.tv. It introduced a new improvisation
type of musical instrument to the classroom, the DubDubDub player, which world wide web
developed pupils’ musical performance and improvisation skills by using the sonic Internet
environment of the Internet. Users of DubDubDub remixed the sonic content of music technology
the Internet, arranged sounds and prioritised them in real time to form new new instrument design
musical works. The name DubDubDub references the three ‘w’s of internet URLs:
http://www. The musical improvisations generated by DubDubDub can be
combined with other instruments, as illustrated during DubDubDub’s first
performance at the Discourse, Power and Resistance conference (hosted by
the University of Plymouth and Manchester Metropolitan University on
21 April 2006). This paper reflects on the development of DubDubDub and this
first performance, providing an insight into how technologies can facilitate new
models of musical performance and improvisation that may be beneficial for
educational application.
Introduction
Musical performance and improvisation with new technologies is an 1. See www.
emerging focus area for music education. Researchers have investigated soundbeam.co.uk
the range of applications of technology in the teaching of musical compo-
sition (Savage 2002 and 2003), but the use of new technologies to help
pupils develop performance skill or technique in classroom settings is rare
and less widely reported in the literature. There are some notable excep-
tions to this, however, particularly in the field of music education for
pupils with special educational needs. Here, innovative products such as
the Soundbeam1 have been used for many years.
In contrast to the rather limited application within education contexts,
contemporary musicians are developing, building and performing with
new instruments on a regular basis. There is a yearly conference devoted
to ‘new interfaces for musical expression’ (NIME). A review of the research
evidence from conferences like this provides a useful backdrop the
DubDubDub project.
Blaine (2005) starts from the position that many young people today
have a familiarity, and significant dexterity, with a range of potential perfor-
mance interfaces. Her investigation includes the application of a number of
Musical instruments must strike the right balance between challenge, frus-
tration and boredom: devices that are too simple tend not to provide rich
experiences, and devices that are too complex alienate the user before their
richness can be extracted from them. In game design, these same principles
or learnability are the fundamental principles of level design used to build an
interest curve to engage players.
(Blaine 2005: 28)
Oore (2005) picks up on a number of these points. Like Blaine, his first con-
cern is with technique and how this is developed with a new instrument. His
key question is ‘What does one do with a complex new digital instrument?’
(Oore 2005: 60). Like Blaine, he makes the obvious point that if an instru-
ment was designed to be ‘easy to master’ it would quite possibly not be that
interesting to play or to listen to once the initial novelty of the instrument
had worn off. Secondly, he goes on to analyse a range of general concepts
that, he suggests, might apply to the learning of a new instrument. These
are couched under a statement that ‘the individuality of a musician is
manifest in their learning process as much as in their performance’
(Oore 2005: 61). This may be true, it is not a lot of help for the educator,
who has to presume that there will be a common sequence of learning for
the majority of learners and prioritise knowledge accordingly. But the impor-
tant point here for the DubDubDub project is that the process of learning to
control a new instrument and explore its musical potential is a vital element
in an overall learning process that cannot be short-circuited. Additionally,
how a user learns a digital instrument is an important consideration in that
instrument’s design. As he states in his concluding paragraphs: ‘The new-
instrument performer must often be the initiator and driver of the explo-
ration of the new instrument […] The true creative journey begins when
the user’s own goals and style drive the learning, and when basic elements
begin to be internalized and built upon’ (Oore 2005: 64).
Buxton asks questions that should be central to educators’ thoughts when
using new technologies to promote musical performance in the classroom.
Why should musical performance be live? What difference does it make? For
Buxton, musical performance is a compromise between the presentation of
the scored and the improvisational where physical, emotional, gestural, active
and reactive components all have a part to play. He draws up a continuum
within which the visibility or invisibility of musical cause and effect outwork:
I must confess, that I have the same emotional and intellectual response to
watching someone huddle over a laptop as I did 20–30 years ago when they
were huddled over a Revox tape recorder. The more invisible the gesture and
the more tenuous my perception of the correlation between cause and effect,
the less relevant it is to me that a performance is ‘live’.
(Buxton 2005: 4)
interactive artist was employed to help design and make the software. The
prototype was produced using Macromedia Flash. It allowed for Internet
pages, along with embedded sounds, to be assigned to keys on the computer
keyboard with each page opened or closed by pressing the appropriate key.
The prototype that resulted from these early experiments was similar to
Soundplant (http://soundplant.org), an excellent piece of freeware within
which one can attach sound samples from a computer hard disk to a
computer keyboard; however Soundplant does not allow the access of
sounds contained within Internet pages.
Pupils are Egerton High School tried out the initial DubDubDub
interface. During this trial they commented that they had no problems
using a standard Internet browser to open several web pages at a time
on their desktop or keep them tabbed on the taskbar. But this method
highlighted some problems. Although it was easy to navigate the open
web pages, it was not always easy to find out which page was playing
which audio element. The way in which the DubDubDub interface should
empower a user’s engagement with Internet audio was of paramount
importance. In this method, there were just too many mouse clicks getting
in the way of creating mixes and performing with Internet audio.
During subsequent searches of the Internet for new browsers, a web
browser was discovered that allowed for the tiling of pages within one
page. The Avant Browser (www.avantbrowser.com) was free to download
and proved to be fast, stable, customizable and easy to use. Its use removed
the need for the creation of a specific piece of DubDubDub software. For
example eight web pages can be opened in any one Avant browser page
each with different web searches.
A very useful performance application of the Avant browser facilitated
the collection and storage of sets of favourite pages, enabling the user to
return to them quickly in a live performance setting. The browser also
facilitated the mixing of sounds as each ‘tile’ of a web page has controls for
volume and looping its sonic content.
A second piece of software was combined with the Avant browser for
the DubDubDub project. Google Video (http://video.google.co.uk/) is a
dedicated video search engine that is content-safe to use with pupils.
Controls at the bottom of each page include a pause/play button, a time-
line cursor to locate or repeat sounds and a volume-control slider. By
downloading the Google video player rather than just playing back videos
within the Google video homepage, pupils were able to use these controls
to facilitate a greater degree of versatility in terms of managing audio (as
well as providing an enhanced quality of video playback). Some six videos
could be open at once within the Avant browser, each with controls
accessible and a thumbnail of the selected video playing.
The combination of Google Video in the Avant browser effectively
provided pupils with a sound-mixing environment. The sonic environ-
ment of the Internet, or specifically, in this case, the sounds attached to
videos uploaded to Google Video, are manipulated and controlled by the
DubDubDub player which is, itself, a conflation of existing technologies.
Audio exists on the Internet for a variety of reasons and serves a num-
ber of functions. It may arise incidentally by way of an embellishment to a
corporate website or it may have a specific function such as a radio station.
grime beats through emulating scratch sounds, sub-bass riffs, bass drum
grooves and claps. The original Baroque piece had been transformed
through a DubDubDub-inspired breakdown into a unique presentation of
improvised music and expression.
Conclusion
We [the NIME community] are in a unique position to raise the bar as to the
quality and range of experiences, devices, and the expressive capabilities they
inspire, particularly as it relates to music creation and education.
(Blaine 2005: 32)
Many music teachers are reluctant to use ICT extensively in their teaching.
It may be for a number of reasons: lack of confidence in their own ICT capa-
bilities; fear that their students know more than they do; lack of awareness of
the potential benefits of using ICT; concerns that technology-based music
may take over from more traditional approaches.
(Ashworth 2007: 3)
• Be differentiated (a place for the computational, for the acoustical and for
other tools)
• Be integrated in a variety of ways
• Allow opportunities for juxtapositions and for legible, embodied conduct 2. The DubDubDub
(how performers look for, reach for, touch, communicate in non-verbal Performance can be
accessed at
ways, etc.). http://video.google.co.
uk/videoplay?docid=2
This notion of ‘performance ecology’ reminds us that all musical inter- 3568487482597859
82&q=dubdubdub&to
actions are contextualised. Regardless of whether they are technological tal=4&start=0&num
in the digital sense, traditional in the musical sense, or a juxtaposition of =10&so=0&type=sea
the two, musical interactions between young people need to be under- rch&plindex=0.
stood in the context of a wider performance ecology. DubDubDub pre-
sented a new mode of artistic expression to a group of postgraduate
students and school pupils. In many senses it is character d by infra-
instrument design: it was based on few gestural movements; it was con-
strained in terms of operability; it was deliberately simple to use and
based on pre-existent web-based technologies. Did it produce or engen-
der simple music? That is a judgement to be made by the listener.
Readers of this article can make their own judgement by viewing and lis-
tening to the performance hosted on Google Video2 (UCan.tv 2007).
Either way, DubDubDub may be one tool that the contemporary music
educator can use to help develop young people’s musical performance
and improvisation skills.
Works cited
Ashworth, D. (2007), Electrifying Music: A guide to using ICT in music education,
London: Paul Hamlyn Foundation.
BBC (2007), www.bbc.co.uk/1xtra/events/urbanclassic/features/event.shtml
Accessed July 2007.
Blaine, T. (2005), ‘The Convergence of Alternate Controllers and Musical Interfaces
in Interactive Entertainment’, Proceedings of the 2005 International Conference on
New Interfaces for Music Expression, Vancouver, BC.
Bowers, J. (2003), ‘Improvisationing Machines’, Advanced Research in Aesthetics in the
Digital Arts, 4, http://www.ariada.uea.ac.uk/ariadatexts/ariada4/
Accessed 10 July 2007.
Bowers, J. and Archer, P. (2005), ‘Not Hyper, Not Meta, Not Cyber but Infra-
Instruments’, Proceedings of the 2005 International Conference on New Interfaces
for Music Expression, Vancouver, BC.
Buxton, B. (2005), ‘Causality and Striking the Right Note’, Proceedings of the 2005
International Conference on New Interfaces for Music Expression, Vancouver, BC.
Cage, J. (2007), ‘Roaratorio: An Irish Circus on Finnegan’s Wake, for voice, tape
and Irish musicians’, www.answers.com/topic/roaratorio-an-irish-circus-on-
finnegan-s-wake-for-voice-tape-irish-musicians?cat=entertainment
Accessed 4 July 2007.
Oore, S. (2005), ‘Learning Advanced Skills on New Instruments’, Proceedings of the
2005 International Conference on New Interfaces for Music Expression, Vancouver, BC.
Savage, J. (2002), ‘Electroacoustic Composition: Practical models of composition
with new technologies’, Journal of the Sonic Arts Network, 14, pp. 8–13.
—— (2003), ‘Informal Approaches to the Development of Young People’s
Composition Skills’, Music Education Research 5: 1, pp. 81–85.
—— (2005a), ‘Developing Compositional Pedagogies from the Sound Designer’s
World’, Music Education Research, 7: 3, pp. 331–48.
Acknowledgement
This project was funded by the Bernarr Rainbow Awards for Music Teachers and
supported by UCan.tv (www.ucan.tv).
Suggested citation
Savage, J. and Butcher J. (2007), ‘DubDubDub: Improvisation using the sounds of
the World Wide Web,’ Journal of Music, Technology and Education 1: 1,
pp. 83–96, doi: 10.1386/ jmte.1.1.83/1
Contributor details
Jonathan Savage is a Senior Lecturer in Music Education at the Institute of
Education, Manchester Metropolitan University. His main research interests lie in the
field of developing innovative uses of new technologies within the music curriculum.
He is Managing Director of UCan.tv, a not-for-profit company that produces engaging
educational software and hardware including Sound2Game (www.sound2game.net)
and Hand2Hand (www.hand2hand.co.uk). Free moodle courses are available at
www.ucan.me.uk. Contact: Dr Jonathan Savage, Institute of Education, Manchester
Metropolitan University, 799 Wilmslow Road, Didsbury, Manchester, M20 2RR, UK.
E-mail: j.savage@mmu.ac.uk
Jason Butcher is a deputy head teacher and Head of Expressive Arts at Egerton
High School in Trafford, Manchester. As well as over twenty years’ experience of
managing creative and educational projects with funding from a broad range of
organ s, he has a range of pedagogical, technological, creative and design skills and
has a strong interest communication, teaching and learning in ways that build on
pupils’ latent interests in new media.
Articles
7–21 The discipline that never was: current developments in music
Journal of
technology in higher education in Britain
23–35
Carola Boehm
Crossing borders: issues in music technology education
Giselle M. d. S. Ferreira
Music, Technology
37–55 Reframing creativity and technology: promoting pedagogic
change in music education
Pamela Burnard
and Education
57–67 Problem solving with learning technology in the music studio
Andrew King and Paul Vickers
69–81 The ElectroAcoustic Resource Site (EARS)
Leigh Landy
83–96 DubDubDub: Improvisation using the sounds of the World Wide Web
Jonathan Savage and Jason Butcher