1,531 research outputs found
Loop Work & Accomplices: Groove and digital aesthetics within collaborative musical works - Jamie Howell PhD thesis - Accompanying Materials
Scores, Audio and Video supporting the PhD thesis Loop Work & Accomplices: Groove and digital aesthetics within collaborative musical works by Jamie Howell
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Loop Work 1
A set of loop-based miniatures for Plus-MinusA Sandwich Short Of A PicnicTrickle Down AestheticsLoop Aware Exaggerate; Mute Silent ReduceBlown Fus
Loop Work 2: For Alice & Moss
This piece is part of a set collectively known as 'Loop Work' which explores loops and performer agency in a variety of waysDivine InterventionHárom Száz Harminc HáromWitness StatementRealignmentDisruptio
Sigh
A fixed media piece arising from a collaboration with violinist and keyboard player Claire Ellis. The work was created using an iterative process of improvisation and electronic manipulation
Cómplices
A collaborative piece involving an iterative process which developed over the course of the creation of the work. The process was a combination of recordings of improvisations on bass clarinet and electronic manipulation of the result
First person – Jamie Whitelaw
First Person is a series of interviews with the first authors of a selection of papers published in Journal of Cell Science, helping researchers promote themselves alongside their papers. Jamie Whitelaw is first author on ‘ CYRI-B loss promotes enlarged mature focal adhesions and restricts microtubule and ERC1 access to the cell leading edge’, published in JCS. Jamie conducted the research described in this article while a post-doctoral researcher in Prof. Laura Machesky's lab at CRUK Scotland Institute, Glasgow, UK. He is now a Lecturer at University of the West of Scotland, Blantyre, investigating host–pathogen interactions with a focus on the role of the host cytoskeleton
Kathleen Jamie, Chitra Ramaswamy & Amanda Thomson: Antlers of Water - Live Event
‘When we read and write, when we love our fellow creatures, when we walk on the beach, when we just listen and notice, we are not little cogs in the machine, but part of the remedy.’ These luminous words by Kathleen Jamie form part of the introduction to Antlers of Water, an outstanding collection of contemporary Scottish writing about nature and landscape.
The generosity of Jamie’s approach as editor of the collection goes beyond the stellar selection of contributors such as Amy Liptrot, Karine Polwart and Malachy Tallack: she also invokes the agency of readers to make a difference. ‘If, by reading, you are encouraged or confirmed in your love of the natural world, if you’re inspired simply to… look outside, then our job is done.’
In a discussion led by the BBC's Clare English, Jamie is joined by award-winning journalist Chitra Ramaswamy as well as visual artist and writer Amanda Thomson – both contributors to the anthology – to discuss Scotland, landscape and the more-than-human world around us.
This is a live event, with an author Q&A.
Part of the Edinburgh International Book Festival Making Climate Change Personal festival theme
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