1 / 19

A Brief History of Interactivity in Performance

very. A Brief History of Interactivity in Performance. ^. ^. at a distance.  PLEASE VIEW IN SLIDE SHOW MODE TO ACTIVATE AUDIO . Pre-Human Interactive Performance?. Download Video File from http://www.schubincafe.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/ CCRMA_World_Opera_WhaleSong_Slide2.wmv

linda-reese
Download Presentation

A Brief History of Interactivity in Performance

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. very A Brief History of Interactivityin Performance ^ ^ at a distance PLEASE VIEW IN SLIDE SHOW MODE TO ACTIVATE AUDIO Mark Schubin, World Opera, 2011 May 17

  2. Pre-Human Interactive Performance? Download Video File from http://www.schubincafe.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/05/CCRMA_World_Opera_WhaleSong_Slide2.wmv CLICK MOUSE TO ADVANCE TO NEXT SLIDE The Oceania Project http://songlinesofthewhales.org/ Mark Schubin, World Opera, 2011 May 17

  3. Perhaps Not • Speed of sound in water ~ 0.92 miles/second • Singer 100 miles away hears song 92 seconds late & response arrives another 92 seconds later, more than three minutes! Christophe Dang Ngoc Chan http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Onde_compression_impulsion_1d_30.gif Mark Schubin, World Opera, 2011 May 17

  4. Human Communication Frederick Remington Mark Schubin, World Opera, 2011 May 17

  5. Jack Johnson v. Jim Jeffries Reno, NV, 1910 Result learned within hours by explorer Thomas Cameron Taylor in central Africa 180 miles from the nearest telegraph line drum “telegraph” Assam, India Mark Schubin, World Opera, 2011 May 17

  6. Map of High-Speed Wireless Communications System in France Mark Schubin, World Opera, 2011 May 17

  7. The Original Telegraph: 1793-1852(-1880in Sweden) replacing existing infrastructure is difficult! Mark Schubin, World Opera, 2011 May 17

  8. Harmonic telegraph, 1874 Telegraph-controlled puppet, 1851 Mark Schubin, World Opera, 2011 May 17

  9. The New York Times, April 3, 1877 Mark Schubin, World Opera, 2011 May 17

  10. “The operator in Providence plays the banjo, the Worcester operator the harmonica, and gently the others sing. Some tune will be started by the players and the other will sing. To appreciate the effect, one must have a transmitter close to his ear. The music will sound as clear as though it were in the same room.” Boston Evening Record, about an 1891 concert organized by operators in Worcester, Fall River, Boston, Springfield, Providence and New York Mark Schubin, World Opera, 2011 May 17

  11. Satellite Arts Project 1977 • Kit Galloway & Sherrie Rabinowitz • NASA facilities • GEO delay ~ ¼-second http://ecafe.com/getty/table.html Mark Schubin, World Opera, 2011 May 17

  12. AES ISDN Concert 1995 • APT codecs • Jesse Rae, Scottish Borders • Dan Dean, Seattle • Angus Clark, New York • Audience in New York Mark Schubin, World Opera, 2011 May 17

  13. An Olympic Thought The five Olympic rings represent the five continents; why not open the 1998 Games with choruses singing together on five continents? Mark Schubin, World Opera, 2011 May 17

  14. Distributed But Not Interactive • Nagano Winter Olympics 1998 • orchestra in concert hall fed • choruses in Beijing, Berlin, Cape Town, Nagano, New York, & Sydney with multi-hop satellite delays, which fed • Olympics stadium after frame-rate conversion & multi-hop satellite delays, where 2000 chorus & 50,000 spectators sang with speaker delays to 228.25 ms Mark Schubin, World Opera, 2011 May 17 http://arte.sc-a.jp/3w/ardbf/olympic98/index_e.html

  15. Light 299,792,458 m/s in a vacuum (~186,282 MPH) slower in denser media ~ 185,000 m/s in an optical fiber Sound 0 in a vacuum no sound in a pure vacuum faster in denser media ~ 343 m/s in dry, room-temp. air ~ 1125 ft/s ~ 1484 m/s in water ~ 5120 m/s in iron “I have, by the help of a distended wire propagated the sound to a very considerable distance in an instant” – Robert Hooke, Micrographia Speeds pulse dispersion Mark Schubin, World Opera, 2011 May 17

  16. Circus Maximus, Ancient Rome 2037 ft. long speed of sound ~ 1125’/s ~1.8 sec. one end to other Mark Schubin, World Opera, 2011 May 17

  17. Metropolitan Opera House about three US TV frames of acoustic delay more than four US TV frames of acoustic delay Mark Schubin, World Opera, 2011 May 17

  18. Stockholm-Palo Alto: 5379 miles direct • ~ 29 ms for light in a vacuum • acoustically equivalent to about a 33-foot separation • Metropolitan Opera proscenium is 54 feet across • unfortunately, no direct vacuum pipe • add fiber delay, routing delay, processing delay: ~123 ms, 138 feet • Porgy and Bess will be pretty far apart! Mark Schubin, World Opera, 2011 May 17

  19. Let’s See! This presentation will be available soon in the “Get the Download” section of SchubinCafe.com This concludes this presentation. Mark Schubin, World Opera, 2011 May 17

More Related