Composed music that intentionally exploits sound localization
Spatial music is composed music that intentionally exploits sound localization. Though present in Western music from biblical times in the form of the antiphon, as a component specific to new musical techniques the concept of spatial music (Raummusik, usually translated as "space music") was introduced as early as 1928 in Germany.[1]
The term spatialisation is connected especially with electroacoustic music to denote the projection and localization of sound sources in physical or virtual space or sound's spatial movement in space.
Context
The term "spatial music" indicates music in which the location and movement of sound sources is a primary compositional parameter and a central feature for the listener. It may involve a single, mobile sound source, or multiple, simultaneous, stationary or mobile sound events in different locations.
There are at least three distinct categories when plural events are treated spatially:[2]
essentially independent events separated in space, like simultaneous concerts, each with a strong signaling character
one or several such signaling events, separated from more "passive" reverberating background complexes
Technological developments have led to broader distribution of spatial music via smartphones since at least 2011,[12] to include sounds experienced via Global Positioning System localization (BLUEBRAIN,[13] Matmos,[14] others) and visual inertial odometry through augmented reality (TCW,[15][16] others).
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^Maconie, Robin (2005). Other Planets: The Music of Karlheinz Stockhausen (Lanham, Maryland, Toronto, Oxford: The Scarecrow Press.): 296. ISBN0-8108-5356-6.
^Jakelski, Lisa (2009) "Górecki's Scontri and Avant-Garde Music in Cold War Poland", The Journal of Musicology 26, no. 2 (Spring): 205–239. Citation on p. 219.
^Solomon, Jason Wyatt (2007), "Spatialization in Music: The Analysis and Interpretation of Spatial Gestures", Ph.D. diss. (Athens: University of Georgia): p. 60.
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