Feigning Humanity: Virtual Instruments, Simulation and Performativity

This article is concerned with the ways virtual instruments simulate acoustic human performance. In particular, it examines two case studies—virtual orchestras and virtual singers—to consider how their design and implementation seek to express human music performance by adopting the micro and macro...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Eve Klein
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Association for the Study of Popular Music 2016-01-01
Series:IASPM Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://iaspmjournal.net/index.php/IASPM_Journal/article/view/785/pdf
Description
Summary:This article is concerned with the ways virtual instruments simulate acoustic human performance. In particular, it examines two case studies—virtual orchestras and virtual singers—to consider how their design and implementation seek to express human music performance by adopting the micro and macro sonic variations of timing, pitch, dynamics, articulation, and ambience, and other limitations imposed by the physical relationship between the player and the instrument. By feigning the acoustic markers of expressive human musical performance, virtual instrument designers and composer-users encourage the listener to produce, in themselves, the experience of hearing an orchestra or singer. Users also contribute to the recontextualisation of human performance by feeding back into the cultures and development cycles of virtual instrument software, where sonic gestures are recurrently refreshed. The construction of virtual instruments as devices of musical expressivity is, therefore an evolving, mutually constructed, and performative endeavour.
ISSN:2079-3871
2079-3871