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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Dave and Alex of Slub performing live in London. The left screen shows one performer's CLI, the right shows the other performer's "Scheme bricks" coding interface, and the top shows a custom-made game environment through which audience members influence the music generation.

Slub is an algorave group formed in 2000 by Adrian Ward and Alex McLean, joined by Dave Griffiths in 2005 and Alexandra Cardenas in 2017. They are known for making their music exclusively from their own generative software, projecting their screens so their audience can see their handmade interfaces.[1] Their music is improvised, and advertised as falling within the ambient gabba genre.[2][3]

Since 2005 slub performances have been exclusively live coded, using a variety of different self-built language environments.[4] Fluxus, a Scheme game engine; and Tidal, a pure functional DSL embedded in Haskell.

In 2011, while on the way to a gig, Alex McLean and Nick Collins invented the Algorave.[5]

References

  1. ^ Shulgin, Alexei (2003), "Listen to the Tools", Read_me 2.3 reader, Helsinki: NIFCA, ISBN 951-8955-74-3
  2. ^ "Slub performance". 2009. Retrieved 22 April 2010.
  3. ^ Slub-trio, Muziek moet het visuele volgen, niet omgekeerd (dutch interview)
  4. ^ Armitage, Tom (24 September 2009). "Slub: Making music with live computer code". Wired Magazine. Retrieved 22 April 2010.
  5. ^ Cheshire, Tom (29 August 2013). "Hacking meets clubbing with the 'algorave'". Wired Magazine. Retrieved 29 August 2013.

External links

This page was last edited on 17 January 2022, at 22:56
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