에 의해 게시 apeSoft
1. The original version (with an analog technical set-up) requires a solo instrumentalist as 4 assistants (technicians): three assistants operating the opening and closing of sliders (L/R channels)–respectively the microphone, delay-line and output–and an assistant for the change of time values of the taps in the delay-line.
2. "Solo" (für Melodieninstrument mit Rückkopplung) by Karlheinz Stockhausen is a piece written for any solo melodic instrument and employs a feedback system to allow the soloist to create polyphonic music.
3. SOLO [Nr.19] is an algorithm that aims to implement digitally the original analog set-up for the performance of six versions of Solo für melodieninstrument mit rückkopplung by Karlheinz Stockhausen.
4. *** This app is for the Musician who want to play SOLO [Nr.19] of Karlheinz Stockhausen for Study, Live Performance, Concerts, Lessons etc... It have not sense to employ this app otherwise.
5. The score (Universal Edition-Wien, 1969) consists of six pages of music and six pages of Form- Schema (the number six can be considered a key element), in addition to explanatory notes (very detailed) for the performance the composition.
6. "Solo" uses the technique of recording onto tape with a single head together with a moveable arrangment of playback heads, allowing for the creation of complex sounds through accumulation.
7. SOLO [Nr.19], performs the work of four technicians for each of the six Stockhausen's versions.
8. Through a feedback circuit, the sections are recorded more or less densely stacked and processed with a variable delay time; the result is then played by two sets of speakers and mixed with the direct sound of the soloist.
9. Indeed many choices are left to the soloist and cover almost all the events: from the selection of a version, the positioning of the material, the types of tonal variation requests, the order of pages and more.
10. In reality these faculty are provided as input by the composer through the management of macroscopic or microscopic order parameters, restricting the possible versions (virtually infinite) at a predefined or definable set of possibilities.
11. In this piece, the role of the interpreter is very important in the creation of a performance that is always unique and unrepeatable every time.
또는 아래 가이드를 따라 PC에서 사용하십시오. :
PC 버전 선택:
소프트웨어 설치 요구 사항:
직접 다운로드 가능합니다. 아래 다운로드 :
설치 한 에뮬레이터 애플리케이션을 열고 검색 창을 찾으십시오. 일단 찾았 으면 SOLO [Nr.19] 검색 막대에서 검색을 누릅니다. 클릭 SOLO [Nr.19]응용 프로그램 아이콘. 의 창 SOLO [Nr.19] Play 스토어 또는 앱 스토어의 스토어가 열리면 에뮬레이터 애플리케이션에 스토어가 표시됩니다. Install 버튼을 누르면 iPhone 또는 Android 기기 에서처럼 애플리케이션이 다운로드되기 시작합니다. 이제 우리는 모두 끝났습니다.
"모든 앱 "아이콘이 표시됩니다.
클릭하면 설치된 모든 응용 프로그램이 포함 된 페이지로 이동합니다.
당신은 아이콘을 클릭하십시오. 그것을 클릭하고 응용 프로그램 사용을 시작하십시오.
다운로드 SOLO [Nr.19] Mac OS의 경우 (Apple)
다운로드 | 개발자 | 리뷰 | 평점 |
---|---|---|---|
Free Mac OS의 경우 | apeSoft | 7 | 4.43 |
PC를 설정하고 Windows 11에서 SOLO [Nr.19] 앱을 다운로드하는 단계:
*** This app is for the Musician who want to play SOLO [Nr.19] of Karlheinz Stockhausen for Study, Live Performance, Concerts, Lessons etc... It have not sense to employ this app otherwise. You can hear fully the first version performed by Enrico Francioni (Contrabass) and the second version performed by Simonetta Sargenti (Violin) *** SOLO [Nr.19] is an algorithm that aims to implement digitally the original analog set-up for the performance of six versions of Solo für melodieninstrument mit rückkopplung by Karlheinz Stockhausen. The original composition was conceived for five persons. Four technicians plus the main instrument performer. SOLO [Nr.19], performs the work of four technicians for each of the six Stockhausen's versions. "Solo" (für Melodieninstrument mit Rückkopplung) by Karlheinz Stockhausen is a piece written for any solo melodic instrument and employs a feedback system to allow the soloist to create polyphonic music. Written in 1966 with its world premiere in Tokyo in the same year, its origin dates back to the same period as the composer's work "Kontakte". "Solo" uses the technique of recording onto tape with a single head together with a moveable arrangment of playback heads, allowing for the creation of complex sounds through accumulation. The original version (with an analog technical set-up) requires a solo instrumentalist as 4 assistants (technicians): three assistants operating the opening and closing of sliders (L/R channels)–respectively the microphone, delay-line and output–and an assistant for the change of time values of the taps in the delay-line. During a performance a part of what the instrumentalist plays is captured by a two-channel recorder. Through a feedback circuit, the sections are recorded more or less densely stacked and processed with a variable delay time; the result is then played by two sets of speakers and mixed with the direct sound of the soloist. The score (Universal Edition-Wien, 1969) consists of six pages of music and six pages of Form- Schema (the number six can be considered a key element), in addition to explanatory notes (very detailed) for the performance the composition. "Solo" is one of those compositions by the author employing "controlled alea" as a compositional language. Indeed many choices are left to the soloist and cover almost all the events: from the selection of a version, the positioning of the material, the types of tonal variation requests, the order of pages and more. In reality these faculty are provided as input by the composer through the management of macroscopic or microscopic order parameters, restricting the possible versions (virtually infinite) at a predefined or definable set of possibilities. In this piece, the role of the interpreter is very important in the creation of a performance that is always unique and unrepeatable every time.