I found a review by Joseph Sannicandro of my music online. His blog gives a full acount of the AKOUSMA festival.
Really interesting to see some initial thoughts on Javaari, although a little on the negative side, plus there are some major misconceptions about what acousmatic music should or should not be!:
"Manuela Blackburn,
PhD., is an electroustic composer from the UK, and also a lecturer on
music technology at Liverpool Hope University. I mention her academic
training in part because her work has some of the qualities one might
expect, utilizing Max/MSP and presenting her work in a very controlled
manner. I don’t mean this in a derogatory way; this is by no means the
sort of overly cerebral Computer Music that often comes out of the
academe. The program consisted of four prepared pieces, the last which
was exchanged in favor of a recently completed piece, the first of a
planned trilogy utilizing Indian music samples. That last piece
incorporated tabla and sitar, which I found to be not very compelling.
Acousmatic music is meant to obscure the source material, but both
instruments were clearly recognizable, not to mention identified by the
composer in her address to the audience beforehand. Freed from their
original context but still identifiable, they were utilized in way that
didn’t resonate with me. The philosophy (or spirituality) of Indian
music is an inherent part of its structures, eg. the drone, or the
meter/tala, and underlies the music (as social practice, as art).
Manipulated and cut up in this way that impact is lost, so their
inclusion begins to seem like an necessary exoticization rather than
teasing out something new. The first three pieces were more appealing,
however, at times verging on glitch territory. Each featured a steady
momentum, almost impatient, never stopping or repeating. The
compositions were dynamic and propulsive in a very thoughtful way. The
audience was seated with the composer’s mixing console behind us, with
some space available to lie down in center of the front rows" ....by Joseph Sannicandro
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