Unobtrusive notification based on auditory changes in ambient music

Author(s):  
Yuuki Muranaka ◽  
Mohammed Al-Sada ◽  
Tatsuo Nakajima
Keyword(s):  
2009 ◽  
Vol 44 (3) ◽  
pp. 449-468 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jakob Frank ◽  
Thomas Lidy ◽  
Ewald Peiszer ◽  
Ronald Genswaider ◽  
Andreas Rauber
Keyword(s):  

2017 ◽  
Vol 14 (2) ◽  
pp. 305-333
Author(s):  
VICTOR SZABO

AbstractIn the liner notes to his albumAmbient 1: Music for Airports(1978), Brian Eno (1948–) defined Ambient music in contradistinction to Muzak's ‘derivative’ instrumental pop arrangements. Ambient music's historians and critics have often followed Eno by describing Ambient music as an alternative to conventional ‘background’ or ‘programmed’ music for commercial spaces. Such descriptions can be misleading, however, given that Ambient music's dominant mode of reception is selective personal consumption, not public administration. This article investigates the aesthetics of Eno'sAirports, and elucidates the organizing role of the Ambient genre, within their primary reception context of personal recorded music listening. A comparison with The Black Dog'sMusic for Real Airports(2010) shows how Ambient music then and now reflexively affords atmospheric use by translating a sense of physical dwelling and passage into mixed musical moods. By expressing ambivalenceaboutthe reality of airports and air travel, these Ambient records characteristically convey apprehension about the technological administration of human experience – a phenomenon that includes personal recorded music listening.


2018 ◽  
Vol 13 (3) ◽  
pp. 211
Author(s):  
Antonio Francisco Alaminos-Fernández

The twentieth and twenty-first century have been a temporary canvas where two closely related concepts have broadened, both in terms of modernity and supermodernity: ambient music and the development of urban spaces. Both phenomena undergo a development, interaction and sustained change process, largely caused by technological changes. For the purpose of this study, first the concept of "non-places" and its change from physical spaces to virtual spaces will be presented. In second place, the development of ambient music is specifically considered; first regarding the close relationship that it establishes with non-places and then the generation of atmospheres through collective sound spheres. Subsequent technological transformations spread and fragment the associations between non-places and music, enabling personal atmospheres through individual spheres. At present, technological developments allow virtual non-places to take shape (Augé), which are environmentally filled thanks to playlists through streaming services. Subsystems of delocalised networked spheres and temporary spheres are established, yet they are emotionally contiguous. This article presents the humanising role that music has experienced within this urban growth process in western societies, which have developed over the last century.


2021 ◽  
Vol 74 (1) ◽  
pp. 43-90
Author(s):  
Victor Szabo

Abstract Music from the Hearts of Space, a freeform music program that aired across Northern California on KPFA-FM Pacifica Radio from 1973, set forth an expansive transgeneric vision of contemplative atmospheric “space music” whose properties, in the following decades, would become more popularly codified as either “new age” or “ambient.” Histories of these latter genres typically separate out ambient’s avant-garde lineage and secular functionalism from new age’s therapeutic and spiritual concerns; but an examination of Hearts’s first decade on the air, leading up to its 1983 syndication via National Public Radio’s satellite network, reveals a sonic and cultural milieu that belies this eventual generic split. Through investigation of Hearts’s private archive and interviews with the program’s host Stephen Hill, as well as industry research, cultural-historical study, and style analysis, I situate the genesis of Hearts’s proto-ambient sound within the Bay Area’s new age movement of the 1970s and early 1980s. Informed by the metaphor of the global media environment established in systems theory and popularized by Marshall McLuhan and Stewart Brand, artists and media producers within this grassroots technoculture designed and spread “alternative” personal media for the development of holistic awareness. These media included slow, reverberant, hypnotic recorded music, as curated by Hill and his cohost Anna Turner under the guiding concept of “space music.” This early history and analysis of Hearts’s space music as an atmospheric medium for attuning the listening self to a worldwide media ecology deepens and complicates genealogies that isolate the formation of ambient music from that of new age, revealing a cross-pollination of highbrow and countercultural ideals that led many musicians associated with the new age movement to similar sonic conclusions to those of ambient music architect Brian Eno.


Author(s):  
John T. Lysaker

Chapter 4 explores and theorizes Eno’s approach to ambient music. It begins with a clear precursor, Erik Satie’s musique d’ameublement—furniture music. Like Satie, Eno sought sounds that could blend into and color various situations without commanding the attention of the hearer. But he also wanted music that could engage listeners who elect to attend to the activity of the assembled sounds, which distances it from other background music like Muzak. Because “ambient” has exploded into a diverse musical genre, Music for Airports is contrasted with other ambient works from the like of Aphex Twin, Moby, Gas, and Thomas Köner. What seems to distinguish Music for Airports is its ability to elicit our attention without captivating it through musical developments. Instead, it initiates a kind of reverie, opening spaces for thought in ordinary living environments.


Paragraph ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 33 (3) ◽  
pp. 392-409 ◽  
Author(s):  
Scott Wilson

This article takes its point of departure from late Lacan's meditations on the incompatibility of psychoanalysis with Japanese culture due to its non-European linguistic basis. The article argues that this emphasis on language narrowly conceived fails to keep pace with the interconnected, multi-media, all-encompassing nature of the unconscious today. Illustrating this point, the article focuses on the figure of the hikikomori: middle-class Japanese youths who have withdrawn from all conventional social contact to indulge exclusively computer-based interactions. Thanks to the overlap with the related figure of the ‘Bedroom DJ’, the analysis then moves on to the ambient music of Richard D. James, aka Aphex Twin. It argues for the validity of the concept of an ‘audio unconscious’ distinct from Lacan's unconscious ‘structured like a language’. The final part of the article, however, examines one of James's music videos and discerns in it modes of jouissance that psychoanalysis can still describe.


2020 ◽  
Vol 179 ◽  
pp. 02109
Author(s):  
Qingli Liu

Environmental music, or ambient music, refers to music played in certain conditions in order to achieve a specific function or effect. In China, environmental music is rarely used in factory plants. The environment for physical work is filled with noises and less tranquil than the mental work environment. Most employees in a factory plant are physical laborers. The present study first selects environmental music with certain characteristics and apply computerized waveform analysis to the pieces to identify their similarities and differences. Next, music is played, in two different experiments, in the assembly plant of a certain fabrication factory. Its impact on the emotion and productivity of employees is measured and discussed. Further, this work will explore the practical impact of environmental music on human factors in the factory plant through the analysis of experimental data. Experiment results demonstrate that music tempo has the most prominent effect on productivity in the factory plant being studied. Music with a moderato tempo can significantly reduce fatigue experienced during work, create a pleasant work ambiance and enhance the average productivity by 2.92%.


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