Dimitri Voudouris
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dimitri Voudouris [Δημητριος Βουδουρης] - [born 1961 in Athens, Greece] an electroacoustic composer and pharmacist living in South Africa who pioneered UNYAZI,[1] the first electronic music festival and symposium on the African continent in 2005 that took place at University of the Witwatersrand, in Johannesburg, South Africa. He lectures part-time at Witwatersrand University in electronic music composition.
He composes for acoustic instruments, electronic sound sources, multimedia, including dance and theatre. He bases his technical and theoretical compositional approach in research of cognitive psycho-acoustic behavioral patterns in humans and the behavior of sound in relationship to continued environmental changes. His socio-cultural interests have led him to research the survival of music in the 21st century and the impact that media and technology have on the composer.
His Impilo (2000-2001), which means life, uses field recordings and tries to capture both commercial media and wild-life. These natural sounds were then mixed together with electronic media to combine two extreme fields of sound. The composer said[1] that "I tried to create a warm, natural environment in which the listener is surrounded in everyday life." Voudouris added that this analysis of sound has allowed him to discover man and his environment, no matter how technical and complex it may be. "The energy flowing through both animate and inanimate objects is the same - it is the space that constantly changes our everyday experiences."
Contents |
[edit] Compositions
- IMPILO [2000-2001] Computer music with prepared environment.
- SIZOBONANA [2002] Field recordings, African percussion, Computer processing.
- PALMOS [2002] Hammond Organ B4, Bandoneon, Oboe, Computer processing.
- NPFAI.1 [2002] Kalimba, Kundi, Granular synthesis.
- NPFAI.2 [2002-2003] Piccolo, Flute, Bass Clarinet, French Horn, Hindewhu, Computer processing.
- NPFAI.3 [2003] African marimba, Computer processing.
- NPFAI.3 + WM [2004] Western Marimba and tape.
- PRAXIS [2003-2004] Orthodox Christian Male Choir, Magnetic Tape and Computer processing.
- LEXICOPHONY.1 [2004] Computer Music
[edit] Contemporary Dance and Multimedia Theater
- L22P08M02 [2002-2005] Scene 1-3: Multimedia theatre - Field recording of demonstration, Dance Theatre, Poetry, Visual Design, Computer assisted processing.
- TAXIDERMIE [2006] Contemporary Dance in collaboration with the dance company Projet-Insitu [France] - Contrabass, Grand piano, Violin, Xylophone, M'bira, Field recordings, Computer assisted processing.
[edit] Film
- JHB626GP [2006] Short compositions and field recordings for the video work of Ismail Farouk exhibited at the Venice Architecture Biennale 2006.