Can you suggest some good artwork link done in jitter ?
Hi,
I have been using Max/MSP for interactive music composition for many years. A piece of mine can be found in the following link (http://soundscape.web1000.com/moth_and_fire.mov). I have studied Peter Elsea's jitter tutorial and cycling74 jitter tutorial two years ago. I also saw some works from Youtube made in Jitter. However, I still feel that most of the works are either not attractive to me, or do not really need real-time method.
I composed several interactive music and hesitate about whether I should go further in real-time video field because I rarely saw a good model that combines real-time audio and video in an artistic way.
I was wondering if any one of you know some good video demonstration links of real-time audio-visual work realized in Jitter. Please send me the links if you think that real-time audio-visual work you saw is very cool in an artistic way rather than simply an experiment of interactive techniques.
Thank you very much.
Chien-Wen
I agree that there is not enough examples of Jitter work on the
internet. However, I think this has more to do with the state of
internet video distribution than with the medium of real-time video. A
lot of video artists I know refuse to use YouTube because of quality
issues, and hosting your own high-quality streams online can be very
costly. Also, recording a real-time video can sometimes be a major
hassle when the patch that you designed did not take recording to disk
into account, especially when OpenGL is involved.
That said, I highly recommend looking at (and contributing to) the
Flickr Jitter group pool:
http://www.flickr.com/groups/jitter/
Maybe something similar could be put together on youtube or a similar
service.
Cheers,
Andrew B.
here's a divx of my most recent reel. all of these clips were made with jitter in realtime, except for one which was made with ... wait for it ... nato modular. (first person to identify the nato clip gets a free drink on me in the future.)
and yes, youtube compression makes it useless for jitter work distro.
a friend of mine from my grad school class was working on/at/for (?)
some web startup looking to host HD video for artists, like a youtube
'select' for indy art pieces. Ill ask what/how that is going. Could
be a great resource if it takes off.
On Apr 27, 2007, at 2:05 PM, andrew benson wrote:
> I agree that there is not enough examples of Jitter work on the
> internet. However, I think this has more to do with the state of
> internet video distribution than with the medium of real-time
> video. A
> lot of video artists I know refuse to use YouTube because of quality
> issues, and hosting your own high-quality streams online can be very
> costly. Also, recording a real-time video can sometimes be a major
> hassle when the patch that you designed did not take recording to disk
> into account, especially when OpenGL is involved.
>
> That said, I highly recommend looking at (and contributing to) the
> Flickr Jitter group pool:
> http://www.flickr.com/groups/jitter/
>
> Maybe something similar could be put together on youtube or a similar
> service.
>
> Cheers,
> Andrew B.
v a d e //
www.vade.info
abstrakt.vade.info
I am a newbie. Where can I get Peter Elsea's jitter tutorial? I am very interesting of study it.
thanks
Hello Chien-Wen,
You can find a creative example of real-time audio-visual work the one
realized by japanese artist Ryochi Kurokawa.
Iu
Cheng Chien-Wen wrote:
>Hi,
>I have been using Max/MSP for interactive music composition for many years. A piece of mine can be found in the following link (http://soundscape.web1000.com/moth_and_fire.mov). I have studied Peter Elsea's jitter tutorial and cycling74 jitter tutorial two years ago. I also saw some works from Youtube made in Jitter. However, I still feel that most of the works are either not attractive to me, or do not really need real-time method.
>
>I composed several interactive music and hesitate about whether I should go further in real-time video field because I rarely saw a good model that combines real-time audio and video in an artistic way.
>
>I was wondering if any one of you know some good video demonstration links of real-time audio-visual work realized in Jitter. Please send me the links if you think that real-time audio-visual work you saw is very cool in an artistic way rather than simply an experiment of interactive techniques.
>
>Thank you very much.
>
>Chien-Wen
>
>
>
> Where can I get Peter Elsea's jitter tutorial? I am very interesting of study it.
linked here :
http://music.arts.uci.edu/dobrian/CAMP07/links.htm
easy.
that's [242.plasma] at ~2min in.
_f
Am 27.04.2007 um 20:18 schrieb joshua goldberg:
>
> here's a divx of my most recent reel. all of these clips were made
> with jitter in realtime, except for one which was made with ...
> wait for it ... nato modular. (first person to identify the nato
> clip gets a free drink on me in the future.)
>
> http://goldbergs.com/art/montage-web-medium.divx
>
> and yes, youtube compression makes it useless for jitter work distro.
#|
fredrikolofsson.com klippav.org musicalfieldsforever.com
|#
YES! when are you next in new york? :)
On Apr 29, 2007, at 7:23 PM, Fredrik Olofsson wrote:
> easy.
> that's [242.plasma] at ~2min in.
> _f
>
> Am 27.04.2007 um 20:18 schrieb joshua goldberg:
>
>>
>> here's a divx of my most recent reel. all of these clips were
>> made with jitter in realtime, except for one which was made
>> with ... wait for it ... nato modular. (first person to identify
>> the nato clip gets a free drink on me in the future.)
>>
>> http://goldbergs.com/art/montage-web-medium.divx
>>
>> and yes, youtube compression makes it useless for jitter work distro.
>
>
> #|
> fredrikolofsson.com klippav.org musicalfieldsforever.com
> |#
>
self promotion time>>>
www.axiom-crux.net, the videos named chaos parabola and universal flow both utlize jitter as well as a few of the others. MOCA sensor dance, and MAC live also were live performances using jitter.
;)
Check out vades page, hes got bunch of stuff to, and andrew b's got some good stuff on youtube!
i really like kurokawa works.
but how do you know he uses jitter?
i never found any info about his methods or applications...
do you have some link?
any info can be helpful.
thx in advance
igor
hi friends, you can take a look at this tutorial:http://www.videoconverterfactory.com/tips/identify-music-in-youtube.html