Jo Thomas (born 1972) is a composer, sound artist, producer, and performer of electronic music based in London. [1] She works primarily with electronic sound, with a focus on fine detail and abstraction combining technological, biological and emotive thematic elements. [2] [3] [4] Her work utilises a wide range of sound sources including field recordings, voice, glitch, and synthesised sounds from various sources, including her own self-built instruments. [5]
She has released on record labels including Entr'acte, NMC and Holiday Records. [6] [7] Her work has been performed internationally, working with organisations in Italy, France, California, Brussels, Switzerland and Australia. [8]
Thomas has performed alongside artists including Will Dutta, Lara Jones, Charles Hayward, Maria Chavez, Lee Gamble, Phill Niblock and Squarepusher. [9] In 2012 she was awarded the Prix Ars Electronica Golden Nica prize in the category of Digital Musics and Sound for her work Crystal Sounds of a Synchrotron. [10] [11]
Thomas was born in 1972 in Aberystwyth, Wales. She has a BMus and MMus from Bangor University and gained a PhD from City University, London in electro-acoustic composition in 2005. [9] [12]
In 2011 Thomas created the piece Crystal Sounds Of A Synchrotron using sounds recorded at Diamond Light Source, the UK's national synchrotron light source facility in Harwell, Oxfordshire. The work was composed directly from frequencies generated by the particle accelerator and also uses binaural recording from locations inside Diamond's experimental hall, storage ring and beamlines. [13] She was awarded the 2012 Prix Ars Electronica Golden Nica prize in the category of Digital Musics and Sound Art for Crystal. [10] [14]
In 2015 Thomas was commissioned to create a large-scale sound installation as part of the 800th anniversary celebrations of Magna Carta. The resulting work Agna Rita was installed at The Collection museum in Lincoln for the Frequency Festival of Digital Culture. [15] The work combines musical and sonic elements and uses the frequency, rhythm and text from Magna Carta, exploring a union of medieval modalities and digital contemporary artefacts. [16]
The 2017 documentary film Little Tsunamis directed by Toby Clarkson features Thomas as one of three sound artists alongside Chris Watson and Daniel Wilson. [17] [18]
In 2018 Thomas created a new commissioned work for the touring Synth Remix project (2018). The piece, titled Nature's Numbers, is based on the work of Daphne Oram and Delia Derbyshire at the BBC Radiophonic Workshop. [5] [19] The project made use of the 2016 realisation of Oram's Mini-Oramics machine, created by Tom Richards, with Thomas as one of the composers chosen to pilot its use. [20]
In 2020 Thomas was commissioned to create a new musical work In A Still Place to be played on sculptural sound installation Speaking Tubes by IOU Theatre, Halifax. The piece explores different states of stillness whilst acknowledging sometimes rapid change. [21]
In 2007 she was commissioned by Ports of Call to compose an audio trail inspired by the history of Silvertown, London. [22] [23] She runs a soundwalking project in North London with her own label Soft Apple. [24]
Daphne Blake Oram was a British composer and electronic musician. She was one of the first British composers to produce electronic sound, and was an early practitioner of musique concrète in the UK. As a co-founder of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop, she was central to the development of British electronic music. Her uncredited scoring work on the 1961 film The Innocents helped to pioneer the electronic soundtrack.
Oramics is a drawn sound technique designed in 1957 by musician Daphne Oram. The machine was further developed in 1962 after receiving a grant from the Gulbenkian Foundation. The technique involves drawing on 35mm film strips to control the sound produced. Oramics was also the name used by Oram to refer to her studio and business interests generally.
Rafael Lozano-Hemmer is a Mexican-Canadian electronic artist living and working in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. He creates platforms for public participation by using robotic lights, digital fountains, computerized surveillance, and telematic networks. Inspired by phantasmagoria, carnival, and animatronics, his interactive works are “anti-monuments for people to self-represent.”
Jean-Claude Raoul Olivier Risset was a French composer, best known for his pioneering contributions to computer music. He was a former student of André Jolivet and former co-worker of Max Mathews at Bell Labs.
The Prix Ars Electronica is one of the best known and longest running yearly prizes in the field of electronic and interactive art, computer animation, digital culture and music. It has been awarded since 1987 by Ars Electronica.
Raul Alejandro Viñao is an Argentine composer based in London.
Joshua Davis is an American designer, technologist, author, and visual artist in new media.
Ryoji Ikeda is a Japanese visual and sound artist who currently lives and works in Paris, France. Ikeda's music is concerned primarily with sound in a variety of "raw" states, such as sine tones and noise, often using frequencies at the edges of the range of human hearing. Rhythmically, Ikeda's music is highly imaginative, exploiting beat patterns and, at times, using a variety of discrete tones and noise to create the semblance of a drum machine. His work also encroaches on the world of ambient music and lowercase; many tracks on his albums are concerned with slowly evolving soundscapes, with little or no sense of pulse.
Thomas Köner is a multimedia artist whose main interest lies in combining visual and auditory experiences. The BBC, in a review of Köner's work in 1997, calls him a "media artist," one who works between installation, sound art, ambient music and as one half of Porter Ricks dub techno. A noted characteristics of Köner's dark ambient style are low drones and static soundscapes evocative of desolate, Arctic places.
Carsten Nicolai is a German artist, musician and label owner. As a musician he is known under the pseudonym Alva Noto.
Olivier Alary is a Montreal-based musician and composer who has released his own recordings, as well as composing for film and exhibitions.
Pitch Black is a New Zealand electronica duo from Auckland.
Tosca are an Austrian music group consisting of Richard Dorfmeister and Rupert Huber. This is Dorfmeister's second such project, the first being Kruder & Dorfmeister. Tosca's first album, Opera, was released in 1997 by G-Stone Recordings.
FabricLive.31 is a DJ mix compilation album by The Glimmers, as part of the FabricLive Mix Series.
Gintas K is a sound artist born in Lithuania in 1969. He was the core member of the first Lithuanian industrial music group "Modus". Performances, actions, even short films shape the activities of "Modus".
Universal Everything is a digital art practice and design studio based in Sheffield, England. The studio was founded in 2004 by Matt Pyke, who is the creative director. Pyke studied botanical and technical illustration and then graphic design, before spending eight years at the Designers Republic (1996–2004).
Ars Electronica Linz GmbH is an Austrian cultural, educational and scientific institute active in the field of new media art, founded in Linz in 1979. It is based at the Ars Electronica Center (AEC), which houses the Museum of the Future, in the city of Linz. Ars Electronica's activities focus on the interlinkages between art, technology and society. It runs an annual festival, and manages a multidisciplinary media arts R&D facility known as the Futurelab. It also confers the Prix Ars Electronica awards.
Matt Heckert is an American sound artist, born in 1957. He was involved in Survival Research laboratories in the 1980s before becoming a machine musical artist.
Georgia Rodgers is a composer and acoustician from the United Kingdom, currently based in London.
Maja Smrekar is a Slovenian intermedia artist. In 2005 she graduated at the Department for Sculpture of Fine Art and Design Academy in Ljubljana. She also holds Master's degree in Video and New Media that she obtained at the same institution. She has exhibited in numerous institutions across the world. In 2017 she received the Golden Nica award at the Ars Electronica festival for her K-9_topology series. In this opus, which consist of four projects she addressed the topics of parallel evolution of human and dog. From 2008 she is a featured artist and production partner of Kapelica Gallery in Ljubljana.