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Novak, Yann  

Mandy-Suzanne Wong

(b Madison, WI, 1979). American sound artist, installation artist, electronic composer, laptop performer, and visual artist. Based in Los Angeles, he has collaborated with Will Long, Mise_En_Scene, and Marc Manning, among others, and exhibited and performed throughout the United States and Europe. He owns and operates Dragon’s Eye Recordings, which promotes promising but under-recognized sound artists and composers.

Novak’s installations, along with his electronic compositions and performances, typically consist of quiet, subtly shifting textures. These sounds are often field recordings of environmental sounds, digitally transformed into exquisite drones or slow-moving melodies, as in +ROOM (2009). Novak’s work is often associated with Ambient music, demonstrating the fluid, and indeed questionable, nature of the boundary between music and field recording or, generally speaking, between music and sound art. However, unlike ambient music, Novak’s pieces are often programmatic. The goal, in many of his works, is to transform documentation into narrative by digitally altering prerecorded sounds and images. His alterations often consist not of fleshing out sounds and images by adding to their characteristics, but of digitally erasing their distinguishing features. He may obliterate the movement that we typically see in video, reducing it to a static expanse of color. Similarly, he alters environmental sounds beyond recognition into contemplative textures....

Article

Silva, Cândido [Candido] Inácio [Ignacio] da  

Marcelo Hazan

(b Rio de Janeiro, 1799/1800; d Rio de Janeiro, May 29, 1838). Brazilian composer and tenor. His birth certificate is not extant (the date provided is based on information from an 1821 customs record). At an early age he entered the music course for boys taught by José Maurício Nunes Garcia. Subsequently, he was handpicked by Prince João to take violin and viola lessons from an unknown instructor in preparation for future admission in the royal chamber. In 1820 he joined the royal chapel choir without compensation. In 1827, under Prince Pedro, he petitioned for admission in the chamber orchestra or, optionally, for a promotion in the chapel choir, but precedence was given to other musicians in both instances.

Silva was gravely injured during a theft amidst the urban unrest that surrounded Pedro’s resignation in 1831. Not by coincidence, he appears as a founding signatory of the Sociedade Defensora, whose goals included enhancing the patrolling of Rio de Janeiro’s streets. Throughout the troubled 1830s, when costly operatic productions became unviable in Rio de Janeiro, Silva sang in unstaged performances promoted by the Sociedade de Beneficência, the professional musicians’ association. In ...