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Erkki Kurenniemi

Erkki Juhani Kurenniemi (10 July 1941, Hämeenlinna, Finland – 1 May 2017,[1] Helsinki) was a Finnish designer, philosopher and artist, best known for his electronic music compositions and the electronic instruments he has designed. He is considered to have been one of the leading early pioneers of electronic music in Finland. Kurenniemi was also a science populariser, a futurologist, a pioneer of media culture, and an experimental film-maker.

Young Kurenniemi in 1965

Kurenniemi completed the majority of his instruments, electronic compositions and experimental films in the 1960s and 1970s. Between 1962 and 1974, he designed and constructed ten electronic instruments and studio devices when he was working as a volunteer assistant at the Department of Musicology at the University of Helsinki,[2] and as designer at Digelius Electronics Finland Oy, founded in 1970. In addition to the Musicology Department, Kurenniemi also worked as assistant and senior designer at the Department of Theoretical Physics from 1962 to 1973. Kurenniemi earned a Bachelor of Science degree in 1968.[citation needed]

He subsequently worked as a designer of control systems for industrial robots at Oy W. Rosenlew Ab (1976–78), and as a designer of industrial automation and robotic systems at Nokia’s cable machinery division (1980–86). He also worked as a specialist consultant and Head of Planning at the Science Centre Heureka in Vantaa, Finland (1987–98).

Kurenniemi received the Finland Prize of the Ministry of Education and Culture in 2003.[3] In 2004, he was elected honorary fellow of the University of Art and Design Helsinki.[4] 2011 Kurenniemi received Order of the Lion of Finland medal from The President of Finland Mrs. Tarja Halonen.

Instrument design edit

Kurenniemi began his career in instrument design at the Department of Musicology in the University of Helsinki during the academic year 1961–1962. At the suggestion of musicology students Erkki Salmenhaara, Ilkka Oramo and Ilpo Saunio, Professor Erik Tawaststjerna invited Kurenniemi to design an electronic music studio for the university. Kurenniemi was also employed by the department as an unpaid voluntary assistant.[5][6][7][8][9]

Kurenniemi's concept for the studio represented a departure from the then prevalent tape editing studios in that it employed digital control technology and automation. The key unit for control, production and editing in 1964–1967 was the so-called integrated synthesizer, the design of which bore a closer resemblance to the 1950s' digital RCA synthesizer than to the voltage-controlled synthesizers of Robert Moog, for instance. In parallel with his work on designing the studio, Kurenniemi also built electronic instruments for customers, including avant-garde artist M. A. Numminen, composer Osmo Lindeman and Swedish composer Ralph Lundsten. Kurenniemi worked on a series of DIMI synthesizers (from DIgital Music Instrument). In 1970, a company called Digelius Electronics Finland Oy was set up to manufacture DIMIs.[5][6][7][8][9]

Kurenniemi's instruments were characterised by the early use of digital control and also the combination of sequencers with synthesizers. Kurenniemi was also the first to use a completely digital design based on calculator circuits to determine the pitch of the synthesised sound. Kurenniemi also explored the use of digital memory in his instruments – his first digital memory was installed in the Dico instrument commissioned by Osmo Lindeman (1969).[5]

In addition to developing new applications, Kurenniemi studied the use of different control systems in his instruments. For instance, Dimi-O (1971) is based on an optical interface, the original purpose of which was to read sheet music graphically. The instrument could also be played with a conventional keyboard or via a video camera. Dimi-O was also used in tandem with a dancer, whose movements were transformed into music (see Section 2.2 Film, media and video works).[citation needed]

Dimi-O is an early example of an interactive instrument. Inspired by the bio-music of the American composer Manford L. Eaton, Kurenniemi designed instruments based on bio-feedback. These included Dimi-S (also known as Sexophone, 1972), where sound generation is based on the electric conductivity of the skin, and Dimi-T (a.k.a. Electroencephalophone, 1973), where the sound control is based on a signal generated by the electric activity of the brain.[5][6][7][8][9]

Having worked for years in other fields, Kurenniemi resumed the construction of digital instruments in the mid-2000s (decade), when his pioneering work was attracting increasing interest internationally. Together with Thomas Carlsson, a UK-based designer of electronic systems, in 2005, Kurenniemi designed and constructed a new version of the Dimi instrument in which sound generation is based on the theory of mathematical harmonies developed by Kurenniemi since the 1980s (see Section 3. Scientific activity). Dimi-H is a program-based instrument that allows the player to pick out "notes out of the air" in a camera-generated 3D space.[10]

Artistic activity edit

Music edit

The most well-known part of Kurenniemi's music production is his electroacoustic compositions, which he realized in the Electronic music studio of the University of Helsinki. Beside his own work, he acted as an assistant to other composers - e.g. Erkki Salmenhaara - and produced material tapes for composers.[5]

The well-known compositions of Kurenniemi include pieces such as "On-Off" (1963) and "Andropodien Tanssi" (1968) which was partly released on an album of Finnish progressive psychedelic band Wigwam under the title "Dance of the Anthropoids" (Wigwam: Tombstone Valentine, 1970).

Part of Kurenniemi's compositions are realized in a collaboration - e.g. "Saharan Uni I & II" (1967) with Kari Hakala and "Inventio/Outventio" (1970) and "Mix Master Universe" (1973) with Jukka Ruohomäki. Many of the Kurenniemi's pieces are first realized as an equipment testing - e.g. "Andropoidien Tanssi" (with Andromatic), "Improvisaatio" (with DICO) and "Inventio/Outventio" (with DIMI-A).[6][7][8][9] In 2002 Mika Taanila put together a compilation-CD (Äänityksiä/Recordings 1963-73) of Kurenniemi's electroacoustic compositions.[11]

Film, media and video works edit

Kurenniemi's films comprise 14 experimental 16-mm short films on the themes of nature, the living environment, as well as travelogues, sex and technology. The films were shot in 1964–1971, but their exact completion dates are difficult to determine, as Kurenniemi only showed his work to a few friends at his home. Only one film, Ex nihilo, was presented publicly at the time of its completion, and has therefore been assessed by the Finnish Board of Film Classification.[citation needed]

All the others remain, according to Kurenniemi, more or less incomplete sketches. All the films were originally silent, but in 2003 Kurenniemi and Mika Taanila added soundtracks of Kurenniemi's contemporaneous electronic music to six of them. The dates in the filmography are Kurenniemi's estimates of when the editing of the film was finished.[citation needed]

From 1972 to 1974, Kurenniemi recorded diary entries on tape cassettes. From the early 1980s onward he kept a constant video and photograph log of his surroundings and personal events, with the aim of producing material for a digital virtual world, to be compiled some time after his death, in which his life would be the central element.[citation needed]

Kurenniemi archives and works in exhibitions edit

All of Kurenniemi's films and the Dimi-S instrument as well as Master Chaynjis, an early robot from 1982, are today in the collections of the Finnish National Gallery (FNG), the Museum of Contemporary Art Kiasma. His extensive private archive is deposited in the Central Art Archives of the FNG, where it is being catalogued and digitised. Some of Kurenniemi's instruments (integrated synthesizer, Sähkökvartetti, Dico, Dimi-A, Dimix and Dimi-6000) are deposited in the studio of the Musicology Department at the University of Helsinki, and some (Andormatic, Dimi-O and another Dimi-S) are in Ralph Lundsten's music studio Andromeda in Stockholm. Another Dimi-A synthesizer is deposited in the Museum of Music in Stockholm.

The Documenta (13) art exhibition in Kassel presented a colorful overview of Kurenniemi's archives and artworks in 2012. Parts of these private and public archives and artist projects were shown also in a solo show at Kiasma Museum of Contemporary Art in Helsinki from 2013 to 2014.

Scientific activity edit

Kurenniemi presented his theory of mathematical music in the article "Harmonioiden teoria" ("Theory of harmonies", 1985) and "Musical harmonies are divisor sets" (1988), in which he defines harmony as a function of the divisor set of an integer. Harmony can be read by interpreting the successive numbers as intervals. Harmonies are symmetrical, that is, their interval relations remain constant regardless of whether the divisor set is read from beginning to end or vice versa. Correspondingly, all intervals and chords can be expanded into a harmony by calculating the greatest common factor of the set, f, and its smallest common divisor, s, resulting in the harmony as H(s/f). In Kurenniemi's theory, both major and minor chords generate the same harmony, which in his view would explain their equal status in Western tonal music.[5][11]

His theory of harmonies abandons traditional scales and octave equivalence, elevating harmonies to the status of natural scales. Kurenniemi also assumes that rhythm follows the same proportions, only below the hearing threshold. Around the start of the 1990s, he wrote yet as unpublished articles concerning a theoretical concept on trivalent networks which he called the Graph Field Theory on space, time and matter.[citation needed]

Bibliography edit

  • 1963a. "Elektronisen musiikin studiolaitteiston systematiikkaa". Teekkari 1B/1963.
  • 1963b. "Kokeita analogialaskimella". Teekkari 3–4B/1963.
  • 1971a. "Elektronisen musiikin instrumenteista". Musiikki 1/1971.
  • 1971b. "Message is Massage". Taide 6/1971.
  • 1972–73. "Mitä tiedät tietokonemusiikista". Rondo 8/1972 – 3/1973.
  • 1978. "Musiikki ja tekoäly". Tritonus 4/1978.
  • 1979. "Mikroprosessorit teollisuusrobottien ohjauksessa". Sähkö 5–6/1979.
  • 1980. "Uusi tekniikka säästää luonnonvaroja". Suomen Luonto 6–7/1980.
  • 1985. "Harmonioiden teoria". Musiikki 3–4/1985.
  • 1988. "Musical Harmonies are Divisor Sets". Teoksessa M. Karjalainen, T. Lahti, J. Linjama (toim.): Proceedings of Nordic Acoustical Meeting 88. Tampere 1988.
  • 1999. Askeleen edellä: "Todellisuus on aina askeleen edellä mielikuvitusta" : artikkeleita 1979 - 1999 (from the series Kysymysmerkki). Kiasma Museum of Contemporary Art, Helsinki.
  • 2004. "Oh, human fart". Framework: The Finnish Art Review 2/2004. FRAME Finnish Fund for Art Exchange, Helsinki.
  • 2011. Erkki Kurenniemi (from the series 100 Notes – 100 Thoughts, dOCUMENTA 13). Hatje Cantz Verlag, Kassel 2011
  • 2015. Writing 2015-11-18 at the Wayback Machine and Unwriting (Media) Art History - Erkki Kurenniemi in 2048. MIT Press 2015. Edited by Joasia Krysa and Jussi Parikka.

Discography edit

  • Various performers: Perspective '68 – Music in Finland. © 1968 Love Records LRLP 4.
  • Wigwam: Tombstone Valentine. © 1970 Love Records LRLP 19.
  • Dimi 1: Dimi is born. © 1970 Musica, DDS-1.
  • Various performers: Love Proge 2. © 1998 Love Records LXCD 621.
  • Various performers: Arktinen hysteria – Suomi-avantgarden esipuutarhureita. © 2001 Love Records LXCD 635.
  • Various performers: On/Off – From Ether Sounds To Electronic Music. © 2002 Kiasma Records NYK-001.
  • Erkki Kurenniemi: Äänityksiä / Recordings 1963–1973. © 2002 Love Records LXCD 637.
  • Various performers: Avantometric Attachments 2002. © 2002 Mediataideyhdistys Avanto ry AAAAA-2002.
  • Various performers: An Anthology of Noise & Electronic Music: Third A-Chronology, Vol. 3, 1952–2004. © 2004 Sub Rosa [220].
  • Erkki Kurenniemi & Circle: Rakkaus tulessa. © 2011 Full Contact / Ektro Records KRYPT-014.
  • Erkki Kurenniemi: DRY ’73-9-8. © 2011 Ruton Music RUT-003.
  • Erkki Kurenniemi: Rules. © 2012 Full Contact / Ektro Records KRYPT-022.
  • Claes Andersson, Kalevi Seilonen, Erkki Kurenniemi, Otto Donner: Sähkö-shokki-ilta. © 2013 Ektro Rocords ectro-099.

Filmography edit

  • Carnaby Street (c. 1971, 4:07, colour)
  • Computer Music (c. 1966, 6:29 B/W)
  • Electronics In The World of Tomorrow (c. 1964, 4:56, colour & B/W)
  • Elämän reikänauha (The Punched Tape of Life, 1967, 8:03, B/W)
  • Ex nihilo (1968, 12:47)
  • Firenze (c. 1970, 9:15, colour)
  • Flora & Fauna (c. 1965, 5:59, colour)
  • Joulumysteeri (Christmas Mystery, 1969, 5:50, B/W)
  • Huumaava elämänlanka (The Intoxicating Thread of Life, c. 1968, 7:04, colour)
  • Sex Show 1 & 2 (c. 1969, 5:10, colour)
  • Talo (House, 1969, 2:44, B/W)
  • Tavoiteltu kaunotar (Coveted Beauty, 1965, 4:15, B/W)
  • Tuli ja vesi (Fire and Water, c. 1968, 10:55, colour)
  • Winterreise (c. 1964, 9:53. colour & B/W)

Instruments edit

  • Integrated synthesizer (for the Department of Musicology at the University of Helsinki) (1964–)
  • Sähkökvartetti (Electric Quartet, for M. A. Numminen) (1967–1968)
  • Andromatic (for composers Ralph Lundsten and Leo Nilsson) (1968)
  • Dico (for composer Osmo Lindeman) (1969)
  • DIMI-A (1970)
  • DIMI-O (1971)
  • DIMI-S (1972)
  • DIMIX (1972)
  • DIMI-T (1973)
  • DIMI-6000 (1973–1974)
  • DIMI-H (2005–2006, together with Thomas Carlsson)

Compositions edit

  • "On-Off" (1963)
  • "Ein-Aus" (1964) (abridged version of "On-Off")
  • "Saharan Uni I-II" ("Saharan Dream I–II", 1967; in cooperation with Kari Hakala)
  • "Antropoidien tanssi" ("Dance of the Anthropoids", 1968)
  • "Hana" ("The Faucet", 1969)
  • "Improvisaatio" ("Improvisation", 1969)
  • "Preludi" ("Prelude", 1970)
  • "Virsi" ("Hymn", 1970)
  • "Inventio-Outventio" ("Invention" 1970; an adaptation of J.S. Bach’s a minor invention (BWV 784) by Kurenniemi; "Outvention" by Kurenniemi together with Jukka Ruohomäki)
  • "?Death" (three different versions 1972-75)
  • "Mix Master Universe" (1973; together with Jukka Ruohomäki)
  • "Slice" (197?)
  • "Suru" ("Grief", 1980)

Sources edit

  • Taanila, M. 2002. Äänityksiä / Recordings 1963–1973. [CD liner notes.] Helsinki: Love Records.

References edit

  1. ^ Elektronisen musiikin uranuurtaja Erkki Kurenniemi on kuollut. Yleisradio, 1 May 2017. (in Finnish)
  2. ^ "Finnish Computer Instrument Made". Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. 13 March 1971. pp. 54–. ISSN 0006-2510.
  3. ^ Ministry of Education awarded Finland Prizes for 2003. Ministry of Education and Culture. . Archived from the original on 2012-04-06. Retrieved 2011-10-25. Retrieved 6 October 2011.
  4. ^ Honorary fellowships. Aalto University, School of Art and Design. . Archived from the original on 2016-05-19. Retrieved 2011-10-25.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link). Retrieved 6 October 2011.
  5. ^ a b c d e f Ojanen, M. ja Suominen, J. 2005. Erkki Kurenniemen sähkösoittimet. Musiikki 3/2005.
  6. ^ a b c d Tiits, K. 1990. Voluntääriassistentti Kurenniemi ja elektronimusiikin alku yliopistolla. MA thesis. University of Helsinki, Department of Musicology.
  7. ^ a b c d Tiits, K. 1990. Erkki Kurenniemi Avantgarden innovaattori. Musiikkitiede 2/1990.
  8. ^ a b c d Kuljuntausta, P. 2002. On/Off: eetteriäänistä sähkömusiikkiin. Helsinki: Like.
  9. ^ a b c d Kuljuntausta, P. 2008. First wave: a microhistory of early Finnish electronic music. Helsinki: Like.
  10. ^ Carlsson, T. 1999–2009. Dimi-H: Optical Digital Instrument. http://www.beige.org/projects/dimi/. Retrieved 6 October 2011.
  11. ^ a b Kurenniemi, E. 1985. Harmonioiden teoria. Musiikki 3–4/1985.

Further reading edit

  • Krysa, Joasia & Parikka, Jussi (eds.): Writing and Unwriting (Media) Art History: Erkki Kurenniemi in 2048. MIT Press, 2016. ISAST. (doi:10.1162/LEON_r_01368)
  • Ojanen, Mikko (2020). User Stories of Erkki Kurenniemi's Electronic Musical Instruments, 1961–1978 (Ph.D. thesis). University of Helsinki. ISBN 978-951-51-6393-6.

External links edit

  • Erkki Kurenniemi — Avantgarden innovaattori, phinnweb.org; accessed 2 May 2017.(in Finnish)
  • Erkki Kurenniemi-Sähkö Recordings Connection, phinnweb.org; accessed 2 May 2017.(in Finnish)
  • YLE Elävä arkisto: DIMI, suomalainen syntetisaattori, yle.fi; accessed 2 May 2017. (in Finnish)
  • Documenta 13, d13.documenta.de; accessed 2 May 2017.
  • Dimi-H, beige.org; accessed 2 May 2017.
  • Erkki Kurenniemen sähkösoittimet; accessed 2 May 2017.(in Finnish)
  • Erkki Kurenniemi profile, ubuweb.com; accessed 2 May 2017.
  • Erkki Kurenniemi at IMDb  

erkki, kurenniemi, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, 2017, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, erkki, . This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations May 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Erkki Juhani Kurenniemi 10 July 1941 Hameenlinna Finland 1 May 2017 1 Helsinki was a Finnish designer philosopher and artist best known for his electronic music compositions and the electronic instruments he has designed He is considered to have been one of the leading early pioneers of electronic music in Finland Kurenniemi was also a science populariser a futurologist a pioneer of media culture and an experimental film maker Young Kurenniemi in 1965Kurenniemi completed the majority of his instruments electronic compositions and experimental films in the 1960s and 1970s Between 1962 and 1974 he designed and constructed ten electronic instruments and studio devices when he was working as a volunteer assistant at the Department of Musicology at the University of Helsinki 2 and as designer at Digelius Electronics Finland Oy founded in 1970 In addition to the Musicology Department Kurenniemi also worked as assistant and senior designer at the Department of Theoretical Physics from 1962 to 1973 Kurenniemi earned a Bachelor of Science degree in 1968 citation needed He subsequently worked as a designer of control systems for industrial robots at Oy W Rosenlew Ab 1976 78 and as a designer of industrial automation and robotic systems at Nokia s cable machinery division 1980 86 He also worked as a specialist consultant and Head of Planning at the Science Centre Heureka in Vantaa Finland 1987 98 Kurenniemi received the Finland Prize of the Ministry of Education and Culture in 2003 3 In 2004 he was elected honorary fellow of the University of Art and Design Helsinki 4 2011 Kurenniemi received Order of the Lion of Finland medal from The President of Finland Mrs Tarja Halonen Contents 1 Instrument design 2 Artistic activity 2 1 Music 2 2 Film media and video works 2 3 Kurenniemi archives and works in exhibitions 2 4 Scientific activity 3 Bibliography 4 Discography 5 Filmography 6 Instruments 7 Compositions 8 Sources 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksInstrument design editKurenniemi began his career in instrument design at the Department of Musicology in the University of Helsinki during the academic year 1961 1962 At the suggestion of musicology students Erkki Salmenhaara Ilkka Oramo and Ilpo Saunio Professor Erik Tawaststjerna invited Kurenniemi to design an electronic music studio for the university Kurenniemi was also employed by the department as an unpaid voluntary assistant 5 6 7 8 9 Kurenniemi s concept for the studio represented a departure from the then prevalent tape editing studios in that it employed digital control technology and automation The key unit for control production and editing in 1964 1967 was the so called integrated synthesizer the design of which bore a closer resemblance to the 1950s digital RCA synthesizer than to the voltage controlled synthesizers of Robert Moog for instance In parallel with his work on designing the studio Kurenniemi also built electronic instruments for customers including avant garde artist M A Numminen composer Osmo Lindeman and Swedish composer Ralph Lundsten Kurenniemi worked on a series of DIMI synthesizers from DIgital Music Instrument In 1970 a company called Digelius Electronics Finland Oy was set up to manufacture DIMIs 5 6 7 8 9 Kurenniemi s instruments were characterised by the early use of digital control and also the combination of sequencers with synthesizers Kurenniemi was also the first to use a completely digital design based on calculator circuits to determine the pitch of the synthesised sound Kurenniemi also explored the use of digital memory in his instruments his first digital memory was installed in the Dico instrument commissioned by Osmo Lindeman 1969 5 In addition to developing new applications Kurenniemi studied the use of different control systems in his instruments For instance Dimi O 1971 is based on an optical interface the original purpose of which was to read sheet music graphically The instrument could also be played with a conventional keyboard or via a video camera Dimi O was also used in tandem with a dancer whose movements were transformed into music see Section 2 2 Film media and video works citation needed Dimi O is an early example of an interactive instrument Inspired by the bio music of the American composer Manford L Eaton Kurenniemi designed instruments based on bio feedback These included Dimi S also known as Sexophone 1972 where sound generation is based on the electric conductivity of the skin and Dimi T a k a Electroencephalophone 1973 where the sound control is based on a signal generated by the electric activity of the brain 5 6 7 8 9 Having worked for years in other fields Kurenniemi resumed the construction of digital instruments in the mid 2000s decade when his pioneering work was attracting increasing interest internationally Together with Thomas Carlsson a UK based designer of electronic systems in 2005 Kurenniemi designed and constructed a new version of the Dimi instrument in which sound generation is based on the theory of mathematical harmonies developed by Kurenniemi since the 1980s see Section 3 Scientific activity Dimi H is a program based instrument that allows the player to pick out notes out of the air in a camera generated 3D space 10 Artistic activity editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Erkki Kurenniemi news newspapers books scholar JSTOR May 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message Music edit The most well known part of Kurenniemi s music production is his electroacoustic compositions which he realized in the Electronic music studio of the University of Helsinki Beside his own work he acted as an assistant to other composers e g Erkki Salmenhaara and produced material tapes for composers 5 The well known compositions of Kurenniemi include pieces such as On Off 1963 and Andropodien Tanssi 1968 which was partly released on an album of Finnish progressive psychedelic band Wigwam under the title Dance of the Anthropoids Wigwam Tombstone Valentine 1970 Part of Kurenniemi s compositions are realized in a collaboration e g Saharan Uni I amp II 1967 with Kari Hakala and Inventio Outventio 1970 and Mix Master Universe 1973 with Jukka Ruohomaki Many of the Kurenniemi s pieces are first realized as an equipment testing e g Andropoidien Tanssi with Andromatic Improvisaatio with DICO and Inventio Outventio with DIMI A 6 7 8 9 In 2002 Mika Taanila put together a compilation CD Aanityksia Recordings 1963 73 of Kurenniemi s electroacoustic compositions 11 Film media and video works edit Kurenniemi s films comprise 14 experimental 16 mm short films on the themes of nature the living environment as well as travelogues sex and technology The films were shot in 1964 1971 but their exact completion dates are difficult to determine as Kurenniemi only showed his work to a few friends at his home Only one film Ex nihilo was presented publicly at the time of its completion and has therefore been assessed by the Finnish Board of Film Classification citation needed All the others remain according to Kurenniemi more or less incomplete sketches All the films were originally silent but in 2003 Kurenniemi and Mika Taanila added soundtracks of Kurenniemi s contemporaneous electronic music to six of them The dates in the filmography are Kurenniemi s estimates of when the editing of the film was finished citation needed From 1972 to 1974 Kurenniemi recorded diary entries on tape cassettes From the early 1980s onward he kept a constant video and photograph log of his surroundings and personal events with the aim of producing material for a digital virtual world to be compiled some time after his death in which his life would be the central element citation needed Kurenniemi archives and works in exhibitions edit All of Kurenniemi s films and the Dimi S instrument as well as Master Chaynjis an early robot from 1982 are today in the collections of the Finnish National Gallery FNG the Museum of Contemporary Art Kiasma His extensive private archive is deposited in the Central Art Archives of the FNG where it is being catalogued and digitised Some of Kurenniemi s instruments integrated synthesizer Sahkokvartetti Dico Dimi A Dimix and Dimi 6000 are deposited in the studio of the Musicology Department at the University of Helsinki and some Andormatic Dimi O and another Dimi S are in Ralph Lundsten s music studio Andromeda in Stockholm Another Dimi A synthesizer is deposited in the Museum of Music in Stockholm The Documenta 13 art exhibition in Kassel presented a colorful overview of Kurenniemi s archives and artworks in 2012 Parts of these private and public archives and artist projects were shown also in a solo show at Kiasma Museum of Contemporary Art in Helsinki from 2013 to 2014 Scientific activity edit Kurenniemi presented his theory of mathematical music in the article Harmonioiden teoria Theory of harmonies 1985 and Musical harmonies are divisor sets 1988 in which he defines harmony as a function of the divisor set of an integer Harmony can be read by interpreting the successive numbers as intervals Harmonies are symmetrical that is their interval relations remain constant regardless of whether the divisor set is read from beginning to end or vice versa Correspondingly all intervals and chords can be expanded into a harmony by calculating the greatest common factor of the set f and its smallest common divisor s resulting in the harmony as H s f In Kurenniemi s theory both major and minor chords generate the same harmony which in his view would explain their equal status in Western tonal music 5 11 His theory of harmonies abandons traditional scales and octave equivalence elevating harmonies to the status of natural scales Kurenniemi also assumes that rhythm follows the same proportions only below the hearing threshold Around the start of the 1990s he wrote yet as unpublished articles concerning a theoretical concept on trivalent networks which he called the Graph Field Theory on space time and matter citation needed Bibliography edit1963a Elektronisen musiikin studiolaitteiston systematiikkaa Teekkari 1B 1963 1963b Kokeita analogialaskimella Teekkari 3 4B 1963 1971a Elektronisen musiikin instrumenteista Musiikki 1 1971 1971b Message is Massage Taide 6 1971 1972 73 Mita tiedat tietokonemusiikista Rondo 8 1972 3 1973 1978 Musiikki ja tekoaly Tritonus 4 1978 1979 Mikroprosessorit teollisuusrobottien ohjauksessa Sahko 5 6 1979 1980 Uusi tekniikka saastaa luonnonvaroja Suomen Luonto 6 7 1980 1985 Harmonioiden teoria Musiikki 3 4 1985 1988 Musical Harmonies are Divisor Sets Teoksessa M Karjalainen T Lahti J Linjama toim Proceedings of Nordic Acoustical Meeting 88 Tampere 1988 1999 Askeleen edella Todellisuus on aina askeleen edella mielikuvitusta artikkeleita 1979 1999 from the series Kysymysmerkki Kiasma Museum of Contemporary Art Helsinki 2004 Oh human fart Framework The Finnish Art Review 2 2004 FRAME Finnish Fund for Art Exchange Helsinki 2011 Erkki Kurenniemi from the series 100 Notes 100 Thoughts dOCUMENTA 13 Hatje Cantz Verlag Kassel 2011 2015 Writing Archived 2015 11 18 at the Wayback Machine and Unwriting Media Art History Erkki Kurenniemi in 2048 MIT Press 2015 Edited by Joasia Krysa and Jussi Parikka Discography editVarious performers Perspective 68 Music in Finland c 1968 Love Records LRLP 4 Wigwam Tombstone Valentine c 1970 Love Records LRLP 19 Dimi 1 Dimi is born c 1970 Musica DDS 1 Various performers Love Proge 2 c 1998 Love Records LXCD 621 Various performers Arktinen hysteria Suomi avantgarden esipuutarhureita c 2001 Love Records LXCD 635 Various performers On Off From Ether Sounds To Electronic Music c 2002 Kiasma Records NYK 001 Erkki Kurenniemi Aanityksia Recordings 1963 1973 c 2002 Love Records LXCD 637 Various performers Avantometric Attachments 2002 c 2002 Mediataideyhdistys Avanto ry AAAAA 2002 Various performers An Anthology of Noise amp Electronic Music Third A Chronology Vol 3 1952 2004 c 2004 Sub Rosa 220 Erkki Kurenniemi amp Circle Rakkaus tulessa c 2011 Full Contact Ektro Records KRYPT 014 Erkki Kurenniemi DRY 73 9 8 c 2011 Ruton Music RUT 003 Erkki Kurenniemi Rules c 2012 Full Contact Ektro Records KRYPT 022 Claes Andersson Kalevi Seilonen Erkki Kurenniemi Otto Donner Sahko shokki ilta c 2013 Ektro Rocords ectro 099 Filmography editCarnaby Street c 1971 4 07 colour Computer Music c 1966 6 29 B W Electronics In The World of Tomorrow c 1964 4 56 colour amp B W Elaman reikanauha The Punched Tape of Life 1967 8 03 B W Ex nihilo 1968 12 47 Firenze c 1970 9 15 colour Flora amp Fauna c 1965 5 59 colour Joulumysteeri Christmas Mystery 1969 5 50 B W Huumaava elamanlanka The Intoxicating Thread of Life c 1968 7 04 colour Sex Show 1 amp 2 c 1969 5 10 colour Talo House 1969 2 44 B W Tavoiteltu kaunotar Coveted Beauty 1965 4 15 B W Tuli ja vesi Fire and Water c 1968 10 55 colour Winterreise c 1964 9 53 colour amp B W Instruments editIntegrated synthesizer for the Department of Musicology at the University of Helsinki 1964 Sahkokvartetti Electric Quartet for M A Numminen 1967 1968 Andromatic for composers Ralph Lundsten and Leo Nilsson 1968 Dico for composer Osmo Lindeman 1969 DIMI A 1970 DIMI O 1971 DIMI S 1972 DIMIX 1972 DIMI T 1973 DIMI 6000 1973 1974 DIMI H 2005 2006 together with Thomas Carlsson Compositions edit On Off 1963 Ein Aus 1964 abridged version of On Off Saharan Uni I II Saharan Dream I II 1967 in cooperation with Kari Hakala Antropoidien tanssi Dance of the Anthropoids 1968 Hana The Faucet 1969 Improvisaatio Improvisation 1969 Preludi Prelude 1970 Virsi Hymn 1970 Inventio Outventio Invention 1970 an adaptation of J S Bach s a minor invention BWV 784 by Kurenniemi Outvention by Kurenniemi together with Jukka Ruohomaki Death three different versions 1972 75 Mix Master Universe 1973 together with Jukka Ruohomaki Slice 197 Suru Grief 1980 Sources editTaanila M 2002 Aanityksia Recordings 1963 1973 CD liner notes Helsinki Love Records References edit Elektronisen musiikin uranuurtaja Erkki Kurenniemi on kuollut Yleisradio 1 May 2017 in Finnish Finnish Computer Instrument Made Billboard Nielsen Business Media Inc 13 March 1971 pp 54 ISSN 0006 2510 Ministry of Education awarded Finland Prizes for 2003 Ministry of Education and Culture OKM 12 1 2004 Pe Ht COMPOSITE NEWS BULLETIN DECEMBER 2003 Archived from the original on 2012 04 06 Retrieved 2011 10 25 Retrieved 6 October 2011 Honorary fellowships Aalto University School of Art and Design Archived copy Archived from the original on 2016 05 19 Retrieved 2011 10 25 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Retrieved 6 October 2011 a b c d e f Ojanen M ja Suominen J 2005 Erkki Kurenniemen sahkosoittimet Musiikki 3 2005 a b c d Tiits K 1990 Voluntaariassistentti Kurenniemi ja elektronimusiikin alku yliopistolla MA thesis University of Helsinki Department of Musicology a b c d Tiits K 1990 Erkki Kurenniemi Avantgarden innovaattori Musiikkitiede 2 1990 a b c d Kuljuntausta P 2002 On Off eetteriaanista sahkomusiikkiin Helsinki Like a b c d Kuljuntausta P 2008 First wave a microhistory of early Finnish electronic music Helsinki Like Carlsson T 1999 2009 Dimi H Optical Digital Instrument http www beige org projects dimi Retrieved 6 October 2011 a b Kurenniemi E 1985 Harmonioiden teoria Musiikki 3 4 1985 Further reading editKrysa Joasia amp Parikka Jussi eds Writing and Unwriting Media Art History Erkki Kurenniemi in 2048 MIT Press 2016 ISAST doi 10 1162 LEON r 01368 Ojanen Mikko 2020 User Stories of Erkki Kurenniemi s Electronic Musical Instruments 1961 1978 Ph D thesis University of Helsinki ISBN 978 951 51 6393 6 External links editErkki Kurenniemi Avantgarden innovaattori phinnweb org accessed 2 May 2017 in Finnish Erkki Kurenniemi Sahko Recordings Connection phinnweb org accessed 2 May 2017 in Finnish YLE Elava arkisto DIMI suomalainen syntetisaattori yle fi accessed 2 May 2017 in Finnish Documenta 13 d13 documenta de accessed 2 May 2017 Dimi H beige org accessed 2 May 2017 Erkki Kurenniemen sahkosoittimet accessed 2 May 2017 in Finnish Erkki Kurenniemi profile ubuweb com accessed 2 May 2017 Erkki Kurenniemi at IMDb nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Erkki Kurenniemi amp oldid 1213626304, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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