Microtiming Studies

The concept of studying microtiming and other techniques often found in African and African-American music in to uncover the patterns that create the groove, rhythm and embodiement felt like looking at the science behind something I’ve always thought of as purely emotional. At the start of the reading I kept questioning whether music, a tool used to convey emotion, can be broken down in terms of technical terms to capture what makes it human and expressive. As someone with a short-lived history with music theory I was aware that it can all be broken down to uncover what makes up what we hear everyday, though never thought about what part of this technical dissection can be used to point out the humanness of it all. The ‘microscopic sensitivity to musical timing’ that is used by African musicians to create ‘expressive timing’ in their music was something that made sense once I read it, yet an attribute that I never thought about. A human can never reach the mechanical perfection of a machine, which sounds like a flaw until you start thinking of it as the foundation that creates expressive and meaningful beat. The emphasis on the fact that these slight shifts aren’t random, they’re embodied and part of a long cultural practice made me rethink how much of musical feel comes from the body and not just intention. Applying that to the live coding that we will be doing in class helped me understand where our personal expression can come into live coding. Evaluating a line or typing in the code for a beat when it feels right, even if it’s slightly delayed or early will contribute to creating a performance that feels personal and expressive rather than mechanic. It’s not about perfecting what we practice or what we had in mind, it’s about feeling what we are performing on a level where embodying the music is possible, giving space for the human body to be integrated into our works.