Patterns of Thought
Sir Ian Blatchford and Dr Tilly Blyth focus on whether a machine can produce art without creative and emotional intentions of a human, reflected in the sonic artwork Longplayer
Sir Ian Blatchford and Dr Tilly Blyth continue their series exploring how art and science have inspired each other, from the Enlightenment to Dark Matter. They examine whether the digital computer, that simply follows a series of logical steps, can produce original art without the creative and emotional intention of a human.
Ian visits Longplayer a piece of music created using an algorithm designed by ex Pogues musician Jem Finer. It will play for a millennium, without repetition, ending on December 31st 2999. The algorithm that defines Longplayer allows the music to be composed in real time according to simple rules. It’s music that plays with ideas of human and physical time
Over 100 years before the digital computer age, Ada Lovelace made a significant intellectual leap by suggesting a computing machine could be used not just for numerical expressions but to manipulate quantities other than number, such as musical notes. As Tilly reveals, it goes to the heart of questions about whether, in the future, anything as a mundane as a piece of computer code can generate music and art that’s genuinely creative without human input.
Producer Adrian Washbourne
Produced in partnership with The Science Museum Group
Photograph (C) LongPlayer Trust
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- Thu 17 Oct 2019 21:00Â鶹¹ÙÍøÊ×Ò³Èë¿Ú Radio 4
- Thu 24 Jun 2021 19:45Â鶹¹ÙÍøÊ×Ò³Èë¿Ú Radio 4