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Marcello Messina deposited The Internet of Musical Stuff (IoMuSt): ubimus perspectives on artificial scarcity, virtual communities and (de)objectification in the group
Society for Music Theory – Popular Music Interest Group (SMT PMIG) on Humanities Commons 1 month, 1 week ago
Part of the recent developments in Ubiquitous Music (ubimus) research involve the proposal of the Internet of Musical Stuff (IoMuSt) as an expansion and complement to the Internet of Musical Things (IoMusT). The transition from IoMusT to IoMuSt entails a critique of blockchain and non-fungible tokens (NFTs) as technologies for allotment,…[Read more]
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Marcello Messina deposited The Internet of Musical Stuff (IoMuSt): ubimus perspectives on artificial scarcity, virtual communities and (de)objectification on Humanities Commons 1 month, 1 week ago
Part of the recent developments in Ubiquitous Music (ubimus) research involve the proposal of the Internet of Musical Stuff (IoMuSt) as an expansion and complement to the Internet of Musical Things (IoMusT). The transition from IoMusT to IoMuSt entails a critique of blockchain and non-fungible tokens (NFTs) as technologies for allotment,…[Read more]
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Marcello Messina deposited The ‘greedy southern woman’ as a national Italian cliché: A preliminary proposal on Humanities Commons 5 months, 2 weeks ago
Unpacking the charged cliché of the ‘greedy southern woman’ involves analytical confrontation with some of the many axes of exclusion that characterize Italy, intended as a patriarchal, northern-centric and body-normative society. Furthermore, it involves a critical grasp of the violent modes of visualization that coordinate the exposure of bodi…[Read more]
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Marcello Messina deposited The Ubimus Symposium in 2022, peeking into the musical past on Humanities Commons 6 months ago
Twelve years, twelve events. Despite the well-established tradition of our community to get together, share results and challenge partners with unexpected new threads, this year opens a new stage. After much discussion, the Ubiquitous Music Group decided to take up Teresa Connor’s proposal and coined a new name for our event, The Ubiquitous M…[Read more]
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Marcello Messina deposited A Internet do Bagulho Musical (Internet of Musical Stuff) – IoMuSt on Humanities Commons 6 months, 1 week ago
We introduce IoMuSt-the Internet of Musical Stuff: a proposal to recalibrate the Internet of Musical Things in the light of the current reification of digital creative resources, epitomised by the Non-Fungible Tokens frenzy. As opposed to marketable “things”, “stuff” is fluid, malleable, unfixable and pecuniarily irrelevant. Hence, stuff is good…[Read more]
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Marcello Messina deposited Proceedings of the 11th Workshop on Ubiquitous Music (UbiMus 2021) in the group
Society for Music Theory—Russian Music Theory Interest Group on Humanities Commons 1 year, 3 months ago
The 11th UbiMus — Ubiquitous Music Workshop (https://dei.fe.up.pt/ubimus/) was held at the Center for High Artistic Performance, the house of the Orquestra Jazz Matosinhos (OJM) in Portugal, during September 6–8, 2021. It was organized by the Sound and Music Computing (SMC) Group of the Faculty of Engineering, University of Porto and INESC TEC…[Read more]
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Marcello Messina deposited Proceedings of the 11th Workshop on Ubiquitous Music (UbiMus 2021) on Humanities Commons 1 year, 3 months ago
The 11th UbiMus — Ubiquitous Music Workshop (https://dei.fe.up.pt/ubimus/) was held at the Center for High Artistic Performance, the house of the Orquestra Jazz Matosinhos (OJM) in Portugal, during September 6–8, 2021. It was organized by the Sound and Music Computing (SMC) Group of the Faculty of Engineering, University of Porto and INESC TEC…[Read more]
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Marcello Messina deposited “Armato di carnagione”: Chromatic Regimes of Racial Profiling in the Italian Press. on Humanities Commons 1 year, 11 months ago
Marcello Messina, Stefania Capogreco. “Armato di carnagione”: Chromatic Regimes of Racial Profiling in the Italian Press. Francielle Maria Modesto Mendes; Francisco Aquinei Timóteo Queirós; Wagner da Costa Silva. Pesquisa em comunicação: jornalismo, raça e gênero, Nepan Editora, 2021, 978-65-89135-20-3.
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Marcello Messina deposited Cartridge Music in the Quarantine: Presence, Absence, Contingency Setups and (De-)territorialised Performances in the group
Society for Music Theory – Popular Music Interest Group (SMT PMIG) on Humanities Commons 2 years ago
Between the end of May and the beginning of June, 2020, we performed individually, filmed, synced together, edited and presented a quarantine version of John Cage’s Cartridge Music. Uploaded on YouTube, the performance was broadcast on 1 June, as part of the 4th Research Colloquium of the Postgraduate Programme in Music of the Federal University o…[Read more]
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Marcello Messina deposited Cartridge Music in the Quarantine: Presence, Absence, Contingency Setups and (De-)territorialised Performances on Humanities Commons 2 years ago
Between the end of May and the beginning of June, 2020, we performed individually, filmed, synced together, edited and presented a quarantine version of John Cage’s Cartridge Music. Uploaded on YouTube, the performance was broadcast on 1 June, as part of the 4th Research Colloquium of the Postgraduate Programme in Music of the Federal University o…[Read more]
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Marcello Messina deposited Editorial: Ubiquitous Music Making in COVID-19 Times in the group
Society for Music Theory – Popular Music Interest Group (SMT PMIG) on Humanities Commons 2 years, 1 month ago
Picture a world with no mobility. Planes are landed. Urban transportation stopped. Large gatherings are non-existent and everybody is at home. That’s 2020, today. Most countries have reduced social interactions to a minimum. Food markets, drugstores and gas stations remain open. But shopping malls, cinemas, coffee shops and pubs have closed t…[Read more]
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Marcello Messina deposited Editorial: Ubiquitous Music Making in COVID-19 Times on Humanities Commons 2 years, 1 month ago
Picture a world with no mobility. Planes are landed. Urban transportation stopped. Large gatherings are non-existent and everybody is at home. That’s 2020, today. Most countries have reduced social interactions to a minimum. Food markets, drugstores and gas stations remain open. But shopping malls, cinemas, coffee shops and pubs have closed t…[Read more]
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Marcello Messina's profile was updated on Humanities Commons 3 years, 4 months ago