Beth Coleman
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Beth Coleman (also known as M. Singe, DJ M. Singe, and DJ Singe) is an American female electronic music composer and academic in the field of new media studies. Her work has been featured in a variety of venues such as the
Whitney Museum of American Art The Whitney Museum of American Art, known informally as "The Whitney", is an art museum in the Meatpacking District and West Village neighborhoods of Manhattan in New York City. It was founded in 1930 by Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney (1875–1942), ...
,
MoMA PS1 MoMA PS1 is a contemporary art institution located in Court Square in the Long Island City neighborhood in the borough of Queens, New York City. In addition to its exhibitions, the institution organizes the Sunday Sessions performance series, th ...
, Musée D'art Moderne Paris, and the Waag Society Amsterdam. From 2005 until 2011, she was a professor of Comparative Media Studies and Writing at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Currently she is assistant professor, Department of English Language and Literature, University of Waterloo, Canada, and co-director of Waterloo's Critical Media Lab.


Early career

Following a trip exploring the burgeoning experimental and electronic music scenes in Berlin in the summer of 1994, Coleman and frequent collaborator Howard Goldkrand returned to New York City, where they formed
Soundlab Soundlab was a collective of artists, both sound and visual, that started in the East Village, New York City around the mid 1990s. The founding members were Howard Goldkrand, Beth Coleman and Paul D. Miller aka DJ Spooky. The collective include ...
Cultural Alchemy with Paul D. Miller (aka
DJ Spooky Paul Dennis Miller (born September 6, 1970), known professionally as DJ Spooky, That Subliminal Kid, is an American electronic and experimental hip hop musician whose work is often called by critics "illbient" or "trip hop". He is a turntabli ...
). SoundLab was formed as a grass roots initiative to provide a space for emerging artists to display new ideas and forms of music and experimental art instillations in response to legal pressures placed on traditional musical venues during the Giuliani administration. Coleman performed her first solo DJ set with the collective in January 1996. Over her career, Coleman has transitioned from being known primarily as a DJ to being strongly associated with environment installations and new media studies.


Music

Extended experimentation with digital interfaces and audio data manipulation are characteristic of Coleman's musical output, creating what she refers to as an “electronic architecture interface.” Her music is often associated with the
illbient Illbient is a genre of electronic music and an art movement that originated among hip hop-influenced artists from Williamsburg, New York City around 1994. DJ Olive, and DJ Spooky, pioneers of the genre, have both claimed to have coined the term ...
music scene of 1990's New York City, a hybrid of ambient, dub, and hip-hop traditions. Over the course of her career, Coleman has shifted from primarily using turntable equipment, a staple of illbient music, to focusing more on audio design software such as Logic. Coleman has stated that she has an aversion towards improvisation in her work, preferring the use of more premeditated, thought-out sound structures. Coleman is one half of the duo Singe & Verb, a collaboration with her fellow SoundLab co-founder Howard Goldkrand, and has also collaborated with other artists such as
Ilhan Ersahin İlhan is a Turkish language, Turkish male given name and a surname. It is also used as a feminine given name. Notable with the name include: Title * Ilkhanate, Hulagu Khan's khanate, title of Hulagu Khan. Given name * İlhan Eker, Turkish footbal ...
, Lawrence D. Morris,
Graham Haynes Graham Haynes (born September 16, 1960 in Brooklyn, New York) is an American cornetist, trumpeter and composer. The son of jazz drummer Roy Haynes, Graham is known for his work in nu jazz, fusing jazz with elements of hip hop and electronic mus ...
, and Fredy Studer.


Academia

Coleman has written articles advocating a break down of musical and cultural segregation through technology and new art forms, a reflection of the “cultural alchemy” originally introduced in the SoundLab collective. In 2011, Coleman published her first book, ''Hello Avatar: Rise of the Networked Generation''. In the book, she explores how the boom of social and mobile media and new technologies in the later half of the 2000s has allowed humanity to filter their experiences into a new digital medium, creating an augmented x-reality.


Selected works

In 1999, Coleman and Goldkrand created the piece ''Mobile Stealth Unit (Pink Noise)'', a mixed-media sculpture consisting of a workman tricycle and a system of audio electronics. The piece was meant to be an “investigation of space in the form of two-way transmission” through the concept of pink noise. In 2005, Coleman and Goldkrand created the piece ''Waken'', a full-room installation consisting of six-channel audio mix broadcast through 24 speakers grouped in “flower clusters” designed to replicate the behavior of flower interactions.“Anatomy of an Amalgamation.” Beth Coleman and Howard Goldkrand. Leonardo Music Journal, Vol. 16, Noises Off: Sound Beyond Music (2006), p. 53


References

{{DEFAULTSORT:Coleman, Beth Living people Year of birth missing (living people) American women in electronic music American electronic musicians 21st-century American women