1 What do we mean “Generative” music?
Generative:
“Generative” music is where, following some trigger event such as pressing “play” or playing a note, or initiating some voltage (in modular synthesis rack), the music follows some rules, algorithms or uses probability to generate or evolve the musical ideas (notes, rhythms, timbres) for an arbitrary amount of time. In some cases the generative algorithms work with the performer, reacting to their input. In other cases the performer may intervene with the algorithms to tweak, adjust or change direction.
Key idea
Generative music means (to me) that the music should be able to go on indefinitely, with enough going on to make it interesting, but without anything particularly “sticking out” to catch the listener’s ear.
Some generative algorithms take parts that the performer plays and augments this with additional harmony, chords or (counter) melodies. An example of this is Olafur Arnalds’ and Halldór Eldjárn’s Stratus algorithm for performer pianos where MIDI triggers generate sequences of associated notes, chords and “ripples” in a separate instrument or player piano.
Other generative music involves complex algorithms, probability triggers and modulations to create ever-changing sounds, sequences, rhythms. Often these are programmed via modular synth rigs using LFOs, sequencers, quantizers, harmonic generators, bernoulli gates, Turing machines.
With Ableton Live Suite, it’s possible to create both kinds of generative sequences - either shorter, reactive sequences or long infinitely varying sequences. Through modulation and automation it’s possible to create music where the sounds evolve, appear, disappear, blend or create dissonance. In this book we’ll try to present some ideas that will help get you started on this journey. I recommend that you try out the ideas in practice. Let the sequences play. Sit with them a while and let what you hear guide what to try next…
It is my firm belief that the tools provided in Ableton Live Suite, including Max for Live, can replicate many of the generative possibilities within modular synthesis rigs. I hope to show within the following chapters how a combination of stock Ableton plugins plus some free (or inexpensive) Max for Live plugins can help you create generative music that is interesting to listen to.
This is only the beginning.