 Director of the studios, composer Dr David Berezan explains, ‘my compositions are not really complete unless they’re experienced on multiple loudspeakers. I can create an immersive listening experience, with sounds moving around you in a dynamic way.’
Berezan is excited by the collaborative opportunities the Centre offers, ‘It might be working with visual artists, or in other media such as film. There's also scientific collaboration, for example in the development of sensor technology, because of the obvious parallels with the tools that we use in electroacoustic music. That's one way that we see ourselves existing beyond the composer in a box.’
Berezan’s desire ‘to create incredible sounds that I'd never heard before and hearing other people do that’, was originally fired up in the early 1990s while studying jazz and music technology. He started MANTIS (Manchester Theatre in Sound), which produces internationally-profiled electroacoustic concerts at the University of Manchester and other venues.
With five planned compositions, Berezan will be busy in the Novars facility, ‘I wouldn't say I go to the head of the queue, all of the people who are researching at the studios have a guaranteed allocation of time for electroacoustic composition.’
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