Litcius/Paper detail

Producing Liveness

Steve Benford, Paul Mansfield, Jocelyn Spence

202110 citationsDOI

Abstract

The global pandemic has driven musicians online. We report an ethnographic account of how two traditional folk clubs with little previous interest in digital platforms transitioned to online experiences. They followed very different approaches: one adapted their existing singaround format to video conferencing while the other evolved a weekly community-produced, pre-recorded show that could be watched together. However, despite their successes, participants ultimately remained unable to ‘sing in chorus’ due to network constraints. We draw on theories of liveness from performance studies to explain our findings, arguing that HCI might orientate itself to online liveness as being co-produced through rich participatory structures that dissolve traditional distinctions between live and recorded and performer and audience. We discuss how participants appropriated existing platforms to achieve this, but these in turn shaped their practices in unforeseen ways. We draw out implications for the design and deployment of future live performance platforms.

Topics & Concepts

LivenessSoftware deploymentPerforming artsComputer scienceChorusCitizen journalismVideoconferencingWorld Wide WebHuman–computer interactionMultimediaVisual artsArtSoftware engineeringLiteratureProgramming languageInnovative Human-Technology InteractionDigital Games and MediaMusic Technology and Sound Studies
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