Profile: Helen Papaioannou
Tidal Cyclist | Helen Papaioannou |
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aka | Kar Pouzi / Papaloannov |
Location | Yorkshire, UK (currently Sheffield…soon to be…somewhere else in Yorkshire!) |
Years with Tidal | 4 yrs intermittently |
Music available online | YouTube, BandCamp |
Other music/audio sw | Baritone sax, synthesizers, Ableton, bells, toys, games, scores |
Livecoding
What do you like about livecoding in Tidal? What inspires you?
For me, Tidal is a super-fun environment that affords many possibilities and surprises, right from the outset of starting as a beginner. I enjoy the feeling of being able to make changes with intention and the musical surprises that arise from unexpected interactions with functions, misunderstandings and errors. I also like that it’s relatively easy to start making music even with limited experience of different functions and syntax.
How do you approach your livecoding sessions?
I use Tidal for a variety of purposes, sometimes for live situations, sometimes to create and record music that I then layer with other sounds (e.g. performing with baritone sax or synthesizers) and produce into tracks. For me, Tidal is a good tool to come to when I don’t have or want a clear idea of what I want to do; even small changes to patterns can lead you down a musical rabbit hole you didn’t foresee.
What coding approaches do you like to use?
At the moment I’ve been mainly having fun in Tidal by working with one sample, or a very small palette of samples. I have a lot of fun with limitations. Here’s an example of doing something super simple with the same sample, using sometimesBy & silly increments of ‘fast/slow’, or random speed ranges, and sequences of the same sample repeated a different amount of times…I like to push things until they break & often they do! I’ve seen other people doing fun stuff with inverse patterns which I also often use.
Starting from patterns of Greek dances, like hasaposerviko, make for fun improvs which could go anywhere
Do you use Tidal with other tools / environments?
Yeah, I’m not very faithful to any particular environment; I pick & choose depending on what I’m doing and how I feel. I often end up recording improvisations or specific results of code I like in Tidal into a DAW and sometimes layer other things on top. Or I use Tidal to control synthesizers via MIDI.
Tidal Contributions
How do you contribute to TidalCycles? What have you worked on?
I have used Tidal in educational workshops and enjoy seeing how it excites people and inspires interest in music making more generally. I generally introduce/incorporate a variety of different approaches to music making when delivering workshops or teaching.
Music
What projects are you currently working on or planning? What’s next?
- Ultraniche label is releasing one of my Kar Pouzi singles, Clippity Clop, in 2023. This track was originally an improvisation I did in a live set with Tidal, made with one electronic stab sample. I then revisited the code, recorded the output & played some sax on top, in unison with the resulting pattern generated in Tidal.
- I’m slowly working towards a solo Kar Pouzi release in 2024, including tracks made using a variety of tools, including Tidal amongst other things.
- I’m also writing a piece for 2 percussionists and touring an audiovisual collaboration in Japan with artist Noriko Okaku.
- I’ve been playing in a new, very quiet duo with percussionist Charlie Collins, which we’re excited to perform & record soon.
Links to music
- My website
- Kar Pouzi (solo)
- Garlic Hug (EP) + Party video
- Here’s a video interview I made for florilegio.
Background
I work with a mixture of approaches and tools in my music, sometimes improvising from scratch (with saxophone, synthesizers, or Tidal), sometimes composing things from start to finish (be it through a DAW or a score, sometimes incorporating Tidal in electronic works), or using pattern games and scenarios with ensembles which are somewhere in between.